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Summer 1994 President's Report 1993-1994 Lawrence University

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Recommended Citation Lawrence University, "President's Report 1993-1994" (1994). Alumni Magazines. Book 41. http://lux.lawrence.edu/alumni_magazines/41

This Book is brought to you for free and open access by the Communications at Lux. It has been accepted for inclusion in Alumni Magazines by an authorized administrator of Lux. For more information, please contact [email protected]. PRESIDENT'S REPORT 1993-1994

1i ~ L AWRENCE UNIVE R S I TY

President's Message ...... 2 President Richard Warch

Financial Message ...... • ...... 13 William Hodgkiss

Fund Raising ...... 17 Gregory A. Volk

Honor Roll ...... 20

1993-1994 Faculty Scholarly and Creative Achievements ..... 28

1993-1994 Highlights ...... 45

Lawrence University wishes to thank Image Studios for contributing photography appearing in this publication, and Fox River Paper Company for contributing the stock on which it is printed. fteen years ago, Jean Kemeny, wife of esident John Kemeny, published a memoir entitled "It's Different at Dartmouth." And, undoubtedly, so it was and is. But not only at Dartmouth. One of the ubiquitous tag lines applied at this college is the phrase "The Lawrence Difference," which can be taken to describe every­ thing from distinctive aspects of the campus culture and academic mission to the entrees served up in Downer Commons. It's different at Lawrence too. Which may translate to the notion that Lawrence is different, and that idea---Drat least the limitations of that idea-frames my report for this year. In the course of the past year, I have shared and discussed with trustees, faculty, alumni, and others the changing features of the climate in which the college conducts its mission and the ways in which that climate affects us. Basically, the world is changing for higher education and it behooves us to understand how and why ... and to begin thinking about answers to the question: "so what?" We'd rather not think about these things, but we must.

Yes • • • but PROSPERING IN AN IN

For simplicity's sake, let me posit two ways of understanding that changing world. First, it presents us with an inhospitable climate. Second, it confronts us with a hostile climate. In each case, I mean climate to stand for the conditions and attitudes that face and challenge us from beyond the hallowed halls. These two ways of looking at the world intersect and overlap, to be sure, but understood individually they may be interpreted as follows: V E 1994 PRESIDENT'S REPORT

President Richard Warch we're different: HOSPITABLE AND HOSTILE CLIMATE

A N IN HOSPITABLE C LIMATE decline in the number of high school graduates which started in 1980, the forthcoming recovery A few months ago, the Ideas Network of will vary by region and by state. Of the roughly National Public Radio carried a feature on the 750,000 additional students who are expected to difficulties faced by selective colleges in attracting graduate from high school in 2008-09 compared to students, a program that featured Lawrence. That 1991-92, 70 percent will reside in the west and the such a program was conceived and aired, and that south. The northcentral region, which includes it used Lawrence as the example, may serve as a , is expected to have the smallest metaphor for the inhospitable climate argument. recovery-only 15 percent over 91-92 levels and Although we have reached the bottom of the still a far cry from the numbers attained at the

3 peak in 1979. Furthermore, the racial and ethnic universities today. composition of high school graduates will also All things considered, Lawrence did quite well change, with students from historically underrepre­ in weathering the demographic crisis of the '80s. sented groups-especially blacks and Hispanics­ Total degree candidate enrollment increased from becoming an increasingly larger fraction of the 1,018 in the fall of 1983 to 1,144 last fall, and we whole. The challenge for higher education and for have seen substantial improvement in the quality Lawrence is to serve these kinds of students in the of the entering students as measured by standard­ coming decades more effectively than we have in ized tests and high school performance-a 65 the past. point increase in the average SAT combined score; a 3 point increase in average ACT compos­ ite score; and an increase from 29 percent to 51 percent of the entering freshmen ranking in the top decile of their high school classes between the fall of 1983 and the fall of 1993. In a moment of fancy, we may have entertained the notion in the late '70s that all Lawrence had to do was to make it to the other side of the demographic chasm and all would be as it once was. But the world has changed over the last decade and we must come to grips with the new reality, a new set of challenges that make The enrollment gains reported for higher the demographic crisis pale in comparison. The education over the last decade, then, have been competition for traditional students among selec­ primarily the result of increases in the participa­ tive colleges has been intense. The name of the tion of women, minorities, and older adults game in the '80s was market research, developing a returning to college or enrolling for the first time. niche, enhancing programs and services to be more These last, or nontraditional learners, make up the "attractive" to students, and the development in majority of the enrollment at a significant number the media of a variety of college rating schemes of institutions. Lawrence, and most other selective designed to help students and their parents sort four-year private liberal arts colleges, have out the choices. The emphasis has been on the continued to serve mainly traditional-age college inputs to the educational process, and this has students-18 to 22 year olds right out of high deflected our attention from the outcomes. school, a group that only makes up roughly half of But there is more: a survey several years ago all students enrolling in the nation's colleges and reported that only 6 percent of the families with

4 MESSAGE FROM THE PRESIDENT

18 year olds can afford the average tuition at an independent college­ and that datum says nothing about either the academic preparation of those 18 year olds or their interest in liberal arts and sciences or music education at small residential colleges. So price and cost have become dominant factors in college selection, a consideration that has taken on even greater import when taken in concert with growing concerns about post-graduate employment opportunities. Added to all of that is wide­ spread confusion and/or ignorance about liberal education, a style of undergraduate education that many young people and their parents neither understand nor value and whose benefits they do not believe comport with their interests or intentions. Concerns about jobs, careers, and financial issues, therefore, continue to be an issue for college students in general, and Lawrence students are no exception. The Cooperative Institutional Research Program's Freshman Survey reported that a record number of last year's college freshmen said that a very important reason ... the world has changed for attending college is to "be able to make more money" (75.1 percent compared to only 49.9 percent in 1971). over the last decade Similarly, all-time highs were reached in the percentages and we must come to grips who said that a "very important" reason they picked their college was its "low tuition" (32 percent), or because they with the new reality, were "offered financial assistance" (31.6 percent). More a new set of challenges college freshmen than ever are planning to pursue advanced degrees after they finish college ( 65 percent, that make the compared to 55 percent the year before and 50 percent in demographic crisis pale in the early '70s). The emphasis by students on careers and employment comparison. is also present on the Lawrence campus. Such concerns showed up in the results of the Small College Goals Inventory administered to senior students a year and a half ago in preparation for the planning process. Of the new freshmen entering Lawrence last fall, 73 percent of those responding to our administration of the Freshman Survey noted that a very important reason to attend college was to "get a better job." But as the country begins to recover from the recession, it is becoming increasingly clear that the nature of work in America has changed, perhaps forever. Unlike past economic downturns, this one has been distinguished by broad, sweeping cuts in middle-management positions across all sectors of the business community. Increasing productivity, controlling costs, total quality management, process engineering, and the creation of leaner, more responsive and competitive organizations are the topics of the day. On March 31, the Wall Street]ournal noted that what has been up to now called a "jobless" recovery is beginning to look a little different and laid-off middle managers are now getting placed more quickly. The article also noted that most companies are still cutting payrolls and some industries are still down-sizing.

5 In addition, USA Today recently devoted that my college is failing to receive certain benefits significant coverage to the current job situation. from government, but that I seem unable to Closer to home, Nancy Truesdell, Lawrence's prevent government from doing bad things to my director of career services, attended a conference college." Not all of the things government does last spring where Manpower, Inc. presented its qualify as bad, I realize, but in talking about latest figures and discussed the rising use of inhospitable climate it is worth acknowledging the "contingent" workers, employees hired on a burdens placed on the college by such things as temporary or contractual basis, and sometimes the Campus Crime and Student Right to Know Act, the Drug Free Workplace Act, new accredita­ tion and accounting standards, and just-issued regulations governing the reauthorization of the Higher Education Act, each and all of which impose new criteria and demands for evaluating and reporting on our competence and performance. Many of the new regulations apply criteria for performance without regard to the sector of higher education involved. Four-year degree-granting colleges and universities are treated the same as vocational and occupational schools. Some rules bear on areas traditionally the purview of institutions, such as acceptable academic progress, program length, and definitions of credit hours. Some are extremely broad. For example, institutions must complete surveys conducted as part of the Integrated Postsecondary Education Data System (!PEDS) or "any other federal collection effort, as designated by the Secretary [of Education] regarding data on postsecondary institutions" in order to participate in federal student aid programs. Many of the new criteria are quantitative in nature. The new State Postsecondary Review without full benefits such as health insurance, sick Entities (SPREs) created by the Higher Education leave, and vacation time. The most recent rule of Act amendments are being required by the thumb for counseling students on their future Secretary of Education to set minimum acceptable careers is to tell them to expect to change jobs levels for completion/graduation rates, rates of seven to nine times and switch careers two to certification and licensure, withdrawal rates, three times over the course of their working lives. and placement rates of graduates. Institutions Furthermore, state and federal governments are "triggered" for review by the SPRE would have to contributing to the inhospitable atmosphere meet these acceptable levels in order to retain through growing intrusiveness and a general sense access to federal financial aid for their students. that higher education-the last unregulated indus­ The joining of the quality and cost of higher try, if you will-ought to be regulated. As a fellow education as a serious public issue is readily seen in Associated Colleges of the Midwest president put the language used in some of the proposed rules. it in Washington last April, "My concerns are not The following example is taken from the proposed

6 MESSAGE FROM THE PRESIDENT

rules for implementing the new standards for recognizing accrediting agencies as part of the Higher Education Act. "The statutory definition of an institution of higher education provides the framework for a shared responsibility among accrediting agencies, states, and the federal government to ensure that the "gate" to [student financial aid programs] is opened only to those institutions that provide students with quality education or training worth the time, energy, and money they invest in it."

And while on the topic of money, inhospitality emerges once more. One commentator on higher education's prospects put it this way: "All signals are that the national .. state and federal economic outlook is tight. The long era of economic expansion is over; since the end of World War II, the governments are U.S. has experienced a long period of economic prosperity contributing to the with minor, short-term fluctuations. This rosy picture is not likely to continue. One real prospect is for severe inhospitable recession. At best, we can look forward to a long period atmosphere through of stagflation-little growth; various sectors or regions in trouble; no expectations of good news on the growing intrusiveness and economic front. a general sense that "Most [institutions of higher education] are already living with the reality of a funding squeeze. My message: higher education-the last it's time to let go of this as a complaint. It is NOT temporary, somehow distracting you from what you really unregulated industry, want to do. It's the new reality.... The challenge is to if you will- accept the constrained funding picture and still find ways to prosper." Simply put, we're dealing with a flattening ought to be regulated. of revenue sources with no concomitant reduction in expenditures, and with increasing calls on our resources for financial aid and for physical plant maintenance thrown in for good measure. These may be, as the Chinese put it, interesting times, but they are hardly cheering times and there is no avoiding the hard realities that the inhospitable climate poses for us, in admissions, in the conduct of our mission, in coping with government regulation, and in confronting real economic constraints. If I have not left you gasping by what I've detailed so far, here's more, this iteration under the rubric of Hostile Climate.

A HOSTILE CLIMATE

At the Associated Colleges of the Midwest Presidents meeting in Washington last April, Terry Hartle, vice president for government relations at the American Council on Education, spoke to us in

7 anticipation of our visit with David Longenacker years ago," they write. "And even if you wanted to at the Department of Education. We had spent make such an argument you'd have a tough time much time talking about the onerous provisions of proving your point. Few measures of actual quality Section H of the regulations governing the reau­ of education exist. Only a handful of institutions thorization of the Higher Education Act, and Mr. make any effort to compare the skills of entering Hartle warned us that we had only seen the begin­ students to those who graduate. As a result many ning. The view of higher education in "this town," parents hand over their tuition money to buy as he put it-"this town" being a favorite phrase reputation-not education .... So without any among Washingtonians, as if the nation's capital evidence that quality is improving, how can it be was simply some small burg somewhere with its that the nation's 3,600 colleges and universities are own mores and world view-is simple and straight­ charging so much more and yet are under such forward: faculty don't teach; students don't learn; financial stress?" What is important to note here is not that the question is posed of why a college education costs so much, but that the question is framed in the context of quality-if colleges and universities are going to charge these kinds of prices, then the quality of the education they provide ought to be increased, articulated, and demonstrated. At bottom, the fact seems to be that even as the importance of higher education is recognized and the international competitiveness of American higher education is applauded, American society today has less respect for the higher education community than it did a generation ago. The 1980s brought us Charles Sykes's Profscam and Allan Bloom's The Closing of the American and the costs are too high. Mind, both assaults on the integrity of the And the view from "that town" is held by professorate. Beyond these assaults, however, we others elsewhere as well. Some of you may have witnessed innumerable instances where higher seen-several friends of the college have sent education contributed to its own difficulties. In a me-the March 15 issue of Financial World, which September 1991 article entitled "An End to contained an article titled, "No One Runs the Sanctuary," the authors provide a telling summary Place: The sorry mismanagement of America's col­ of higher education's other "failures" that have leges and universities," in which the authors pre­ contributed to the lowered level of confidence sent a less-than-cheerful picture of the current we're now experiencing. Their summary includes problems of the higher education community. "No institutional avoidance of the responsibility for defender of the university system claims that defining purpose with the result that institutions increased tuition has actually made the education try to be all things to all people; the persistent offered any better than it was ten, twenty, or thirty image of college as an "elite enclave" for young

8 MESSAGE FROM THE PRESIDENT

men and women 19 to 22 years old; the increasing commercialization of higher education, including the emphasis on athletics and the provision of a wealth of goods and services, that move the focus away from the heart of the enterprise; athletic programs run amok; doctored transcripts for student athletes; scientific misconduct and fraud; the anti-trust suit in which some of the most selective institutions were accused of price­ collusion; personal excesses on the part of faculty and college and university presidents; excessive and misapplied overhead charges on government research contracts; and, I would add, fraud and abuse in the financial aid system. The writers go on to conclude that the truth of the charges-either generally or as applied to any given institution-is irrelevant. What matters is that we have reached an end "to the public perception of the collegiate campus as a place of sanctuary, a place where values other than the purely financial might prevail, where commitment to freedom of expression and truly unfettered inquiry guarantees a standard of conduct exceeding that observed by the population at large. The message is that whatever their claims to a special calling, these institutions are no different, no better, no longer exempt American society today from public scrutiny and caricature. Colleges and universi­ ties appear neither able nor willing to hold faculty has less respect for accountable for the quality of education they provide. the higher Tenure is viewed not as a necessary guarantee of academic freedom, but as protection from accountability and as the education community assurance of economic advantage to a privileged class. than it did The practical consequence is that institutions of higher education can expect less of the public purse and more of a generation ago. public intervention., Three years later, that's what we've reaped: more public intervention, more public mistrust, more demands for accountability, more insistence on institutional improvement. These impingements take many forms, but one of them in fact offers us a useful and positive response: assessment. Too many of us, I fear, are so distraught by the fact that assessment is now a requirement for accreditation-that it comes at us, as it were, from "outside" the academy-that we fail to see its promise. When that view prevails, it takes two forms: one is to view assessment as a strategy to confirm that everything's ok; but everything is not ok- our admissions pool is too shallow, our retention rate is too low, our institutional attention to modes of student learning is too ill-formulated, our commitment to continual improvement too episodic. Some of us may profess an Old view of the college: "It doesn't get any better than this." One appreciates the vote of confidence and of self­ confidence, and in most respects that is precisely the claim we ought to make. But at the same time, it had better get better. Our future depends on it. The second view, marginally more helpful than the first, is to adopt a

9 minimalist approach and to devise an assessment are. We do not want to imitate the preacher who program that is least interruptive of business as wrote in the margin of one of h is sermons, "pound usual. The proponents of this position often put it the pulpit; the point is weak." If in any shape or this way: there is no way on earth that the North fashion the point is weak, the first task is not to Central Association of Colleges and Schools is not state it with greater conviction and volume, but to going to accredit Lawrence, so let's not jump improve the point. At Lawrence, we ought to be through a bunch of hoops unnecessarily. attending to improvement. Here we circle back to where I began: In reflecting on this rather dismal recitation, "But we're different." The charges of a lack of I'm reminded of the story of Farmer Jones, who institutional focus does not apply here; faculty had an old grandfather clock in his front hall, inattentiveness to teaching does not characterize which he loved very much, winding it daily and keeping it in good repair. He listened with pleasure to the sweet tones of its hourly chimes. One night, as Farmer Jones lay in bed, the grandfather clock struck thirteen. Hearing those chimes, he leaped from his bed and roused his family and field hands and assembled them in front of the farmhouse. "Why have you awakened us and brought us out here?" the family and field hands asked. "My friends," Farmer Jones replied, "there's work to be done, because it's later than it's ever been before." And here's the good news. We're doing that work. The strategic plan­ ning in which five task forces have been engaged for the past year-soon to be assimilated and articulated as a strategic plan with attendant opera­ tional plans-is well underway. That process is already paying dividends us; our students learn; we don't abuse student~ and a first iteration of a planning document was athletes; our financial aid default rates hover at provided for trustee review at the annual meeting about 2 percent; we've never misapplied overhead this fall. charges on government grants, and so on. To all We're also working on the assessment issue. Last of this some would say that higher education is May, a representative from the North Central misunderstood, or at least Lawrence and like­ Association of Colleges and Schools visited cam­ minded colleges are misunderstood, that we pus and met with several of us to describe the haven't "made our case." And there is truth to assessment requirement. We were encouraged by that observation. But to leave it there, it seems to his report, namely, that North Central has no pre­ me, is to miss the point. It doesn't matter that existing assessment grid that will be laid on many of the charges that are being leveled at the Lawrence and that our assessment procedures academy do not pertain to Lawrence. The more should reflect our institutional culture and our important fact is that we can be better than we own interests and needs. We were also challenged

10 MESSAGE FROM THE PRESIDENT

by his report, and here is where much more work needs to be done, namely, that assessment needs to be coupled with improvement and that the most salient aspect of assessment is not the instruments we use to collect information but the conversations we have about the information we've collected. Conversations of that sort-in this highly individualistic faculty community-will not come easily or naturally to some, but I believe there is also great receptivity and even enthusiasm among many to engage them. Gauging our expectations of and for students in light of their experiences and achievements should give us ample evidence to mold our curriculum, our teaching, and the campus culture to serve students more effectively. Assessment, if we embrace it fully and do it right, can get our eyes individually and collectively on the main chance of liberal education at Lawrence: student learning. The president of Antioch has noted that "most of what happens in student learning, especially how faculty contribute to it, is unexamined and It doesn't matter is shrouded in a combination of faculty members' personal that many of the charges experiences as students, some assumptions based on the discipline being taught, and the traditions of the that are being leveled institution. Rarely do most faculty think a great deal at the academy about how students learn, about the implications of recent research on differences in student learning styles and on do not pertain to multiple intelligences, about the developmental issues based on age of the students being taught or about the life Lawrence. The more experiences of students. important fact is that "The truth about our present arrangement is that, for the most part, we do not know how well students have we can be better learned what they've studied. What we know is how well than we are. the material has been covered in the syllabi and how well students have performed on exams, papers, or in class presentations." In short, there are opportunities through assessment to come to terms with these kinds of issues and hence to devise a path along which we can travel toward being a more effective and stimulating learning community. There is work to be done here to be sure. And finally, as the Board of Trustees determined at the spring meeting, there is work to be done through Lawrence 150. In our conversations and considerations about this campaign, its objectives and its intended consequences, we have identified a number of areas where we can demonstrably influence institutional improvement: more prominence and new spaces for science education; greater use and integration of computing and information technologies in the curriculum, perhaps in ways that will change the delivery system in some fundamental ways; more forthright and fruitful connections between college and conservatory; and more resources to secure our future and provide us the wherewithal to respond imaginatively to new opportunities and objectives. Money will not address every one of the

11 MESSAGE FROM THE PRESIDENT

challenges facing us; money will not permit us to and program support in the conservatory; escape responsibility for planning, for assessment, computer technology essential to continual and for improvement; but just as clearly, the lack improvement in teaching and learning in a range of money will constrain us on those and other of disciplines; library and media resources to counts. support our academic mission. Above all, we must If we confront a demographic problem that be prepared to think and plan systematically and threatens our ability to sustain a full enrollment of intelligently about the changes in our teaching students whom we can serve best, including those and learning mission that can both be improved from historically underrepresented populations, and even radically altered by the rapidly emerging then we must look at new approaches to broaden developments in information technology. our applicant pool and to strengthen the college in If we are to improve our retention of students ways that enhance our appeal and reputation. and be more attractive to more of them in a very competitive environment, then we must attend to the quality of student life and devise ways and means to enhance it, intellectually of course, but otherwise as well. These several undertakings-and others as well-will require resources, to be sure, but in all of them, we must be prepared, even eager, to evaluate what we do in terms of our goals, to change what needs changing as we proceed, and to reinforce what we do well. We may not be able to correct the climate by ourselves, but we can make it more likely that Lawrence and the values it represents can survive, even prosper, in a climate not of our making or of our choosing. So as we prepare to launch this campaign, as we broaden our efforts to increase our applicant pool and our retention rate, as we promote the Included in this last should be continued attention planning process and the assessment opportunity, to curricular change that will reflect the growing as we continue to conduct the teaching and learn­ significance of multicultural perspectives in our ing mission of college and conservatory, we should increasingly pluralistic nation and world. be mindful that we face daunting challenges from If we are to sustain and improve the quality of an inhospitable and a hostile climate. But if we education we enable students to acquire, then we can persist and succeed in these undertakings, we must recognize that there is a correlation between might find it possible not only to proclaim but to price and cost, and we must be able to manage prove a Lawrence difference worthy of our cost while we provide the ingredients that are endorsement, our energies, and our esteem. increasingly essential for student learning: the scientific facilities and equipment for student­ faculty research; sufficient faculty, instruments,

12 The 1993-94 fiscal year was a continuation of 1992-93 fiscal year and represents a 6.1 percent Lawrence University's long tradition of balanced increase in current operations. budgets and improving financial strength. Total The major area of increased revenue was tuition revenue and other additions recognized by the and fees which, raised by 5 percent to $20,134 per university amounted to $46.1 million. Total year, showed an increase of $1.5 million to $19.5 expenditures and other deductions were $40.7 million. However, financial aid also showed an million, resulting in a $5.4 million increase in CHART A: ASSETS the net worth of the university to a total net worth of $111.3 million. Individual Cash and Plant and Equipment $35,063,892 funds that showed significant growth were Shorr,rerm Investments 25.86% the endowment fund by $4.2 million and future projects by $1 million. The Common Fund continues to man- Other Assets age the majority of invested assets for the $2,536,315 university. In December 1993, the total for 1.87% invested assets including unrealized gains Other Receivables $1,108,837 reached a high of $93 million. However, as .82% of june 30, 1994, that balance was at $89 million due to market fluctuations. The Student Loans overall performance of the Fund has been $2,595,547 outstanding; $6.6 million was added to the 1.91% endowment in the form of dividends and interest and unrealized gains. The univer­ sity continues to follow the endowment Investments $90,013,953 spending policy which limits spending to a 66.39% percentage increase over the previous year. Total endowment spending amounted to $5.8 million. The outstanding record CHARTB: of gift giving has resulted in signifi- LIABILITIES/FUND BALANCES cant growth in the endowment, Plant Funds totalling $4.2 million. $20,601,135 Annuiry Funds The debt position for Lawrence 15.19% $1,391,751 Accounts Payable 1.03% University did not change significant­ $7,254,088 ly in this fiscal year. Total long-term 5.35% debt was reduced by $120,000 through scheduled amortization and Bonds Payable no additional long-term debt was $17,007,000 incurred. A composite look at the 12.54% balance sheet is displayed in charts A and B in the following column. Current Funds Total revenue and transfers $3,371,433 necessary to support the operating 2.49% budget amounted to $34.6 million. Loan Funds Endowment Funds This was an increase of $2 million $2,569,750 $83,392,264 61.50% over the $32.6 million needed in the 1.90% 13 increase of $839,000 leaving a net increase in total. Major repair projects were allocated at tuition revenue of $695,000. Other significant $805,000, of which the largest project was the increases in revenue categories include gift income $72,600 renovation of Wilson House. Other pro­ for the current year, which increased by 23 percent jects included additional parking, roof replacement, to $2.8 million and auxil- exterior painting, heat~ iary enterprises which ing and air conditioning rose 9 percent to $4.9 upgrades, security items million. related to smoke detec­ On the expense side, tors and the key system, funds directed for window replacement, instructional purposes and concrete repair. increased 9.9 percent Several of these projects to $9.3 million. The came in under budget, only other significant which allowed for increases in expenses $70,000 for additional were the 8.1 percent interior painting and increase in student sidewalk repair during services and the 10.6 the summer months. In percent increase in addition, the university, financial aid, which with the cooperation of raised the level of the Wisconsin Gas & student financial aid Electric Company, hired to $8.8 million. an outside consultant to Financially, Lawrence conduct a campus-wide University continued to energy study. The study William Hodgkiss, vice president for business affairs and manage effectively the resulted in the initiation administration three major financial of a $319,000 lighting components of success; maintaining a competitive and energy control program in 1994-95 with an compensation package for faculty and staff, provid­ expected payback of less than two years. ing the necessary financial assistance to a diverse On behalf of the Lawrence University Business student body, and strengthening the university's Office, l would like to take this opportunity to financial position through the growth of the express appreciation to the many individuals who, endowment and other assets. To continue to be in many diverse ways, contributed to the 1993-94 successful in meeting that challenge, the manage­ financial success of Lawrence University; that ment of the university has engaged in a strategic includes student workers, food services, building planning process that will ensure future success. and grounds, staff, faculty, administration, trustees, Also of interest is the physical facility of and donors. Thank you. Lawrence University. Here again, Lawrence has maintained a high standard of excellence. Planned maintenance and repair of the physical plant has been given additional attention over the last two years and, as such, the university was able to hold operational expenses for physical plant to $2.5 million, which is below the previous year's

14 FINANCIAL RESULTS

CHARTC CURRENT FUND REVENUES

Other Sources Auxiliary $689,687 $4,888,084 1.99% 14.12% Gifts and Grants $2,706,813 7.82%

Endowmem Income $5,895,241 17.03%

Tuition and Fees Governmenc Grants $19,53 1,505 $902,966 56.43% 2.61%

C HART Do CURRENT FUND EXPENDITURES

Auxiliary $4,597,5 75 13.28% Financial A id $8,782,732 25.37% Instruction $9,278,487 26.81%

Debt Service $801,273 2.31% Research $556,571 Physical Plant 1.61% $2,560,825 7.40% Academic Support Institutional $1,306,811 $5,149,685 3.77% Student Services $1,580,337 14.88% 4.57%

15 FINANCIAL RESULTS

COMPARATIVE HIGHLIGHTS

1993-94 1992-93 Percent Change

Tot;al Revenue $34,614,296 $32,636,071 6.1 Tuit,ion and fees 19,531,505 17,997,330 8.5 Auxiliary enterprises 4,888,084 4,484,075 9.0

Total Educational and General Expenditures. 30,016,721 28,100,367 6.8 Instruction 9,278,487 8,441,914 9.9 Student financial aid 8,782,732 7,943,454 10.6 Debt service 801,273 809,006 -1.0

Total Auxiliary Enterprises Expenditures 4,597,575 4,535,704 1.4

Endowment Income 5,895,241 5,922,948 -0.5 Book value 66,542,864 62,892,811 5.8 Market value 89,338,226 86,704,347 3.0 Earnings per share 78.40 82.36 -4.8

Gifts and Grants Current fund-unrestricted 2,827,250 2,300,028 22.9 Current fund-restricted 1,885,430 1,537,911 22.6 Endowment 3,918,693 2,148,252 82.4 Plant and Equipment 2,6!0,907 1,204,381 116.8

Plant and Equipment Book value 74,678,513 70,844,335 5.4 Accumulated depreciation 36,149,079 33,879,494 6.7 Additions 1,457,346 2,351.618 -38.0 Bonded indebtedness 17,007,000 17,127,000 -0.7

Full-time Equivalent Students 1,207 1,192 1.3

16 ND RAISING

total gifts from individuals reached $7.9 million, a 142 percent increase over the preceding year. Of that amount, gifts from Lawrence and Milwaukee­ Downer alumni totaled nearly $5.9 million, another new fund-raising record. Gifts from other individuals-Lawrence parents and friends­ exceeded $2 million. While the dollar achievements are clearly impressive, the number of alumni donors to the college dropped from 58 percent (last year's all-time record) to 54 percent. Nevertheless, Lawrence ranks twelfth in the country this year in terms of its alumni donor participation rate. Gifts to The Lawrence Fund, that portion of our development program that underwrites the college's operating budget, totaled approximately $2 million. Our efforts to strengthen annual support were Gregory A. Volk , vice president for development advanced considerably this past year through and external affairs receipt of a $250,000 challenge grant from an anonymous donor, the parent of a former Lawrence experienced its strongest year ever in student. Under the terms of the challenge, new fund raising during the 1993-94 fiscal year, ending and increased gifts of $50 or more for expendable June 30. Gift income from private sources totaled scholarship support were matched one-to-one. $11.5 million, an increase of 80 percent over last Over the course of the year, 1, 756 donors made year's total of $6.4 million. These strong results new or increased gifts that were eligible for the exceed the long-standing record of $8.49 million match, and the challenge grant effort comfortably received in the 1988-89 fiscal year. exceeded its goal with $353,563 in qualifying As the pie chart of gift income by use on page contributions. 19 indicates, of the $11.5 million in gifts, approxi­ ln response to another anonymous challenge, mately $3.5 million went to the operating budget the Class of 1969 celebrated its twenty-fifth or supported other current expenditures; approxi­ anniversary here last June and announced the mately $4.5 million was added to the endowment; largest twenty-fifth reunion gift ever-$270,000 to approximately $1.6 million went toward renova­ endow a scholarship fund for minority students. tion or expansion of the physical plant, and the Reunion also provided the occasion for a mag­ remaining $1.9 million was in the form of life­ nificent reunion gift from Paul and Kay Schmidt, income gifts, the principal of which we hold in both Class of 1939, of Elkhorn, Wisconsin, in escrow until such time as it is no longer needed to honor of their fifty-fifth class reunion this past meet our life-income obligations to the donors. spring. The Schmidts established a $1.3 million Another $176,000 was received in the form of charitable remainder trust to bolster the principal government grants for equipment and research, of the Paul and Kay Schmidt Scholarship Fund, bringing Lawrence's total of "unearned income" to previously established at Lawrence in 1989; create nearly $11.7 million. an unrestricted endowment fund; and enhance Giving from individuals was particularly strong; the college's plant fund by providing for a future

17 building project. the second major grant from the Keck Foundation Bequest income increased by 43 percent, in support of this nationally recognized model reaching nearly $1.2 million. The recent growth program, which is enabling physics students to in bequest and other deferred gifts reflect the use sophisticated computing tools in advanced concerted efforts we have made in the past two theoretical and experimental courses and in years to strengthen our planned giving program. research projects. Notable among bequests received last year were Several significant gifts to strengthen our those from: endowment resources deserve special mention: D Dr. Elizabeth A. Steffen, M-D '42, a former D The Hutto-Patterson Charitable Foundation of alumni trustee of the college and a physician in Los Angeles created and endowed the Hutto­ Racine, Wisconsin, left more than $200,000 to Patterson Library Fund to support acquisitions augment a scholarship fund in her name begun in the humanities through a grant of$100,000. during her lifetime. The Foundation's president, Clare P. Hutto, C Anne Prioleau Jones, professor emerita of graduated from Lawrence in 1935. French, who taught at Lawrence from 1937 to ::J A scholarship fund in memory of William E. 1976, included an unrestricted provision for Buchanan, former chair of the Lawrence Board $70,000 in her will, funds which have been used of Trustees, was established by a major gift from to create an endowed library fund in her name. the Fox Valley Corporation and contributions D Maybelle E. Mais, '34, a long-term resident of from the Buchanan family. Appleton, and staff member at the Institute for D Oscar C. and Patricia Hamar Boldt established Paper Chemistry, bequeathed more than the Oscar C. and Patricia Hamar Boldt $250,000 to the college, funds which have been Endowed Scholarship Fund through substantial used to purchase musical instruments and gifts over the course of the past year. Mr. Boldt, equipment and provide endowed support for the chief executive officer of The Boldt Group, Conservatory of Music. serves on the college's Board of Trustees. D Henrietta Hafemann Miller, '25, left an Mrs. Boldt, '48, previously established the unrestricted bequest of $315,000 to Lawrence. Patricia Hamar Boldt Chair in Liberal Studies. A high school history teacher in Evanston, ::J Finally, a gift from Cynthia Moeller Stiehl, Illinois, for forty years, Mrs. Miller pioneered '89, a trustee of the college, significantly the introduction of the advanced placement bolstered the endowed resources dedicated to program in Chicago schools and was the Conservatory of Music through the nationally recognized for her teaching. establishment of the Stiehl Conservatory Fund. While corporate giving was down by Our contributors this past year have advanced 13.5 percent, foundation giving increased by teaching and learning at the college as never 56 percent with nearly $1 million in foundation before. We are grateful for such extraordinary gift income. Hence, overall giving from organiza­ support and for the confidence in our efforts that tions increased by 6 percent, providing strong it represents. Thank you. evidence of the continuing strength of our corporate and foundation relations programs. Of particular note is a $250,000 grant from the W. M. Keck Foundation of Los Angeles toward Lawrence's computational physics program. This is

18 FUND RAISING

GIFT INCOME Opera[ions Other $2,!;8,449 BY USE Expendable 19% $1,317,308 Unalloca[ed II% $13,669 1%

Life Income $1,896,651 16% Endowmem $4,540,038 39%

Plam $1,574,129 14% SOURCES OF SUPPORT $12 $10 -- I

I • = Other $4 • . Corp<:>rations &Foundations $2 I . Parents and Friends so 1986·87 1987·88 1988·89 1989·90 1990·91 1991-92 1992·93 1993·94 ALUMNI DONOR Fiscal Year PARTICIPATION

Fiscal Y~ar 19 J .f!fONOR ROLL

Thousands of alumni, parents, and friends of the college, along with *Josephine Breneman Buchanan *R. Jameson and Mary Hamilton ('62) Bums hundreds of corporate and foundation donors, contribute to Lawrence Catherine B. Cleary every year, and the college values and appreciates every gift, both for *Walter R. and Ann Shattuck ('39) Courtenay Robert G. Cuff the vote of confidence it provides and for the assistance it gives in *Helen G. Daniels, M-D '52 strengthening and sustaining our educational mission. Listed on the Ulrry A. ('81) and Katherine R. ('82) Domash *John H. Ellerman, '58 following pages are the names of those individuals whose support during *Karl D.t and Helen Buscher Franke, '60 the 1993-94 fiscal year qualified them for membership in The Founders *Esther Graef Hamilton, '20 *Chris J. and Evelyn Hartwig Club, and those corporate and foundation donors of $1 ,000 or more *Raymond H. ('38) and Jane Cobb Herzog during that period. The roster of the Lawrence-Downer Legacy Circle as *Catheryn E. Hoehn, '64 *Dorothy A. Hoehn of june 30, 1994 follows. Alumni donors at all levels will receive a copy *Janet Gillingham Hoffmaster, '34 of their class's 1993-94 honor roll with class agent letters to be mailed *Margaret Banta Humleker, '41 *J. Thomas ('60) and Julie Esch ('61) Hurvis in the spring. *Olin E. Jessup, '30 *Harold E. ('72) and Mary Donn Rossi ('73) Jordan Many gifts received by Lawrence each year are given in memory or *Michael H. and Kathryn Hiett ('58) jordan honor of friends, classmates, relatives, or members of the college faculty *George Keirn *Marjorie Buchanan Kiewit, '43 and staff. The names of those so honored during the 1993-94 fiscal *George and Marguerite Kress year are also listed here, followed by the names of new endowed funds *Charles S. ('38) and Marcia Litts ('42) Larsen *Mr. ('71) and Mrs. John A. Luke, Jr. created at the college during the same period. *Esther Norris MacEachran, '32 Every effort has been made to ensure the accuracy of the following Donald James and Julia Him ('33) Maclaurin Joan Swamlow McDougal, '52 lists. If you note an error or omission, please accept our sincere apologies *E. James and Virginia Cossmann ('43) Quirk and inform the Lawrence University Development Office by calling *John P. and Jean Shannon Reeve, '34 *Arthur P. and Catharine Beals ('39) Remley 414-832-6552. *Nelson J. and Penny Rohrbach *Edward L. and Nancy Scarff *Robert J. ('51) and Joan Schaupp THE FOUNDERS CLUB *Paul F. and Katharine Pitman Schmidt, '39 Douglru A. Brengel, '72, president *Charles A. ('37) and Charlotte B. Schwartz *John S. and Mary B. Sensenbrenner *Frank C. Shattuck The Founders Club was PLATINUM SEAL $10,000 Viola Sperb, '34 established in 1972 to recognize GOLD SEAL $5,000 *Carl and Cynthia Moeller ('89) Stiehl SILVER SEAL $2,000 *Johannes A. and Margaret K. Van den Akker those individuals whose strong *William B. ('41) and Margery M. Weiss BRONZE SEAL $1,000 commitment to Lawrence and *Barbara Wriston *F. Stansbury ('36) and generous contributions to its tCarmen Negrcscou ('31) Young In addition, life membership is programs place them in the first Merton S. ('32) and Hilda E. Zahrt accorded to those individuals who rank of the college's supporters. By GOLD SEAL have contributed $100,000 or their involvement and commit­ *Anonymous (3) more to Lawrence or have pre~ Manuel Arango Arias, '59 ment, members of The Founders *Dougla.o; A. ('72) and Lynn Brengel viously gained life membership Club extend and enliven the phil­ John H. Buchanan under earlier criteria. *Ottilia Buerger, '38 anthropic example provided by RichardV.Case, '65 Amos A. Lawrence and jason PLATINUM SEAL *George M. ('51) and Marjorie Olsen ('44) Chandler John E. and Mary Abele *Claire Langstadt Gehin, '24 Downer. The club's membership *Anonymous (1) *Jack C. and Jane Christiansen Kuoni (M-D '44) Hand roster recognizes those individuals *Emery J. Ansorge, '33 *William 0. ('66) and Marcia Hochkammer 'Genevro Thome Bcgg, '36 *Donald F. ('50) and Elisabeth Foulke ('48) Jaba.> who made gifts to the college dur­ *Judith E. Blazer *Thomas C. ('58) ;md Marlene C. Kayser ing the 1993-94 fiscal year (July I, *Oscar C. and Patricia Hamar ('48) Boldt WilliamR.Kelleu *Philip D. and Rosemary Wiley Bradley, '35 Scott R. Matsumoto, '79 1993 through june 30, 1994) in •Bruce M. ('69) and Elaine Eldredge Brown *Paul F. and tAnnabclle Leverson (M-D '37) McGuire the following amounts: B. L and Margaret Browning Thomas G. and Nancy Buchanan McLoughlin *Roben C. and Bonnie Glidden Buchanan, '62 Charles H. ('57) and Barbara A. Merry

20 *Victor I. and Marilee Minahan Lenore E. Maleug, '33 *Jeffrey H. and Margaret Robandt Colman, '76 *Ned K. ('66) and Helen Ban;hc\1 ('67) Nemachcck "James and Marian Ming Chester C. and Joan Gerlach Cook, '43 *Overton B. Parrish, '55 David L. Mitchell, '71 *Dr. ('64) and Mrs. Richard M. Cowen *Virginia Steffensen Purdy, '38 *Phillips M. ('51) and Meredith Holmes ('53) Montross John Evan ('47) and Jean Pond ('44) Dever *Theodora B. Reeve, '29 "John P.t and Ruth Chapelle ('38) Nash *George Th. Diamandopoulos, '51 •Dale A. ('69) and Helen Schuparra RobertS. ('37) and Jean O'Boyle Shaun E. ('68) and Susan Buesing ('69) Donnelly William D. and Nancy Dian ('77) Sielx.-.::ker "Warren F. and Sandm Parsons *Charles L. and Sylvia Dostal Lillian K. Sing William H. Pearce, '79 *Edith M. Dudgeon, '34 Donald A. ('64) and Janette Utter ('66) Smart •Eugene A. and Sally Haven ('38) Pelizzoni Mr. and Mrs. D. A. Dunn Edgar W. Spanagcl, '28 George L. ('67) and Kay Christensen ('66) Peltier Mary Edmonds, M-0 '43 Robert and Dormhy Bleycr (M-D '44) Strze\czyk "Verne R. and Marion Chester Read Diana Fox Ekedahl, M-D '56 Edward I.t and Douglas M. ('55) and June Jacobsen ('54) Reimer Bert E. ('58) and Suz.anne Whitmore ('57) Elliott Dorothy Puclicher (M-D '44) Van Houscn Mary D. Re.stifo, '63 'Brent B. ('78) and Nina ('82) Erensel "William H. and Phyllis Leverenz ('48) Younger *Alan C. Reynolds, '72 "Ronald A. and Kristine J. ('68) Erickson Thomas T. Rogers, '65 john W. and Sharon Fenlon SILVER SEAL *John H. Runkel, '54 "Mr. ('68) and Mrs. Steven M. Figi Barbara Buchanan Aalfs Jame5Sattizahn, '42 Rachel E. Finger, '51 Richard and Anne Lackie ('50) Andersen Beulah Bowden Severns, '33 •GeraldT.Flom,'52 Robert A. ('64) and Patricia Anker *Stanley E. ('34) and Dorothy Brown ('35) Severson "Martha Benton Rom, '52 "Virginia Jensen Banta, '44 *Donald C. and Jane Shepard Esther E. Franke Hartley B. and Ruth Baldwin ('54) Barker *Marion Hammond Shepard David E. and Evelyn Wiley Frasch, '69 Margaret Butler Barrett, '3 I *William A. Siekman, '41 William J. ('69) and Sandy French *Gertrude Boyce Bergman, '26 Wayne C. Sigl RobertS. ('57) and Barbara Fieweger ('56) Furman •Mr. ('50) and Mrs. Earl W. Berry Charlot Singleton, '67 August W. ('79) and Kathy Geise "Walrer H. ('54) and Jane Doherty Bissell Marion M. Smith, M-D '35 John D. ('72) and Cynthia Libbey ('73) Gilpin David B. and Linda Korf ('72) Bogan Robert J. ('79) and Janet Steiner ('82) Stevens Earl A. Glosser, '51 *Thomas J. and Renee Goral ('85) Boldt James C. Stewart Richard N. ('64) and Susan Nelson ('65) Goldsmith Mr. and Mrs. Wallace R. Bornhoeft *Dr. and Mrs. Curtis W. Tarr BenGraebel, '78 *Eliz.abeth W. Boyce *Peter J. and Patricia Webb Thomas, '62 *Phyllis Weikart Greene, M-D '47 Helen E. Brown *Basil K. and Jane Tucker Vasiliou, '72 Steven D. ('66) and Annice Gregerson *Charles B. and CharlotteS. ('72) Buchanan Gregory A. and Gretta Volk "Annette Gribble Marjorie !wen Buckley, '44 *Marjorie James von Tongeln, M-D '43 *Jean Keast Gridley, '41 Philip}. Burck, '58 *Carl W. Voss F. James and Mary Lamers Grist, '50 *MargaretCarroll,'61 *Irwin H. ('29) and Margaret Croissant Wensink *Rose Buehler Grosse, '49 David R. ('56) and Jacklyn Anderson ('58) Challoner Gus A. and Helen Zuehlke Nancy Kingsbury Gros.sklag, '49 Jane Heath Oxhranc, '36 William C. Gruetzmacher, '73 *Mr. and Mrs. Howard Curler BRONZE SEAL *David C. ('60) and Patricia Hackwonhy *Richard E. ('61) and Karin Cusic Scott Underwood ('62) and Diana L. Adam *John H.t and Laura Thickens ('38) Halford Hugh F. ('68) and Mary Ross Denison *John H. Allen Allan R. ('51) and Jane Cole ('52) Hallock *William B. ('49) and Carol Leichsenring ('52) Dresser Mr. and Mrs. Edward J. Andrew *Laurence C. ('51) and *FerneDugger,'28 *Anonymous (6) Patricia Hammel ('SO) Hammond R. H. English, '30 John D. ('52) and Barham Schroeder ('56) Arbuthnot Marion Neumann Hartman, '34 James D. and Patricia Ericson Bryan H. Arvcson *Virginia Haruidge, M-D '41 Vi rginia Wahl Ernest, M-D '51 *Dorothy Rohrer Auld, '25 John W. ('67) and Sam Johnson ('69) Hein "James L. ('58) and Judith Walsh ('59) Fetterly Calvin W. and Lois A. Aurand Stephen F. Heller, '65 *Joseph B. and Berenice Davis (M-D '22) Fligman William J. Bacr, '72 Martha K. Hemwall ('74) and John C. Peterson ('73) J. Terrence Franke, '68 Jeffrey C. Ballowe, '77 Charles V. Henry, '90 Mr. and Mrs. William M. Frick john J W. Battin, '61 *Senator and Mrs. Douglas Henry Robert C. Fritz, '73 Edwin R. and Monica Worsley Bayley, '40 Susan Fey Hoffe, '64 *David H. ('67) and Jane Paulson ('69) Gregerson Eli:abeth R. Benson, '69 Roger M. and Catherine L ('74) Holcomb *Ethel Wheeler Grimm, '19 *Richard H. ('59) and Paul and Betty Hollinger *Frank F. ('44) and Carol Snyder Haack Gloria Grummel (M-D '61) Bergman John G. and Barbara Boon Hollingsworth, '52 *Phyllis M. Haeger, '50 •Peter R. ('64) and Susan E. Betzer Harriet Biersach Hopkinson, M-D '31 *Norman E. ('58) and Sondra Willoughby Harden Bruce R. ('53) and 1\ajean Bigford John F. and Cynthia Russell Howe, '67 *Philip K. and Barbara Boyce Harvey, '43 *James]. ('71) and Barbam Devine Bode Peter D. ('69) and Cheryl Humleker Paul G. Hayden, '42 John D. and Kay Boentje Clare Patterson Hutto, '35 Richard A. ('61) and Sharon Lee Heinemann Herbert E. Boge, '43 Linda Buchanan Jacob *Fred and Phyllis Herbolzheimer JohnS. Borges, '57 Nancy Pre5ton Johnson, '54 *Russell E. Heston, '70 David L. Brown, '69 *tFlorence Ross Johnston, '14 Donald R. and Marilyn Hibben Dave Brubeck *Mardi Bryant Jones, '45 *Barbam Bryant Hiller, '68 Robert ('75) and Maxine Peters Brucker *Richard L. and Beverly Pearson ('49) Joutras *James E. and Virginia Smith ('61) Hoelter James R. Buck, '68 Arthur H. ('41) and Jean West ('42) Kaemmer Winifred Sullivan Johnson, '29 "Kenneth C. Buesing, '40 John C. and Susan Stillman ('72) Kane *Andrew H. Kalnow, '74 Edward T. Butt, '68 *Loretta J. Kaplan, '77 *Arthur G. ('38) and Barbara B. Kroos Bradley D. Childs,'69 Delmar Karlen, '66 Arnold W. Lau, '81 Jerome R. Clifford, '68 Andrew J. and Virginia Post Kass, '69 *Harold]. ('46) and Elaine johnson {'47) Lucdeman Kenneth M. Coffman, '43

Listings reflect gifts and other commitments received between july 1, 1993 and]une 30, 1994. • Lifetime and current donor t Deceased 21 G. Frederick and Susan Kasten Marilyn Low Schmitt, '60 William H. ('78) and Maria Antonieta Bonifas •Richard H. ('57) and Karen Ansorge ('58) Kimberly Dale R. Schuh, '70 David A. ('62) and Leeza Bray •nwmas 0. ('54) and Natal it! Schroeder ('56) Kloehn "'Winton A. and Ruth Marie \wen ('40) Schumaker James R. and Marianne Brown Allen Z. and Elirobeth Collin ('60) Kluchman Wilham M. Schutte TI1omas W. ('48) and tJenny Vonck Busch •Joseph M. ('50) and Althea Hunting ('51) Konenhof Pe[Cr A. Scmess Mr. and Mrs. George M. Chester *DonaldS. ('50) and Robert W. Simmons, '67 J. Chapman Chester Jean Alexander (M.D '53) Koskinen •Rudy E.t and Mary Wood ('45) Small Mr. and Mrs. William M. Chester, Jr. Harry M. ('77) and Julie M. ('80) Jansen Kraemer Charlotte J. Smith, '45 George B. Christensen, '26 "'Mr. ('66) and Mrs. Patrick R. Kroos Carence W. and Jean Steffen ('37) Smith Norman M. ('35) and Analoyce E. C lapp Anhur and Daisy Estes (M-D '39) Kursch Richard and Marion Longyear (M-D '43) Sonderegger Janet Colman Dr. and Mrs. Dean H. Lauer Tyrust and Betsy Stefl Harold H. ('47) and Genrude Murphy Croghan Charles F. and Estella L. Lauter Elizabeth Me Kone Stil\m;m, M-D '33 tMarjorie Mehne Culmer, '33 Charles A. and Barbara Smith ('87) Lawton •R. Lawrence ('47) and Agaiha Quinn Storms R. Eric Dyrud, '67 "'John T. ('58) and Sheila Andersen ('59) Leatham •Mary Alsted Strange William T. ('76) and Linda Barr Eggbeer Tiwmas Leech, '36 Dorthy 1. Oeflcin Stroh, '37 J. L. and Jean Loven (M-D '41) Ehrcnhaft "'Josephine Buchanan Lcn(C~;tcy, '31 •jon W. B. ('58) and Susan Scidmore ('60) Stromberg Roberta Johnson Ellerman, '59 •Roben H. ('40) and Margaret Laing Leverenz Elisabeth A. Stull, '65 Russell C. Rom, '24 "'Maurice G. ('54) and Alice Pommerenke Locklin Grace L. Stumpf, M-D '34 Ruth Mudler Fox, M-D '24 joanne Macinnis Steven T. Syverson and Diana Alvarado-Syverson tRobert P. Gardiner Dorothy Mahlum MariTmiguchi Thomas R. ('39) and Nancy Moore Gendman Brian T. and Diane L. Majeski, '78 •Thomas W. and Andrea Tatlock G. Jack ('55) and Carol Clossay ('58) Gevaart Philip W. {'71) and Nancy 5. Mancini Karen E. Tews, '80 W. Stephen ('62) and joan Marie Gilboy Paul C. ('62) and Myrna Rongsted ('60) Manz Larry and Alison Osborne ('71) Thomas Mr. and Mrs. Philip H. Glatfelter Ill John B. and Nell Menn William R. ('50) and Dorothy Belu ('51) Thompson James E. ('38) and Beatie Gmeincr Charles and Marcia Duin (M-D '61) Mcmkowski •Mr. and Mrs. Arthur H. Tichenor, '39 Mr. and Mrs. John E. Goode Raymond J. ('41) and Marie Miller Marguerite Greb Tirk, '39 Lynne Ansorgc Gorlinsky, '66 "'Virginia Jacobs Hill Mitchell, '75 Marian Kirkpatrick Torian, M-D '44 Jane Wood Guy, '38 "'Kenneth I. and Jane Rettke {M-D '36) Moe •Dr. and Mrs. Carl M. Vail John A. and Cindy Scidmore Hackworthy, '62 John and Nancy Mommscn Carl A. Valentine, '47 Richard 0. ('7 t) and Denise Dyer ('70) Haight Robert Y. Moore, '53 Thomas D. Vallone, '79 William H. and Katherine Benton ('48) Hale Jane Grise Morrow, '41 Anton R. ('65) and Maria Finiuo Valukas Mr. ('62) and Mrs. Jon P. Hedrich "'Robert J. ('34) and Harriet Mortimer Mrs. Corwin VanHousen Mr. and Mrs. Richard Howland Mrs. C. Everett Moses •Peter V. ('59) and Judith Touzalin Walch tRobert E. Hunt, '32 "'George P. ('43) and joan Mueller •George W. and tHelen Hansen Warch Howard H. and Linda Strane Hutchinson, '64 "'David C. ('59) and jeannie S. Mulford "'Richard and Margot Warch Alben M. and Cynthia B. Johnson Frank F. Mulkey, '38 Steven G. and M. Priscilla ('69) Weaver Samuel C. Johnson Margaret hen Murphy, '60 "'Richard K. ('57) and Carol Weber Henry H. Kimberly, '42 Christopher W. Murray, '75 •Mr. ('62) and Mrs. Thomas R. Weber tDorothy Brenner Laird, '34 Scott D. Myers, '79 Marc S. ('77) and Leslie Ann Bellows ('78) Weinberger Estelle McGowin Ltrson Katie Neal •Esther Berlowitz Weiss, M-D '32 Peter N. and Maryle Ltrson Jerry Nightingale, '68 Harmony Weissbach, M-D '36 Alice Fahlsrrom Leavitt Jamin Nixon, '80 John F. ('41) and Joan Glasow ('42) White Joan B. Leech Irene Neergaard Nydaht, '33 David J. ('81) and Julea Totzke ('82) Wille Marilyn Lehner "'Edmund H. and Janet Spencer ('54) Ollmann Susan Anderson Wise, '70 tMrs. Ernst Mahler David H. and Melinda Olson Peter Wincnborg, '69 John V. and Gretchen Wilterding ('52) Maring Dean Z. and Susan Voss Pappas, '69 John J. ('76) and Anne Webster ('75) Wolfe Henry B. and Hester White ('3 7) Maury Joseph F. ('69) and Francine Patterson James C. Workman Marian Brencklc McConochie, M-D '28 Dwight A. Peterson, '55 Jerome F. Ziehlke, '58 Mary Thomas McCorison, '26 tMargaret Mercer Portman, '37 •Richard W. ('55) and Carol Yates ('56) Zuehlke E. S. Me Loud Mary F. Poulson •Marilyn Edwards Zumberge, '47 George W. and Susan Feith Mead Mojmir and Joyce Povolny Helen Anderson Mead "'Douglas H. and Virginia Stone Powell, '56 ADDITIONAL LIFE MEMBERS John C. and Barbara Otis Nelson, '52 Jerry S. and Constance Clarke ('55) Purdum Margaret H. Anderson Mr. and Mrs. AndreW. G. Newburg "'Joan Radford Anonymous John R. ('30) and Edna A. Newbury Richard L. Rapport 11, '65 Janet M. Ansorge, '62 Mr. and Mrs. HenryS. Noble Robert L. and Helen Zeh Reetz, '52 Frances V. Armalas, M-D '34 David W. ('55) and Janet Evans ('54) Ortlieb joseph and Anita Cast ('35) Reichard tHarrien Hibbard Armstrong, '32 W. Irving Osbomc H. Keith ('42) and Dcltora Framberg ('44) Ridgway George ('45) and Anne Banta Mr. and Mrs. Alfred H. Panhum "'Jeffrey D. ('70) and )one Bocher ('72) Riester Ethc\M. Barber, '34 Perry A. Peterson, '38 W. Douglas Roberts, '64 Mr. and Mrs. t F. John Barlow J. Russell Podzilni, '53 "'Margaret Jennings Robertson, '39 Mr. and Mrs. Jon P. Barsanti, tGertrude M. Puelicher, M-0 'IS F.WardRosebush,'34 Dean ('47) and Joan Pccrcnboom Bartosic Mr. and Mrs. Bruce B. Purdy, '39 Kendrith M. Rowland ('76) and Nancy E. Fay ('78) Mr. ('62) and Mrs. Gordon A. Becker Craig B. Ranger, '74 Mr. and Mrs. John C. Salmon Burton N. ('28) and Miriam Russell ('29) Behling Hugh L. and Phyllis Anderson ('56) Rubens John A. ('68) and Margaret Stalick ('70) Sanders Mr. ('27) and Mrs. John A. Behnke Juan C. and Frances Siekman ('74) Romero 'Margaret Hillman Schade Stuart A. ('48) and Marie V. Bellin Helen B. Rudin, '32 John R. Schade, '68 Bernard and Leah Cohodas (M-D '37) Bcrk J. Frederic ('59) and Sally Meyer Ruf Eugenia R. Schenccker, '73 Wit!iam C. Black, '75 Bernard J. Rutten john D. ('39) and Margaret Gilbert ('40) Schmerein Charles M. Boldt Mildred Mdchen Saiberlich, '28

Listings reflect gifts and other commitments received be1ween july I, 1993 and)une 30, 1994 • Lifetime and current donor t Deceased 22 HONOR ROLL

A. V. and Nilda Salud P.H. Glarfcltcr Company Marshall Hulbert Trust Mary Bohr Schafer, '30 Great Northem Corporation Hutto-Patterson Charitable Foundation Thomas J. ('63) and Patricia Lovshin Schinabcck Guardian Life Insurance Co. The Henry J. Kaiser Family Foundation Tamson Gardner Schuparm, '69 Harley Davidson Motor Company W. M. Keck Foundation J. Harry Scidmore, '26 Hayes Manufacturing, Inc. Kohler Foundation tCecille Kingsley SeaOOme Hilbhire Farm & Kahn 's Larson Perpetual Trust Fund F. Joseph ('44) and IBM Lilly Endowment, Inc. Mary Ellen Schuetter ('43) Sensenbrenner lmageSr.udioo, Inc. Edward MacCrone Charitable Trust Charles B. ('72) :md Diane Sickman Jansport, Inc. Mayo Foundation tDor()[hy Doyon Slichter Johnson & Johnson Mielke Family Foundation, Inc. Mowry and tMary Lc:~ch Smith Johnson Controls Founda,rion F. \V. Olin Foundation, Inc. Dr. and Mrs. Thomas S. Smith The Johnson's Wax Fund. Inc. Outngamie Charitable Foundation tEli:aberh A. SteCfen, M-D '42 Kimberly-Clark Foundation, Inc. Tite Presser Foundation William M. ('49) and Frances Stoll Kohler Company George Pullman Educational Foundation Bruce B. Stowe Lachat Instruments Stephen Edward Scarff Memorial Foundation Jay J. and Sandra Kraft Tibbetts, '62 Laminations Corporation Scholanhips, Inc. John P. ('62) and Karen Anderson ('63) Vernon Eli LH!y and C'.ompany Dr. SchoU Foundation james B. ('51) and Carole Dugger Vessey Lutheran BrotherhooJ RbbenG. Sharp Trust MarJorie E. Vivian, '27 M & I Bank Fox Valley frank Shimonek Trust Michael L. ('65) and Stark Ward The Menasha Coqxmnion Foundation Joseph Shimonek Trust Herbcn G . ('63) and Joan Lichtenberger Weber Merrill Lynch Theda Clark Smith Family Foundation, Inc. JohnS. Wells Mutual of New York Foundation St. Elizabeth Hospital Community Fdn., Inc. C;ncy B. ('63) and Sally Rosebush ('62) Wickland Neenah Foundry Foundation Harry Sreenbo:xk TnJst C harlee; W. Wolf, '31 The Nonhem Tmst Company An hurT. Stillman Trust Mrs. Ben D. Wood Northwestern Mutual Life lnsu;mce Muriel Thauer Scholarship Fund Walter B. and Kathryn Wriston Company Tqzcr Foundation tJohn 0 . Younger, '37 N(')rwe~t B.·mk Wi:sconsin, N.A. Frances 0 . Triggs Trust William H.t ('36) and Muriel Wassman Zuehlke Old World Industries, Inc. Thomas J. Watson Foundation Oshkosh B'Gosh, Inc. Todd Wehr Foundation, Inc. Owens-Coming Fiberglas Corp. Wisconsin Foundation o( Independent Colleges CORPORATE& Perkin-Elmer Corpor..ttion FOUNDATION DONORS Philip Morris, Inc. Phi\ljps Petroleum Foundation, Inc. LAWRENCE-DOWNER $1,000 OR MORE Pierce Manufacturing, Inc. Harold Pitman Company LEGACY CIRCLE CORPORATIONS PPG Industries Foundation AAL Presto Products, Inc. The Lawrence-Downer Legacy AT&T The Procter and Gamble Fund Ameritech Rega! Ware, lnc. C ircle recognizes those alumni, Amoco Foundation, Inc. Saham Enterprises, Inc. parents, and friends of Lawrence Andersen Corporation The Salomon Foundation, lnc. Anhur Andersen & Co. SECURA who are helping to assure the Appleton Mills Foundatlcn Sentry Foundation, Inc. continuity of the traditions, values, Appleton Papers Inc. Star Personnel Services, Inc. Appleton Wire. Division, Albany Symons Corporation and educational excellence of the lmemauonal Coi')Xlration Tenneco, Inc. college by including provisions for Awx;:iated Bank, N.A. ]. Walter Thompson Co. Fund, Inc. Bank One Appleton, N.A. 3M its benefit in their long-range B::mkAmcrica Foundation U.S. Paper Mills Corp. plans. Membership is extended to Banta Corporation Foundation UPS Foundation The Baxter American Foundation WauS.'lU lnsumncc Companies all those who have made commit­ Bemis Company Foundation Wisconsin Electric Power Company ments to support Lawrence Oscar J. Boldt Construction 0,. Wisconsin Public Servi<:e Corporation CheS

23 Oscar C. and Patricia Hamar ('48) Boldt Franklin J. Hill, '49 Samuel G. Remley, '43 Bonnie B. Bomhron, '38 Susan Fey Hoffe, '64 Alan C. Reynolds, M.D., '72 Jeffrey Bowen, '60 David ('57) and Deborah Hoffman James D. and Ebic Van Home Richards, '48 Donald W. Boya, '50 Joseph A. Hopfensperger, '52 Dorothy J. Riegg, M-D '37 Thomas C. Brauer and Kay Dobberke Brauer, '80 Arden W. Horstman, '52 Sara Denman Roberti, 'SO Eleanor G. Briggs, '33 Elwood ('51) and Jane Shoms ('54) Horstman Hugh L. and Phyllis Anderson ('56) Roberts OuiliaBuerger,'38 Joan Miller Hunting, 'SO Margaret Jennings Robertson, '39 Kenneth C. Buesing, '40 Jean Hutchinson, '37 Janice Anslinger Rodes, M-D '35 Marjorie !wen Buckley, '44 Cynthia Percale lnfamino, '73 H. Gordon Ross, '37 Philip J. Burck, '58 Donald F. ('SO) and Elisabeth Foulke ('48) Jabas Helen B. Rudin, '32 Evelyn A. Burroughs, '40 Paul J. Jackson, '49 Margaret Hillman Schade Jane Bennett Cartwright Gretchen L. Jahn, '73 John R. Schade, '68 Thomas Cartwright, '75 Olin E. Jessup, '30 Paul F. and Katharine Pitman Schmidt, '39 George M. ('51) and Marjorie 0. ('44) Chandler Betsy Morton Johns, M-D '32 Robert G. Schultz, '53 William A. Chaney David C. Johnson, '57 Charles A. ('37) and Charlotte B. Schwam Barbara Griffith Cherney, '44 Harold ('72) and Mary Donn ('73) Jordan J. Harry Scidmore, '26 Norman ('35) and Analoyce Clapp Michael H. and Kim Hiett ('58) Jordan Mildred Zschat.-chner Scott, '28 Philip C. and Meredith Plier Clark, '48 Sue Pepper Joys, M-D '51 Faith Richards Seher, '27 Catherine Cleary Nancy Orth Kaiser, '5 I JohnS. and Mary Bovard Sensenbrenner F. Theodore and Janet Wullner-Faiss ('55) Cloak Arthur B. and Lorraine Kaplan Marion Hammond Shepard Alice Brenckle Taylor-Coningsby, M-D '29 MargaretKaser,M-D'33 Alice deSwarte Smith, '62 Edward C. Conrads, '50 Marjorie Buchanan Kiewit, '43 Charlotte Jean Smith, '45 Richard M. Cowen, M.D., '64 Douglas M. Knight Marion M. Smith, M-D '35 Janet Cope Crawford, M-D '40 Gay Patterson Kocmich, '38 Viola Spcrka, '34 Robert F. ('38) and Marian Dettman ('39) De Long Jeannine Kramz Koessel, '51 EdwardS. and Barbara Gray (M-D '44) Spoerl Robert A. Dickens, M.D., '63 Paul and Faith Kuter Kozelka, '32 Sea Peterson Stephens, '43 Mary F. Donald, M-D '36 Ann Kramer, '54 Mary Alsted Strange William B. ('49) and Carol Leichsenring ('52) Dresser Dorthea M. Krause, '31 Don Stnm, '49 Edith M. Dudgeon, '34 FernV.Kruse,M·D'32 Grace L. Stumpf, M-D '34 Ferne Warsinske Dugger, '28 J.F. Kunz, '61 Margaret Luehrs Summers, M-D '43 Hazel L. Dunne, '3 7 Elizabeth Koller La Buwi, M-D '34 MariTaniguchi Janet Goode Durham, '47 Susan Bohlmann Lapato, '68 Daniel J. Taylor, '63 Tim ('52) and JoAnn Buesing ('57) DuVall Joan B. Leech Alice Brenckle Taylor-Coningsby, M-D '29 M. John [)yn1d, '57 Marion R. Lemke, '36 Bruce A. Thoms, '62 Eric Dyrud, '67 Robert ('40) and Margaret Leverenz Arthur H. Tichenor, Jr., '39 Myrna Steffen Eisentraut, '46 Jenefer K. Lucas, '24 Steven M. Tower, '74 Robert L. Eklund, '34 Joan Tomarkin Lucht, M-D '61 Lee W. Traven, '52 Clarence F. Elmgren, '30 Ruth-Marie Dewald Lucht, '46 Katherine Carol Trent, '67 Richard E. Elwood, '50 John E. and Ann M. Lutz Barbara Thompson Turley, '43 Clarice Blatchley Engleman, '38 Klonda Lynn, '17 Johannes A. and Margaret Koller Van den Akker Ralph H. Erickson, '54 Joanne May Macinnis Nancy Brice Van Ry, '56 Joan E. Farrell, '45 Lenore Malueg, '33 James B. ('51) and Carol Vessey Robert and Janice Juve Felker, '50 Alice Erickson Maronn, M-D '27 David and Mary Ellyn Carolan ('76) Vicksta Richard A. Fink, '40 Andrea Matthias, '62 Marjorie E. Vivian, '2 7 Joseph and Berenice Davis (M-D '22) Fligman HesrerWhiteMaury,'37 C. Nicholas Vogel, '65 Russell C. Flom, '24 Bemell Johnson Milhan, '41 William and Mary Slagsvol ('50) Webb Robert M. Fox, Jr., '57 David L. Mitchell, '71 Anne MacLeod Weeks, '77 John P. Frank Jane Reuke Moe, M-D '36 Harmony Weissbach, M-D '36 RobertS. French, '48 Chuck Montag, '57 Barbara Rosebush Weller, '44 Marjorie M. Freund, '35 George P. ('43) and Joan Mueller Ruth M. Werner, M-D '34 Robert R. Fritz, '49 Florence Howe Munat, '69 Thomas P. Wick, '84 Claire Langsradt Gehin, '24 Louise E. Murphy, M-D '42 Lincoln and Dorothy Wickman, '38 Kathryn Norris Geisler, M-D '38 Ruth Chapclle Nash, '38 Clay R. Williams, '57 James E. Gmeiner, M.D., '38 Warren D. and Barbara Mosher ('50) Nelson ElynL.Williams,'43 John Goode S. George "Speedo" Notaras, '53 CharlesW.Wolf,'31 Robert and Ginny Goode Irene Neergaard Nydahl, '33 Dexter L. and Lenore Tully Wolfe, '42 Helen M. Goppelt, M-D '20 Frederick R. Olson, M.D., '65 Barbara Wriston Ruth Alice Gould, '42 Elmer ('36) and Margaret Otte Walter B. and Kathryn Wriston Dayton Fowler Grafman, '44 Earl J. Patterson, '76 Merton S. ('32) and Hilda E. Zahrt Stephen Graham, D.D.S., '69 Sally Haven Pclizzoni, '38 Phyllis Weikart Greene, M-0 '47 Marshall H. Pepper, '54 Jean Keast Gridley, '41 Phyllis Peter-Mallard, '73 F. James and Mary Lamers Grist, '50 KatharineT. Peters Edward L and Margaret Link Grosse, '54 Barbara Garrison Peterson, '52 David C. ('60) and Patricia Hackworthy Perry A. Peterson, '38 Laura Thickens Halford, '38 Joan Radford Esther Graef Hamilton, '20 Edward A. ('66) and Lois Beck ('67) Rath Donald ('73) and Beth ('75) Henrich John P. and Jean Shannon Reeve, '34 Berenice E. Hess, M-D '32 TI1codora B. Reeve, '29

Listings reflect gifts and other commitments received between July 1, 1993 and]une 30, 1994. 24 HONOR ROLL

GIFTS IN MEMORY Raymond H. Herwg, '38 Mr. Ronald D. Roberts, Sr. ProfessorJ.MichaelHitde Professor Robert M. Rosenberg AND IN HONOR Professor Paul Hollinger Margaret Roberts Rourke, '91 Joseph A. Hopfensperger, '52 Professor Kenneth R. Sager, '39 HONOR GIFTS AlysonM.Hu,'Sl Professor George R. Saunders Don Adams Margaret Banta Humleker, '41 Stacey A. Schmeidel, '84 Professor Minoo Adenwalla Nancy Hungate, M-D '62 Paul F. Schmidt, '39 Professor john J. Alfieri Gwen M. Hurd, '65 Professor Fred G. Schroeder Phillip B. Arnold, '93 Clare Patterson Hutw, '35 Jean Bragg Schumaker, '68 Mrs. Carolyn S. Bauer Erik W. Ibele, '71 Mrs. Charles A. Schwartz Heidi Baumann-Schuppd, '77 John L. lbcle, '83 Linda Pride Shaw, '79 Carol Beaumont Brendan S. Jackson, '94 L. Lea Sitwn, '78 Martin Beaumont Mark A. Jennison, '85 Professor George W. Smalley Stuart A. Bellin, '48 Mr. and Mrs. Charles Johnson Mary A. Smolinski Professor Robert Below Marilyn M. Jome, '94 Kathryn Amelia Steck Mary Finni~:nn Berk, '67 Harold E. Jordan, '72 Professor Richard S. Stowe Joshua A. Blakely, '94 Jennifer L. Jordan, '86 Carl M. Smtmary, '79 Oscar C. Boldt Professor Steven jordheim Professor Mari Taniguchi Stephan A. Bossert, '91 Christopher C. Kailas, '82 Professor Elizabeth M. Tarr ProfeW)r Charles Breumg Thomas S. Kepler Daniel J. Taylor, '63 Matthew Brown Andrew C. Kesler, '92 Mr. and Mrs. Peter J. Tiemstra Mary Hamilton Bums, '62 Marjorie Harkins Kiewit, '43 Professor Herbert K. Tjossem William W. Burrington, '84 Kacy Kleinhans, '91 Mrs. Fay Van Eyck Professor Eugene C~lman Kara Kleinhans, '93 Professor George B. Walter, '36 Ann Perschbacher Cerny, '29 Professor John Koopman Saburo Watanabe, '41 George Cerny George W. Krause, '29 Lisa Neuman Weiner, '59 Professor William A. Chancy Joshua Wilker Kriesel, '95 Philip B. Weisskopf, '92 Professor F. Theodore Cloak Dr. and Mrs. W. J. Kube Michel J. Wendt, '93 Eleanor O'Toole Conway, '49 Professor Michael j. LaMarca John M. Wermuth Professor Bruce Cronmiller Jerome A. Langer, '72 Professor Rolf W. Westphal Jane W. Curran-Meuli, '79 Marcia Litts L'lrsen, '42 Kirby White Professor George E. Damp Daniel C. Lauer, '93 Andrew J. Whitsitt, '88 Mary Jane Cowan Danan, '77 Professor Carol L Lawton Sarah Feldt Wilson, '92 Dorothy Dart Elizabeth A. Lehfeldt, '88 Scott A. Wilson, '91 Eugene F. Davis Professor Robert Levy Bessie Clausen Wilton, '25 Rick Davis, '80 Jacob J. Lofgren, '93 Corinne L. Wocelka Sam Mbdejovsky Deitrich, '91 Katherine E. Lofgren, '93 Sallie Saunders Wright, M-D '37 Professor Bart T. DeStasio, '82 Mr. Richard G. Long William H. Younger Professor Eli~abeth Dugan DeStasio, '83 Anne Paterson Maillette, '77 Emma Zinn Brian G. Dobberkc, '82 Suzanne C. Martines, '81 Cynthia Carlson Dobberke, '82 Professor Ronald J. Mason MEMORIAL GIFTS Mr. Robert K. Dodson Bernice Jacobson Matthews, M-D '51 Professor Noblt; Abrahams Franklin M. Doeringer Tanya Alexander McFadden, '85 Mrs. George Adami Professor John P. Dreher Marcia Duin Mentkowski, M-D '61 Charlotte Drummer Allen, M-D '41 John Paul Drescher Michael G. Meuli, '76 Elta Townsend Anderson, '19 Dale L. Duesing, '67 ProfessorJamesMing Ryan T. Anderson, '93 Suzanne Friedley Duffy, M-D '55 Michele A. Mladejovsky, '92 Beth Arveson, '40 Lucinda Steven Duncan, '66 Stephen R. Nelson, '78 Hazel Podoll Azpell, '31 Professor Miriam Duncan Ouistine M. Neumiller, '83 Peggy Babler Robert C. Duncan, '65 Joan Hillebrand Neumiller, '85 Edward T. Barnes, 'IS Roger S. Duncan, '94 John H. Neumiller, '87 Professor Warren Beck Mr. and Mrs. Millard S. Edmonds, Jr. Anthony V. Palazzo, '89 Christopher F. Been, '74 Mary E. Egan, '77 Ruth M. Parkinson, '29 Edgar and Beatrice Behnke John P. Farrell, '85 Stephen M. Parsons, '85 Roy Bellin David W. Flom, '83 Charles B. Petersen, '30 M. Hammer Bender, '44 Professor Elizabeth T. Forter Judith King Peterson, M-D '63 Carl D. Berghult, '64 Professor Dorrit F. Friedlander Caroline Neumiller Pfeffer, '86 Hope Berry Professor Frederick E. Gaines John R. Piirainen, '94 Jean Hill Berry, '48 Daniel J. Galante, '87 Sharon Lutze Polk, '80 Robert W. Bertram, '31 Connie Beam Garcia, '86 Professor Mary F. Poulson Philip M. Binns Cathryn Torresani Geppert, '82 Professor Mojmir Povolny Ralph C. Birr, '48 Professor H. Hartmut Gerlach Tammy Jo Schumann Prenot, '88 Ralph H. Bishop, '22 Laura Sisola Gilchrist, '90 Joel C. Reese, '89 Robert E. Bletzinger, '67 Professor Bertrand A. Goldgar John P. Reeve, '34 M:M. and Olga E. Bober Robert C. Greene, '88 Professor Theodore L. Rehl Jo L. Boykin J.M.Hager,'81 Ms. Carrie Reuning Gladys I. Brainard Professor Chong-do Hah Jennifer Anne Richards, '95 Janet R. Bredehom, '58 OliviaD.Harris,'93 Professor Dane M. Richeson Brian Jerome Brezinski, '81 Fred Hcrbolzheimer, Jr. Professor Susan Riley Lucia R. Briggs

25 Charles M. llrooks, Jr. Mrs. Wilfrid Frost Professor Elisahcth Koffka Frances Hogg Brown, '15 Mary Jean Wightman Funk. M-D '5 I David A. Kopplin, '59 Matthew Brown Arney Richardson G<~ge, M-D '13 Ann E. Krieg, '75 Gloria Granholm Bryden, '49 Elizabeth Holt Galaty, '39 Alben G. Kunes, '64 Josephine Pond Buchanan Anitra Kathleen Geib Joy Smith Kurzer, M-D '64 James P. Buchanan, '42 Christine C. Gerdes, '74 Beverly Kivell Kutch in, '52 Mr. William E. Buchanan James Robert Gettel James]. Lacina Prof. John Bucklew ProfessorMargaretS.Gilbcrt Dr. Ralph V. Landis Warren E. Buesing, '43 Maura Gilloon, '75 Anncue Plank Lmglois, '38 Dorothy Von Berg Burnham, '2 7 Thomas Gleed Charles E. Lanik Helen Krieger Bunynski, M-D '35 Adrian Godschalx, '43 Gina Hanson Larrabee, M-IJ '12 Main Byram Panicia Oswald Goeke, '66 Hope Larsen Carl A. Carlsen, '36 Raymond Gramza Michael Laughran Lew ).Carnegie Edward Gram Henry J. Lay, '35 Bernita Danielson Carson, '29 Raymond Guenther, '49 Ann Ashford Lehfeldr Karl F. Cast, '39 Wil!iamJ.Guyer,'39 Howard N. Lehner, '40 Prof. Gotlob C. Can Mrs. Herbert Hackworthy Marian Scheil Lemke, '38 John A. Chambers, '81 FrancesW. Hadley Robert J. Lierhen, '38 Pauline Proehl Chambers, M-D '34 Harold L. Hamilton, '25 Corinne Durle.r Limb

Listings reflect gifts and other commitments received between July I, 1993 and]une 30, 1994 . 26 HONOR ROLL

Jere W. Ottman, '38 Loretta Weuengcl Smith Margaret Cooke Wood, '19 John F. Owen, '28 Helen A. Snyder, '33 Revena Trezise Wright, '20 Dr. Douglas Packard Jeffrey A. Soderberg, '85 William M. Wright, '25 MargaretA. Parfitt Russell E. Sohner Mildred Friday Wright, '27 Elias Hardie Park Aleksandr Sokol President Henry M. WristOn Willa Grace Park Gail Son Todd R. Zeiss, '58 Margaret Parks Mark M. Sperry Adrienne Brown Zichlkc Dorothy G. Pamc\1 Herbert Spiegelberg Donald W. Zinn, '54 Susan J. Parthum, '85 Charles A. Stark Harold B. Zuehlke, '28 Elizabeth Auld Partridge, '55 Edward]. Starks Mr. and Mrs. W. H. Patterson Elizabeth A. Steffen, M-D '42 GustaveG.Perers Lois Davis Steffen, '49 judith Mellinger Peterson, M-D '53 C. Austin Stegath, '32 NEW ENDOWED FUNDS Janet Driessc.n Peterson, '70 Agnes Bernice Steininger, M-D '38 William Peterson Albert L. Sterr, '34 CREATED JULY 1, 1993, Scar\ G. Pickett, '52 David H. Stevens, '06 THROUGH President Samuel Plantz Larry A. Stewart, '56 Eliwbeth A. Plowright, '32 Arthur Taylor Stillman JUNE 30, 1994 Perry Pollard Elizabeth Kwasny Stowe, '49 Norma Broecker Porter, '33 John G. Strange, '32 Beth Arveson Memorial Scholarship John Poulson James H. Straube\, '37 Ruth Baldwin Barker and Hartley B. Barker Scholarship Matilda Siefert Puclicher Daniel H. Strclnick William E. Buchanan, Sr., Memorial Scholarship Ross Quaintance, '80 Ms. Mary Stumpf Class of 1968 Fund Robert B. Radford, '46 Mary Syriopoulos, M-D '37 Charles U. and Marjorie Mehne Culmer Scholarship Lee C. Rasey, '13 Helen Norris Tangen, '27 forTalemandMcrit Patricia M. Rauh Annabel Fox Tanner, M-D '13 De Stasio Summer Research Award Fund HarvcyRcetz,'35 Edith Taylor Karl D. Franke, Jr., Memorial Scholarship James S. Reeve Olga Schuette Teitgen, M-D '10 Mary Spears Hinz Scholarship Fund Linda Reilly Paul A. Teschner, Jr. Janet G. Hoffmaster Endowment AltsonKayRidgc\y HowardS. Thelin Hutto Patterson Library Fund David Riggs George Thompson Alden M. and Aorence Ross Johnston Scholarship Fund Mr.CadF.Ritcr Walter P. Tippet, 'IS Anne Prioleau Jones Library Fund John W. Robson, '28 Luis Torrent Laun-ence 150 Endowment David F. Rodger Edna Hughes Van Hengel, '13 Maybelle E. Mais Conscn'atory Fund Yvonne Catlin ROtt.k, '34 Wendell Van Vleet Dorothy G. Parnell Memorial Scholarship in the Robert L Roemer, '33 Kenneth Venderbush Arts Academy Robert Rohrhoff, '48 Cecelia Bonini Vc5ta\, '30 Virginia S. Purdy Scholarship Annette Meyer Rosebush, '35 Clifford E. Vickrey, '80 Quirk Art Program Endowment John M. Rosebush, '41 Clarmarie White Voss, M-D '35 Schaupp Family Scholarship Mary E. Roscnheimer, '87 Samue!K. Wald Stiehl Conservatory Fund Professor Elizabeth Rossberg Virginia Anderson Walk, M-D '34 Arthur Taylor Stillman Scholarship Mrs. William Rusch CharlcsV. Wallace Donald G. Sachs Dorothy Walter Charles G. Sadler, '62 John M. Walter, '30 Robert W. Sager, '44 Mary Minahan Walter, '52 Charlene A. Sanna, '68 Marilyn Hockings Walther, M-D 'SO Stephen Scarff, '75 Helen Hansen Warch Robert W. Schmidt, '35 Thaddeus Wasielewski Dr. llarold K. Schneider Carl J. Waterman, '05 Rufus K. Schriber, '36 Herbert H. Weber, '28 Merlin W. Schultz, '51 Wesley W. Weinkauf, '35 Lester E. Schulz, '41 Miss Iva Welch Marguerite E. Schumann, '44 HarryWerner,'29 John H. Scidmore, '58 Edwin N. West, '32 Cecelia Werner Scoular, '31 Arrhur Westenberger Peter J. Seckman, '83 Mr.Pau!H.Wetzcl Jane Clark Scrliff Helen Diderrich Wheeler, '27 Ruth Harwood Shattuck, '06 Kirby B. White, 1897 E. Bradley Shepard, '48 A valine M. White James A. Sherman, '68 Elsner White Lucille Heller Shipman Martha Boyd Sickman, '43 Frank S. Williams, '2 L Janet Cain Sielaff, '55 John R. Williams, '44 Kenneth D. Simmons, '2 7 Karen C. Wi\li;)ms·Zaritsky, '86 Marguerite Massino Simmons, M-D '38 Florence Colburn Wilterding, '26 Bernice Rufsvold S\agsvol, '22 William A. Winsauer, '88 Mary Leach Smith Annabelle E. Wolf, '39 Olga Smith, '24 Frederick H. Wolf Errol Smith Ruth Saeckcr Wolfe, '20

27 /"'oo..~A C ULTY CREATIVE AND ~~H~LARLY A C HIEVEMENTS

ROBERT 0. BELOW CANDICE BRADLEY {Jrofessor of music assistant professor of anchropology

Performed: His composition Summer Music with faculty Published: "Gender Differences in Careers in Anthropology: members Ernestine Whitman and Howard Niblock, "Sunday Evidence from the COSWA/AAA 1987 Vita Dataset," Afternoon Live from the Elvehjem," Wisconsin Public Anthropology Newsletter, October 1993. Radio, Madison, Wisconsin, May 8, 1994. Report: "The COSWA/ AAA 1992 Vita Datasec A Report to CSAEWA and COSWA," Committee on the Status of RICHARD B)ELLA Women in Anthropology of the American Anthropological associate professor of music, conductor of Concert Choir Association, published 1993. Selected: Workshop leader, Comprehensive Musicianship Presented: "Altered Promises and Changed Expectations: Through Performance Seminar, University of Wisconsin, Fertility and the Decline of Bridewealth in Kenya," Social Madison, April I 994. Science Research Council Workshop on "Situating Fertility: Global Visions and Local Values," Johns Hopkins University, Selected: Instructor, Summer Koclaly Workshop for music February 26, 1994. Also presented at American Anth ro~ educators, Silver Lake College, Manitowoc, Wisconsin, july pological Association meeting, Washington, D.C., I994. November 17, 1993.

MARY FRANCIS BLACKWELL Presented: "Women's Empowerment and Fertility Decline assistant professor of chemistry for Western Kenya," Population Studies Center, University of Pennsylvania, September 27, 1993. Published: "The Plastoquinone Diffusion Coefficient in Chloroplasts and its Mechanistic Implications," M.F. Invited: Discussant for "Culture and Fertility" session, Blackwell, C . Gibas, S. Gygax, D. Roman, and B. Wagner, Population Association of A merica meetings, Miami, Biochimica et Biophysica Acra, l I83533-543, 1994. Florida, May 7, 1994.

KENNETH W. BOZEMAN j OHN R. BRANDENBERGER professor of music professor of physics

Received: Voice Foundation Van Lawrence Fellowship Selected: Chair, Selection Committee, American Physical Award, June I994. Society Award to a Faculty Member for Research in an Undergraduate Institution. Performed: Selected choral works of Beethoven; Historical Keyboard Society of Wisconsin, Handel and Haydn Invited: Joint workshop featuring laser teaching experiments, O rchestra, Milwaukee, Wisconsin, April 16, 1994. Annual Meeting of the Optical Society of America, Toronto, Canada, October 1993. Performed: Varied programs of Mozart and American popular song, Cherry Hills Resort, Door County, Wisconsin, W ILLIAM W. BREMER winter 1994. professor of history

]. BRUCE BRACKENRIDGE Awarded: Lawrence University Excellence in Teaching Alice G. Chapman Professor of Physics Award, june 1994.

Presented: "The Hooke/Newron Controversy of 1679," University College, London University, 1994.

Reviewed: Published four reviews in distinguished journals.

28 FREDERICK E. GAINES, associate professor of theatre and drama and holder of the James G. and Ethel M. Barber Professorship in Theatre and Drama, has been a member of the Lawrence faculty since 1977. His work as a director and playwright, involving more than 100 plays, has earned critical acclaim in theatres throughout the country and in England and Greece. Last fall, his original play, Cellophane Xerox, enjoyed a two~ month run at the Theatre of the First Amendment at George Mason University. The play tells the story of a film crew making a movie about the 1970 killing of four students at Kem State and earned Gaines favorable comparisons to Oliver Stone. The Washington Posr called the play "a thoughtful rumination on the human demand for certainty." Also last fall, Professor Gaines had his adaptation of The Legend of Sleepy Hollow performed by the famed Children's Theatre Company in Minneapolis, Minnesota. He wrote the libretto for Lawrence student Brooke Joyce's opera, Michelangelo, and also directed its on-campus premiere in Aprill994. His most recent project was a commissioned adaptation for the Children's Theatre Company of the Studs Terkel book, Race, which he finished in June 1994.

29 Associate Professor of Music ALLEN GIMBEL, who joined the faculty in 1987, chairs the theory~composit i on department in the Conservatory of Music. Gimbel was honored with an American Society of Composers, Authors, and Publishers (ASCAP) Special Award during the year. In the past, he has received an ASCAP Young Composers grant, a Jerome Foundation grant, several Meet the Composer grants, a Yaddo residency, the Charles lves Scholarship from the American Academy and Institute of Arts and Letters, and a commendation from England's Stroud Festival, as well as awards and scholarships from Eastman School of Music and Juilliard. Gimbel was awarded Lawrence's Outstanding Young Teacher Award in 1990. During the 1993-94 academic year, pianist Jon Klibonoff performed Gimbel's Sonata For Piano at Lawrence after earlier playing it at Carnegie Hall. In 1992, Gimbel was invited by Eastman's Samuel Adler, his mentor, to contribute to Reconciliation, a cycle of songs to commemorate the fiftieth anniversary of the Warsaw ghetto uprising.

30 1993-94 FACULTY CREATlVE AND SCHOLARLY ACHlEVEMENTS

A LIC E K. C A SE Recdved: National Science Foundation Instrumemation lecturer in art and Laboratory lmprovemem Program gram, "Multidisciplin­ ary Statistics Curriculum and Computing Laboratory." Co~ Honored: Appointed judge, drawing, Scholastic Art Awards investigator with Chris Noble, Beth Haines, and Merton in Wisconsin in conjunction with the Milwaukee Art Finkler. Museum, January 1994. Received: U.S. Department of Energy grant, National Exhibit: Outstanding Artists of W isconsin Exhibition, Institute for Global Environmental Change. Supplement to Appleton, Wisconsin, March 1994. "Potemial Effects of Climate Change on Fish and Plankton in North Temperate Lakes." Co~ i nvestigator with John J. Magnuson and Tim Kratz. DAVID M . C O O K professor of physics and the Phile tus E. Sawyer Professor of Publi shed: "Diel Vertical and Horizontal Migration of Science Zooplankton: Population Budgets and the Diurnal Deficit," Received: National Science Foundation grant, "Partial Bulletin of Marine Science, 53A4-64. Differential Equations in Advanced Undergraduate Physics," Published: "Diel Vertical Migration and Global Climate June l993. Change: A Dynamic Modeling Approach to Zooplankton Behavior," Verh. Intern. Verein. Limnol. 25:40IA05. Received: Keck Foundation grant, "Preparing Physics Majors for a Capstone Experience," January 1994. ELIZABETH DE STASIO Presented: An invited paper, "Sample Uses of Computer assistant professor of biology Algebra in the Undergraduate Physics Curriculum," summer meetings of the American Association of Physics Teachers, Received: National Science Foundation grant, "The Role of Boise, Idaho, August 1993. Myosin Heads in Muscle Assembly," March 1994.

Honored: Listed in Who's Who in Science and Engineering, DOMINIQU E-REN E DE LERMA [993. visiting professor of music Awarded: Excellence in Teaching Freshman Studies, Invited: Special guest, Symposium: A celebration of choral Lawrence University, May 1994. music by African~ Americans, Cleveland State University, with the Robert Page/Cleveland Singers and Orchestra, March l994. P resented: "Extragenic Suppressors of Dominant Myosin Heavy Chain Mutations in C. elegans," Gordon Research Conference on Muscle Contractile Proteins, Holderness Invited: Special guest participant, The Unisys African~ American Composers Forum and Symposium, Detroit, School, New Hampshire, july l993. Michigan, April l994. Presented: "Muscle Assembly: A Focus on Myos in Heads," Reviewed: Published eight reviews in distinguished journals. Wisconsin Academy of Sciences, Arts, and Letters, Waukesha, Wisconsin, April 1994.

Published: "Black orchestral music: A provisional discogra~ Presented: "The Role of Myosin Heads in Muscle phy," The Unisys African~ American Composers Forum and Symposium (Detroit: Detroit Symphony Orchestra, 1994, pp. Assembly," Midwest Worm Meeting, Indiana University, 4l-89). Bloomington, Indiana, June 1994.

N INA DO RRANCE BA RT T. DE STASIO, JR. assistant professor of English assistant professor of biolog)' Presented: Position paper and group presentation for "How Received: National Science Foundation Research Opportunity Award, "Potemial Effects of Climate Change on Images Mean," Weekend Faculty Seminar, Folger Fish and Plankton in North Temperate Lakes." Shakespeare Library, Washington, D.C., March 1994.

31 1993-94 FACULTY CREATIVE AND SCHOLARLY ACHIEVEMENTS

MERTON D. FINKLER CATHERINE C. KAUTSKY associate professor of economics associate professor of music

Published: "Why Pay Extra for Cesarean Section Performed: Lawrence Chamber Players recical, "Sunday Deliveries?" Inquiry, summer 1993. Afcemoon Live from the Elvehjem," Wisconsin Public Radio, Madison, Wisconsin, May 8, 1994. Published: "Cost Effectiveness and Data Envelopment Analysis," Health Care Management Review, summer 1993. EDMUND M. KERN instructor of history RICHMOND CLAUDE FRIELUND associate professor of theatre and drama Chaired: "English Renaissance Topics," Patristic, Medieval, and Renaissance Conference, Villanova University, Named: Forum leader, "Small Theatre Program Strategies for Pennsylvania, October 1993. Success," Institute for Theatre Technology Conference, Nashville, Tennessee, April 1994. Published: "Counter-Reformation Sanctity: The Bollandists' Vita of Blessed Hemma of Gurk," The journal of Ecclesiastical History, XLV, no. 3, 1-23, 1994. PETER]. GILBERT assistant professor, library Published: "Confessional Idemity and Magic in the Late Sixteenth Century: Jakob Bithner and Witchcraft in Styria," Published: "YMCA Libraries" and "Professionalization of The Sixteenth Century Journal, XXV, no. 2, 307-324, 1994. Librarianship" in the Enc)·clopedia of Library History, a refer~ ence work from Garland Publishing, 1994. Presented: "Women, Men, and the Devil: Gendered Narratives of Witchcraft in Styria," Women's History: GEORGE N. GLAVEE Digging, Doing, Disseminating, University of Wisconsin, assistant professor of chemistry Madison, June 4, 1994.

Published: "Preparation of Magnetic Fine Particles by Presented: "Austrians in an Age of Anxiety: Fear and Hope Borohydride Reduction," Nanostructured Material, 3, 391, in Eighteenth-Century Austria," German Studies with K.). Klabunde, C.M. Sorenson, G.C. Hadjipanayis, Association, Washington, D.C., October 9, 1993. Z.X. Tang, and L. Yiping, 1993.

Published: "Chemical Synthesis of Nanophase Materials," HELEN R. KLEBESADEL Nancphase Materia~, K.). Klabunde, ) . V. Stark, 0. Copper, assistant professor of art C. Moss, A. Khaliel, D. Zhang, C.M. Sorenson, and G.C. Elected: National President of the Women's Caucus for Art, Hadjipanayis. Hadjipanayis and Siegel Eds., Kluwer 1994-95. Academic Publication, Netherlands, pp. 1-19, 1994. Illustrated: Dancing with Goddesses: Archetypes, Poetry, and PETER S. GLICK Empowennent by Annis Pratt, Indiana University Press, 1993. associate professor of psychology Illustrated: The Cauldron of Change: Myths, Mysteries, and Presented: An invited paper, "I Like You, But I Resem You: Magick of rhe Goddesses by De-Anna Alba, Delphi Press, Ambivalent Sexism and Performance," American Chicago, Illinois, 1993. Psychological Society Conference, Washington, D.C., June 1994. MICHAEL). LAMARCA Presented: Invited calks, "The Two Faces of Adam: Hostile professor of biology and Benevolent Sexism," Yale University, May 1994, and Attended: Appleton Medical Center sponsored trip to the Williams College, February 1994. annual meeting of the American Fertility Society in Montreal where he completed a post-graduate course on the new federal regulations governing the conduct of reproductive laboratories, October 1993.

32 Assiscant Professor of Psychology BETH A. HAINES joined the Lawrence faculty in 1992. Haines has been active in publishing and delivering papers on her specialties, child development and children's cognitive and social development. Haines uses hand puppNs and other toys to evaluate children's cognitive develop­ ment in a classroom setting. In May 1994, she presented the paper, "Learning Styles of At-Risk College Students," at the Midwestern Psychological Association meeting in Chicago, Illinois. At that same meeting, she served as a session moderator on "Language Structure and Processing." Haines was co-principal investigator on a team of Lawrence faculty members from several disciplines that received a $38,000 National Science Foundation grant in June 1994. The grant will be used to establish a psychology laboratory to bring an interdisciplinary approach to the teaching of the mathematics department course in elementary statistics, enabling students to see how statistical principles can be applied in the study of psychology as well as other social sciences.

33 ElLENE HOFf-MARCH joined the Lawrence faculty in 1988 and was promoted to associate professor of French and granted tenure in 1994. Last spring she also was named chair of the French department. A specialist in twentieth century French literature, she delivered the paper, "Ceremonies for the Dead: Simone de Beauvoir and the Limits of Self~ Representation," in May 1994 at the Conference on Romance Languages and Literature at the University of Cincinnati. Her article, "Truth or Literary Consequences: Sutor's Confessions of a Portraitist," was published in the july 1994 issue of Neophilologus. Haft-March also authored a book review of Marie Ndiaye's En Famille that appeared in the February 1994 issue of French Review. On campus, Hoft~March is coordinator of the Foreign Language Coalition, a group of foreign language faculty, both modem and classical, that discusses pedagogical issues associated with foreign languages and conducts workshops to promote faculty development. The coalition was formed three years ago through the support of a Mellon Foundation grant.

34 1993-94 FACULTY CREATIVE AND SCHOLARLY ACHIEVEMENTS

CAROLL. LAW TON Published: "The Case Against the Electoral College," in associate professor of art history Herbert M. Levine ed., Point~Counterpoin t, Fifth Edition, St. Martin's Press, 1994. Received: American Philosophical Society grant for a study of the votive reliefs from the Athenian Agora. Published: "Who is Really Advantaged by the American Electoral College-And Who Just Thinks He Is?" An emp i r~ ROBERT B. LEVY ical analysis with Professor of Economics James Dana, International Newsletter of the Comparative Representation and professor of music, conduaor of Wind Ensemble and Electoral Systems Research Committee, International Political Symphonic Band Science Association, VoL 6, No. I, pp. 65 ~ 72, winter 1993. Released: "American Music For Winds," Lawrence University Wind Ensemble, Mark Records, August 1993. Published: "The Biases of the Electoral College' Myths and Realities," with Professor of Economics James Dana, The W isconsin Political Scientist, Vol. 8, No. 1, fa ll~ w inter, LAWRENCE D. LONGLEY 1993-94. professor of government Presented: "National Political Party Reform and Renewal," Received: Fulbright Commission Distinguished Lecturing National Symposium on the Political Process, Washington, Award, John Marshall Chair in Political Science in Hungary, D.C., November 5, 1993. 1994-95.

Named: Consulting editor, World Encyclopedia of Parliaments N ICHOL AS C. MARAYOLO and Legislatures, Congressional Quarterly Inc., Washington, p-rofessor of biology D.C., 1995-96. Published: Co~author of "The Influence of Polyamines in Organized: "Research Conference on the New Parliaments Senescence in Marchantia Polymorpha," The Bryologist, of Central and Eastern Europe," Prague, Czech Republic, 97(2), 1994. August 14-17, 1994. H UGO MARTINEZ-SERROS Organized: "International Workshop of Parliamentarians p-rofessor of Spanish and Parliamentary Scholars," Berlin, Germany, August 1 9 ~ 20, 1994. Published: "Learn! Learn!" New Worlds of Literature, Second Edition, New York, W.W. Norton, 1994. Organized: Four sessions of Sixteenth World Congress of the International Political Science Association, Berlin, Germany, August 21-24, 1994. RONALD ] . M ASON professor of anthropology and the Henry M. Wriston Professor of Named: Consultant to the Ukrainian Parliament in 1994. Social Sciences Published: "Late Woodland and Oneota Occupations on Invited: Presented testimony at U.S. Senate Judiciary Rock Island, Wisconsin," T he Wisconsin Archeologist, 71 Committee hearings, February 2, 1994. (3-4), 115-136, May 1994. Invited: "International Conference on Viable Constitutionalism," State University of New York~ Albany, GERALD !. METALSKY March 1994. associate p-rofessor of psychology

Named: Editorial board member, American Review of Politics, Published: "Low~end Specificity of the Beck Depression since 1993; ]ouTTlal of Legislative Studies, United Kingdom, Inventory,'' Joiner, TE., Schmidt, K.L., and Metalsky, G.!., since 1994. Cognitive Tlurapy and Research, 18, 55-68, 1994.

Published: "The Politics of Broadcast Regulations," with Published: "The Cognitive Style Questionnaire, Health and Erwin G. Kasnow and Herbert A. Terry, in Doris A. G raber Psychosocial Instruments Record," Metalsky, G.l., and ed., Media Power in Politics, Third Edition, Washington, Abramson, L.Y. , Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania. Behavioral D.C., CQ Press, 1994. continued on page 38 35 Assistant Professor of Physics SU SANNE LEE joined the Lawrence faculty at the beginning of the 1993~94 academic year. Lee, who did post-doctoral work at the Lawrence Livermore Laboratory in California, specializes in solid state physics and materials science. Lawrence's first materials scientist, she is working to combine the elements tin and germanium to create a new alloy to be used to detect specific wavelengths of light. Last April, Lee presented a paper on her research-"Effects of Post~Depos ition Processing on the Ultimate Grain Size in Metastable Semi~ conductor Thin Films Used in IR Detectors"- at an international conference on materials science in San Francisco, California. Earlier this year, she received a $40,000 Cottrell College Science Award to support her research and a state~of~the ~ art Differential Scanning Calorimeter ($37,600) from the Perki n ~ Elmer Corporation in response to a research and teaching proposal she sent them last year.

36 1993-94 FACULTY CREATIVE AND SCHOLARLY ACHIEVEMENTS

Assistant Professor of Art TODD V. MCGRAIN joined the Lawrence faculty in 1991. A post~modemist artist, his large scale metal and wood sculptures have been exhibited for more than ten years in cities throughout the United States. At the 1994 ARC Regional juried Exhibition in Chicago, Illinois, his work, "Ball," a white sphere five feet in diameter made of bent mahogany, was selected "Best in Show." A frequent juror of exhibitions in Wisconsin, McGrain has done five com~ missioned works, including a fiberglass human heart, eleven feet high by nineteen feet wide, for the Fox Cities Children's Museum that he completed in 1994. Filled with open passageways, including a slide, the A-MAZE-lNG Heart was des igned for its inner workings to be explored and examined by children. McGrain also was accepted in the Kohler Artist in Industry program, the oldest and most prestigious program of its kind in the country. He will begin his residency in the program in March 1995.

37 1993-94 FACULTY CREATIVE AND SCHOLARLY ACHIEVEMENTS

Gerald I. Mera~ky, continued Published: Revised Leuven colloquium paper for publication Measurement Database Services (producer) and BRS Search in Flanders in a European Perspective: Manuscript Illumination Service (vendor), 1994. around 1400 in Flanders and Abroad.

Published: "The Extended Attributional Style JOHN C. PALMQUIST Questionnaire, H ealth and Psychosocial Instruments Record," Metalsky, G.!. and Abramson, L.Y., Pittsburgh, [lrofessor of geology Pennsylvania. Behavioral Measurement Database Services Named: Vice president, National Association of Geology (producer) and BRS Search Service (vendor), 1994. Teachers. Published: "The Extended Self-Esteem Questionnaire, Health and Psychosocial Instruments Record," Metalsky, G.l. BRUCE H. POURCIAU and Abramson, L.Y., Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania. Behavioral professor of mathematics Measurement Database Services (producer) and BRS Search Service (vendor), 1994. Presented: "A Preliminary Report on the Preliminary Math, ematical Lemmas of the Principia," History of Science Society Appointed: Consulting editor, journal of Abnonnal annual meeting, Santa Fe, New Mexico, November 1993. Psychology. STEWART C. PURKEY MATTHEW C. MICHELIC associate professor of education assistant professor of music Consultant: Consortium on Chicago School Research, Performed: International Viola Congress, Chicago, Illinois, formed to study the implementation and impact of the june 1993. Chicago School Reform Act.

Performed: Co-principal viola, Green Bay Symphony, Green SUSAN G. RASCON Bay, Wisconsin, October \993-March 1994. lecturer in Spanish

THOMAS L. NAPS Published: Translation of"The Garden of Gucumatz," associate professor of mathematics George Mason University's Hispanic Culture Review, summer 1993-winter 1994. Published: Co,authored "An Object-Oriented Approach to Algorithm Visualization," Proceedings of the SIGCSE GERVAIS E. REED Technical Symposium, Association for Computing Machinery Marie Wollpert Professor of Modern Languages and Meetings, Phoenix, Arizona, March 1994. Professor of French

CHRISTOPHER F. NOBLE Presented: "Solving a Modem Mystery: Why do the French assistant professor of mathematics Like to Read Paul Auster?" Kentucky Foreign Language Conference, University of Kentucky, April 23, 1994. Received: Principal investigator of successful National Science Foundation grant to equip a statistics laboratory for Named: Review editor of French Review, the official publica ~ multidisciplinary teaching of statistics. tion of the American Association of Teachers of French.

M ICHAEL T. ORR BRIDGET-MICHAELE REISCHL assistant professor of art assistant professor of music, conducwr of Symphony Orchestra

Presented: "The Hours of Elizabeth the Queen: Evidence for Honored: Young Teacher Award, Lawrence University, June Collaboration Between English llluminators and an Artist 1994. from the Gold Scrolls Group," international colloquium organized by The Centre for the Study of Illuminated Guest Conductor: San Francisco Women's Philharmonic, Manuscripts in the Low Countries, Leuven, Belgium, Stanford University, June 1994. September 1993.

38 Professor of Anthropology GEORGE SAUNDERS, a Lawrence faculty member since 1977, is a specialist in cultural and psychological anthropology. Saunders has written extensively aboU[ Italian culture. Since 1989, his research, funded in part by grants from the National Science Foundation and the National Endowment for the Humanities, has centered on Protestant Pentecoscalism in Italy. This past year, American Anthropologist published his article "Critical Ethnocentrism and the Ethnology of Ernesto De Martino." He also presented a paper in November 1993 at the annual meeting of the American Anthropological Association titled "Terrible Tales and the Gift of Tongues: Pentecostalism as Counterculture in Italy."

39 Assistant Professor of Music and Director of Jazz Studies KEN SCHAPHO RST joined the Conservatory of Music faculty in 1991. Schaphorst has three jazz COs out, the most recent of which, When the Moon jumps, was released by Accurate Records in spring 1994. The recording, the first featuring the newly,formed Ken Schaphorst Ensemble, has been enthusiastically received. The October 1994 edition of Down Beat gave When the Moon Jumps four stars, declaring that "Schaphorst achieves a surprisingly full, orchestral sound with ten pieces." Billboard called it "an intriguing set." The CD features a Schaphorst "Concerto for John Medeski" commissioned by the National Endowment for the Arts in 199l.ln August 1993, the Ken Schaphorst Big Band performed at the Regattabar in Cambridge, Massachusetts.

40 1993-94 FACULTY CREATIVE AND SCHOLARLY ACHIEVEMENTS

TERRY L. REW-GOTTFRIED Lectured: "Julio Cort3.zar and the Fantastic," Spanish Ph.D. associate professor of psychology Program, Syracuse University, Syracuse, New York, September 1993. Received: National Science Foundation Research Opportunity Award to work on cross~ language differences in vowel~ro~vowe l coarticulation in English and Japanese. JUDITH HOLLAND SARNECKI assistant professor of French Published: Co~authored article with T.L. Suiter on Published: "Le visage matemel de Ia mort dans !'oeuvre au "Dynamic Information in the ldencification of Mandarin nair," de mort I' Chinese Vowels and Tones," Journal of the Acoustical Societ)' Les visages la dans oeuvre de Marguerite Yourcenar, the University of Minnesota, Morris, June of America, 95,2887, 1994. 1994. Presented: "Reading and Writing Autobiography in SUMNER RICHMAN Marguerite Yourcenar's Le labyrinthe du monde," Eleventh Alice]. Hu~t Professor of Life Sciences annual Conference on Continental, Latin American, and Francophone Women Writers, Wichita, Kansas, April 7~9, Published: "Feeding and Energy Relations in Daphnia 1994. Galeata Mendotae," R.G. Hein, D.M. Krueger, Bull, Marine Science, 53 (1): 115-127, 1993. Presented: "Mastering the Masters: Aime Cesaire's Creolization of Shakespeare's The Tempest," Modern THOMAS C. RYCKMAN Language Association Annual Meeting, Toronto, Canada, December 27-30, 1993. associate professar of philosophy

Published: "Revised Factualism," The Monist, 125, Published: "Ecriture et Maternite: metaphores maternelles June 1994. dans Le labyrinthe du monde de Marguerite Yourcenar," Societe Internationale d'Etudes Yourcenariennes, Bulletin 13, Presented: "Beliefs, Facts, and Propositions," American June 1994. Philosophical Association, Atlanta, Georgia, December 1993. TIMOTHY A. SPURGIN assistant professar of EngUsh JOSE SANJ1NES Awarded: Excellence in Teaching Freshman Studies, assistant professor of Spanish Lawrence University, 1994. Presented: "Conscious Illusions: The Problem of the Cinematic Frame," Fifth Congress of the International DANIEL). TAYLOR Association for Semiotic Studies, University of California, Hiram A. )ones Professor of Classics Berkeley, June 1994. Published: "Desperately Seeking Syntax: Rethinking the Presented: "lntermodal Communication of Verbal and History of Syntactic Theory in Greece and Rome," Language Visual Art," Fifth Congress of the International Association and Communications, 1993. for Semiotic Studies, University of California, Berkeley, June 1994. Published: Four articles in The Encyclopedia of Language and Linguistics, volumes 2, 7, and 9, (1993). Presented: "Enchantment and Distance in the Age of Metafiction: The Problem of Duplicity in Art," Eighteenth Annual Meeting of the Semiotic Society of America, St. LEONARD L. THOMPSON Louis, Missouri, October 1993. professor of religious studies

Chaired: Section Nine, Cinema, Fifth Congress of the Reviews: Journal of Biblical Literature , Catholic Biblical Quarterly, Journal of Religion, and International journal of International Association for Semiotic Studies, University of California, Berkeley, June 1994. Comparative Religion.

41 Assistant Professor of Geolo~:,')' GEORGE SMITH joined the Lawrence University faculty in 1991. In 1993 and 1994, Smith was honored with U.S. Geological Survey Coastal Geology Program grants in support of his research on the history of the Lake Winnebago basin since the last glaciers were here some 10,000 years ago. In 1994, Smith used a National Science Foundation Instrumentation and Laboratory Improvement grant to construct a one;of;a-kind, folding pontoon boat to continue his study of Lake Winnebago. The nearly $6,000 grant also paid for limno­ logic sampling equipment vital to the research. Smith, who supervised a Lawrence geology field trip to the Carribean to study coral reefs and associated environments in April, has published several abstracts co;authored by Lawrence students. One of the abstracts appeared in the Geological Society of America Abstracts and Programs in April 1994 and two were published in the Proceedings of the Wisconsin Academy of Sciences, Arts, and Lerrers in April 1994.

42 1993-94 FACULTY CREATIVE AND SCHOLARLY ACHIEVEMENTS

Assistant Professor of Art History TIM RODGERS came to Lawrence University in 1991. He serves as curator of the Wriston Art Center and teaches courses in nineteenth and twentieth century art. In May, Rodgers received the Mrs. H.K. Babcock Awa rd from the student body in appreciation of his generous cooperation with undergraduate activities. Through the years, he has acted as an adviser for Bisex ual, Gay, and Lesbian Awareness, advised the Pilot Project for Academic Advising of new domestic students from underrepresented racial and ethnic groups, and supervised an Associated Colleges of the Midwest minority fe llow. In addition to earning his Ph.D. at Brown University in April , Rodgers presented a number of papers off campus. In September 1993, he delivered a paper tided "Charles Demuth Questions the Sexuality of American Art, Challenging the Norms: Gender, Sexuality, Class, and Culwre," at the University of Colorado at Colorado Springs. He also presented a paper titled "Painting the Self: T he Work of Ruth Frisch Dealy," for the America Culture Association in Chicago, Illinois, in April. Rodgers curated Dealy's works at an exhibition at the Wriston Art Center in March.

43 1993-94 FACULTY CREATIVE AND SCHOLARLY ACHIEVEMENTS

ERNESTINE WHITMAN Foreign Languages twenry~seventh annual meeting, San associate professor of music Antonio, Texas, November 22, 1993.

Performed: Appeared on "Live from the Elvejhem," Presented: "A Prototype Reader for Post Elementary Madison, Wisconsin, May 8, 1994. Chinese." Developing Intermediate~level Skills in Chinese: Perspectives and Proposals panel, Midwest Conference on JANE PARISH YANG Asian Affairs, Cleveland, Ohio, October 2, 1993. assistant professor of East Asian languages and cultures RIC H A RD L. YAT ZECK Published: "Chinese Children's Stories: Teaching Discourse professor of Slavic languages and literature Strategies for Beginning Chinese," Journal of the Chinese Language Teachers Association, 28:3, 35-47, October 1993. Translated: Rilke's "Archaic Bust of Apollo," and Mandelstam's "Stalin," Oasis: A Literary Magazine, Translated: "Many Things co Tell, But Hard to Tell," by July-August 1993. Nie Hualing in Hsin-sheng C. Kao ed., Nativism Overseas: Contemporary Chinese Women Writers, Albany: State Translated: Governor Thomas Thompson's remarks and University of New York Press, 1993, 113-126. An excerpt forty~three smaller translations about various businesses from the unpublished translation of the novel Far Away, A for fall 1993 Wisconsin Trade Mission to central Europe River. Hong Kong: Joint Publishing Co., 1985. and Russia.

Presented: "It Tastes Just Like Mother's-Integrating Published: Four stories in various outdoor sporting Authentic Materials into the Intermediate Classroom with publications. Taiwan TV Ads," American Council on the Teaching of

44 JULY 1993 transfer students includes twenty,eight valedictorians and fourteen National Merit finalists representing twenty,nine D The Heritage Hill Foundation of Green Bay, Wisconsin, states and nineteen foreign countries. gives Lawrence a six,octave pianoforte with the under, standing it will be restored and used in the performance of D Lawrence opens the 1993,94 academic period music. The Broadwood is identical in every regard, year with twenty-one new faculty except decoratively, to a piano presented to members. BeNhoven in 1818. Once resrored, it will be one of the few such pianos in the world. D The Lawrence Wind Ensemble, with Professor of Music Robert Levy AUGUST 1993 conducting, releases a compact disc recording, American Music far Winds, 0 Susan Dean, C '73, is named director of for the Mark Records label. admissions at Lawrence. Dean joined the Lawrence christens the R(V Viking, admissions office in 1990 as an admissions 0 the flagship of the college's fleet, counselor for the conservatory. Prior to that, she which is used for science research, served as the college's director of public events principally, marine biology research from 1984 to 1989. on Lake Winnebago. 0 Margaret Madden is named associate dean of the A recital and concert featuring works of several American faculty at Lawrence. Madden was a professor of psychology 0 composers highlight the Lawrence Conservatory of Music's at Franklin Pierce College in Rindge, New Hampshire. sevemh annual Experience Weekend. From 1986 to 1990, she served as assistam to the vice president and dean of the faculty at Franklin Pierce. 0 The Wriston Art Cemer displays "Beyond the Comic Image," an exhibition of paintings and works on 0 Donald Leidel, a foreign affairs expert, becomes the fifth paper influenced by the contemporary comic book recipient of the Stephen Edward Scarff Distinguished idiom. The display features the works of three artists. Professorship at Lawrence. Leidel is a career U.S. State Department administrator OCTOBER 1993 and former U.S. ambassador 0 Two~time Pulitzer Prize~ to Bahrain. winning author John Updike 0 An electrical fire seriously opens the Lawrence Con~ damages the BjOrklunden vocation Series before a lodge, the central building packed house with his pre~ on Lawrence's 325~acre semation of "The Artist and Scandinavian country estate Society: Selected Readings in Baileys Harbor, from His Work." Updike Wisconsin. participated in a question and answer session in Riverview Lounge and was a SEPTEMBER 1993 guest in the fiction writing 0 The freshman class at class of Professor of English Lawrence boasts the Mark Dintenfass. strongest academic profile 0 A performance by jazz trum~ of any entering class at a peter Maynard Ferguson college or university in Wisconsin. The class of 328 highlights the annual Parent's Weekend, which freshmen and nineteen more than 500 parents,

45 studencs, and relatives attend. beyond the world of classics.

D Three acclaimed jazz ensembles headline Lawrence's D Professor Tim Rodgers provides some insight on contem­ twelfth annual Jazz Celebration Weekend, which attracts porary art in "Making Sense of Modern Art," the second more than 500 junior high, high school, and college Lawrence Arts Academy Adult Appreciation course of the students for two days of jazz clinics, master classes, and 1993-94 series. performances.

NOVEMBER 1993

D Professor John Stanley and Associate Professor Marty Finkler serve as co~directors of the Lawrence University Health Care Policy Conference. More than ninety delegates from around the state attend the working conference on a consensus approach to health care answers. The threc~day conference is cosponsored by the Lawrence Biomedical Ethics Program and ::_'-~~~"'- Wisconsin Health Decisions. ---~ 0 D William Hodgkiss is named vice pres- -~ \\ ident for business affairs and adminis- \ · tration at Lawrence. Hodgkiss is the \ ~~. former president and chief executive officer of Appleton's Firstar Bank.

D Lawrence becomes the only four- - / year school in Wisconsin, and one of '-- """ ; 105 schools nationwide, to be selected "~::, -- : ::;··~.,.-.... for the new Federal Direct Student Loan Pianist Richard Goode holds a master class . ~~=~· Program. The program allows the federal government to provide loans to students through schools rather than private lenders. JANUARY 1994 D Pulitzer Prize-winning architecture critic Paul Goldberger D Lawrence presents a two~ part lecture series on the end of the cold war and its challenges for the United States. The of the New York Times delivers the address, "Architecture first address is "Can the U.S. Bring Peace to as a Reflection of Public Policy and Social Responsibility," the Middle East?" and the second is titled during the Lawrence Convocation Series. "Market, Democracy, and Russian D Lawrence's Black Organization of Students presents a Foreign Policy." The lectureship is special evening of African-American culture and food sponsored by the Mojmir Povolny during the second annual Kwanzaa Celebration. Lectureship for International Studies. D Bassist Charlie Haden joins the Lawrence jazz DECEMBER 1993 Ensemble, Jazz Singers, and Gospel Choir in the third concert of the 1993-94 Jazz Series. 0 Mezzo-soprano Marilyn Horne per­ D Physics Professor David Cook receives nearly forms a benefit recital $300,000 in grants from rhe W.M. Keck at Lawrence and Foundation and the National Science Foundation. instructs more than The project enables Lawrence to purchase 200 students, faculty, additional hardware for its computational and guescs during a physics laboratory and its experimental program. four-hour master class. A three~time Grammy~ award winner, Horne's popularity extends far Pulitzer Prize winner Gwendolyn Brooks was a featured speaker of the Laun-ence Convocation Series. 1993-94 HIGHLIGHTS

D Pianist Richard Goode, one of the world's foremost interpreters of Beethoven, performs in the second concert D Sophomore Becky Wagenaar becomes Lawrence's first of the 1993 ~94 Artist Series. two~time swimming A ll ~ American. She set a school record in the IOO~yard butterfly at the NCAA Division lll D Lawrence is named one of three "Centers of Academic nationals in 1994 while on her way to All~American Excellence" by the EW. Olin Foundation and receives a honors. $100,000 grant. The money is applied to Lawrence's reserve fund and will be used to acquire science D The Lawrence wrestling program qualifies Dave Munoz, equipment. '94, and Chris Klotz, '94, for che NCAA Division Ill national tournament. Both wrestlers ended their careers FEBRUARY 1994 ranked in the top five on the Vikings' all-rime wins list.

D Gwendolyn Brooks, the first black recipient of the Pulitzer APRIL 1994 Prize for poetry, speaks at a convocation during Black History Month at Lawrence. The Poet Laureate of :OTen students spend their spring break in Franklin, North Illinois uses her residence in the core of Chicago's black Carolina, volunteering at senior citizens homes and day community as the basis for many of her poems. cares, and weatherizing homes.

D The world~renowned African~ American a cappella group (JPoofessQ"( of Political Science Larry Longley is awarded the Sweet Honey in the Rock performs at Memorial Chapel distinguished Fulbright chair in Hungary. The lectureship, before a full house. one of only two chairs awarded this year in Central and Ea.stem Europe, is considered the most prestigious honor D Alec Maly, '95, places third among twelve singers from in the Fulbright program worldwide. seven states at the New York Metropolitan Opera Upper Midwest Regional competition. 0 Senior Charles D. Bayne receives a national jazz award from Dawn Beat magazine. Known as "DBs," the Doum O The International Film Series kicks off with Kenneth Beat awards are among the highest honors accorded high Branagh's 1993 adaptation of Shakespeare's Much Ado school and cqllege music students. About Nothing. • O Junior Brooke Joyce authors Michelangelo, the first D Twenty students selected nationwide attend a laser physics studenr~writ£en opera to be performed on campus. Joyce workshop at Lawrence. wrote the music while Associate Professor of Theatre and Drama Fred Gaines wrote the libretto. MARCH 1994 MAY 1994 D Jerry Wade is named director of financial aid. A native of Columbus, Ohio, Wade spent three years in the Oberlin O Nineteen graduating students have their artwork displayed College financial aid office and was the associate direc.tor at the Wriston Art Center as part of the annual Senior of financial aid at Butler University in Indianapolis. Arr E~hibic.

O Lawrence senior John VanOss is awarded a $15,000 t!I..awrence's ~sistant Professor of Physics Susanne Lee is Thomas J. Warson Fellowship to study commerical - awarded a $40,000 r<.~earch granc by che Comell Science sturgeon fisheries in Russia. Since their inception in 1969, Awards Pro~ram of the Research Corporation of Tucson, one or more Lawrentians have received a Watson Arizona. This was the largest award ever granted by the Fellowship every year but one. corporation;

D Jiayi (Diana) Ling, '94, becomes Lawrence's first national '0=Tony~nominee, director Eric Simonson is the featured champion by winning the long jump at the NCAA speaker for the annual Honors Convocation. Hailed as a Division Ill national indoor track championships. "superb director" by the New York Times in a 1993 review, Simonson is best known for the Broadway play, The Song D Miriam Schapiro, one of the feminist art movement's of Jacob Zulu. pioneers, delivers a Convocation Series address and slide presentation, '1A Woman Artist and Her O The final concert of the 1993~94 Lawrence Jazz Series Relationship to the Past." features jazz pianists Ellis Marsalis and Marcus Roberts. 47 Lawrence's first national champion, Diana Ling, '94. 1993-94 HIGHLIGHTS

Alumni gather ourside Wriston Art Center before the Parade of Colors at Reunion Weekend 1994.

JUNE 1994 department and director of the college's opera theatre. Gerlach, associate professor of German, specialized in rhe D Professor Emeritus Charles Breunig's book on the history study of German literature and film. of Lawrence, A Great and Good Worko A H~tory of Lawrence University, 1847~1964, is released. Breunig is the D More than 800 people attend Reunion Weekend where former David G. Ormsby Professor of History and Political eight alumni are honored. Receiving Distinguished Economy at Lawrence. Achievement Awards were: Carol Arnosti, '84; James Merrell, '75; Elmer Pfefferkorn, '54; and Thomas Baer, D Lawrence awards bachelor's degrees to 254 graduating '74. Outstanding Service Award recipients were: Katherine seniors at commencement. Professor of History William Schwartz-Strei, '84; Marijean Meisner Flam, '50; Jane Bremer is presented the Excellence in Teaching award and Kuoni Hand, '44; and Patricia Hamar Boldt, '48. The Assistant Professor of Music Bridget,Michaele Reischl is Lawrence Class of 1969 and the Milwaukee-Downer named Outstanding Young Teacher. Dale Duesing, a Class of 1944 make record gifts during the Reunion Grammy award-winning lyric baritone, receives an Convocation. The Class of 1969 turned what began as a honorary degree along with Jacqueline K. Barton, professor "Buck A Month Club" into a gift of more than $2 70,000. of chemistry at the California Institute of Technology, The Milwaukee Downer class raised $20,900. Pasadena.

D Professors John Koopman and Hartmut Gerlach retire. Koopman, professor of music, was chair of the voice

48 - / This late nineteenth century buckskin shirt is believed to have come from the Menominee Indian tribe in Wisconsin. The shirt is part of Lawrence University's anthropological collection, and is used by Professor of Anthropology Ronald Mason as a teaching tool in his course on the Indians of North America.

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