Articles

2 The Cleveland Quartet: A Workday in Five Movements A behind-the-scen es look at the Eas tma n Sc hool's cha mber ensemble

11 Escalating the Admission Effort The Rl'view speaks w it h Timothy Scho ll, Roch este r's new dea n of ad missions a nd stude n t aid

18 Great Expectations: Three Freshmen Profiles of three me m be rs of this yea r's ente ring class

20 Ron Thomas: A Report from the Big Ten The tr ansition to big-city sports journalism

22 The Stro use Collection A th ree-time T on y w in ne r reflects on his caree r

26 Biomedical Engineering Offers Blueprints for Health Building a better ultrasou nd ge ne ra tor, and o ther cha llenges

t 1 28 Identity Crisis 34 Alumnotes 1 30 News Digest 41 Review Point 1 33 Alumnitems

(ova illu trat/on by Stft't RtY'lOlds

h t r i inte r, 19 7 7; Ed itor: Ronald C . Rob rt s: Assistant Edi to rs: Raymond A. Ma rt ino, Sue Brick er; Copy Editor: r n Pitt ; rt Direct or: Jeffrey T. H e rma n n; 5 aff Ph otographer: hri s T. Q u ille n; Edi toria l Assis ta n t : Ben C ray; lumnot Editor: ary Lyn ch . Published quarterly by the U nive rs ity of Ro hester and m ailed to a ll alumni. Editorial of- fi ,107 dmini tr ation Bldg., Roch es ter,.Y. 14627. Second- class pos tage pai d a t Roch est er, N .Y. 14603. To the editor: To the editor: In the Fall 1977 issue, your article on "Genesee Country Living" with a descrip­ tion of the Genesee Country Village was comp lete except for one important detail - no address! Will you kindly send me the address so I can pla n a trip there ? Mrs. Dorothy M . Cox '31 Lakewood, N.J. (Ti,e Museum is in Mumford, N .Y., south­ Ulest of Rochester. For more infor/natiOt/ , write: TIre GrneSff Country Village, P.O. Box 1819. Rochester, N.Y. 14603.1

To th e ed itor: I have look ed over th e Fall 1977 Roches ter Review and find it quite up t o yo u r usual Et hel Klein Snapper '38 high sta nda rds o f pu blica tio n, even includ­ Hanover, .H. ing th e mat erial o n pages 9-11. Pe rhaps so me o f yo u r read ers will be int erest ed in th e fun th at we are having wit h th e "rigo rs" o f aca de mia. O f add itional and particular interest to me was yo u r a rt icle o n Paul Bit good . I kn ew Paul (a nd Da ve Ocorr) w hile a s t u­ dent a t Roch ester (I dabbled in and February March swam on th e va rs ity team for "S peed" Speegle). It so u nds like Paul is leading a n 2-3 In Rochester - Trust ees' 4 In - I e lub oncert idyllic ex iste nce, a nd I a pplaud hi s effo rts Co unc il and Un iversity Alum­ at the Prudential Cent r a t both pr oducin g w ine and appre cia t ing ni Cou ncil meetings 4- 18 Alumni Tour-Los Angeles, it . 4 In Albany-Bask etball team San Juan, Cabo San Lucas, This issu e o f Rochester Revieu: is o ne mo re in yo u r lon g se ries o f excelle n t publica­ vs. RPI ; pr egam e Rou ser for Acapulco, Curacao, ara as tion s. Many th anks for including th e ma ­ Alumni 8 In A lbany- lee C lub Con- terial w hich we br ou ght to yo u r atten tio n cert in th api tol Rotunda; fr om th e [ourna! of Irreproduciblt' Results. reception for alumni at noon I w ill be interest ed if any (or how many) readers identify th e blatant e rro r in th e In Syracuse-Glee C lub dat e o f th e Mexican -American War. Concert (location to b e. M. Achilles '57 announced) Kn oxville, T enn.

(The article lists the da!« of the M erica/I ­ American War as 186 7. T ire correct date is 1846.- £d.1

Two alumni tours are scheduled Switzerland (Thun and Zurich)­ for 1978. A fall tour also is bein g May 12-20 planned. Includes hotel acco m modations, Trans-Panama Canal Cruise­ breakfasts, an d local tours o f each city. Optional tours available. March 4-18 Los Angeles to San Juan, with Breathtaking sce nery ; easy a cessi­ stops in Cabo San Lucas, Acapulco, bility to major Alpine areas; u n ­ Curacao. and Caracas. Price in­ regimented. $469 plu s 15 percent cludes air fare (scheduled flights) from Rochester. from and returning to 127 major Alumni, University personnel, fam­ cities, including Hawaii and Alaska. ilies, and fri ends are welcome on all Available to all alumni, regardless tours. Reservation forms for the Trans­ of location. Central American and Panama Canal Cruise are available Caribbean geography and current from the Alumni Office; mailers and affairs come alive. Stopovers in forms for Switzerland, in early 1978. Los Angeles and San Juan permit­ For further information, contact John ted. From $1,420. Braund, Alumni Office, 315 Frederick Douglass Bldg., University of Roch­ ester, Rochester, N.Y. 14627. Phone: (716) 275-3682.

1 hofos b Donll l Holway

lusciou s scale. He hardly paused to Half an hour before the concert gUp tu ne th e string s; he had been practic­ they break up. Paul works with his ing all afternoon. cello in a dark corner backstage, fac­ "It's better to be nervous before ing the wa ll. Don practices in a wait­ than during," he murmurs, smiling ing room, the score propped on the abs trac te dly. back of a so fa. Peter disappea rs. Mar­ Th ey wo r together abou t 20 min­ tha slips in to a dressin g room an d utes, jumping almo st without com­ closes her eyes for 20 minutes of me n fro m o n e piece to another. The T ransce ndenta l Meditation . They prog ram is pa rt of th eir ongoing Bee­ have all taken up T M, also jogging. th oven cycle: Opus 18, No. 74, "The They find T M re laxes th eir h ands for Harp," and Opus 131, an electrifying a conce rt. rna ter piece of Beethoven's final y a rs. Don (stops in mid- no te): "[eez." Peter: "Yeah, I'm jus t tr ying to get it bro der. Pick a spot. . ." Don : "Seems ve ry untuneful. Is it my fault? .." Paul (to Peter): "You're playing a lit Ie loud ." Pe er :"Su re. Same place?"

on Rehearsing "You don't try to make the concert be just like the last re hearsal," says Donald Weilerstein. "It's something more. Rehearsing gives you the security to do something different in the actual concert." Don and Martha Katz, med itating moments before a Cleve land Quartet concert, are as separate as th ey can be. Q uartet members see m to fasci­ nate people, who watch the m avid ly for signs of a rift, and th e Cleveland­ ers are a littl e def ensive on thi s point, especially since Martha the violist and Paul Kat z the cellist are married to each other. "There's all this thing about th e Budapest Quartet not knowing each other," comments Paul. "But it's pret­ ty relative. When you rehearse to­ gether eight, nine hours a day and do 100 concerts a year, and when you all live in Rochester as we do, and teach at the Eastman School of Mu­ sic, and when you add in the business meetings and recording sessions and receptions and all, well, when you come down to breakfast in the hotel coffee shop, maybe you'd rather sit by yourself and read the paper. We'll get on a plane together and sit down separately and not see one another till we land. That doesn't mean we're Pulling out the violin with deft abandon, he played one not getting along." luscious scale, hardly pausing to tune the strings ...

5 Even when they're just talking, they watch each other. nine hours at a crack: one movement of one quartet played over and over for maybe three hours. From the beginning there was a sense of excitement and personal ful­ fillment. The very first thing they played together was a Haydn quartet, and the sound of it thrilled them all. Paul: "A member of a famous quar­ tet came up to us after Marlboro and said we were going to be great. I was shoc ked. I said it'd be fine to be okay. But he said, no, you' re going to be grea t. I was quite taken aback."

Watching Wat ching. Even wh en th ey're just talking, th ey watch each other. "You can feel a moment very strongly, but someone else in the group can feel it differently. There's always more than one beautiful way to play music. So you've got to be flexibl e ..." Playing with a quartet, you 're jug­ gling so many things. You can get might have grown up with the Buda­ True, a sneeze or su dden coug h too loud, too fast , too intense. Even pest Q uarte t's recording, another can disturb the timing, w reck an en­ as you put all the skill of 30 years in­ might have studied it at ]uilliard or tra nce, but audiences also ca n bring to your playin g, you are forever think­ played it w ith another group. T hese the quartet toge ther and focus it. ing about th e total sound. we re th e ha rdest. Their antennae go out. "You kn ow You make a vibrato on a violin by "We were starting from divergent when you've reached 'em." Th ere is ever so slightly wiggling the finge r viewpoints, strong influen ces from this sense of a great presence ou t in that is pressing down on the string. somewhe re else in our lives. It was a the dark, with a mood of its own-did In a quartet you try to match your vi­ strugg le, wrestling it ou t, working it you ever go to a concert on th e night bratos, both in speed and amplitude, through . And those are the ones that of a blizzard ?-and th e players miss for if one vibrato is dramatically turned ou t to be our most su ccessfu l. it in record sessions. broad and another is tight and nar­ The audiences like th em best. T his is Yet in the studio, th ough th ey aren't row, something is lost in the music. what makes us fee l it's all worth­ projecting to live list en e rs, ano ther "We use the composer's markings while." thing happens: repeating and repeat­ as a point of departure. But how and Wh en they'r e tense, not ge tting ing, mesmerized, they see m to be where we want to depart is the ques­ along we ll, th eir respons iveness to playing for th emselves, a nd the mu­ tion. We're trying to ge t the general one an other changes. Sometimes sic tak es on an interi or qu alit y. feeling of th e movement across, we they go on stage after a bad rehear sal, have to agree on th at. T he overall and they play without enjoy men t, feeling . But our concept of th is can but th ere is no sign th at thi s comes change too when we playa piece 30 over to the a udien ce. Sometimes or 100 times." they start off in a bad mood, and the A curio us note: The group knew beauty of the mu sic lift s th em ou t of it . some of Beethoven's 17 quartets inti­ " A good audience can reall y se t mate ly, some not at all. The new ones you up. We love New York. They con­ came easily; righ t away, they arrived centrate. The silences are part of the at an int erpretation they all liked . music." They suspec t it had to do with th eir similar mu sical background s. But as for the fam iliar work, one member

7 • 19. Did graduate quartets, a cou ple " Unlike Paul, I love to practice ee g of international competitions." alone. I love to go over a phrase 100 They make up to $5,000 a perform­ times, try to make it as beautiful as I ance, cut five ways including the can possibly make it. For some rea­ agent. O ne of their travel expenses is son th is is exciting to me." a plane seat for the cello. What wo uld happen if someone left An Angeleno, Paul studied cello and they brought in a new member? with Piatigors ky at th e University of "Well, you have to learn a lot of California. Then eas t to the Manhat­ new music fast. But the new person­ tan School. ality just has to change a group. If Pet r SalaH started at 9, but also the new member begins a phrase kept up an in terest in piano and paint­ and you finish it, well yo u just have ing. At 13, he h ard his first chamber to do it in a way that complements music in hi na tive Croton-on-Hudson, . what he just did. We've played the .Y. Me t Don at Aspe n, later took Dvorak piano quintet with six or sev­ off for two years with the Peace Corps en different pianists now, and we in Chile. change tremendously." Don: "I started at , and I didn't Either in spite of or because of this th in really eriously about doing flexibility, they have developed a cer­ nything el e, though I did consi der tain sty le quite apart from the music. orne ort of ocial work or teaching. Often they appear in slacks and turtle­ I n v r con id red bing a doctor, necks, and when playing for students Ii my father. I could get good ma rks they hang around onstage during in­ in cience but wa n't much in ter- termission to answer questio ns . It is ted in it. hen I was 18 peop le one of the reasons why people say aid I should go into music seriously." the Cleveland is bringing new ener­ H went to [uilliard, also worked gy and a new audience to th e som e­ wi h Galamian, and, as head of the what rarefied world of chamber music. C land In titute's violin depart­ n in h who h lped the f1 dg- in I w I nd i r id ncy the r . Then their friends crowd around Performing in the wings with awed grins and fer­ No one is nervous now. The vent words: "Marvelous!" "Superb!" concentration is total. The "Never heard such . .. " "Wow, you audience sits absolutely still . really . . . " and all at once their faces It is a humid evening, caus­ open up and they smile as though ing strings and bow-hairs they were coming home from a long to spread microscopically: a trip.• tiny, nagging problem. © 19 77 Wash ington Post At intermission they had discussed an experiment in bowing a certain passage. They go ahead with it but are n' t especia lly happy with the re­ sult. None of th em has had dinner ex­ cept Don ("he eats all the time"), and when at last they wa lk offs tage after their final bows, th ey look drained, distant, still bem used .

9 RR: Have you set any goals for the admission office in terms of num­ bers of applicants or rates of accep­ tance, and if so, what are they? Scholl: Th e bu siness o f se tt ing goals is some thing I ha ven 't wo r ried ab u t too mu ch becau se th er e are imm diat e things to be done. But any goals wo uld have to be aff ected by th e well-publicized pr jections of popu lation declines ove r th e next 10 r 20 years, es pecially declin es in N w York and th e northeastern stat s wher th e Univ ersit y draws most of its tudents. Pessimists say ther will be a 40 percent declin e in the nu mb r of high schoo l graduates in the nex t 10 yea rs in New York Stat. If we kept th at same percent­ age at th e University, th at wo uld mean ou r fres hma n class wo uld num­ b r bou t 600 ins tead of the present 1,080-and that is no t accep ta ble. Mor over, we mu st keep in mind that 25 perce nt of th e stude nts at Ivy League and similar schools come from New York State, w hich will make the competition for the remain­ ing p 01 very heavy. Also, many of RR: From the standpoint of the decreased in th e last five years, and our competitors have increased th eir number of qualified applicants, if all of th at decrease has been in fema le numb rs of undergraduates, so may­ you are able to hold the figures right applicants, partly becau se many tra­ b you can say we I ok forward to a where they are over the next 10 ditionall y all-m ale colleges have be­ fr shman clas of ab ut 300 . I me n, years, you would actually be making gun to accept wo me n in the last few y u can be as despairing as you wa nt progress. Is that right? yea rs. t about this . Scholl: I wo uld say so. But .I should Of cou rse , th er e wo u ld be no bene­ But what w'r trying to do, I'd point out th at, in my view, th e atti­ fit to the Univer sit y or to anyone else ay, i to ke p the numbers about tudes and policies we ha ve adopted in simpl y raisin g the number of app li­ wher they ar and to make su re tha t in the admissio n offi ce would be th e cations. In fact , in our cata logs, bro­ th quality of the fre hmen and trans­ same anyway, even if we we ren' t chu res, and mailin gs, and through fer s i uch that those students can facing this popul at ion crunch. Th e our per son al representatives who do b n fit from what this university has crisis is upon us, and we ca n't ignore recruiting, we mu st say very power­ to offer. it. But to par aphrase Rousseau, we fully what the Uni versity has to offer - but not say that it is all things to all lot h been written about are going to try to ge t jus tice and util­ people . If we wanted 1,000 fresh m en, t nd rd chi m nt Te t scores ity to come together in th e same structure. Wha t we're try ing to do is for example, the idea would be to get dropping in th country. 00 OUf p­ 1,000 applicants- all of them acce pt­ plic n t r fl ct thi trend? to get over the coming cris is and to do it in the right way. And I think able. Then they would all accept our choll: I'd say we have followed tha t wi ll wo rk. The real goals of the offer and we'd have 1,000 stude nts. th tr nd, s h ve most chools. We admission office are, indirec tly, th e That would be a lot easier on every­ re ill w II bov th average, of educa tion of young peo ple (and older one and a lot less expensive. cour . people as wel1)-in o the r words, a Following this theory, then, we counseling fu nction-and an a bility have plenty of applications from a to erve the Unive rsity in th e best well-qualified group of students. In way possi ble. I don' t t hink th ese are practice, however, it would probably contradictions, and they w ill fu se in be he lpfu l if we could have about a our planning. 20 percent increase in the ne xt few years in the number of applicants­ R: Wh t are the numbers you're giving a total of about 5,600. workin with tod y? Scholl: Last yea r we had 4,650 ap­ plications. We made offers of admis­ sion to 3,825, and we have 1,0 80 peo­ ple in the cla s of 1981 . That's ab out 50 more than we were aim ing for . The tot I numb r of applications has

2 RR: In light of the population pre­ ing to push the outlying areas at the is interested in the University. We'd dictions and the University's gu ide­ expense of the local areas. But I give each student a chance to talk in lines for seeking only well-qualified think within the next two or three person with alumni in his or her area. applicants, a 20 percent increase years we are goi ng to have an alumni­ I realize that such a program could may be difficult to obtain. What if admiss ions committee in just about involve thousands of people-but that can't be done? every major metropolitan area. we 'd like to establish that personal contact in the next few years. And, if Schol1: Another goal would be to RR: How about the staffing? incr ease th e "take" ra te, or "yield" a student is offered admission , we'd SchoIl: We have a new person in rat e-the number of acce pted appli­ like an alumnus to encourage the th e admission office, Ann Wright, cants who decide to en ro l1 at th e Uni­ student to visit t he campus and to who wil1 be alu mn i coordina tor. Da­ vers ity. O ur accepta nce rat e now is enroll. vid Wormuth, who is handling other about 28 percent. If we made tha t du ties now, h ad th is pos itio n; but RR: What about the alumni re­ 40 percent- a round number I'd like Dave had so man y other responsibi l­ gional scholarship program? to have- we'd have a class of about ities th at he co uld not devote suffi­ Scho l1: Each of the 53 co mmittees 1,750 fr eshmen , every t hing else re­ cient time to the alumni coordinator is eligib le for up to t hree reg ional mainin g th e sa me . Our goa l thi s yea r, positio n. The g rea t majority of Ann's alumni scholars h ips. T he alu mni of course, wa s on ly 1,030, and we ex­ tim e wil1 be devot ed to the alumni­ make recommendati ons fo r these ceede d th at- so we are not too con­ admissions duties. And Jim Arm­ scho larships, so th ey have, in a se nse , cerned about th e pre sent. We have a stro ng (director of alumni affairs) a "talking poi nt" wit h th e s tudents fine stud ent bod y and we wan t to has ass igned C liff Largess of his of­ they meet . keep it th at way . But we wa nt to sho re fice to work wit h Ann. up th e future, and w e h ave to se t our RR: You mentioned st udents vis­ sigh ts for about 1982. We mus t be RR: Just what can the alumni do? iti ng th e campus. What are your certain tha t the policies and atti ­ SchoIl: Probabl y at th e most basic plans for staff people visi ting h igh tud es we set now wi l1 ens ur e an ade­ level, alum ni can help us greatly by scho ols? quate number of fresh ma n an d tran s­ simply kno wing more abo ut the Un i­ Scho l1 : We in tend th is yea r to h ave 10 fer applicants five and years from ve rsity today and talking about it. ou r staff me mbers visit abo u t 1,000 now . We have to bui ld our rep u ta­ I mea n, yo u don't just mention th e high schoo ls ve rsus ab ou t 300 v isits tion now to avoid a future cr isis. A University of Roc hes ter in casual con­ last year. We're also trying to vis it a lot of educa tiona l in stitutions w ill ve rsation. But there are times whe n lot of high schools in places we make bad admiss ion policies in reac­ people who have chi ldre n are look­ ha ven't been before, such as t he tion to th e populati on crisis. We in­ ing at col1eges, or whe n someo ne is South, th e Southwest, an d the West. tend to avoid th at. ta lking abo ut certain kind s of re ­ And there's a reaso n for thi s. I don't RR: How do you go about increas­ sea rch . Wh en such subjects come up , know if we're going to recruit 1,000 ing the "yield" rate-having more a proper mention of th e Un iver sity acceptances relative to offers of would be helpful. For tha t reason I admission? wa nt to ge t alu m ni w ho are involved in recruiting back to campus mu ch Sch ol1 : Thi s is a com plex stra teg y mor e often . We have a sizea ble num­ and on e in whi ch th e alumni can ber of alumni; and if we can tap th eir play a maj or role. There are all kind s resources and their contac ts, we ca n of pr oject s and programs which can be amazing ly success fu l in admis­ turn a student toward the University - to narrow his or her choice-and sions. personal, individual attention fr om RR: How many alumni-admissions alumni in various parts of the coun­ committees are there? tr y is most important. Scho l1: We have 53 right now.O f RR: How do you plan to utilize course, some of these ar e one -person alumni? committees, and we want to en large those. In the Atlanta ar ea, for exam­ Schol1 : We have had an alumni­ ple, we sho uld have enough alumni adm issions program for years, and on th e committ ee to be able to ass ign the idea is to build on th at , especial­ one volu nteer to one or two high ly in the major me tropolitan areas. schools in the area which we would We have to encourage alumni to par­ like to contact. The alumni can make ticipa te in sufficient n u mbers-and individ ua l co ntacts at th ose school s we have to ma ke sure th at our sta ff w ith th e guidance counselor, prin­ support at th e University is adequa te cipa l, or teac hers, giving us a Roch­ to be certain th at the time and ene r­ es ter representative at each one. gy of th e alum ni are we ll spe n t. We Also, we'd like to be able to con­ had new alu mni-admiss ions cha ir­ tact by telephone any stude nt who men her e last wee k rep resenting New Mexico, Sa n Diego, De nve r, Phoe nix, and so on. And Mo nroe Co un ty . And Alba ny . We are not go-

13 stude nts from those areas right awa y, We have started anothe r program can realize some of the things that bu t th es are areas wher e a lo t o f m o­ thi s fall w hich makes good use of ou r the University has meant to him can bil pe pie with childre n have m oved . faculty, too. We h ave selected abo ut be a powerful influence on a high W mu st ge t some stude n ts from 25 hi gh schools with in abo u t an hour's school student, because it represent th se areas to come to th e Univ ersi t y dri ve from Roches ter, roug h ly from an "instant" experience-the colIege and t return to th ese fas t-grow ing Buffalo to Syracu se . Some are private, s tudent is living it right now. I'd like population are 5 as alumni. some pu blic. Some a re su burban, to see us make good use of our stu­ T his doesn' t mean th at w 'r go ­ others inner city. We have a team for dents' insights whenever we can, ing to negl ct ur own local a rea. The each school consis ting of a faculty such as in off-campus programs or Universi ty of Rochester has a long member, an ad miss ion s taff m em ber, during high school students' visits to tradition of se rv ing s tude n ts from possibly a coach, a nd mayb e a Uni­ campus. N w York State and neighboring ver sity s tuden t who h as g ra dua te d RR: With tu it ion, room, and states, and that's a good tradi tio n to from th at hi gh sc ho ol. Eac h team board on the River Campus at about ma int ain . But I do think we s hould visits th e high school for a morning, $6,000 per year, financial aid has to I ok for mo r dive rsi ty-no t o n ly for and each team member talks to a be a prime concern to many appli­ qu n tity and qua lity of s tude n ts, but cou n te rpa rt at the schoo l. Our facul­ cants. What is the picture? al 0 b ca use o f th e resid ential ri a­ ty member, for example, might talk tu r of the Univ rsity. T he le arning to th e advanced placement English Sch oIl: I think th a t, with some exp ri nee for a student fro m Brigh­ teach er o r th e ph ysics teacher. Each qua lifica tions, we ha ve a fine finan­ ton is going to be much be tter w hen member of the team is we ll-versed cial aid pr ogram, one w hic h is com­ he comes to th is univer sity b e cause in th e Uni versity in genera l, and petitive wi th o thers . T he problem is h has a roommate from Tucson­ each is able to establish a rapport th at financial aid is just going to a nd th oth r way around. The west­ with certai n people at th e high school. ke ep going up , a nd t he bulk of the ern s tud nt, instead of going to th e We might eve n tak e it a ste p further, fin anci al aid money o ffered by the II stat university wh re everyone perhaps inviting advanced biology University comes out of current op­ Ise has a similar lifest yle, comes to classes from those sch ools to vis it erating exp en ses. In ter ms of endow­ th University of R ches ter and m eets campus. In any case, we w ill eva lu­ men t a nd th e typ es o f endowment students with ve ry different kinds of ate th is ex perie nce as a kind of pilot th at co n tribu te to sc ho larships, we backgrounds. So I think thi s is a n­ program , and if it wor ks, w e'll expand have very little. That is go ing to have other instance where justice and u ti l­ it the folIow ing yea r . to chang e, and o ne o f the primary ity m t. In add it ion, faculty m embers also go als o f th e $ 102 m ilIion campaign make so me individual school visits, is to provide more e ndowed scholar­ R: other words, to people and th ey o fte n telephone prospective ships. But I think we have received will y th t suc h extensive trav­ app lican ts and th eir parents. I've good support from the tr u st ees and I by the aff i exp nsive , you ca n asked th e dea ns to have dep artment th e administration. Our finan cial aid th n point to p sitive reason s why it chairmen con tac t me w he never a budget for scholarsh ips this year is ho ld b on ? facul ty membe r is go ing on a trip, $2,750,000, and about 50 percent of 5 hoIl: Yes. It makes sens both such as to an acade mic confere nce. our students received so me sort of fin nci lIy and oth rwise. We can give that facul ty m ember the aid from th e University. Over 75 per­ names of a few applican ts fr om the cent receive aid from some source. city he or she w ill be vis iting. Th en, RR: What about competition if the facu lty member is w illing, he from state universities? or she can make a te lephone call to Scholl: Some of th at is un a void­ the students or even visit a school. able because, after all, a family wi th This is especially importa n t in areas a hig h income a nd lit t le or no need which the staff does not plan to visit. can save money by having a son or RR: Your "pilot program" leads daughter attend a state university. us to nother segment of the Univer­ But I think we can compete for an y ity which apparently can be used studen t with real financial need . As for recruiting-students. for the family with no need, we've Scholl: Yes. And I would like to got to be strong advocates of the va l­ u e students who have a sense of per­ ue of a University of Rochester edu­ sp ctive and objectivity-no t those cation. Such fam ilies ca n afford our who ar simply gushy o r gung ho kind of educa tion if th e y believe it is about the University. A student who worth it. Actua lIy, there is litt le else we can do. We are not going to be hea vily tax-supporte d like th e p ublic ins titu­ tions, altho ugh any public support of private educa tion-insofar as it is not followed by any kin d of control by govern ment-is marvel ous. And we To end the pint on Finan ial aid, let me say that we ill alwa ne d more money f r aid. But a long as our present policie for recruiting students continue, we will be com­ petitive with other publi and privat a lleges and univer ities. We don't have to tell alumni olunteers: "For­ get it, nobody can afford this place anyway." We can tell th m to go ahead. And we'll back them up. RR: You've outlined an mbitious program in admissions. Do you h ve more staff members than last year? Scho ll: 0, I a tually have t wo fewer . We had 13 last year and now we have 11. Bu t ware op rating differently, and we reall y h ave more bod ies because we're ge tting peopl e fro m o ther staffs to travel and to do ot her part- ti me work for u s-peopl e in care er co u nseling, academ ic ad ­ visi ng, a nd special s t uden t se rvices, fo r exa mple. Plu s all the fac ulty, stu­ de n ts, and alum ni. t a ll of th em kn ow eve ry t hing abo u t the Un ive r­ sity, but they a re all ve ry fa m ilia r wi th it, and we've m a na g ed to ge t th ree tim es th e recruiting e ffo r t wi th fewer fu ll-time s taff m embers. RR: One area which we haven't discussed is transfer admissions. Ob­ viously, you can 't "rec ruit" transfers the same way you se ek high school students. What are your plans? Scho ll: T h e re's a g row ing mo b ility am on g students. T h yare more w ill­ ing to go -and many wall' to go-to more th an o ne co lleg . For financial reason s th ey may elec t to s ta r t at a pu blic school for two years and th en tran sfer to a pri va te co llege. O r a stu­ dent may choose a sm all co llege and th en find that it does not o ffe r the cannot lower our tu ition by th ree­ th e financial responsibility for th e faciliti es or faculty to su it hi s special quart er s in order to compete. We higher education o f those kids. We interest, 50 he transf ers. T here are simp ly mu st be advocates of our ver­ find fami lies with very high incomes also people in their 20's or 30 's w ho sion of a liberal educa tion. who wi ll contribute nothing to their are th ink ing about a ca ree r change. What bother s me most about the children's educa tions, and th is can They can go to com m unit y c liege fina ncial aid pictu re is th e trend to­ have a measurable effect on us. for a year or two, then transfer to be ward th e de cline of fa m ily respons i­ Of course, there are some opti­ able to receive a bachelor's degree. bility in thi s country. If we con tin ue mistic trends, too. One is the declin­ I would like to have a much­ to experience an increase in t he nu m­ ing birth rate. If you have fewer ch il­ expanded transfer program. Right ber of situations in w hic h a family's dren, you have more money to spend now we have about 150 students fina ncial responsib ility for t he s tu­ on higher education. Also, in the transferring into t he University each den t's ed uca tio n ends at age 18, th en short run, I see more parents placing year. We'd like s t ude n ts from two­ we are go ing to have a tremendous va lue on our kind of education, and year colleges, of course, but we'd amo unt of trouble. T he fami lies have with that comes a willingness to pay been th e number one fina nc ial sup­ for it. Maybe five or six years ago the porter for th e stude nts. The risin g disruptions on some campuses made divorce rat e is a probl em , for exa m­ parents wonder whether it was all ple, becau se whe n th e parents are worth it. I don't know. But it seems separated, th e one w ho does not th ey do va lue our type of education have the child ren tends not to want mor e high ly today.

15 also like transfers from fou r-yea r schools. And there are some nice things about tra nsfer students . They al­ ready have bee n to another schoo l, and they know tha t colleges are not p rfect. Freshmen might come here thin ing tha t th is is the per fect place, and they are disappointed when they find out tha t it is not. Transfers are often more sophisticated about this, more matu re and rea list ic, and we'd like to have more of them. R: But how can you do it? You can recruit from tw o-year schools , but you can't "steal" students from four-year schools. Scholl: Ob viou sly, you canno t re­ cruit in the usual ways a t four-year colleg s. But th er e are indirect ways, and o ne is simply to mak e it easier to tr an s fer. Maybe we s hould even put it in ou r catalogs : "W welcome trans­ fers ." I'm not sure we've ever really id tha t; but we mean it. RR: We've talked now about at­ tr cling tudents of different ages nd ckgrounds to the University. What was it that attracted Tim Scholl? Scholl: Well, I think there we re a couple of key factor s. On e, certainly, is th structure of th e job itself. We ar trying to ge t the admiss ion staff much more invo lved w ith the ong o­ ing life of the University-to brin g the admission office much close r to the main function of the Univers ity, which is teaching and learning. In thi way we can have a role as peo­ pI interested in education, not just in elling and marketing. I th ink this ppro ch is a radical departure fro m th r univ r ities, and I think it's a d on . Admission peopl can get For example, we 'll want to know if RR: You mentioned Ita couple" of v ry fru trated when they never have the University is thought of as a com­ key factors which helped bring you nything to do with students after pe titive place. If it is, is it because to Rochester. What's the other? th y nroll. it's true? Is it because students are Scholl: It is clear to me th at th e I ,de nand oth r faculty mern- a mbitio us and want the best educa­ University of Rochest er has qu ality r m ny time don't understand tio n? Or is it cutthroat? And to and power far beyond its reputation, th pr bl m in recruiting students. what ex tent does the freshman pro­ and I thin k it is nice to work a t a place B u I hold th title of as ociate gram encourage or di scourage such which is better than it s image. At d n in the Call ge of Arts and Sci- a feeling? As a team , the dean and least I can th ink o f nothing worse n - nd all und r r duates e cept the associa te dean s can try to dis­ m n tud nt r in rts and cove r the rea l st reng ths a nd weak­ n f r th fir t two years- I am nesses of th e fr eshman and sopho­ tt r iti n to evaluate the more experience. If we ca n get the itiv nd th native aspects of best possi ble suppo rt for th e students h Univ r ity to pro p ctive stu­ and facu lty while providing the best possible educa tion, then it's an other d nt , 0 v lu t the freshman and p r ri nee, and to find e ample of justice meeting utility. ut huh perience is repre- pe tiv tudents and than working at a school with an RR: An image of a "highly com­ And I don't agree with anyone image better than the instiiution. My petitive student body," which you who says the City of Rochester would own thinking is that Rochester is the used in your example, could be a turn students away. Really, aside most underrated university I know. detriment to recruiting. Are there from a kid who just can't tear himself Maybe not underrated as much as others? Does the weather in Roch­ away from Manhattan, the metropol­ "non-rated." It's not that people say: ester cause recruiting problems, for itan Rochester area offers many op­ "Tha t place is not as good as it says example? portunities. It isn't exactly out in the it is." It's that people too often don't Scholl: It certainly shouldn't. When boonies. So I don't think we should consider us. Maybe we haven't tooted you are talking about four years in a be complaining. We need only look our horn enough to various constitu­ young person's life which are likely at the University in terms of the op­ encies. I don't mean that we have to to shape his future, then what the portunities for students in four years run down other places. But we should hell should weather have to do with here-and they are endless.• be saying: "Come and look us over. it? That's a non-factor which bugs We're having great fun and we think me, because students sometimes will we are doin g a very good job." I choose schools for the wrong reasons. think one of the keys in this area is We can put our tongue in cheek and alumni influen ce. If the alumni can say that our climate is ideal for study­ talk positively about their experi­ ing -much better than San Diego or ences here, we can correc t this image ; this is a place where you prob lem . can rea lly get a lot of work done. But what should be impo rtan t is the qual­ ity of a student's experience, both academic and nonacademic, and tha t's what we have to talk about. We are ta lking about people, not abo ut th e weather.

Everg lades Hartford Alumni Admissions and Mr. and Mrs. Richard L. Katz Mr. and Mrs. John Mon ticello 1205 Mariposa Avenue, (Jo Anne Almendinger Scholarship Chairmen Apt. 233 Monticello) Coral Gables, Fla . 33146 153 Woodland Road O ffice: (305) 547-7280 Storrs, Conn. 06268 Cap ital District-Albany Arizona Ho me: (305) 66 1-1342 Home : (203) 429 -9994 M r.C arl Mangine Mr. Lou is-Jack Po zn er 852 6 East Rovey Aven ue 90 Sta te St ree t Fairfield County Haw aii Scott sdale, Ar iz. 85 25 3 Alba ny, N .Y. 12207 Ms. Rita Black D r. Eugene Welch Office: (518) 463-4808 15 Pin e Hi ll Terrace P.O. Box 1600 Atlant a Hom e: (51 8) 489-0018 S ta m fo rd, Conn. 06903 Ho no lu lu, H. 1. 96806 Mr.C arroll A.G ardne r Hom e: (203) 322-1952 668 East Pelh am Road N.E. M r. Rich ard H anft Hou ston Atla n ta,Ga . 30324 25 1 River Street Finger Lakes Mr. Fred J. Pa ulus O ffice : (40 4) 875-92 11 Troy, N .Y. 12180 M iss Jea nn e C ra ne 3435 Locke Lane Hom e: (40 4) 875- 62 08 O ffice: (518) 27 4-17 00 106 Holiday Harbour Houston, Tex. 77027 Hom e: (518) 279-9671 Ca na ndaigua, N .Y. 14424 Office: (713) 75 1-4507 O ffice: (716) 394-3500, ex t. 29 0 Hom e : (713) 622 - 0963 Central Florida- Dayto na Mr . William A. Lee Home: (71 6) 394 - 5679 8417 Ta lly Ho Road Beach and O rlando Ithaca Lut hervi lle, Md . 21093 Mr. John McKeeha n Geneseo M r. a nd Mrs . Dona ld Reaves Office: (301 ) 821 - 7654 826 Pineappl e Road M rs. Robert D ew ar (Ce lia) Home: (301) 821 -7658 So u th Dayton a, Fla. 32019 (Don na Lin foot ) 901 D ryd en Road , #39 O ffice: (904) 767-3900 40 Westv iew Cresce nt It ha ca , N .V. 14850 Boston G eneseo, N.Y. 14454 Home: (904 ) 767-6363 Mr.A nd re w Hanushe vs ky Mr. Ge orge M . Mullen O ffice: (716) 243 - 3553 La nsin g North 17- lF c/o Belknap and McC lain Chicago Home: (716) 243-232 6 650 Pleasant Street Ms.Su za n ne Ma jor Ith aca , N .Y. 14 850 Watertown, Mass. 021 72 2433 Simpson Street Great er Detroit Kansas City Office: (617) 926 -0950 Evanston, Ill. 602 01 Mr. and Mrs. M icha el Lucke y Dr. and Mrs. Rob ert G . Pierl eoni Home: (617) 44 7-4570 O ffice: (31 2) 99 5-2084 (Ann Adam s Luck ey) (Ma ry an n E.Pow er s Pierleo n i) Home: (312 ) 869- 5014 744 Gree nhills Drive 10009 West 95 th S treet Buffalo An n A rbo r, Mich . 48105 Dallas Ove rla nd Pa rk, Kans. 66212 Mr. Ro ber t R. Jones O ffice: (313) 782- 14 36 M rs. Mary Sn ell O ffice : (913) 83 1- 718 0 132 Woo db ury Drive Home: (313) 665-3124 Buffalo, N.Y. 14226 3004 Padre Court Hom e: (913) 888-6 757 Office: (716) 836-3995 Plano, T ex. 7507 5 (co ntinued Otl page 4 0) Ho me : (716) 833-2895 Home: (214) 423 -9277

17 Great Expectations: Three Freshmen

in the Medieval House. The house is a special-interest living center for students interested in the classical, medieval, and Renaissance periods of European h istory. Daniel decided to accept the inv itation and says he's happy about that. He wanted to live in a quiet place, he said, and he likes the house lect ures and dinners, be­ cause facu lty members are invited and there is a chance for informal contact. He has always been interested in military h istory, and he began study­ ing medieval history after h is firs t exposure to calligraphy. In turn, his interest in calligraphy began during his senior year in high school. He was using an old German dict ionary, written in old script, and was in­ trigu ed by the lettering . He tried to copy it, then took courses, and began reading about the art. He pla ns to Daniel Cohen continue studying calligraphy, and Rama Roell will be lettering sig ns for Medieva l Daniel Co hen is a freshma n who Hou se events. If Rama Roe ll makes it to the White lives in the Medieval Hou se, plan s to Cohen's University courses include Ho use, the United States will have major in chemistry, and says his firs t che m istry, mathematics, literature, a another President w ith a strong in­ few weeks in college have brought recreational cou rse in archery, and terest in sports. him back to rea lity. an a r t history preceptorial which he Rama is a freshman who plans to Back from w he re? From th e ex­ find s "fas cinat ing.. . . I've never be­ ma jor in po litica l science and then pectation that goi ng away to co llege fore been able to look at a painting go to law sc hool. "I definitely wa nt would mean being independent and and ana lyze and understand it ." to go into po litics," she said. "I wa nt on his own, and that college would Daniel plan s to major in chemistry to run for office and work my way b an "intellectual haven." - unless he "finds something new"­ up." To th e top ? "Why no t? " she He is not disappointed, th ough . long the way, earn a Ph.D. in bio­ said. "My expectations were so idealistic chem istry, and ha ve a ca reer in re­ Rama is a first-gene ratio n Ameri­ that it wouldn't be fair to say I was search. can. Her parents are Dutch, and they disappointed," he said. "I've just He chose Rochester ove r the Uni­ came here from Ho lland after they b n brought back to reality." And versity of Ch icago becau se he lives were marr ied. Re latives from Hol­ he i n't unhappy about that reality, in Chicago and wa n ted the experi­ land are frequ ent visitors here, she ither. ence of livin g away from home. He said, and she is hopi ng to make her Daniel is a graduate of the Univer­ decided agains t G rinne ll College be­ first trip to he r pa rents' na tive land sity of Chicago High School. It is a cause he wa nted to be in a city. " Roch­ next sum me r. small, select, and very competitive ester has music, ar t, an d a variety of She's had an insid e look at po litics school, with course offerings not cultural activit ies," h e said . since she was a child, because her found in most high schools. His last mother wo rked for t he Ma ry land two years of English, for example, Sta te Legislature. Also, livin g in An­ w r seminars, and th list of courses napolis, she took advantage of the available to choose from included proximity of th e nati on's capital and Shak p are; evil; th poetry of Blake, beca me an in formal stude nt of gov ­ nn , nd Coleridge; Freudian logic; ernment. and mod rn and cI ssical Greek dra­ At the same tim e she was learning ma. c d mics at Ro hester, at least how government and politicians real­ f r a first- me t r freshman, are not ly fu nction, she w as p laying tennis, v ry diff rent fr m what they were volley ball, field hock ey, and bask et ­ in hi high hool, Daniel noted. ball and was o n her high school teams Hi cell nt background in the in all fou r sports. humaniti I d to an invitation to live She's on th e tennis team at Roch­ the spe iali t at a Iarg m dical c n­ ester and is planning to try out fo r ter in a big city. I'd pref r to be a g n­ the basketball team. eral practitioner in a rural etting. If "You can 't limit yo u rself to study­ you love to 'do tor' p ople, th oun­ ing, " Rama said."After a month in try i th pia e to do it. D tor are college I'm learning that e mploye rs needed th re, ince a man of them and gradua te schools are looking for rnigrat to the ity wh re th 'big an all-arou nd person. I love my money'i . courses but sports teaches you a dif­ "Besides. a general practice would ferent kind of compe tition, and it's be so much more int re ting. You goo d men tal discipline ." don't iu t get J tead diet of skin or Her int erest in spor ts ha s never ga trointest inal probl m , but a little inter fer ed wi th her s tudying. Rama of everything." was in th e Hon or Soc iety in high The Wil on 5 holar hip, in addi­ schoo l and is a t te nding th e Univer­ tion to carrying a fou r-year stipend, sity on a Bost on Alumni Regional enables each Scholar to ha e a spe­ Scholar ship. Just before he r senior cial faculty advis r for a ad mic an d year in high school, her fa mily moved general matters. Martha's adviser i to East Sandwich , Mass., and she Professor Harmon Hal omb of th e made th e transiti on fr om a large, philosophy department. open-campus school to a sma ll, struc­ Working with Prof. Holcomb and tured one without dr o pping a grade. within the framework of the Roch­ She came to Rochester on th e ad ­ ester Pl.m. Martha plans a double vice of her high school gy m teacher Martha Tymeson major in biochernistr and t heology. whose father, Ge orge Mull en '4 1, is By doi ng 0, she hopes"to work ou t a trustee of th e Universit y. At 1 7, Martha Ellen T ym eson is a coher nt approach to m dical eth ics Rama said she's been happ y her e o ne of th e you ngest membe rs of he r that can be applied to is ue s lik eu­ right from th e beginning, but she did entering class. Sh e go t to th e Univer­ thanasia and abortion, and to do tor­ have so me se cond th ou ghts after sity so quickly by fin ishing high patient relationship in genera l. spending a weekend a t ano ther col­ school (Winchest er -Thurston School. " nother thing l'v be o rne in- lege which ha s a reputati on as bein g Pitts burg h) in three yea rs. In fact , te rested in and ho pe to pursue w hile a "party scho ol." "Spo rts aren 't im­ she finishe d in such di stinguished I'm here is th e quest ion of life afte r portant here, so th er e's no enthus i­ fas hio n that she won on e of th e Uni ­ death.While I r a lize it wo u ld be dif ­ asm , no real spirit," she said. "S ports vers ity 's coveted four-year Joseph fi ult to find any pa tt r n fr om a sci­ aren't as imp ortant as aca de m ics, but c. Wilson Scholarships, which she entific point o f view in th e e peri­ th ey should ge t more att en tion th an will use to broaden her back ground ences of those p o ple w ho ha ve lost they do here." for a caree r in m edicine. life signs and th en re overe d, I'd like She does th ink the women's spo rts Martha's decision to attend th e Uni ­ to exa m ine as man y ases as po ssi­ program is exc ellen t. "T he girls on ve rsity of Roch est er was no sudden ble to see if an y useful co nclusio ns the teams are so close, so inten se," whim. "I've heard a bout this place can be dr awn." she noted. " And you won't find a bet ­ since I was a ba by," she said." M y ter staff of women than the faculty father (Rev. Gale E. Tymeson '50) we have here." T hose fac tors and th e wa s an undergraduate here, and exce llent acad em ic offerings here re­ w hen he fini sh ed at th e se mina ry, h e inforced her pos itive fee lings about returned here to the Henrietta Uni ted th e University. Church of C hr ist. So even as a small Her determina tion to be a we ll­ child , I spe n t a lot of tim e on campus ." ro u nded person has led Ra ma to areas She is qu ick to add , though , that th e othe r th an aca de m ics and sports. She Wilson Scholarsh ip rea ssures her plays the flu te and is learning gui tar. that she was admitted to the Uni ver­ She worked on her hig h school maga­ sit y on her own qualifications, and zine and te levision sta tion. And she "not on my father's good name." o nce dan ced in a comm u nity th eat er Another factor in her decision to pr oduction of th e mu sical Carnito ], attend th e University is its "grea t medical school. And the Rochester Plan is the best t hing I've come across for students who are su re that they wa nt to go on to medical school." Marth a is one such student, and she ha s very definite ideas about the sh ape her medical career w ill take. "I wa n t to stay out of the ra t race of

19 Wh en sportswriter Ron T homas '71 left the Rochester Times-Union two years ago to go to work for the s: Chicago Daily News, he had a few ad­ justments to make. He started t ravel­ ing to games by plan e instead of ca r. His pass go t him into a p ress box in ­ A ort f om stead of th e bleach ers. A nd the Big Game beca me Michi gan and O hio State instead of Ca ledo nia-M u mford e ig Ten and Avon . Now in his third season of cover­ ing th e Big Ten, Thom as looks back By Ray Martino at his first job at th e Times-Union as a valuable appren ticeship. " Fran k Car­ do n, the sports editor at th e Times­ Union, allowed me to cover a varie ty of su bjects," h e says. "1 primarily cove red regional high school s por ts,

20 us ua lly buried under a ll of the pr o "Sports cove rage p u ts the spotlight foo tball sto ries," he says. "Mos t read­ • 11 on man y important Is sues,.he says. ers w ho are in te rested in the Big Ten "Sports is one of the fe w industries get the ga me re sults from the Sunday covered by the mediia so cIoseIy that morning paper, so I have to handle people get an id ea o f h o w the Amer­ my sto ries differently. ican busi ness w orld re all y works. "My mo st important writing is done There's constant s po r ts coverage ~f during th e week leading up to Satur­ employer-employee n eg otr.a t iIons , fl­ day's ga mes," Thomas says. "I'll do nan ces, and legal is s ues. E v e~ colleg~ features on players or coaches and sports has become bi g bU Sine s s . preview the teams' strategies. Some football bowl bid, for e xample , an of my stories have nothing specifical­ mean a million dollars to a school . ly to do with upcoming games. For "Sports jou r n a lis m also m ake s ~ i.si­ example, one of my recent fea t u res ble the social progress of minorIt~e s wa s on the history of th e op tion play ." in this cou ntry. Since Jackie R o bin­ When the footba ll season e nds son broke into major lea g u e b a s e b 1I Thomas begi ns covering Big Te~ in 1947, blacks h a v e become accepted basketball. "Since I'm mo re person­ slowly into other areas of sports a n d ally involved with basketball, it's business. Today, we're g raduall see­ easier for me to analyze it," he says. ing more black q uarterbacks in f a t ­ " In football, it's more difficu lt to iso­ ball. Blacks on the sports field sho w late the playe rs who are responsible society that t hey ca n e xc el under for a team's successes or fa ilu res." pressure in leadership positions." After the NCAA basket ball tourna­ Thomas fee ls tha t there are v alu­ ment in March, Thomas becomes a able lessons to be le a r n e d from sp rts . copy editor on the 6 p.m . to 2 a.m. "Sports teaches a person t he v a lue o f sh ift . He edits w ire service copy and working toward a goal as an individu­ occasionally does spec ial featu res . al and a member of a te am. The nega­ Whe n Tho mas isn 't on the road tive resu lts from an overemphasis on covering a ga me, he does mos t of hi s winning can be seen as well. inter view ing by pho ne . "T he college "It's the responsib ilit y of sports sports infor ma tion directors are very journalism to report not o nly o n the helpful in arranging int er views w ith games but also what ha ppens off the players and providing background field that's significan t, " Tho m a s 5 ys. ma terial. I rarely have a problem get­ "A lot of what happens in sports is a ting information . reflection of the cou n try in general." "One lesson I learned from Cardon Working in a profession t ha t h a s a at th e T-U was to s tay away from oth­ sma ll percentage of mino ri t ie s has er repor ters aft er a ga me-most wi ll posed no proble ms for Tho m a s , he surro und th e sta rs o f the ga me and says. "In fact, in cer ta in conditions end up with th e sa me quo tes. I tr y to I think I have an advantage, especial­ look for the less o bvio us story." ly when writing abou t bl ack ath letes. Although T homas has reservations They don 't bend over backw a rds to about becoming a n editor some day, give me a story, b u t the y probably but I also did some stories on Roch ­ he knows w ha t he wo uld loo k for in a find it easier to talk w it h m e ." es ter's pr o baseball, soccer, and la­ sportswriter. "I judge a writer on h is With a master's d e gree in journal­ crosse teams. After tw o yea rs at th e information-gathe ring techniques a nd ism from Northwester n U ni v e r s i ty T-U, I had covered just about every his ability to keep a sto ry in te resting and four years' experie nce u n d e r his sport at least onc e." and colorful from beginning to e nd . belt, Th omas, 28, is in a p osi t ion to When T homas join ed th e Daily Wri ters wh o impress me th e most are think about other career o ppor t uni­ News in the fall of 1 975, his assign­ those who ask thei r own ques tions at ties, but he says tha t h e's sati s fi ed fo r me nt was to cover Big Ten basketball. press confere nces and who come up the pr esent. " B ro a d cas t in g h a s t h "Basketball has always been my with the unpredi ctable sto ries. A glamour and poten t ially the bi g m o n ­ number one sport to watch and to good w riter establishes a me ta ph o r ey, but I enjoy w r it ing," h e says. play," he says. "T he only bette r job I in his lead and con tinues it through­ "Spor tswriting g ives m e the opp o r t u ­ could have asked for would have ou t the story. T here ar en't man y who nity to be crea tive a nd to com b i ne been covering a pro basketball team." can do th at consist en tly. Fina lly, a my outside interests with m y jo b . Last fall T ho mas was given the ad­ good sportswriter isn't intimidated I guess I can't complain." . dition al responsibility of covering by coac hes." Big Te n football. Since the Daily Th omas takes issu e with thos News is an eve ning paper, its cover­ who consider the sports section of a age of Saturday ga mes differs from newspaper something less than news. other new s media . " My sto ry on a Saturd ay ga me doesn 't appear until our Monday eve ning edition , so it's

2 1 e Strouse lection les Strouse '4 7E is one person who doesn't have to worry about r ad not taken." He managed to take them both. Three Tony ds and a string of Broadway hits are behind him, and other musi­ i in his future. He still finds time to compose serious music, ing t the satisfactions in his life. By Sue Bricker

"Little Orphan Annie? Who would want to see Little Orphan Annie{" That was the reaction Charles Strouse had a few years ago when lyricist Martin Charnin brought him an ide a for a new Broadway musical. "1 ha ted the idea," Strouse said. "I tho ught it was terrible." But he decided to give it a try any­ way, and he composed 'the music w hile C ha rn in wrote the lyr ics, Stro use has no regre ts about his decision, Amlil' bounced in to New York as 1977's smash Broadway hit, left audi­ e nces cheering, and added another T on y award to Strouse's collection. lilt fee ls great," Strouse said about w inning a Tony award. "It's a sur­ prise. O ne of th e things they tau gh t m e at th e Eas tman School is a re­ spect a nd love for th e craft of music, so when I'm honor ed for my music, it 's de ligh tful. It's icin g on th e cake, and I already love th e cake," And, he added, th e second and third times, it fee ls better. . Strouse's fir st T on y was fo r th e mu ­ sical score of Byl' Byl' Birdil' and his second, for th e mu sic he wrote for /vpplause, Other Strou se co n tribu tions to Br oad way have been th e mu sic for Colden Boy, 5upl'rman, and A ll A ml'r­ iran. H olly wo od also has been fortu­ nate e noug h to ge t in on Strouse's act: am ong the films he 's scored ar e Bonnil' and Clydl' and Thl' Night Thl'Y Raided Mi rl sky's. Strouse graduate d fr om Eastman in 1947 and spent the next 13 years studying music, writing for nightclub acts, a nd struggling at times until Birdie o pened in 1960 and became an ins tan t success, He s t udied at Tanglewood for three summers wi th Aaron Copland-s-vmy biggest hero"- and then, through Copland, go t a scholarship to study in Paris with Nad ia Bou langer, mas­ ter teach er of composition. "Every­ body stud ies with her," he said. Photos by M ichael Derer

23 Until that tim e, Strouse had put most of his efforts into writing what he calls serious, or abstract, music. But Boulanger thought he had a spe­ cial talent for popular music and en­ couraged him in th at direction. It ope ned a new dimens io n in his pro­ fess ional life-the audience. "W hen I left Madam e Boulanger, I supported myself the only way a composer can," Strouse said. "I was playing for dance classes and re­ hearsals. You can't make money w rit­ ing serious music." It was during this tim e tha t he be­ gan meeting people connected with th e theat er a nd started working with th em. "I began to see that I have a grea t need to communicate w ith a n audi­ ence, and th at's o ne of the thin gs I'd been missin g whe n I was a st ude nt," he said. "T he n, I was learning a cra ft, and that sho u ld be learned in a class i­ cal sett ing . But I wa s mi ssing some­ thing and didn't kn ow it. "Suddenly, I saw th at I was made for popular music-that I real1y did enjoy it. It's flavored m y life differ­ ently." Strouse still composes serious mu­ sic."I need both," he said . "I can't write only for an audience." He re­ cently wrote an opera oratorio for th e opening of the ne w Syr acuse Civic Center. Another cla ssical com­ positio n is "Festival Fanfare," which he wrote to ce lebrate the reopening of th e Eastman Theatre after its reno­ vati on in 1972. Strouse is always composing some­ thing. "Music dr ives me up a wall, " he said. "I'm so despondent if I don't beat a problem, or so elated if I feel it's been a success-or if the audience feels it's a success." Strouse does his composing, usual­ ly for about two hou rs each day, at th e home where he, his wife, Barbara, and their ch ildren live. He was born and raised in New York and he loves the city. His apart­ ment ove rlooks Ca r negie Hall. Walk­ ing through the Manh attan streets, he re sponds to the sig hts and so unds aro und him, poi n ting out interesting­ looking people and bu ild ings, talk­ ing about the mixt u re o f faces an d th e visual stimulation . "I think being in New Yo rk affects my creativity," Strouse sa id. "I like bein g in the middle of thi n gs." Confident and relaxed, Strouse is aware of his talent and proud of his accomplishments, but there doesn't appear to be any need to shout about them to the world. His Tony awards, an Annie paperweight, and other me­ mentos of his Broadway successes sit quietly on a shelf in his living room. He ta lks easily about himself, but with modesty and almost a sense of wonder at what he's achieved. Whe n asked if he feels he's a celeb­ rity, Strouse sa id no and almost laughed at the tho ught. But whether or not he fee ls that way, he does fit in the ranks. His name is listed in Who's Who, and newspaper reporters interview hi m. People don't stop him o n the street to ask for autographs, but headwaiters in the theater dis­ trict know him on sight. Mention his na me to most people and they'll re­ spond with a questioning stare. But ad d the plays and movies he's scored, and the questioning loo k turns to instant recog nition. Wha t lies ahead for Charles Strouse appears to be as fu ll as his past. He an d lyricist Lee Adams are working on tw o new m us icals. One, Birdie 1I, is a sequel to Bye Bye Birdie. T he ot her, A Broa dway M usica l, is abo u t a group of white peop le produc ing an all­ black show and is based on some of th e experiences he a nd Adams had when scoring Golden Boy. Strouse also has a dream. "1 am am bitious; I am driven ," he sa id. "1 loo k at a score by Stravinsky and I th in k, 'Will I ever know enoug h? Ca n I eve r do any thing that deep?'" He said he's tr yin g. Stro use th ou ght back a mom ent to his college da ys in Rochest er whe n a girl he dated asked him if he wanted to be a composer or if he wanted to be a su ccess . " At the time, I thought it was a very profound question," he said. "It took me a lon g time to decid e the answer. I decid ed I wanted to be both." Looks like he made it..

2S Th at indefatigable soothsayer Ben Biomedical Engineering Franklin once pointed out that noth­ ing is certain but death and taxes. It's unlikely, however, that even he could have anticipated the dramatic revolu­ Offers Blueprints for Health tion in modern technology that has occurred in the past half-century, By Ellen Ruppel Shell and nowhere are these changes mo re evident than in the burgeoning field of engineering. Today there's a good chance you 'll find engi neers at work just about any­ wh er e there's a sticky practical pro b­ lem worth tackling. They're helping to protec t our oceans from oi l slicks, ou r soil from erosion, a nd our at mo­ sph ere from ae rosols. Perhaps one of t he most in triguing conte mpo ra ry applications of engi­ neerin g ex pertise, however , is in the area of medicin e and t he health sci­ ences . Here a relat ively new breed of eng inee r ing specialist, the biomedi­ cal eng ine er, is working together with the health prof ession al to pro­ vide better and more efficien t care. At the Uni versit y's College of Engi­ neering and Applied Science and School of Medicine an d D entistry, biomedical eng ineers (an d un der grad­ uate and grad ua te students as pir ing to the title) are eng aged in a broad spectrum of research activities. O ne group, led by Pr of . Edwin L. Ca rs te n­ sen of the Department of Electrical Engineering, is study ing th e e ffec t of ultra sound radiation on va rious ph ys­ iological processe s in mammals. An­ other, whose principal investigator is Helmut D. Weymann, professor of mechanical and aerospace sciences, is lookin g at what influence the struc­ ture of blood , particularl y that of th e red blood cell membrane, ha s on its flow behavior. A third gro up, directed by Leon Wheeless, associate profes­ sor of pathology and of e lectrical en­ gineering, is developing an auto­ mated method of prescreen ing Pap smea rs for abnorma l cells . Prof. Carsten sen's inter est in ultra­ sound research da tes back to his Navy days when he was involved in a study of underwater sound . Later he w as supported by the National Foundation-March of Di mes in an in vestigation of the production of heat in deep tissues using ul trasonic radiation. "Well over a million people a year are treated with ultrasound," Carsten­ se n explained."Basically it's just a matter of applyi ng localized heat, a technique that in so me cases has proved to be therapeut ic." 2 Ultrasound is used to treat a vari­ used to study clay suspension is just "T he goal of this a pect of auto­ ety of ills, from severe pain to simple about the same theory one could mated cytology, which involv s the muscle strain. But some medical sci­ apply to a study of the blood, and I prescreening of gynecological sp ci­ entists believe it may have an even thought it might be more interesting mens, is to throw out the more than more critica l application as a tool in to do blood work for a change." 80 percent of cell specimens whi h the contro l and possible eradication Weymann and co-worker Dr. Paul are completely normal," Wheeless of cancerous tiss ue. LaCelle, chairman of the Department explained."T h e machine must be "Many research groups are investi­ of Radiation Biology and Biophysics able to recognize the entire spectrum ga ting th e use of hyperthermia (high and director of the Blood Cell Rheol­ of abnormalities-but it do s not ac ­ tem peratures) in cancer treatment," ogy Center, are attempting to deter­ tually classify the cells a to the spe­ Ca rs te nse n sa id. "S ince ultrasound mine exactly how much pressure is cific type of anomaly. It is up to the is one way of producing localized necessary to push red blood cells cytotechnologist to handle the final heat , it may some day be used to through the circulatory system at a analysis." radiat e cancero us tumors." given viscosity. They are also testing Wheeless and his research group Ca rs tens en and his team of gradu­ the blood additives that are used to have devised and constructed a com­ ate studen ts and assist an ts are work­ alter this viscosity in patients whose plex system of detectors, flow cham­ ing together with Drs. 1. D. Hare and blood is too thick to flow smoothly. bers, and omputers that can reliably Ch arl es A. Link e of th e Unive rs ity's "W he n blood viscosity is too high, distinguish normal from abnormal Medical Center in an investiga tio n th e hear t has trouble pumping it." cells. Cells stained with a f1uores ent of th e pot ential su rg ical uses of ultra­ Weymann said. "This can lead to a dye are put through this system, sound. decrease in t he blood oxygen level which checks them for signs of ab­ "O ne of ou r prim ary conce rns is which further reduces the pumping normality. whether or not ultrasound causes tu ­ rate a nd, eventually, may cause a "We found that nuclear fluores­ mors to metastasize (spread to orig­ heart attack." cence is a unique indicator for a b­ inally unaffected areas of th e bod y)," Tho ug h these studies may one day normality," Wheeless sid. "50 far Carstensen said. "T he second qu es­ contribu te to th e discove ry of new we have determined that our m th d tion we are int erest ed in an swering ways of pr eventing ce rtai n types of will work, bu t it's still two or three is whether ultrasound has an y effec t cardiac condi tio ns, Wey ma nn is quick yea r away from becoming a cli nical on th e animal's immunosy stem." to point ou t th at such advances are ins trument." After nea rly five years of rese ar ch, a lon g way do wn th e road . Wheeless attributes th e success of Carstensen's group ha s concluded " Right now we're spending a good th is project to its interdisciplinary that ultrasound rad iation did not deal of ou r time just lookin g at th e app roac h: 13 exper ts from fi Id s accelerate metastasis in the animals properties of heal th y blood cells," he ranging from optical engine ri ng to being studied . In fact , th e treatments said. "We do n' t ev n understan d cytopa thology are co llaborating on apparently caused the tumors to dis­ how th e tran sport of oxygen is car­ it. Th is is bas ica lly the same philoso­ appear altogether. ried ou t betw een t he eIls and th e phy th at in spi r ed t he initia tion of Carstensen plans still further in ves­ tissu e su rro unding the ca piIlar ies. th e Un iversity's graduat -level bio ­ tigations into the potential conse ­ We hope th at some day our wo rk will medical eng ineering program 16 quences of ultrasound treatment. help un cover so lutions to a variety of yea rs ago-the idea that an ind ivid u ­ Included will be the experimental clinical dilemmas, such as ho w th e al tr ain ed in mo re th a n one area ma y analysis of the impact of diagnostic red blood cell membran es o f people we ll be better eq uip ped to a ttack levels of ultrasound on the mamma­ with sickle ceIl an emia become rigid probl ems of me d ical technology than lian imm unosystem, as well as a and how the shearing motion of the so meone specializ ing in a si ng le field. study of the effectiveness of ultra­ blood ceIls can ca us e a decrease in "It's th e mo st natural thing in th e sonic treatment as a ma le contra­ viscosity." world," Edwin Kinnen, professor of cep tive. Like his colleagues Carstensen and electrical engineering, sa id o f the Altho ugh perha ps somewha t more Weymann, Leon Wheeless is involved program. "I t's an o ppor t u nity for esote ric research than Carstensen's, in a number of theoretical investiga­ our studen ts to combine skiIls and Prof . Weym ann's studies may even­ tion s. Yet, u nli ke them, one of the abilities in t he physica l sciences with tu ally ha ve equa lly far-reaching ap­ immediate objectives of his research an interest and concern for th h ea lth plications . Weymann has spe nt years is a comple te ly pragmatic one: to per­ of mankind . It's a popular concen­ looking at red blood cell m embranes fect an automated meth od for dis­ tration with almost unlimited possi­ and blood viscos ity and hopes th at ting uishing normal from abnormal bilities, and we hope ou r pr gra m will his wo rk may some day co n tribute to cells. continue to expand and diversify to th e easing of human cardiovascular in teract with the ever-growing de­ tra u ma . ma nds of medical science." . Weym ann is a relat ive newcomer to th e su bspecialty o f biomedical en­ gine ering . "1 go t interest ed in thi s are a of res earch five yea rs ag o w hile doing a study of clay suspen sion in oil we lls," he expla ined."T he theory

27 elli

We thoug h t that we were really stomach. (Now he does n't need a pillow.) To the edi tor: throwi ng down the ga untlet in our The show ha d qu ite a group involved in T he "Identity Crisis" photograph in the I st issue by diggin g up the p ho to be­ it . Lloyd Richards, Joe Po nazecki (Joe is Fall 1977 issue of the Rochester Revieu:. .. now a pro fess iona l actor o n TV, stage, is a scene from the April 1951 Quilting low a nd acco mpanying it w ith the etc.): the Un iversity's own Bob Scrim­ Club production Harem Scamn. Upon see­ followi ng cha llenge : "Lest you should geour was in th e cas t; and Art Sa tz (now ing th is photograph, I found that I still b gin to th ink that th is is easy, try president of a m usic school in New York have the long-playing record of the show this one on for size." City, I believe) created m uch of the orig­ songs, together with the original program. ina l music, as did Tenney Johnson (an at­ According to the program, the player Here's h ow some of yo u responded. to rney in D.C.). Ge ne Su rasky d irec ted on the far left is Pete Peirce, in the role of an d co-a uthored it (I was th e other "co"). Yvon ne de Montez, Flower of the Orient. To the editor: Ge ne is a successful Brigh ton dentist and Th e second from left is Ray Rueby in the Re th "Ide nti ty Crisis" in th e Fall 1977 has been putting his fingers in my teet h role of Su ltan Ib n Hadd . The dancers I am issue-surely you jest. for years. unabl e to identify from the program ex­ Any 10 al fan of great musica l comedy T hings were tou gh in those days. With cept to suggest tha t they were part of the would immediately recognize those lus­ the real coeds ac ross town on Prince dancing chorus, th e mem ber s of which cio us gi rls as part of my ha rem-as pre­ Street, we had to use local talent for the ar e list ed as: Bill Beveridge, Dick Bake­ sent d in April 1951 by th e Q uilt ing Cl u b fe males-and th ey go t even with us by meier, Howie C lark, Bruce Cloughly, Andy of th University of Roch est e r Men 's s ticking mu stach es o n so me of th e real Go ld ma n, Ralph Keyes, Da n Murphy, Joe Campus. The show: Harem Scarem. ga ls for the ir K'Scope shows. Pon azecki, Frank Sa n tini, and Charles T he do ll n th e left is Yvo nne de Mo n­ "Ident ity Crisis" indeed. Wilson . tez, Flower of th e Orient-tho ug h we also Su lta n Ibn Ha dd Th e theme of the show was about drill­ call d him Pe te Peirce . And to th e righ t of Land of Sau cy Arabia ing for oil in th e Middl e East. Perhaps the th th rone is Frank Santin i. However, with (aka Ray Ru eb y, Jr. '51) show oug h t to be revived in view of the five wives I'll have to admi t th e n am es of Rochest er, N .Y. even ts of today. the next three escape me- obviou sly th ey By the way, I myself wrote o ne of the weren't my favorites. (I thi nk the one in songs for thi s show, whic h is probably the cen t r of the th ree is Bill Beve ridge.) how I hap pen ed to recogni ze thi s sce ne. Apparently, this photo was taken du r­ Per r y Edson '52 ing a rehearsal, as the Sultan is not wear­ Los Angeles, Calif. ing his beard an d has no pillow in his

2 To the editor: To the editor: The "Identity Crisis" picture in the Fall Of course I think rot ryonr will know the For Next Time ... 1977 Rochester Reoieto was taken by Al identities in the Fall 1977 issue's antique Bloomfield for publicity purposes-the photo. I forget how long ago it is. Even I For next time, we will retire from the 1951 Quilting Club production of Harem don 't recognize everybody, and I forget lists for a while to do some m re dig­ Scarem. the name of the then Men's Campus Quilt­ ging in the University archives. We The photogenic beauties are (left to ing Club annual musical? comedy? obviously need to dig even deep r if right ) Pete Peirce, Ray Rueby, Frank San­ The fetching youth on the far left is we're ever going to stump anyone. To tin i, Bruce Cloughly, Bill Beveridge, and Peter Peirce '53 (I think). Ch arles Wilson. Too bad this organization The Sultan is Ray Rueby '51. The rest tide you over until we do, John Kin­ went the way of so man y traditions and no of the harem is too well-disguised to trig­ yon '4oE sends in this photo from longer exists (or so I am to ld). ger my recognition. Coral Gables, Fla ., and writes, " I be­ Dave Rosen th al '52 I'm sure you will get complete identifi­ lieve this picture was taken at the old Stage Man ager, 1951 cation, though. Q uilting Club Helen Drew Isenberg '51 Sagamore Hotel, later the Sheraton. Sunnyvale, Calif. I spy Art Cowles on bass, Bill Osseck (ESM clarinet teacher) on sax, and myself half-hidden in the brass sec­ tion. But who are all those other cats, and where are they now?"

29 I

About the University o A History of the University of Roches­ and at local Rochester bookstore s. ter, 1850-1 962, by the late Arthur J. The retail price is $20, with an intro­ o Th e Na tiona l Ca ncer Institute has May, award-win ning historian and ductory pr ice of $16.50. awarded a $2,809,186 grant for the professor at the University for 39 To order by ma il, fill out the coupon onstruction of a new Cancer Center years, has been published by the below and mail it with check, money re earc h build ing at the University's University. or der, or Master Charge or VISA cred­ M dical Center. Strong Memorial, Prof. May, a distinguis hed scho lar, it card infor ma tion to: Un iversity of Th Genesee, Highland, Rochester accomplished author, an d one of the Rochester Books tore, River Campus Ge neral, and St. Mary's Hosp ita ls most popular teach ers in the Univer­ Station, Rochest er, N .Y. 14627. f rm the clinica l research an d tr eat ­ sity's hist ory, bega n his book in 1964 m nt component of the Cance r Ce n­ whe n he retired fr om teac hing. He ter, whic h serves pat ients in a 10­ was appo inted off icial University his­ co u nty area . tori an by W. Allen Wallis, then Uni­ o A one-year fellow sh ip for a grad u­ Th n w facility has been approved vers ity pres iden t, and completed ate student in political science has by the New York State Department most of the chapte rs in firs t-draft been esta blished in mem ory of Fre d­ of Health, Division of Hea lth Facili­ form du ring th e next fou r years be­ erick L. Thomas '16, who died in 193 0 ties Development. Constructio n is fore his death in 1968. while serv ing in th e American For­ xp cted to begin in February 1978 The 347-pag e volume, containing eign Service. and will b c mpleted in mid-1980. 30 pages of illustr ations, traces the Th e Frederick L. Thomas Mem orial The one and one-ha lf story Ca nce r University's devel opment fr om its DACOR Fellowship was made pos­ Re earch Facility will bring togethe r beginnings with on ly a handful of in­ sible by a don ati on to the DACOR in one 10 ation clinical research , struc tors in a conv erted hot el to to­ (Diplomatic an d Consular Officers, treatment, and supportive se rvices day's institution of eight scho ols and Retired) Education al and We lfare f r II adult outpatients seen by the colleges. Foundation by Mr. T ho mas' brother, Ca ncer Center faculty at Strong. In After Pr of. May died, th e task of Sheld on Thomas. Th e fellowship addition, the facility will provide editing h is work for publication was carries a stipend of $5,000 an d will radi tion th rapy to adult inpati en ts give n to Law renc e E. Klein '71, w ho be awarded, according to th e ter ms nd to p di tric inpatien ts and out­ com pleted the book with help from of the fellowship, " for aca dem ic ex­ p tients. several facult y member s, administra­ cellence to assist fin anci ally an ou t­ Th total cost of the new facility tors, and staff members. Prof. Ma y standing American studen t who will will b $5 ,685,544. The National Can­ had been assisted by Mr s. Howard S. be completing hi s first yea r of grad u­ cer Institut grant covers 49 percent Mer ritt and Mrs. Ke nneth G. Kugler. ate study in political science in May of th co t. The rest of th cost will be T he book is available at the Uni­ 1978 at the University of Rochester m t by private donations and monies vers ity's bookst or es on the River and will be effective during th e sec­ com mitted by the Un iversity from its Campus, at the Ea stm an School of ond year of such study at the Univer­ 102 million campaign. Mu sic, and at th e Medical Center, sity in 1978-79." ------

Please send me copies of Arthur May 's A History of the University of Roches­ ier, 1850- 1962 , at $16.50 each, plus 50 cents per order for postage and handling. ( w York State res idents add 7% sales ta x, or $17.65 per book plus handling fee.)

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IS (Ban rnericard): _ Expiration Date: _ o degree programs, according to Ken­ neth E. Clark, d ean of the ollege f Arts and Sci n ee. Among the m s t popular courses are " Fan tas y," " Da r­ win and the Science of Evolution," "Man's Plastic Brain," "O n-line om­ puter Techniques," and " life ft er Death."

o A memorial in honor of the lat e Senator and Ambassador Kenneth B. Keating '19 will b established in Israel. The proposed Keating Insti­ tute of American Studies at Tel Aviv University will provide a br ad pro­ gram of study and research into th American experience in d m rati government. Keating was rnbassa­ dor to Israel at the time of h is death in 1975. A Roc h ster campaign t raise Co llee/ ors browse at the An tiquarian Book Fair , held in the reserve reading room of Rush Rhus $200,000 toward the nati nal goal f Lib rary. This year the Fair celehmted its fifth allll iI1ersary by establishing a new sales record­ $500,000 is now under way. C han el­ an estimated $4 1,000. Attl'l1dan ce at this year 's fair, spOtlsored (/5 usual /'y the Friel/ds of the lor Wallis and Howard Hanson, re­ University of Roch ester Lilirarie«, was recorded at 7,JOG. tired director of the Eas tman Sch 01, are among the memb rs of t h fund­ raising co mmittee. Money raised in this coun try will be placed in a n en ­ o The School of Medi cin e a nd De n­ o The Homecoming Weekend foot­ dow ment fund, the p roceeds from tistry has received gra n t awa rds ball ga me, for which 2, 000 fa ns ig­ which w ill be matched by the g vern­ totaling $63 ,3 97 fr om th e Un ited nor ed an afternoon of rai n and wind, men t of Israel. Cancer Council, Inc., for nine junior left the Yellowjackets with th eir The Keating In stitu te will exp nd facul ty memb er s to undertake re­ fourt h st ra igh t victory as they bea t on th e Ame rica n h ist o r y pr gram at search re lating to cance r. Hobart , 29 - 15. Halfback Mik e Cor p Tel Aviv Un iversity t o pro vide an Amo ng th e top ics to be studied are was na med Divis ion III EC AC Player int erdisciplinary agenda of co u rses, DNA synthes is in normal and ca n­ of th e Week. T he team fini sh ed th e publications, and r es e arch in the cerous cells, Hodgk in's disease, and season 6-3. fields o f Am erican gover nmen t, p Ii­ anti-ca ncer drugs. tics, for eig n policy deve lopment, eco­ o Med ical research and the econo m­ nom ics, literature, a nd the a r ts. o In an article on dance films in th e ics of health ca re were the to pics of Oct. 15 , 1977 issue of Saturday Revieio, discussion for the Unive rs ity's sixth Walter Terry descr ibes John Mu eller, annua l Joseph c. Wilso n Day. Na­ People professor of po litical science a t Roch ­ tional leader s in thes e areas spoke on o Intern ationally known librarian est er, as " the ge ntleman w ho knows two gene ral th e mes, "Cur rent Dilem­ A/an R. Taylor ha s been a ppoin te d mor e abou t dan ce films tha n any­ ma s in Health Science Policy" and director o f the Univers ity lib raries, one ." Mu eller has been teaching a "Who Shall Live ?" effective Jan. 1 , 1978. Taylor has be e n survey co urse , " Da nce as an Ar t Wilson Day co ncluded w ith a spe­ associate libr arian at Jo hns H opkins Form," since 1970 and w rites a cial mu sical pro g ram in th e Eas tman Unive rsit y since 1974. monthly column for Dance Magazine. Theat re, featurin g the Eastman Phil­ A native of Eng la nd, h e co m pleted harmoni a and the Eas tm an Schoo l his libr ary stu dies th ere in 1953 a nd Chorus . th en becam e ass is tan t librarian of th e Nati onal Arc h ives o f Rhod e sia o The Unive rsity's su ccessful small and Nyasa land in Salisbury, Southern group seminars fo r freshmen, which Rhodesia. He wa s ch ie f librarian have been offe re d for a limited num­ th ere from 195 6 to 1963, when h e ber of stude n ts since 1 964, hav e been came to th e United S ta tes as librarian ex panded thi s fall. for Af rica n s tudies at Indi ana Un i­ Ca lled freshman preceptorials, th e ve rsity . se mina rs have been opened to all Taylor also se rv ed as bibliographe r freshmen enrolled in bachelor o f arts and instructor in the African S tud ies

31 o Dr. RolJert M . Herndon has been named director of the University's Center for Brain Resear ch. He re­ places Dr. Garth Thomas, wh o will return to full-time teaching and re­ search. Dr. Herndon had been associate professor of neurology at Johns Hop­ kins University School of Medicine and director of the Johns Hopkins Hosp ital Neurology Clinics. He earned his M.D. degree, with honors, at the University of Tennessee School of Medic ine.

o Pres iden t Sprou ll has been named to th e Sloan Commission on Govern­ ment and High er Education, a new commission initi ated and supported by the Alfred P. Sloan Foundation. The Comm ission, composed of ap­ prox imate ly 20 leaders from fields such as hig her education, industry, and public service, will examine the changing relationships be tween gov­ Program and as visiting lect urer at attended Emory University Graduate ernment and h igher education. Indiana's Graduate Library School School and completed his doctoral Cha irma n is Louis W. Cabot, cha ir­ until 1973, when he became assistant work in anatomy at the Medical Col­ man of th e Ca bot Corporation and a director of libraries for reader ser­ lege of Virginia, where he began his member of th e M.I.T. Corporation; vi es at the Univers ity of Maryland. teaching career as an ins t ructor in vice chair man and director of research anatomy. He joined the medical fac­ is Pro f. Ca rl Kaysen of M.I.T., former o Dr. Laurence S. Jacobs '65M ha s ulty here as assistant professor of joine d the faculty of th e Universit y's director of th e Instit u te for Advanced anatomy and has twice received the St udy, Pri nceton, N.J. M dical Ce nte r as director of th e Medical Center's Excellence in Teach­ C linica l Resea rch Center , associa te ing Award. prof ssor of medicin e, and a member of the Endoc rine- Me ta bolism Unit. o Dr. William T. Van Huysen , associate H had been assista nt professor of dean for student affairs at the School m di ine at Washingt on Un iver sity of Medicine and Dentistry, has re­ in St. Lo uis. Phonathon Schedule ceiv ed the 1977 Gold Medal Award T he Cli nica l Research Center is a of the Uni versity's Medical Center 1977-78 Alumni Annual c ntral facility supported in large Alumni Association. Giving Program pa rt by the ational Institutes of Dr. Van Huysen , who also is asso­ Healt h, with the d a n o f the School February ciate professor of obstetrics and gyne­ of M dicine and Dent istry acting as Pho en ix cology, received the award for exce l­ principal inv stigato r. All medical Washington , D.C. lence in teaching and for serving as t ff can con duc t rigidly con trolle d Atlanta an outs tanding role model for stu­ tudi s th r of illness and of pat ien ts' Los Ang eles dents and faculty. r p n to tr tment. Cleveland He received his M.D. degree from San Franci sco Tufts Un ivers ity School of Medicine Mi chat' Shtridan, professor of Chicago o N. in 1939 and came to Rochester in natomy at th edical Center, has Seattle 1961 to en ter a special five-year train­ b n app in t d associate dean fo r ing prog ram in obstetrics and gyne­ April dmi ion t th School of edicine cology. H e b came assistant dean for West ch ester/Stamford nd 0 nti try in place of Dr. Pau l L. student affairs in 1969 and associate Ne w York City L II , who ha b ome chairman dea n in 1973. Ho usto n of th p rtm nt of R diation Bi- I and Biophy ics. May h rid n i a graduate of Stephen Rochest er Wind-up F. u tin St te College in Texas. He

2 were Roy In nis of the Congress of Racial Equality and Margaret "Midge" ostanza, special assistant to Presi­ dent Carter for public liaison. Helping to coordinate all of this was Kimba hery '7 7 . "Those of us who worked on this year's PE- rnefika Geuka, the project coordinator, and many others like my­ se lf-hope that the festival will contribute to racial har­ mony in Rochester by making the people aware of the cu ltural benefi ts the black community ha to offer. "A few more successful years will allow us to make PACE na tio na l in scope, while still basing it in Roches­ ter. Bu t for th e moment, our main concern is financial so lvency at our current level of activity." Che ry's activi ties as a student reflected his initiativ and his conce rn for black cul ture. In addi tion to winning a second-place prize in the University Eng lis h de part­ ment's Isaa c Davis Spe ech ontest, he received th e Friends of th e Un iversity of Ro hes ter Libraries' Kath ­ Setting the PACE rine Koller Diez Award for an outsta nding studen t book co llection. His was en titled "A frica n History: Black s in For Black Cultural Diaspora." Awareness

"While Phil adelphia has th e Penn Relays, Newport has its Jazz Festival, and New Orleans th e Mardi Gras . .. Rochest er now has the Pan-African Cultu ral Expositi on (PACE). " T his expresses the ma gnitude of th e ambition s of th e orga nizers of Rochester's newest ethnic a rts festi val. De­ spite an ons laugh t of November-like weather during th e we ek in Aug us t w hen it wa s held, this year's PACE drew well ove r 40, 000 people to downtow n's Genesee Cross­ roads Park for th e seco nd consecutive year. Drawin g o n th e cultura l resou rces of blacks of all cu l­ tural backgrounds, PACE 1977 featured a variety of mu­ sic, dan ce, visua l arts, an d cuisine , as we ll as lectu res and pan el discussion s on issu es ra ng ing from the black fam­ ily to th e blu es. Amo ng the speakers at the Expos ition

Lining Up a Championship Bob Mielca rz '7 1G, regionnl marketing reT'rt'selltalipe for the rnr­ pel distrilmlirlg firm of Belknap & McClaill, Inc., last slimmer WO Il the Neto Hampshire Statr Amatfur Golf Champiou ship Ilt'ld {I t Tilt' Ba lsams Coun try Cluh ill D i:n'i// e Nolch . Mit'icflrz H'on ihe 36 -110 11' final round IJy defealill.": his 0T'porl/'lll 3 aiu! 2, playing Ihl' lus!

16 holes al (l Mle-lI lldrr-pa r eli».

33 1925 Marriage: Marian Boddy Englert and . Austin Haines on Jul y 15 in Rochester.

1928 Eugene G . Alhart wa s present d with the fir s t Paul Harris Award by the Roc hester R tary C lub.. ..Arthur H. Moehlman has b e n named m ritus professor of the his­ to ry and philosophy o f educ ation and edu­ cational dministrati on at The University of T exas . T xas S tate S nator LI yd Dog­ g tt p n or d a Senat resol ution hono r­ ing Moehlman's r tirem nt.

1932 Em nu I Goldb rg ('35GL retired pres­ ide n t of th e Nalge Division of Sybron C rp., ha b n ap po inted cha irman of t h Joint Distribution Com m ittee 's Latin Am ric n o rnrnittee, New York City.. .. Cpt. C rl F. P ul, [r., USN (Ret.), ad­ When Mary Donoh ue Conroy and Gera ld Dyer signed lip for a Urliversity alumni tour to ministra tiv judg with th National Aero­ New Zraland and Au stralia last April , they liftle suspected they were on their way to a 52-year nautics and Space Admin istration in class reunion. Mrs. Conroy and Oyer (hath '25) spent a week's time on the tour with 3D-odd Washington, D.C., attende d th e cou nci l other alumni before realizing their co mmo n hand . Tour escort John Bra und had invited the meting of the Int r-Arneri can Ba r Asso­ ciat io n in Sa n [o e, Costa Rica in January . group for predinner cocktails in the Hilton. When he discovered the lHlexpected re­ union, he mpturf'd the moment on film. 19 3 1944 1950 ernon H. P tt r on r ceived the 19 77 John S. Crowley has been elect ed an ex­ Glenn Berggren, manager of the Cinema An nual Award of the D uctile Iron Society ecu t ive v ice pr esid en t of Xe rox C orp. Products Division of Schneider Corp. of at the S iety' n nual meeting in C ha tta­ America, Mineola, N .Y., has received a noog , T nn. 1945 tec hnica l citation from the Academy of Arthur Winton ha s been e lected president Motion Pict u re Arts and Sciences. ... of Beth T orah Cong regatio n of North Mi­ Rev. Gale E. Tymeson is serving as pastor ami Beach for 19 77- 78 . o f Ca lvary U nited C hurch o f Christ in Turtle Creek, Pa. 19 7 lo eph C. el on, vice preside n t-co u nsel 1951 fo r Centex Corp ., Dallas, has been a p­ Dr. Albert Soloway (G) ha s been ap­ poi nted lect ur er in bu sin e ss la w at the pointed to t he pha rmacy deanship at School of Busin ess Administration of Ohio State University . Southern Methodist U nive rs ity . I y has receiv d General 1952 P. Steinmetz Award. 1948 Peter S. Oi Pasquale h as been named The Instit ut fu r Englische Spra ch e und assistant directo r of the manufacturing Lite ratur , Universitat Sal zburg, Au stria, technology division of t he film ma nufac­ has pu blished Thr Kil1g il1 Tudor Dmma by turing orga n iza tio n a t Eas tma n Ko dak Patricia Steep e Barry in its 19 7 7 se ries Co., Roc hes ter. of Elizab than a nd Renaissance S tudies. iff, ch irm n of the D part- . ..Rev. Eliz beth S. Ehling h as been rt at iddl bury 011 ge, h 1953 named visiting lecturer in psychology an d William C. Broeffl e has been name d vice publi h d A rshil, Gorky's Art from 194 3 ­ religion at Drew University, Madison, 19 : A SJy!is/i( Analysi . Hi book i in­ president and general m an ag er of Elec­ .].. .. . 0 I S eig rt has b en named clud d in th ri Out tanding Disstrlntions tro Signal Lab, Inc., a s u bsidiary of the sales man ger for Industrial Biological in Iht fin, Arl by arland Publi hing of Am rican District Telegraph Co ., Rock­ Systems of Corning Glass Work .... work ity . land, Md ... . Kenneth M . Cameron is Roger Tengw II has compl ted work o n se rv ing as writer-in-reside nce in the De­ "The Alexander Discovery," avid o ta pe partment of T hea tre a t the U ni vers it y of eries to be aired on cable television in South Carolina.... D r. Daniel Offer has Orange County, Calif. b en appointed chairma n of t he Depar t­ ment of Psych iat ry and dir ec tor o f th e 19 9 Psy chosomatic and Psychiatric Institute GI ay in nell (G) has been named at Michael Reese Hospital a n d M edical poet-in-residence at Holy Cross College. C nter , Chicago.

1954 B y H rd y has been na m ed manager o f th e C uca monga (Ca lif.) C ha m ber of Com- merce.... Frank W. Hetherington ('64G) 1966 1968 has been appointed director of admis­ Elliott Fix has been promoted to staff de­ Amy Goldstein Bass has been appointed sions and financial aid at Franklin Co l­ velopment training specialist at the Mon­ director of publications at Stevens Insti­ lege, Franklin, Ind....Rev. Thomas B. roe Developmental Center, Rochester. .. . tute of Technology in Hoboken, .J... . Richards received an alumni award for Lawrence G. Goldberg has been ap ­ Jon L. Prime (G) ha s been appointed vice "service to fellow men" at the alumni­ pointed associate professor of finance president for finance and administration reun ion lun cheon at Buck ne ll University and economics at the Graduate School at Rochester Institute of Technology... . in June . of Business of New York University... . Marriage: Sarah P. Shires and Bruce E. Paul E. Singer has formed an investment Brown on June 26 in Lake George, N.Y. 1958 management firm, Braxton Associates, Patricia Adduci has been nam ed vice in New York City... . Robert A. Young 1969 chairperson of th e records management has been named an assistant vice presi­ Deborah Adler is cooperative advertis­ committee of th e Int ernatio nal Ins titute dent of Lincoln First Bank, Ro hester. ing coordinator of Best Western, Inc. , of Muni cipal C lerks. . .. Wayne A. Burdett Phoenix, Ariz . ...Richard W. Brea rton ha s been pr om ot ed to supe rv isor of safe ty 1967 III has been named an assistant cashier and security at Rochest e r Products Di­ Martin D. Begleit e r has been appointed of the State Bank of Albany.... David P. vision of Ge neral Mo to rs Corp. associa te professor of law at Drake Uni ­ Che rnicoff hold s a fellowship in herna tol ­ versity Law School, Des Moines, Iowa . ogy and medical oncology at the Cleveland 1959 . .. Gary L. Grahn has been appointed a Clinic, Ohio.... St uart M. Geschwind (G) Bonalyn Bricker-Smith, ass ista nt profes­ mem be r of the planning committee and has joined the la w department of Reynolds so r of pian o an d th eory and chair man of sen ior vice president of marketing and ad ­ Metals Co ., New York Ci ty . . .. Dr. Martha piano at Ce ntra l Was hing to n Un iversi ty ver tising at Photo Corp. of America In­ Kinc aid has joined practice wit h Dr. Mark in Ellen sburg, received th e doctor of ternati on al, Inc., Matthews, N.C. ... Dr. Frampton at the Williamson (N.Y.) Med­ mu sical arts degr ee from th e Uni ver sit y Stephen Margolis is in the private practice ical Center.. ..Dr. Mary Lou O ster­ of Ci ncinna ti Co llege -Conservato ry of of internal med icin e in Wyncote, Pa ... . Granite, assistant professor of anatomy Mu sic in Jun e....Charles E. Dyer has George A. Park, Jr. has been named corpo­ at the University of Ma ryland Sc hool of been named pr oject manager for Latin rat e operations manager of Gan nett Roch­ Medicine, was the recipient of an Alfred Ameri can-Asia-Pa cific of Corn ing Glass es te r Newspapers .. . . Born: to Gail Suhre Sloa n Foun dation Fellowship . ...David Work s' Internati onal Co rp., Sunde rlan d, Chambers and Victor B. Chambers, a son, Wilson ('74G) has been appointed senior England. Victo r Jam es, on Feb. 17 in Rochester. estimator and planner for t he European region at Eastman Kodak Co ., London. 1961 ... Ma rriages: Carolyn E. Grieve a nd Peter G. Kirby has been appointe d vice Sco tt S. Sm ith on July 20 in Pe rry, N.Y . pr esident for human resources of Li'l Ge n­ . .. Ell en R. Hadley and George W . Wood­ eral Stores, Tampa, Fla.... Phyllis Al­ zell in Schenectady, N.Y. pert Lehrer performed as piano soloist and memb er of the Millstone Tri o in th e College Theatr e a t Sullivan Co unty Co m­ munity College, Monticello, N.Y. in Ju ly. . . .James R. Speegle has bee n appointed dire ctor of planning projects a t Rochest er Institute of Technology. Whatchabendoin? 1962 Your classmates would like to read about you in th e Alumnotes Donald B. Reid has been named vice pres­ iden t of the corporate service office of section of the next Review. The coupo n belo w makes it easy. Bank of America, New York City. My news: 1963 David W. King has been appointed assis­ ta nt dea n of the Ar ts and Sciences College at SUNY (Oswego).

1964 Linda C. Ange ll is fina nce developm ent consulta nt on th e nati on al staff of th e Gi rl Sco uts of America.. .. Arthur Krauser has been appointed direc tor of psyc hol­ ogy , arc hitec ture, and hou sing research Name: at Sanfo rd R. Goo dkin Resear ch Co rp., De l Mar , Ca lif. . ..Judith Lehman Ruder­ man received her doctorate in Eng lish Class: from Duke University and teaches litera­ tu re in an adult educa tion progra m in Address: Du rham, N.C.

1965 Alfred Maley is manager, tac tics develop­ ment, for Co ms ha re, lnc., Ann Arbor, (Mai l the coupon to M ar y Lynch, Alumnotes Editor, Roches ter Review, Mich.. ..Marriage: Colleen M. Scaccia 107 Adminis tration Building, University of Roc hester, River Station, and William J. Walters on Aug. 6 in Dun­ Rochester, New York 14627.) kirk, N.Y.

35 Yellowjacket Day Th« University took a stt'P toward estat» lishing its "ins/ant tradition" last Septem ­ btr, as tht second annual YtllowjacKet Day was htld. A hove, Ihe beer keg toss . Ofll' of many fil'ld romts which also included the "[iremm 's dunk" and a frisbee competition ; Upptr righ}, taking a hini's-t'yt' vieto of the frstivilits; right . Isaiah Ja ckson conducts tht Univfrsity Symphony Orchestro during tIJI' Ytllowjac1cet Day Con{locatiOll .

1971 1972 Jeffrey E. Erickson has joined th e law Paula Lapin Seifter is an associa te with firm of Sma llwood-Cook, St out, and the law firm of Bond, Sch oen eck , and Erickson... .Kevin Log n has been nam ed King , Syrac use .. ..Susan Sutton Smith an instructor in economics at the College has wri tte n Comp lele Poem s mId Collee/I'd of liberal Arts, Drew University, Madi­ leiters of Adelaide Crapsey. publish ed by th e son. .j.. .. Francis G. Marchese has be­ State Univers ity of New York Pr ess.. .. come a certified public acco un tant a nd June M. Waldman has received an M.A. formed a partnership, Block and Marchese, and Ed.5 . fro m th e Univer sit y of Minne­ Rochester. ...Jerrilyn D. Pease has been sota . She is schoo l psychologi st for th e appointed assistant actuary of th e tax Centra l Berks hire Regional School Dis­ department of Connecticut General Life tri ct, Da lton, Mass.. .. Marriages: Rich­ Insurance Co ., Simsbury. Conn. ... War­ ard Bickelman and Ellen Rabin on Aug . r n C. Smith is director of You th Min­ 20 . . . . Eleanor W. Mud ge and Charles C. istry at Immaculate Conception Church Cares on june 25 in Bo ulder, Colo .. .. in Rochester... . Marriage: Ann H aszlau er Lynne L. Russo and William Dallas on and ich el Clark on Sept. 17 in Roch ­ jul y 30 in Rochest er . . . .Vickie Sidou ester. and Paul H. Sighino lfi o n Sept. 1 7. ...

6 Donald S. Stevens a nd Janet Peck o n and Barry . Yarkoni ('74) on Aug. 7 in 1966 May 14 . ... Rhonda Warshaw and Harry Tuxed o, .Y. ...Mary E. George and Jona­ Victor Klimash ('68CE) se rves as mu­ Blood good on Au g . 21.. .. Born: to Wil­ than J. Markell ('77) o n June 1 1 in Roch ­ sical director of the horal So ie ty and liam E. and Jeanne Wojcikiewicz Hert­ es te r ....Joan M. Luce and Thomas L. Philharrnonia O rc hes tra of Lou isia na. H e zog, a daughter, Lorraine Elissa, o n Au g. Blasdell o n July 2 in Ro h ester.... Melissa will conduct the Alaba ma A ll-S ta te Cho­ 10 in Columbia, S.c. ... to Dean and Meyers a nd Carl Ern in Sca rsdale, .Y. ... rus in 1978... . Marriage: Jeanne I. Rizzo Marjory Lehrer Levy, a da ughter, Jessica Karen Rosenberg a nd Richard Furlin o n and Richard E. Conner on April 14 in Randi, on June 27... . to Francis and Jun e 4 in Roch ester....[o n Rosengota Planta tion, Fla. Carolyn Clark Millard, a daughter, Em ily and Brian S. Sheppard o n Sept. 3 in El­ Marie, on June 17. mira, N .Y. ... Harlan W. Stockman and 1968 C h ris ti ne Ma cleod o n June 4 in C lin to n, Sandra Seefeld h a s been appointed assis­ 1973 N .Y. tan t pro fessor of mu sic in flute at Miami M ari o n Wal ker ha s been named as sistant Unive rsity, Oxfo rd. O hio.. .. Daria Serne­ director for nonacademic programs in 1977 gen's e lect ro nic music score"AR ." co m­ the Office of Minority Educational Af ­ Marriages: Mary L. McMillen a nd Craig bin ing compute r-synch ro nized music a n d fairs at Cornell Universit y. . . . Marriages: R. Chormann o n June 4 in Buffalo, .Y. lighting scores wi t h dance, was performed C arol Coddi ngton and Bob Sarafconn ... C a ro l A. or to n a nd Gary S. Connors by th e Mi mi Ga r ra rd Dance Theatre a t on March 26 in Lunenburg, Ma ss.... Da­ on Jul y 9 in Rochest er. . .. Deborah D . th e Riversid e C hu rch Dance Fes tival, vid Denton and Francesca Larrere on Kin g and Michael T. Donahue o n June 17 ew York Ci ty. Aug. 27 ... . M ary Pa tricia Downey and in Ro ch ester. ... Marianne Freeman and Mark C. Whitehead on July 2 in Roches­ Ernest Hartman on Jul y 2 in Hilton, N .Y. 1971 te r ... .Amy Lynn Fr ie dman and Dennis ... Linda A. Blasc zycyki ewicz and Wil­ Marriag e: Helen Caroline Tuntland (GE) P. Ph illips on Aug. 14 in C lifton, N .Y.... liam M. Kuzon, Jr. on July 30 in Buffalo, and Isaiah Allen Jackson III o n Au gu st 6 Stephanie G . M org an and Richa rd A. N.Y.... Marcia Ostrander and Bruce in Rochest er. Lu x ('74G) on Ju ly 16 in Ro chester. Humphrey on June 4 in Ithaca, .Y.... Bet sy lazary and Paul R. Romano o n 1972 1974 June 19 in Rochester. Sherry Zannoth (G El performed in the Jeffrey Zweiben ('7SG) has joined Sybron fir st La BO!'t'me o f th e New Yo r k it y Cor p. as an operations analyst on the Opera's fall se aso n at th e New York State corporation's bu dget and analysis staff. Theatre . . .. Marriages: Robert Amster and La urie Strassberg ('7S) o n Dec. 2S, 1976 in Man­ •I hasset, N.y. ...M arlene Giu liani and Gregory Schlegel on A ug. 19 in Roches ter. . ..Susa n Jan e Dora n and Frank M. K ord­ 1940 ziel on A ug . 13 in Syracuse. " Th ree Pieces After Blake," by Ulysses Kay (G El, was performed by the New 1975 York Philharmonic, under the direction 1961 Sharon Blinder received h er M.B.A. Hill of Paul Freeman ('S6 E, 'S8G E, '63G E), Dr. James T. Barter ha s been appointed in ma rketing fro m T he Wharto n School of as part of the Philharmonic's " C e leb ra­ professor of psychiatry a t the Universit y th e Unive rs ity of Pe nnsylva n ia a nd is now tion of Black Composers Week" at lin­ of incinnati College of Medicine and a m arketing re presentative for Interna­ coln Center Aug . 29-Sept. 2. director of psychiatric se rv ices at th e tional Pap er Co. in Ne w Yo rk C ity .. ..Dr. General Hospital. Mary C. Lynn ha s been appoin te d cha ir­ 1948 person of th e Depa r tmen t of America n Mar y Jeanne van Appledorn's ('SaGE, 1963 Studies at Sk idmore College... . Mar­ '66G E) " Co ncer to Brevis" for piano and Dr. St uart J.Hu lnick has been na med riag es: Sharon Blinder and Douglas E. orchest ra has been taken under ren tal acting chief of th e Department of Plastic Hill on Ma y 29. . . .Kathleen A. Calitri co n tract by Ca rl Fisch e r , Inc . Surgery a t Temple University Ho s pital. and Dennis L. Dobkin o n Sept. 3 in Roch ­ . .. Born: to Robe rta Br us h and Dr. este r .... Lynn Evensen a nd Jerry Ca rnegie 1956 Robert G . Scaer, a da ug h ter, Amanda on Jul y 9. . . . Lind a R. Perry and Michael P. David Burge (GEl, chai rman of t he pia no Mylan, o n May 13 in Bou lde r, Colo . Goldsmith on Jul y lOin Rochest er.... faculty at ESM, performed a t the Wu r z­ Karen A. Redden and Dennis P. Hennigan burg Festi val, Germa ny. . .. Rev. Carl W . 196 6 on Au g . 20 in Wolcott, N.y... . Sharon J. Leazer (G E) ha s perfo r me d in a numbe r Dr. Robert J. Sokol ('63GM) ha s been Buerger and Thomas F. Hewner on June o f benefits, amo ng th em a co ncert for the na me d professor of obste t rics and gyne­ 18 in Lockport, N.y . . .. Amy E. [aroslow World Hunger Appeal of th e lutheran co logy a t th e C leve land M etropolitan and Rich ard Ga llag he r o n Au g. 21 in New C h u rc h in Ame rica a t the Be t h lehem Gene ra l Hospital, Case W est ern Re serve York City . ... Iva Lorraine Light and James lutheran C h u rch, Bronx, N. Y. University. F. Loftus o n Jul y 16 in Bea con, N .Y. . . . Jill R. Neuman and James M. Quinn on Aug. 1962 1971 13 in Rochest er....Suzanne B. Shapiro Bruce Smith ('6sGE), a member o f the Dr. Francis M . Powers, Jr. (eM) ha s and Stephen E. Presser on June 26 in Detroit Sy m pho ny O rchest ra, ha s re­ joined th e ca nce r treatment ce n te r o f th e Rochest er.... Linda J. Seaman and Ste­ ceived hi s Ph.D. in musicology from the Divine P roviden ce H ospital in Williams­ phen R. Thorn on July 23 in Rochester. Uni versity of Michi gan . port, Pa . ., . Mary Martha Moor and Myles Beson Weiner on June 26 in Rochester. 1965 1972 Robert Silverman's (CE, '7 0G E) record­ Dr. Kim Solez (G M) has been appo in ted 1976 in g of pian o music by Franz Lis zt won assistant prof essor of pathol ogy and Roland B. Gray (G ) has be en named devel­ th e 1977 G rand Pri x du Disque from th e medicin e a t Johns H opkins Ho spital. opment assistant in the University's Of­ Lis zt Society in Budapest. fice of Development. Marriages: Calvin J. Bittner and Renee Bass ('77) on Aug. 27 in Watertown, N.Y.. .. Nancy J. Friedman

37 1973 a nd postanesthesia at the Ve te ra ns Ad­ and mental health at th e Ca ry Mem orial Dr. Melvyn W. Kramer (GM, '7 0G) has mini stration Hospit al, Ren o, Nev. Hospit al, Caribou, Me . ...Jan e Kolber o pened a medi al o ffice for the pr acti ce Field s has been named h om e ca re coo r­ of int rn al m dicin e, endo rin ology, and 1964 dinat or at Montef iore Hospit al and Med­ diabete s in Sudbu ry, Mass.. . .Dr. Angelo Ruth Wilder Bell has been nam ed ar ea ical Center, Bronx, N.Y. . ..Barbara A. Licata (GM), an assista nt prof essor of cha irm an of th e Master of Science Nurs­ Coughlin Sebold has been named nu rsing med icin at the Universit y, has join ed th e ing Degr ee Pro gram of the Psychiatric­ superviso r for th e Meri de n Public Health end cri no logy staff at Roches ter Ge ne ral Mental Health Nursin g Department at and Visiting Nu rse Association , Merid en , Hospital. Ca tholic Uni ver sit y of Am eri ca, Washing­ Conn . ton , D.C. 1975 1973 David Bolesh ha s been prom oted to cap­ I r Margaret Fee Austin ha s been nam ed tain in th e Ar my Nu rse Corps, Fort Gor­ 1946 pr esident of the Salt Lake district of Utah don , Ga . Ruth F. Brown has been app int ed an Nurses Association .. . . Emily Hauenstein ass i tan t professor in th e Departme n t of O'Hara has develop ed a new course in 1976 Nursin at th University of A r ka nsas at nursing pra ctice at the Univ ersity of Vir­ Marriage: Christine R. Coapman and Pin Blu ff.. ..Ruth Weber Dickinson ha s g in ia, C ha rl o t tesville . . ..Michelle D. Frederick J. Klauser ('7sRC) on Aug. 27 b n s rving as chai r man of the Health Young is enrolled in th e G rad uate School in Brockport, N.Y. and W !fa re Committ e of the Sa n Diego of Nur si ng, Bosto n Uni versity. o un ty Grand Jury. 1977 1974 Marriage: Christine Monohan and Dr . 1961 Beverly Stevens Anderson has been John F. Menard on Jun e 2S in H erkimer , B rbar Eck trom Dominick ha s been na med clinical s pecialis t of psychiatry N.Y. n m d coo rdinato r o f op era ting rooms omecoming '77 Rocht's frr's YrlloUljnckr fs hnd n fidd day in Ihrir Homecoming game agains! the Stalrsmrn of Hobart Colll'ge. Running-hack Mike Corp brokr John Parrinello's reco rd as Rochesier's all-lim leading rusher and also threu: lhree touchdown pa55/'S (two 10 ouarierbac): Rick Stark) on razzle-daz.z ll' plays. At righ), Corp nms wide behind a phalanx of blockrr», including Dan Cnp (72), Sam Shatkin (3 J, and Chris O'Con­ nor (68); lower right, Halford B. Johnson '52 receives the fo urth annunl L)lslt' "SpiKt" Garnish Award for servia 10 Unit1t'Tsity athlttics; b low, a cold, strady drizzl« fails to damp" the spirits of Rochtsttr [ollousers during Iht 29 -1 victory. Walt er W. Paris '29 on July 20 in South­ er II II bury, Conn. II r 1949 Gordon W. Malchow '31 on Aug . 27 in Rom n L. "Sp d" Sp gle, swimming Donald M. Paris has been named presi­ Rochester . coach for 31 years and one of the Un iv~r­ de nt of th e William E. Wrigh t Co . of Can­ Dr. Gerald S.McGuire '31 on Sept. 5 in sity 's most beloved sports figures, d ied ada, Ltd., a To ronto-based firm engaged Webster, N.Y. Aug . 6 in ew Port Ri hey, Fla . He wa 74. in the sales and dis tributio n of ho me sew­ Phylli s M.Smith '31 on Sept. 24 in Pitts­ A native of Birm ingham, Ala .. Sp egle ing pro duc ts. ford, N.Y. came to Rochester in 1920 after gradu­ Walter G. Fotch '32 on June 25 in Roch­ ation from Oberlin ollege. He serv d as 1954 ester. swimming coach from the e tablishmen.t James D. Sharps, director of sales pro mo­ Jeannette Peterson Lathrop '32 on July 5 of the sport at the University in 193 .1 until tion planning in Eas tma n Kod ak Co.'s in Rochest er. 1Q62. He retired as professor ementus of consumer ma rket s division , has been re­ Gertrude Wright '33 on July 14 in Roch ­ sports and re reation in 1963. elected cha irma n of the Commi ttee for es ter. When Alumni Pool was renamed the the G rea t O utdoo rs for a seco nd term. Mary A. Hotchkiss '34 on June 27 in Ly­ Roman L. Speegle Po I last October, Da ­ ons, N.Y. vid R. Ocorr, director of athleti s, said: 1956 William H. Bailey '36GE o n Apri l 15 in "Most people know of Speed's ontri­ Walla Walla, Wash. Edwa rd Barkley ('62 G), for me r social butions to physical education and int r­ Herbert W. Har p '36E o n Jun e 14 in Fre­ studies departm ent head at Jefferson collegiate spo rts. Only th o se who were don ia, N.Y. High School, Rochester , has been named colleagues or students can appreciate ~he Dr. Michael Ferraro '37 on July 10 in acting dir ector of soc ial s tudies by th e contributions Speed made to campu life . Rochest er . Board of Educati on. th rough his many tal nts and his high re ­ Dr. Arthu r C. Hoffman, Jr. '38G on Ju­ ga rd for the individual. He was truly a ly 14 in C hevy C hase, Md . 1960 'man for all seasons.' Blaise Montandon '39E on Jan. 29 in William E. Brooks (G) has been nam ed "It is most appropriate that the pool be Co rpus Ch risti, Tex. manufacturing produ ct manager at East ­ dedicated to Speed. For more than 30 Dr. Joh n E. Baybu tt '40 o n Jun e 26 in man Kodak Co.'s appara tus div ision. years it was his classroom, w~ere . he Easto n, Md . taugh t thousands to swim and Insflred 1969 George C. Monroe, Jr. '41 o n Jun e 11 in coun tless intercollegiate competitors. Orange, Te x. Anne Pohl Lafford ('73G), assista nt pro­ Speegle was presented with an lumni Dr. Valeska Rozisk ey '41M in East Roch­ fessor of modern lan gu ages at Eise nhower Cita tio n to Facu lty award in 1960 in rec­ este r, N.V. Co llege, is a candida te for th e degree of og nitio n of his se rvice to t he Un!ver~ity William R. Baxter '43 on Sep t. 6 in Web­ doctor of modern lan gu ages at Midd le­ and its stude nts. Besides bing swimrm ng ste r, N.Y. bury Co llege , Vt. coach, he had served as freshman foo tball Eliz abeth Mab ry Hsie '46 on July 1 in coach, varsity track coach, and director Fairport, N.Y. 1975 of Todd Union. John J. Hastings '47 o n Jan uar y 28 in Marriage: Andrea M. Reid and Martin Lancaster, N.V. Ademovic on Ma y 28 in Caledo nia, N.Y. Dr. Ruth E. Rumerz '47GM, '52G M on May 18 in Sea ttle, Was h. Ruth Klausen Miglianti '48E on Aug. 20 in Delh i, N .Y. In th e Fall 1977 issue of th e Re­ I •••rl Evelyn Vock Sturge '49 on July 11 in view Th eodo re E. Fitch ('35) was North Syracu se, N.Y. incorrect ly included in t he " In Me­ Macy O. Hallock '08 in Medina, Ohio. Bernard G. McIntyre '50 o n July 9 in mor iam " co lumn . Theod o re F. Harriet E. Dorman '14 on Ju ly 30 in Ball­ New York C ity. Fitch ('22) should h ave been list ed sto n Spa, N.Y. Robert S. Whitehouse '51G in Hollidays­ in th is colum n. Hazel M. Clark '15 on Se pt. 6 in Black burg, Pa. Th e Re view apo logizes for this Mountain , N.C. Dr. Samuel J. Kuykendall '52MR in little erro r and ex te nds its sympat hy to Florence M. Farlow '15 on Jul y 7 in Roch ­ Rock, Ark. th e fam ily of T heodore F. Fitch . es te r. Dr. John C. Petropoulos '52G on June 13 Roscoe L. Taylor '17 in Encino, Calif. in Norwalk, Conn . Pauline V. Moore '19 on Ju ne 29 in Roch ­ Thomas W. Tapp '53 on Aug. 26 in Roch­ est er. es ter. Margaret E. Cooney '20 on Aug. 8 in James A. McGill '5 7 on Sept. 8 in Me­ Rochest er . Lean , Va. Marion Clark Bailey '24 o n July 4 in Dr. Robert G . Olsson '57 on Aug. 25 in Cleveland Heights, Ohio. Pitt sburgh, Pa. Clay Goodloe Barry '24 o n Aug. 6 in Doris Htoo '58 E in Kemmendine, Burma. Alexandria, Va. David C. Collins '60 on Jun e 12 in G ree n Katherine Lucas Kerrigan '24 on July 29 Valley, Ari z. in Rochest er . Dr. Martin W. Greifinger '62 on Apr il 11, Ernestine M. Klinzing '24E on July 21 in 19 75 in Roswell, Ga . Roche st er. Nina Dworkin Cohen '66 on Sept . 14 in Doris Barnes Wignall '24 on July 21 in Rochest er. Dundee, N.Y. John R. Udovich '73G on July 17 in Fair ­ Jared L. M. Uphill '25 on July 11 in Ba­ port, N.Y. tavia , N.Y. Charles F. Sherwood '75 on Aug. 26 in Dr. Alexander Petrilli '27 on Jun e 11 in Rochest er. San Francisco, Calif . Annette St. He lens Norris '28 on Jul y 21 in Roche st er .

39 Schenectady Twin Cities Alumni Admissions and Mr. Walter G. Hannahs M s. Kristine Mayer 22 29 G rand Boulev ard 84 21 22 nd Avenue South, Scholarship Chairmen Ni skayuna, N.Y. 12309 Apt. 309 A Office: (518 ) 474- 7416 Bloo ming ton, Mi n n. 55420 icontinued from page 17) Home: (518) 474- 6544 Vermont Long Island-Nassau Northern New Jersey Seattle Dr. Rich ar d A. Ryder Mrs . Leon ard L. Melm an Mrs. Bev erl y Roberts Eaton Mr. and Mrs. Henry D. Allen Box 266 (Do ris Urbach Melman) 40 Spring Brook Dri ve ' (Kri stina Van Ren sselaer Sh elburne, V t. 05482 Home: (516) 223 - 4266 G illett e, N.J. 07933 A llen) O ffice and Ho me: Home: (201) 647 -4040 Long Island-Suffolk 8601 South East 63 rd Street (80 2) 985- 2800 Mr. Paul Bairn Philadelphia Mercer Island, Wash . 98040 Washington, D.C. 3 Lynmar Cour t Mr. Louis G . Rigby Office:(206) 292 -1 600 Mr. and Mrs . Robert Harden Huntington , N.Y . 11743 427 East Gorga s Lane Home: (206) 454-9028 (Carol yn Ruth S towell Office: (212) 937-6 100 Phi ladelphia , Pa . 19119 Southern California- Harden) Hom e: (516) 427-6443 Office: (215) 923-9180 Los Angeles (Orange County) 4908 Rockin gham Lan e Home: (215) 247 -4924 Mohaw Valley Mrs. Dorot hy Lee Hufford Bow ie, Md . 20 715 Mrs. Richar d Jonquil Pittsburgh P.O. Box 478 Office: (703) 527-4500 (Ca rla Co nte Jonquil) Dr . Robert W. Boykin El T oro, C alif. 92630 Ho me: (301) 464 - 1098 2102 Holl an d Ave nue 339 Normal Avenue Home: (714) 586-0 751 Wayne County Utica, N .Y. 13501 Slip pery Rock, Pa. 1605 7 Southern California- M rs. Rob ert Leen e (Ma ry Nortz Ho m : (3 15) 732-5663 Office: (412) 562-2 873 San Diego Leene) Home: (412) 7']4- 8635 Monroe County Mr. and Mrs. Robert Hoe 12 7 Grant Street Mr . Max T. S to ne r Portland 6145 Waverly Newark, N.Y. 14513 Woods. Oviatt, G ilman, Dr. Jean MacFarlane La Jo lla, Calif. 92037 Ho me : (315) 331 -2954 St urman and C larke Student Health Department Westchester County 44 Excha nge Street Univer sit y of Oregon Health Southern California- Mr. Joseph Coratti Rochester, N.Y . 146 14 Sc iences Ce nte r Other than Orange County 52 In tervale Road Office: (716) 454 -5370 School of Medicine Mrs. Joan Dutcher Hoffman Rye, N .Y. 10580 Home: (7 16) 442-8027 Portland , Ore. 97201 10450 Laramie Avenue O fhc~ Chatsworth, C alif. 91311 Office: (914) 939 -7300 Mrs . Gordon D. Currie (503) 225- 8665 Home: (213 ) 998-9623 Home: (914) 967-3454 (Janice Jacobs Currie) Home: (503) 244-5404 Wilmington 7 O ld Farm Circle Poughkeepsie Susquehanna Valley- Dr. Joseph Skwish Pittsford, N .Y. 14534 Mr . Brion Kenline Binghamton 5123 New Ken t Road Home: (716) 381 -4652 29 Lori Street Mr. David F. Skoni eczki 32 Spruce Street Wil mington, De l. 19808 New Haven Poughkeepsie, N.Y. 12603 Johnson City, N .Y. 13 790 Office: (302) 366-4217 Dr . and Mrs. Willia m Lanford Office: (914) 831-3600 Home: (607 ) 798-7733 Home: (302) 731 -9289 (Dr. Cynthia Jane Smith Hom e: (914) 462-3225 Lanford) Rhode Island Syracuse 117 Canner S treet Mrs. Eric Berke (Nancy G ilbe rt Mr. Thomas Flynn ew Haven, Conn. 06511 Berke) 6547 Rutger Road ffic : (203) 436-2320 74 Cindy Lane East Syr acu se , N.Y. 13057 Home: (203) 562-5370 Warwick, R .1. 02886 O ff ice: (315) 474-1026 Home: (315) 463-0372 w Me ico Ho me: (401) 739-6164 Dr . John . Gleichauf Richmond Tampa and St. Petersburg Rout 3, Box 73A Mr. Frank Wood Mr. Robert A. Moverman Santa F, .M. 87501 7705 Yolanda Road 3001 Barnhard Drive, #14 Office:(50 5) 983-1683 Richmond, Va. 23229 Tam pa, Fla . 336 12 Hom : (505) 983-1241 Office: (804) 786-3357 work ity Home: (804) 282-0686 Mr . icha I Cohen Rocky Mountain rea Mutual of ew York Mr . Robert F. Jennings 17 0 Broadway 1665 S. Routt Way ew York, .Y. 10019 Lakewood, Colo. 80226 ffie : (212) 586- 000 Office: (303) 989 -1483 Home:(516 ) 826-0630 Home:(303) 988-8473 S n r nci sco Mrs. Kazuo Maruoka (Susanne ke Ridge Road Keaveney Maruoka) 765 47th Street San Francisco, Calif. 94121 Home:(415) 752-8638

o At th e Eastman Theatre co ncer t which concluded th e ce lebra t io n of W ilson Da y thi s fa ll, C h a nc ello r Wal ­ lis sh a red w it h the a ud ience " few re ­ rn ern brances of Jo seph C ha m be rla in Wil son. Noting that six yea rs had passed since Wi lso n 's death, Wa llis re ­ co un ted for n ew e r s tuden ts, fac u lty , and members of th e Rochester com­ m uni ty the highlights of W ilson's life a nd ca reer: hi s birth in Roch ester, hi s undergraduate ye a rs a t th e Un i­ ve rsi ty, h is man agerial s kills as he t ra nsformed H aloi d Com pa ny into Xe rox o rp ora tion, hi s se rvice as cha ir ma n o f th e Universi ty's BOMd TIll' Inll' Joseph c. W i/ SOil (f1'(t11l 1;1" C"nll(/'I/ or W . Alit'll W I1 I/ ;s o f Trust ees, and hi s ro le as ben ef act or to th e Univers ity and th e co m m u n ity. Most alu mni a lready kn ow th e Joe disco ver th at we were reading o nly various paper du e e a h o n d ay. W ilso n s to ry. But in hi s ta lk Wa llis th e sa lac ious parts and wo u ld rem ove T hat wa y h e could on e ritra t on looked at t he personal side of Wil son, th e book fr om th e she lf. At least , th is h avin g a good time a ll weekend, not providing a fe w a necdo tes w h ich help was Joe's a rg u men t. A nd it was per­ clouded b y th e pro sp c t m o st of hi s ex plain for th ose w ho didn't kn o w him s uas ive . As I remem ber, he more or fe llow s t u den ts fa ed of s t aying up ju st w hy it wa s that people liked th e less assigned eac h of us to an hou r in a ll of Sunday night. m an so much. th e libra ry w he n th e book wo u ld be In 19 33 h e joined his father at Excerpts from W. Allen Wallis' ta lk : th e ex cl us ive right o f o ne mem be r of Haloi d , s ta r ting a s As si s tant a le s th e g ro u p.. .. And so, w h ile th e se­ Joe's ta lents as a manager, a lead­ Manager at $20 P r w e k . In 1Q3 h e e r, a nd a sc ho la r manife s ted th e m - niors were s truggling to hack th ei r beca rn Secreta ry of t h e orporation. se lves w he n he wa s s t ill a s tude n t at way through 'T he Genera l Pr ologu e,' in 19 38 Secre tary-Treasu rer, in 1940 W est H igh School. T he se ta lents a re a g ro u p o f us sopho mores ... were T reasure r , in 1945 Vic Pres id - n t, described in a le tte r w ritten soon af­ s u r re ptitious ly co ping w ith th e eq ua l­ a nd in 19 46 Presiden t. A Nrto Yark ter h is dea t h by a h igh schoo l cla ss­ ly formidable te xt of 'T he Mi ller's T;I/Il's a rt i Ie quoted h im a s a t trib u t ­ ma te: Ta le' a nd 'T he Reeve's Tale.'" ing hi s posit ion in th e company to " Did I ever tell yo u," t he let te r in ­ At th e University, th e yea r book for nep otis m . quires, "a bo u t how Joe found th e th e cla ss o f 1931 , Joe's class, de­ Af ter Joe Wi lson died s u d d n ly co mple te C ha ucer in the libra r y one scr ibes him as " the local bo y w ho w h ile a t lunch w ith Governor Ro ke­ da y ? He revealed hi s discov e ry a t made good," say ing, "Joe is a flo rid fe ller o n Novem ber 22, 19 7 1, th e r e lu nch , as I reme mber. ...Joe to ld us s uccess. Belo ng ing to t hat ex clus ive was found in h is wa lle! a fra ye d , b lue, t h a t he had bee n br owsing in C h a uce r g ro u p e ndowed w ith ra ccoon coa ts three -by- five ca rd, of the sor t u s ed (the ye a r before h e h ad led us a ll to and Bui ck roadsters, he's terribly for re cipe s o r library ca ta logs. He ' Do n Ju an ' a nd By ro n's di sco ve ry of popu lar w ith the women . Joan C raw­ had be en ca r ryi ng that car d from t he sex) and had fo u nd th ere tw o ta les of fo rd's m a r riage a nd C la ra Bow's en­ ea rliest da y s of hi s ca re e r . O n it was th e most hil a rio us na ture, o ne be ing gageme n t w ere seve re sh ocks to w rit ten w ha t must h a ve be en hi s own an O ld Eng lish version of th e travel­ [oe y. Almost majo red in Engli sh , but fo r m u latio n of hi s a m bi tions in li f . in g sa les ma n jo kes we a ll kn ew so he fo u nd ex pu rg a te d editio ns are It said : well, th e seco nd ta le involving a du ­ used ." " T o be a w hole man; to a ttain plicitou s do xy a nd h er fai thfu l bu t T h e two ye a rs after g rad ua tion sere n ity : T hroug h t h e r ea t io n of a s tu pid s wa in . Joe gave us the o u t line from th e Un iversi ty w ere s pen t o b­ famil y life o f uncommon ri c hne s s ; o f th e two tales, w ith qu otes to illu s­ ta in ing an M.B .A . at th e Harvard through leadersh ip o f a busine s s trate th e funnier parts- 'Tee hee. Bus ine ss Sc hool. w he re he wa s every w hic h bri n g s happiness to it s work­ q uoth she , a nd cla p't th e w indow to ' bit as succe ss fu l as a t Roc h ester. He e rs , se rves w ell it s cus to mers, a nd is o ne I remembe r fro m tha t fir s t in­ wa s o ne of five s t ude n ts in his cla ss bring s prospe rity t o its o w ners; b y troducti on to C hauc e r. made edi tors of th e Hnrmr d BIIS ;IIess aiding a socie ty threatened b y fratri ­ " Na t u rally, this ne w s threa te ned a 1\1'11;1'111 , h e was a Baker Scho lar , a nd cidal d ivisio n to g ain u nity." s ta mpe de to ward th e libra ry. ... But he was g rad ua ted wi th high dis tinc­ [oe was d iscern ing. He pointed o u t tion . Hi s penchant for planning a nd tha t we co u ld not a ll tr amp in th ere hi s self-d iscipline resu lted in h is co m­ in a bod y and make a dive for th e pletin g by Fr iday e ven ing a ll of the book. If we did , th e libraria n . .. wou ld