JOHN C. HEATON Faculty Codirector of Private Wealth Management, Joseph L. Gidwitz Professor of Finance OI CENTENNIAL … ROSANNA WARREN … HOME DECOR EDITOR … HAGEL LECTURE … THINKING HUTS … RETIRING REP GAIN THE FRAMEWORKS TO PRIVATE WEALTH PROTECT AND GROW YOUR WEALTH MANAGEMENT Exclusively for High-Net-Worth There are many roads to growing and protecting Individuals and Families business and financial capital while reinforcing Gleacher Center, Chicago personal values that support a flourishing family. In the October 14–18, 2019 Chicago Booth Private Wealth Management program For more information, visit for high-net-worth individuals and families, you can ChicagoBooth.edu/PWM explore the options and then decide which ones are or call 312.464.8732 to submit an application. right for you and your family. SUMMER 2019 SUMMER SUMMER 2019, VOLUME 111, NUMBER 4 UCH_Summer2019 cover and spine_v7.indd 1 8/1/19 5:08 PM DOUBLE EXECUTIVE MASTERS IN HEALTH POLICY FROM THE UNIVERSITY OF CHICAGO AND THE LONDON SCHOOL OF ECONOMICS 2 CITIES 2 DEGREES 1 PROGRAM YEAR 1 NOVEMBER–DECEMBER 2 weeks in London APRIL–MAY 2 weeks in Chicago SUMMER: Harris Policy Project YEAR 2 NOVEMBER–DECEMBER 2 weeks in London APRIL–MAY 2 weeks in Chicago SPRING: MSc Dissertation SUMMER: LSE Capstone Project Solutions to global health challenges require global thinking. APPLY NOW lse.uchicago.edu/UCmag UCH_ADS_v1.indd 2 8/2/19 10:01 AM EDITORˆS NOTES VOLUME 111, NUMBER 4, SUMMER 2019 EDITOR Laura Demanski, AM’94 SENIOR EDITOR Mary Ruth Yoe ASSOCIATE EDITOR Susie Allen, AB’09 MANAGING EDITOR Rhonda L. Smith ART DIRECTOR Guido Mendez ALUMNI NEWS EDITOR Andrew Peart, AM’16, PHD’18 FERTILE SOIL COPY EDITOR Sam Edsill GRAPHIC DESIGNER Laura Lorenz CONTRIBUTING EDITORS John Easton, AM’77; Carrie Golus, AB’91, AM’93; Brooke E. O’Neill, BY LAURA DEMANSKI, AM’94 AM’04 Editorial Office The University of Chicago Magazine, 5235 South Harper Court, Chicago, IL 60615 TELEPHONE 773.702.2163 FAX 773.702.8836 EMAIL [email protected] The University of Chicago Alumni Association has its offices at 5235 South Harper Court, Chicago, IL 60615 TELEPHONE 773.702.2150 FAX 773.702.2166 n this issue we observe the astonishing century that the Oriental ADDRESS CHANGES 800.955.0065 or Institute is about to celebrate. The OI was established in 1919 as [email protected] WEB mag.uchicago.edu the University’s first research institute, but its seeds go back fur- ther, to 1894, when William Rainey Harper appointed James Henry The University of Chicago Magazine Breasted to the University of Chicago faculty. (ISSN-0041-9508) is published quarterly (Fall, Winter, Spring, Summer) by the University Harper, the wunderkind who was the first to lead this Univer- of Chicago in cooperation with the Alumni sity, had crossed paths with Breasted at Yale. The newly minted Association, 5235 South Harper Court, president had been a professor of ancient Hebrew and the Old Chicago, IL 60615, and sent to all University of Chicago alumni. Published continuously since Testament there when Breasted attended as a divinity graduate student 1907. Periodicals postage paid at Chicago and Iwith a strong interest in Semitic languages and literature. additional mailing offices. POSTMASTER Send What Breasted set in motion in Chicago would have been hard to address changes to The University of Chicago Magazine, Alumni Records, 5235 South foresee when Harper brought to campus the brand-new doctor of Harper Court, Chicago, IL 60615. © 2019 Egyptology—the first American so degreed. Twenty-five years down University of Chicago the road, a decade after Harper’s death, the University established the Advertising Contact uchicago-magazine Oriental Institute with a gift from John D. Rockefeller Jr. @uchicago.edu or visit mag.uchicago.edu/ Moving from its first home in the Haskell Museum to its current loca- advertising. The Magazine is a member of the tion in 1931, the OI thrived. More than in most fields, the assumptions, Ivy League Magazine Network, whose clients include other colleges and universities. These methods, and real-world contexts of Middle East archaeology changed advertisements help the Magazine continue to with the volatile political times and technological leaps of the 20th cen- deliver news of the University of Chicago and tury and early 21st (see “Past and Future,” page 50). its alumni to readers. Please contact the editor with any questions. The OI’s blossoming, which continues, made the Magazine’s task on IVY LEAGUE MAGAZINE NETWORK this occasion frankly daunting. The world of its research, archaeology, Heather Wedlake, Director of Operations museum, dictionaries, public outreach, and conservation—I could go TELEPHONE 617.319.0995 WEB ivymags.com on—is as vast and rich as the cultures of the region that Breasted was the EMAIL [email protected] first to call the Fertile Crescent. In our centennial special section (page The University does not discriminate on 39) we’ve only scratched the surface of the OI’s past achievements, the basis of race, color, religion, sex, sexual orientation, gender identity, national or ethnic present work, and future ambitions. origin, age, status as an individual with a Luckily, there are more opportunities to learn—and to participate disability, protected veteran status, genetic firsthand. The OI will celebrate its milestone throughout the 2019–20 information, or other protected classes under the law. For additional information, please see academic year. To find centennial lectures, films, exhibitions, and more, equalopportunity.uchicago.edu. keep an eye on oi100.uchicago.edu. Finally, we hope you’ll add your own OI memories to the record (archaeological and/or written). Send them to uchicago-magazine @uchicago.edu. We’ll share readers’ recollections with the OI and the Photo courtesy the Oriental Institute ◆ ©istock.com/blindspot University Archives, and print a few in the Fall/19 issue. THE UNIVERSITY OF CHICAGO MAGAZINE | SUMMER 2019 1 UCM_Ednotes_Summer19_v1.indd 1 8/2/19 3:16 PM Vol. 111 / No. 4 SUMMER 2019 mag.uchicago.edu Bullish Persepolis, the ceremonial center of the Achaemenid Empire, boasted an immense palace complex featuring many slender columns—often topped with capitals like this one, which depicts a human- headed bull wearing an Assyrian-style crown. The limestone carving was excavated during the Oriental Institute’s Persian Expedition (1931– 39), as was the 10-ton bull statue shown on the cover. These are among the many treasures held by the OI, which celebrates its centennial this year. For more, see page 39. Cover and this page: Photos courtesy the Oriental Institute TOC_v5.indd 2 8/2/19 1:10 PM 1 Editor’s Notes 4 Letters 7 On the Agenda Features Local interest By Jeanie Chung 22 After 40 years in the Illinois House, a veteran lawmaker steps aside. Hermit philosophy By Lucas McGranahan 24 A course on exile, retreat, and homes away from home. Listening to the world By Lydialyle Gibson 26 Rosanna Warren’s odes to woundedness. American style By Brooke E. O’Neill, AM’04 32 Elizabeth Gordon, PhB’27, fought for “good” design in the Cold War era. Toward a safer world By Laura Demanski, AM’94 34 At the first annual Hagel Lecture, Madeleine Albright and Chuck Hagel spoke from experience. The OI at 100 UChicago’s Oriental Institute celebrates a monumental first century. 40 48 50 54 A brief visual Profile of the A roundtable Museum history director discussion outreach Cover and this page: Photos courtesy the Oriental Institute 9 55 UChicago Journal Peer Review Research and What alumni are news in brief thinking and doing TOC_v5.indd 3 8/2/19 1:11 PM LETTERS The University of Chicago Magazine welcomes letters about its contents or about the life of the University. Letters for publication must be signed and may be edited for space, clarity, and ci- vility. To provide a range of views and voices, we encourage letter writers to limit themselves LETTERS to 300 words or fewer. Write: Editor, The University of Chicago Magazine, 5235 South Harper Court, Suite 500, Chicago, IL 60615. Or email: [email protected]. Special recollections self, at least in the United States, has I was delighted by “No Key Required” been spurred by a perceived weaken- (Spring/19). As a student in the Gradu- ing of democracy. The reasons for this ate Library School, I had the privi- should also be examined. lege of working with Bob Rosenthal, Tom Schroder, AB’67, AM’69 AM’55, for a couple of years when Re- AVE MARIA, FLORIDA genstein was the new library. Along with general cataloging and editing, I served as exhibits coordinator. I had Comprehensive care the chance to work with a number of I read with interest “Primary Value” experts at the University to organize (Spring/19). When I graduated from and exhibit their specialties through the Pritzker School of Medicine in 1972 books, manuscripts, and artifacts. I and established a solo family practice, also put together a catalog for each it was glaringly obvious that I saved exhibit. It was a really fun job. I am The factors that are mentioned all Medicare money on hospital patients. eternally grateful for the experience line up to criticize Donald Trump. It happened every day. I was deeply of working with Rosenthal. While I’m no fan of his, the article ap- involved with my patients’ hospital Sadly, the University closed its li- pears one-sided. One factor negatively care and shared Ram Krishnamoor- brary school many years ago. I never impacting democracy in the United thi’s frustration with trying to get understood why. In the late 1960s, States has been the role of the courts in the attention of the narrowly focused the Library School was well ahead vastly expanding their power and cur- specialists, but it was worth it because of its time in recognizing the impact tailing that of voters and even elected I often was able to correct their false that computers were to have on the officials.
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