y'\)c\ \.\ \\.,.\v'(l-CL- THE UNHVERSHTY Of CHHCAGO1/''/ FOUNDED BY JOHN D. ROCKEFELLERTheFour Hundred Twenty-sixth�ONVOCATH0o/TheSPRHNGSECOND SESSIONCELEBRATING THE CENTENNIAL YEARJune TwelfthA.D. Nineteen Hundred Ninety-two,.".__�__".:r�� ..... _ ..../: ,�RSUy Ul' (..-1 "�.��:\ \ �.' . . /./::'[ <'L.:.:) "I�l CJ ,/W '- '-:. I�J 91992"..... _-_---ROCKEFELLER MEMORIAL CHAPELCONTENTSPRAYER 5CONVOCATION ADDRESS 5ANTHEM 6AWARD OF HONORS 6CONFERRING OF ACADEMIC DEGREES 4The Division of the Biological Sciences and thePritzker School of MedicineMaster if Science 47Doctor if Medicine 52Doctor if Philosophy 54The Division of the HumanitiesMaster if Arts 47Master if Fine Arts 49Doctor if Philosophy 54The Division of the Physical SciencesMaster if Science 49Doctor if Philosophy 55The Division of the Social SciencesMaster if Arts 50Master if Science in Teaching 51Doctor if Philosophy 56CONFERRING OF BURLINGTON NORTHERN AWARDS 5CONFERRING OF HONORARY DEGRESS 7ALMA MATER 25BENEDICTION 25Please refrain from applause until the President leads the audiencein acknowledging the awarding of degrees after her remarks.Photographs may be taken in the Chapel only after the recessional.1ORDER OF EXERCHSESFor the Conferring of DegreesThree o'clockHANNA H. GRAY, President of the University, PresidingTHE CONVOCATION PROCESSIONPROCESSIONAL - Canzon noni toni(The Congregation remains standing until after the prayer) Giovanni GabrieliThe Marshal and the Student MarshalsThe Candidates for DegreesThe Faculties of the UniversityThe Trustees and Officers of the UniversityThe Dean of Rockefeller Memorial ChapelThe Convocation SpeakerThe Candidates for the Burlington Northern AwardsThe Candidates for Honorary DegreesThe Provost of the UniversityThe President of the UniversityTHE PRAYERTHE REVEREND BERNARD 0. BROWNDean of Rockefeller Memorial ChapelTHE CONVOCATION ADDRESS((ONLY IN CHICAGO"DAVID M. BEVINGTONPhyllis Fay Horton Professor in the Humanities, Professor, Department of English Language& Literature, Committee on Comparative Studies in Literature, and the College3THE ANTHEMDie mit Tranen saen Johan Hermann ScheinThe Rockefeller Memorial Chapel Choir and OrganDie mit Tranen saen werden mit Freuden ernten.Sie gehen hin und weinen, und tragen edlen Samen,Und kommen mit Freuden, und bringen ihre Garben.THE AWARD OF HONORSTHE CONFERRING OF ACADEMIC DEGREESCandidates for Degrees will be presented in alphabetical order by degrees in thefollowing academic units. Please refrain from applause until the President leads theaudience in acknowledging the awarding of degrees after her remarks.In the Division of the Biological Sciences and the Pritzker School of Medicine by DeanSamuel HellmanIn the Division of the Humanities by Dean Philip GossettIn the Division of the Physical Sciences by Associate Dean Peter 0. VandervoortIn the Division of Social Sciences by Acting Dean John W Boyer4THE CONFERRING OF THEBURLINGTON NORTHERN FACULTYACHIEVEMENT AWARDSFor excellence in graduate teaching, encouragement if graduate students,and leadership in the development if programsLEONARD LINSKYProjessor, Department if Philosophy and the CollegePlato wrote that philosophy begins with wonder, and it is surely the mark of a truephilosopher and a teacher of philosophy that he display the capacity to discover what isunexpected, problematic and thus profound in even the most familiar experience orproposition. Leonard Linsky, Professor in the Department of Philosophy and theCollege, has this capacity in the highest degree. Yet the capacity for philosophy canaccomplish nothing without unstinting devotion to philosophy. For twenty-five yearsLeonard Linsky has been doing and teaching philosophy at the University of Chicagowith inexhaustible devotion -devotion to original scholarship, to rigorous and eleganttextual exegsis, and to the philosophical development of his students.Leonard Linsky is remarkable for the intensity and searching honesty that he bringsto his teaching. Even when he at first finds a student's philosophical position unpersua­sive, he remains willing and even eager to rethink the issue between classes, turningover his first view if he subsequently finds it mistaken. Always forthright, free from theguises of self-protection, he sets for his students a sterling example of doing andteaching philosophy.Leonard Linsky's graduate students testify to his special ability to inspire, encour­age, and influence them. One former student, now a member of the philosophydepartment at another university, wrote of his training with Leonard Linsky:It didn't matter whose ideas we were discussing; the arguments of the mostdistinguished scholar and the lowliest graduate student were all treated withcriticism, respect, and delight.Another commented that:"Leonard Linsky has changed not only my interests, but also my life."The candidate will be presented by William Tait, Professor Department if Philosophy,Committee on the Conceptual Foundations if Science, and the CollegeCITATIONDistinguished scholar, stimulating teacher, and friend, who has been an exemplar andan inspiration for his students as he has led them toward a deeper understanding of thefundamental problems in modern philosophy5REBECCA WESTProfessor; Department <if Romance Languages & Literatures and the CollegeRebecca West, Professor in the Department of Romance Languages & Literaturesand the College, is truly one of those who bears her learning lightly. In her classes onItalian literature, she creates an environment in which students feel free to articulateand develop their own interpretations of the texts under study. Everything seems tocome easily and naturally. Each student feels that he or she is an active contributor to theclass and is not merely "taking" instruction. It is only upon reflection that studentsrealize that Rebecca West has artfully constructed the space in which they are enabled toread and think with ease. Hers is indeed an art that improves nature.Professor West can create this sense of freedom in the classroom because of herthorough mastery of the texts and the scholarly work in the field, and because of herbroad knowledge ofItalian literature. Like all true master scholars and teachers, she hasa fine sense of economy, knowingjust when she has said enough to enable her studentsto generate their own insights and ideas. In this way, her students learn from her notonly literature but also a broader lesson, that humanistic scholarship at the highest levelis a dynamic combination of individual and collaborative effort, requiring tact and afine receptivity to the ideas and feelings of others as they are expressed in language.Combining so efficiently her research, teaching, and writing with a personalcommitment and enthusiasm, Rebecca West is instinctively generous in the time,encouragement, and support she provides to her students. As twenty-five studentsattested in a recent nomination letter, "we feel very fortunate to have such a dynamicand personable scholar at our University. "The candidate will be presented by Peter Dembowski, Distinguished Service Professor; Depart­ments <if Romance Languages & Literatures and Linguistics, Committee on Medieval Studies, andthe College.CITATIONInspiring teacher of Italian literature, whose unstinting generosity has encouraged inher students independence of thought and a dedication to the highest standards ofhumanistic scholarship.6THE CONFERRING OF HONORARY DEGREESThe Candidates will be announced by Edward O. Laumann, Provost of the Universityand George Herbert Mead Professor, Department of SociologyFor the Degree of Doctor of Humane Letters:NATALIE ZEMON DAVISHenry Charles Lea Professor of HistoryPrinceton UniversityOne of the most creative and widely emulated American historians of Europeworking today, Natalie Zemon Davis has not only mastered the archival and manu­script techniques of traditional historical scholarship, she has bent those techniques tonew ends, boldly expanding the boundaries of the discipline. Employing the theoreticalperspectives of cultural anthropology and literary criticism, she has restored the voicesof the sixteenth century, in particular those of the least audible groups in early modernsociety-artisans, peasants, and women. Stressing the meaningful nature of socialaction, and devising a set of interpretive strategies to retrieve that meaning, she hasasked questions of the past that most of her fellow historians had not thought to ask, orhad presumed to be beyond what could be known. With a combination of intellectualrigor and generous, democratic sensibility, she has taught us that no human behavior,no matter how strange or seemingly marginal to the larger currents of history, isirrelevant to the historian. She has inspired a generation of young historians with hercapacious scholarly vision and her personal example.The candidate will be presented by Jan E. Goldstein) Professor, Department of History and theCollege.CITATIONWho has bent the techniques of traditional historical scholarship to new ends, boldlyexpanding the boundaries of the discipline. Employing the theoretical perspectives ofcultural anthropology and literary criticism, she has restored the voices of the sixteenthcentury, in particular those of the least audible groups in early modern society­artisans, peasants, and women. Demonstrating that no human behavior is irrelevant tothe larger currents of history, she has inspired a generation of young historians with therigor and capaciousness of her scholarly vision.7JOSEPH FRANK, Ph.D., 1960Professor <if Comparative Literature and Slavic Languages and LiteraturesStanford UniversityAt the age of 27, in 1945, Joseph Frank published a three-part article in the SewaneeReview "Spatial Form in Modern Literature," one of the most influential essays ontwentieth-century literary criticism. Professor Frank had identified long before it wasapparent to others one of the tendencies of modern literature and critical thinking: thatliterature in the twentieth century, chronological and narrative in nature, had increas­ingly "spatialized" itself and had reached for the simultaneous character of painting andsculpture. The article has been reprinted many times and has provoked a generation ofcommentary and praise. He had in fact created new concepts and a new vocabulary for aliterary tendency.In 1960 Joseph Frank finished his dissertation at Chicago, "Russian Nihilism: AContext for 'Notes from the Underground. '" He gives this copiously commented onwork a soil and socio-politicallife that had not been done before, and he did it withgrace and sensitivity. The "environment," in his capable hands, drained nothing fromthe intrinsic value of the work, but rather fostered its growth. This was the beginningof his fascination with Dostoevsky, and he was to return again and again to work onDostoevsky. In 1976 he published the first of a projected five-volume intellectualbiography of Dostoevsky. No one in the vast accumulation of publications onDostoevsky, in the United States, Europe, and Russia itself, has considered theintellectual, political, social, and personal circumstances of Dostoevsky-the man andthe writer-in such detail and with such intelligence. The two further volumes havebeen received with increasing acclaim. This biography has rightly been calledmagisterial.In addition to his masterful work on Dostoevsky and Russian literature, JosephFrank has ranged over the whole course of American and European scholarship andcriticism. In addition to his much admired The Widening Gyre, Crisis and Mastery inModern Literature (1963), he has published important pieces on such writers as T. S.Eliot, Balzac, Stendhal, Sartre, Trilling, Malraux, Mann, and Valery. He is admiredand respected in American, French and Russian literary circles. He has done the mostpainstaking historical research, and at the same time ranged over broad theoretical andsocio-literary topics. He is a scholar, critic, and man of letters. Joseph Frank hasenriched our understanding of Western thought and literature, and we are proud thathis beginnings were at Chicago.The candidate will be presented by Edward Wasiolek, Avalon Foundation Distinguished ServiceProiessot; Department <if Slavic Languages & Literatures.CITATIONBy the range, quality, and originality of his work, he has influenced the course ofmodern literary criticism. His work on spatial form has become a permanent feature ofour understanding of twentieth-century literature, and his studies of Russian literaryand intellectual history have helped form the course of Russian scholarship in thiscountry. His multi-volume intellectual biography of Dostoevsky is magisterial andwill stand as a model for biographers for generations to come. His scholarship hascontributed greatly to our understanding and appreciation of American, European,and Russian literature and thought.8MORRIS HALLE, A.M.} 1948Institute Professor of LinguisticsMassachusetts Institute of TechnologyMorris Halle was born in Latvia in 1923, and came to the United States as a child. Hereceived his bachelor's degree from City University of New York in 1943, and amaster's degree in linguistics from the University of Chicago in 1948. He was awardeda Ph.D. degree in linguistics by Harvard University in 1955, and he has taught at theMassachusetts Institute of Technology since that time; he is presently InstituteProfessor at MIT.Halle's influence on the field oflinguistics has been enormous, most especially in thefield of phonology, the study of how the human mind perceives and organizes thesounds oflanguage. From his earliest work on Russian, he has demonstrated time andagain that a human being's thorough knowledge of his or her native language is vastlymore complex than might naively be thought; yet far from being an unfathomablemystery, Professor Halle has argued, this complexity is a challenge to our scientificreasoning, and a challenge that can be met with suitable theoretical tools. Over the lastthree and a half decades, he has refined our conception of how the human mind mastersthe sound system of human languages. His many books and articles on generativephonology, on autosegmental and metrical phonology, and on historical linguisticshave had an extraordinary impact on the field as we know it today.In addition to asking questions concerning general linguistic theory, Morris Halle'swork has been especially influential in our understanding of English, of the Slaviclanguages, and of the evolution of the IndoEuropean language family more generally.By going beyond the study of ordinary language to the study of poetry, he has also leftan important mark on the study of poetics and the analysis of the poetic traditions of theIndoEuropean languages.Professor Halle has also had a great influence in the field of linguistics through themany linguists in the profession who have been his students over the years at MIT. Hisdevotion to scientific practice and his concern for the development of younger scholarsin linguistics have earned him his place in the field today.The candidate will be presented by John Goldsmith} Professor and Chairman} Department ofLinguistics and Professor in the College.CITATIONThroughout his career in linguistics, he has asked and answered fundamental questionsconcerning the nature of language and the nature of the human mind. For severaldecades he has defined the major questions of phonological research, and he hasilluminated our understanding of such varied topics as the nature of poetic versifica­tion, the prosodic systems of the classical languages, and the rich resources of thehuman mind revealed by the study ofliving languages.9LEONARD B. MEYER, Ph.D., 1954Benjamin Franklin Professor <if Music and the Humanities, EmeritusUniversity <if PennsylvaniaIn a series of important books, Leonard Meyer has sought to redefine basic conceptsabout music and to influence in fundamental ways how we should hear and understandmusic. Using unorthodox and eclectic methods, he has brought to bear a penetratingmind to such diverse questions as the psychological significance of music, the nature ofrhythm, the meaning of style, and the way in which the modern world should copewith the increasing pluralism in the field of music. One strand that has run throughmuch of his work has been that we should study the way music is perceived, and someof his most profound insights have come from his studies of psychology-especiallycognitive psychology. Leonard Meyer's account of music in America in the 1960's hasbeen the most persuasive and the most widely accepted. His has been one of the mostarticulate and influential voices in shaping our views about the notes and how theywork.Leonard Meyer's influence as a teacher has also been far-reaching: on the students hetrained at Chicago and later at the University of Pennsylvania; on their students; and onseveral generations of students in every country of the world who have been stimulatedby his work. His astute questioning of basic premises, his sharp challenges tounexamined assumptions, and his irreverent wit have provoked several generations ofstudents to think more clearly and to do better than they thought they could.Moreover, Leonard Meyer can rightly be called the patron saint of the Department ofMusic at the University of Chicago, for it was his and Grosvenor Cooper's energy andvision that raised our Department from a small service organization in a somewhathostile environment into one of the best music departments in the country.The candidate will be presented by Howard Mayer Brown, Ferdinand Schevill DistinguishedService Prcfessor and Chairman, Department <if Music.CITATIONAs the constant entre of received wisdom, he has succeeded in redefining basicconcepts about music, teaching us all how to hear the notes and understand how theywork in fundamentally new ways. His studies of the psychological significance ofmusic, of the nature of rhythm, of the meaning of style, and of the new pluralism in hisfield have asked the right hard questions; and his energy and vision elevated theDepartment of Music at this University to a position of pre-eminence. He has shown usthe directions we should continue to explore in the years to come.10DAVID PINGREEUniversity Professor and Professor of the History of MathematicsBrown UniversityDavid Pingree is one of the finest scholars of our time, or of any time, in the historyof astronomy and astrology from antiquity through the Renaissance. His editions ofGreek, Latin, Arabic, and Sanskrit texts alone qualify him for this commendation, butbeyond his philological accomplishments, through his studies of the exact sciences, hehas studied the transmission of science and culture over a period of two millennia. Heworks with equal facility with Byzantine Greek, Pahlavi, and Arabic manuscripts, andin the field of Sanskrit alone, he has, in his Census of the Exact Sciences in Sanskrit (fourvolumes to date), examined thousands of manuscripts, most of them never beforestudied, and described their contents in what frequently amounts to short treatises onmany aspects ofIndian mathematics and astronomy.Professor Pingree's work transcends the field of the history of the exact sciences, forhis is a unique contribution to intellectual history demonstrating the complex interrela­tions in the transmission of ancient and medieval learning between cultures, fromancient Mesopotamia, through Hellenistic Greek and Roman civilization, to India, theIslamic Near East, and medieval and Renaissance Europe. Mathematics and astronomy,with its concomitant astrology, were, in a strict sense, invented only once, inMesopotamia in stages between about 2000 and 400 B.C. The sciences in Greek andIndian civilizations are extensions of this origin, from which they descended to theByzantine, Arabic, and Latin cultures of the Middle Ages and the Renaissance and,greatly transformed by the scientific revolution of the seventeenth and eighteenthcenturies, to our own time.David Pingree has used his knowledge of sources, not only to show transmissionforward in time, but also to reconstruct the sciences of an earlier period, from whichfew records have survived, by using the records of a later period. For example, he hasused Indian texts, of which there are many from the fifth through the seventh centuries,to reconstruct the underlying pre-Ptolemaic Greek astronomy from which Indianastronomy originated, although - as-ide from a few papyrus fragments - no Greek textsof this kind have survived, as Ptolemy's work had rendered all that had gone before itobsolete. His work is filled with ingenious detective work of this kind, using Greekastrology to clarify Babylonian omen texts, Arabic texts of the eighth and ninthcenturies to reconstruct Sasanian (Persian) astronomy and astrology of the fifthcentury, and late Indian commentaries to show the earlier history ofIndian astronomy.His skills had made him, a young scholar at the University of Chicago in the sixties, animportant link among the various fields in the Department of Near Eastern Languages& Civilizations, and to other areas of the humanities and the exact sciences as well.The University of Chicago, where philology, history, and the history of science livein happy communion, is proud to claim David Pingree as a candidate for an honorarydegree of Doctor of Humane Letters.The candidate will be presented by Erica Reiner; John A. Wilson Distinguished Service Professorof Assyriology, Departments of Near Eastern Languages & Civilizations and Linguistics} andEditor-in-Charge of the Assyrian Dictionary of the Oriental Institute.CITATIONEditor, translator, and interpreter of Greek, Latin, Byzantine, Arabic, and Sanskrittexts that shed light on the history of astronomy, he has used these sources to trace thedevelopment and transmission oflearning from Babylon to the European Middle Agesand Renaissance, and thus he has reconstructed with scholarship, imagination, andgreat wit two millennia of the history of science.11GERALDSTOURZHProjessor if Modern HistoryUniversity if ViennaGerald Stourzh is a distinguished historian of modern Central Europe and one of themost influential Austrian historians of his generation. Moreover, he is also the author oftwo important books and many influential essays in early American history, works thathave merited and received great respect from other leading scholars in that field.Gerald Stourzh studied both at the University of Vienna and at the University ofChicago. During his stay at Chicago his research focussed on the history of Americanforeign policy and American political thought in the revolutionary period. Hiswritings on American and Anglo-American themes are distinguished by their conjoin­ing of subjects often considered apart: political thought and constitution-making;institution-building and the conduct of foreign policy. These works enlarged the fieldof vision of scholars on both sides of the Atlantic by exhibiting the interpenetration ofconcepts and arguments, both ancient and modern, both European and American, inthe intellectual world of "the Age of Constitutions. "Having completed major books on Benjamin Franklin and Alexander Hamilton,Gerald Stourzh turned to the history of Central Europe, and particularly to the historyof his own land, Austria, producing major books on the history of the Austrian StateTreaty and on the role of the high courts in the Hapsburg Empire in mediating socialconflict and guaranteeing national equality in a multi-ethnic society. He brought to hisstudies of Austrian history an interest in the relationship between articulated rights andliberties and the formal structures oflegislative and judicial power that can guarantee(or subvert) those rights. He has been one of the most articulate and eloquent voicesdefending the integrity of the historical memory of an Empire that contained elevendifferent national groups, and that represented social, cultural, and political traditionsquite distinct from those of Germany.Gerald Stourzh has also been a leading, if not the leading, teacher of Americanhistory on the European continent, and has trained or influenced a whole generation ofyounger Europeans in their studies of American history. His teaching, like hisscholarship, has been comparative and interdisciplinary, combining extraordinarybreadth, penetrating insight, and courageous vision.The candidate will be presented by John W Boyer, Prcfessot; Department if History and theCollege, Master, Social Sciences Collegiate Division, Associate Dean if the College, and DeputyDean, Division if the Social Sciences.CITATIONDistinguished historian of the Hapsburg Empire and of the Republic of Austria, he hasalso written influential books and essays on early American history, and his scholarshipand teaching have been comparative and interdisciplinary, combining extraordinarybreadth, penetrating insight, and courageous vision. He has been a leading teacher ofAmerican history on the European continent, and he has played an important civic role,undertaken in the spirit of cosmopolitan humanism, in defining and defending modernAustrian identity.12For the Degree of Doctor of Laws:ROBERT J. AUMANNProfessor, Institute of MathematicsHebrew University ofJerusalemRo bert J. Aumann is one of the leading scholars in the theory of games. For more than30 years his contributions have defined and solved some of the most difficult problemsin this subject. His research has had an especially great impact on economics.Professor Aumann's earliest research on general equilibrium, which is the study ofthe consistency of economic relations among all of the actors in the economy, brought itto a highly satisfactory state. He introduced the notion of an economy with acontinuum of traders. As a result, it became possible to understand how an efficientequilibrium can exist even if a large number of the participants behave in irrationalways.His work on the deeper links between cooperative and noncooperative gamesilluminates how individuals are able to enforce contracts without outside help. Verydeep insights into the theory of repeated games emerged in this analysis. It remains oneof the most important and active areas of research in economics.His work on power, taxation, and public goods advances our understanding of howlegislatures function. The situations to which the theory of games applies are verycomplicated. Professor Aumann and his students have studied the limits imposed byhuman frailties for these situations and have obtained surprising insights with practicalimplications. As supervisor of the doctoral dissertations of some of the leadingpractitioners of game theory, he has made the Hebrew University the leading center ofresearch on game theory.The candidate will be presented by Lester Yeiser, Professor, Department of Economics.CITATIONWhose work as a leading game theorist has inspired a generation of economists. Hardlyany area of economics has remained untouched by the wide-ranging applications of hisingenious ideas and contributions to game theory. His research has encompassed manyareas: how legislation is passed, taxation, unemployment, and the complexity ofdecision making. His endeavors have enriched and led to a better understanding ofeverything he has studied. He has created the leading center of research in game theoryat the Hebrew University. His students are among the leaders in this field.13DANIEL L. McFADDENE. Morris Cox Professor of EconomicsUniversity of California) BerkeleyDaniel McFadden has greatly enriched economics and econometrics by his funda­mental work on problems of immense practical importance. For example, in an effortto predict the likely demand for .the San Francisco Bay Area Rapid Transit System(BART), he developed highly original models of consumer demand and new econo­metric methods for estimating them. Combining economic theory and econometrics ata high level, Professor McFadden developed a paradigm for the analysis of choicesamong indivisible goods that serves as a foundation for empirical work in laboreconomics, transportation economics, industrial organization, public finance, soci­ology, civil engineering, and marketing research.To take another example, his research on theory of production pioneered the "dual"approach to the specification of technology. This approach greatly simplified andextended production theory. His work underlies the methods used to measure factorproductivity. It spawned an entire field of knowledge.His deeply reasoned analyses have stimulated a huge body of theoretical andempirical work. By demonstrating the value of economic theory and econometrics inaddressing practical problems, he has stimulated many others to approach empiricalproblems in a rigorous disciplined fashion. By distilling the essential features of manypractical problems, he has formulated and solved many original economic and econo­metric problems. In doing so, he has turned economic theory and econometricsoutward and has greatly enriched the foundations of both fields. Professor McFadden isa model economic scientist who has greatly influenced the theory and practice ofeconomics.The candidate will be presented by James J Heckman) Henry Schultz Professor, Department ofEconomics) Irving B. Harris Graduate School of Public Policy Studies) and the College.CITATIONBy demonstrating the value of economic theory and econometrics in understandingand solving an enormous range of important empirical problems, he has inspired alleconomists to approach empirical economics in a rigorous, disciplined fashion. Ourunderstanding of consumer demand, the organization of production, the choice ofmodes of travel, the behavior of government bureaucracies, and the demand forhousing has been enhanced by his work. By distilling the essence of the problems inthese fields, he has made profound contributions to economic theory and econometrics.In doing so, he has greatly advanced the evolution of economics as a science.14For the Degree of Doctor of Science:HARMON CRAIG, S.M., 1950; Ph.D., 1951Professor of Geochemistry and OceanographyScripps Institution of Oceanography, University of California, San DiegoHarmon Craig has had and continues to have a profound impact on the Earth andPlanetary Sciences. His research has changed the way we think about the origin ofmeteorites, the early evolution of the Earth, the subsequent distribution and behaviorof volatiles in the mantle and crust, and the history of the oceans and the atmosphere.His contributions have influenced scientific discourse in disciplines as diverse asclimatology, economic geology, volcanology, and archeology.As a graduate student of the University of Chicago, Craig worked with Nobellaureate Harold Urey and helped to bring about an intellectual explosion which createdthe modern science of geochemistry. With Harold U rey, he showed that the chondriticmeteorites fall into chemically distinct classes, representing different parent bodies.This classification represents the beginning of the modern era of meteorite studies.Harmon Craig also presented the first comprehensive survey of the variations of13C/12C ratios in all manner of natural carbon-containing materials. This work formedthe basis for all subsequent applications of carbon isotopes in geochemistry, whether tofossile fuels, natural gases, carbonate rocks, diamonds, meteorites, or living organicmatter.He made a remarkable contribution in the demonstration that isotopic variations inthe two elements of water, i. e., hydrogen and oxygen, are almost perfectly correlatedin all the natural waters at the surface of the Earth: oceans, lakes, rivers, glaciers, etc. Heshowed how these effects arise from the kinetic behavior of isotopes during evaporationand condensation in the oceans and the atmosphere. Professor Craig then showed thatwaters from geothermal sources (hot springs, geysers, etc.) follow different patternswhich were, nevertheless, clearly related to local rainfall. These experiments showedthat in general, water and other volatiles coming from volcanoes and similar sources arenot coming from the Earth's deep interior, but are primarily recycled surface materials.Professor Craig subsequently became involved in a massive project to determinesystematically the abundances of a large number of chemical species in seawater, so asto provide a three-dimensional map of their distributions. One of the results of thisstudy was the recognition of a "plume" of the rare isotope 3He emanating from sourcesalong the crest of the East Pacific Rise and spreading westward under the influence ofthe ocean currents. This was the first unequivocal demonstration that the Earth'sinterior contains "primordial" gases which had never before been at the Earth's surface.This knowledge is an important factor in understanding the origin and earliest historyof the Earth.One cannot discuss Harmon Craig's work without reference to its impact on ourunderstanding of the global carbon cycle. He was the first to model the effects on theglobal radiocarbon budget of oxidized carbon transfer between the deep ocean and thesurface ocean, and between the surface ocean and the atmosphere. Through studies of13Cj12C and 180/160 ratios in organic matter and in dissolved compounds in seawater,he and his collaborators have refined our understanding of the role of the deep oceans inthe global carbon cycle. More recently, a study of air trapped in polar ice caps showedthat methane concentrations have increased in the atmosphere over the past 300 years.This observation is important because methane is a 'greenhouse gas contributing toglobal warming.Harmon Craig is a relentless seeker after truth. He dispels darkness wherever heperceives it and in doing so sometimes ignites a few fires. More often than not, hisefforts shed light on whole disciplines previously unexplored.15The candidate will be presented by Robert N. Clayton} Enrico Fermi Distinguished ServiceProfessor, Departments of the Geophysical Sciences and Chemistry, the Enrico Fermi Institute}and the College.CITATIONWho has shown how the precise measurement of the abundances of isotopes in naturalmaterials can be used to study the Earth's atmosphere, its oceans, and its interior. Hehas demonstrated the power of these techniques to provide quantitative understandingof the interactions of the various geospheres. His work has stimulated and set standardsfor the research of a new generation of Earth scientists.NORMAN DAVIDSON, S.B.} 1937} Ph.D.} 1941Chandler Professor Emeritus of Chemical BiologyCalifornia Institute of TechnologyNorman Davidson, Chandler Professor Emeritus of Chemical Biology, CaliforniaInstitute of Technology, is a distinguished alumnus from the University of Chicago.After having received his Bachelor of Science in Chemistry from the College, heattended Oxford University as a Rhodes Scholar. He returned to the University andcompleted his Ph.D. degree two years later.U sing the rigor of chemical measurements and electron microscopy, ProfessorDavidson developed methods to reveal the sequence organization of nucleic acidswhich were essential to the recombinant DNA technology and genetic mapping.Persuaded by the power of the recombinant DNA technology, he undertook the studyof functions of the central nervous system. He and his coworkers were among the firstgroups of scientists to isolate the sodium ion channel. Because of his contributions, onecan look forward to a better understanding of molecular neurobiology.In summary, Norman Davidson pioneered new methodologies in physical chemistryin the 1950's and 60's. He revolutionized the way we think about the organization andexpression of genes in the 1970's and 80's. Currently, he is a pioneering scientist leadingour way to a better understanding of the complex functions of the central nervoussystem. He is a gifted scientist who, by his innovative thinking, has bridged the gapbetween the physical sciences and the biological sciences, and has earned the highestrespect of the scientific community.The candidate will be presented by Nien-Chu C. Yang} Professor, Department of Chemistry,Center for East Asian Studies} and the College.CITATIONWhose distinguished career extends from chemistry, to biophysics, and to neurobiol­ogy; who has made pioneering and significant contributions in all three areas ofresearch. His continuing productivity have led scientists to a fundamental understand­ing of molecular structures of genes and neurotransmitters. His innovative thinking hasbridged the gap between the physical and biological sciences.16F. CLARK HOWELL, Ph.B., 1949; A.M., 1951; Ph.D., 1953Professor of AnthropologyUniversity of California, BerkeleyClark Howell is the most respected and knowledgeable living authority on thee_volution of our prehistoric ancestors and their closest relatives. His mastery of themany disciplines necessary to understand the anatomical relationships between thedifferent hominid fossils, to determine their age, and to understand how both bodyform and behavior adapted them to changing natural surroundings, is absolutelyunrivalled.Professor Howell's anatomical expertise has contributed fundamentally to ourunderstanding of the relationships of the Australopithecines and Homo habilis, theevolution of archaic Homo sapiens and Homo erectus, the nature of adaptations of theNeanderthals, and their replacement by fully modern people. His research in the Omobasin in Ethiopia provided essential information for constructing a reliable timetablefor the evolution of the very early branches of our family tree. His studies of theevolution of prehistoric carnivores and other mammals helped resolve basic questionsabout the age of hom in ids and the nature of the natural settings in which they lived. Asan archeologist who has directed excavations and archeological surveys in Africa,Spain, and Turkey that are models of multidisciplinary research on the physical andbehavioral adaptations of early people, he has himself helped fill in many gaps in thefossil record of the changing body forms of early hominids and the tools they made andused. His publications, numbering in the hundreds, are sought as indispensable guidesto the literature and latest results of paleoanthropological investigations worldwide.F. Clark Howell's work and personal example have established standards for multi­disciplinary paleo anthropology to which all aspire, but which others have seldomattained. They will remain as models for many years to come.The candidate will be presented by Leslie C. Freeman, Professor, Department of Anthropology.CITATIONAs the foremost paleoanthropologist of the last half century, who knows hominidfossils and their contexts more completely than any other living scholar, he hasprovided uniquely authoritative assessments of the evolutionary relationships of theprehistoric ancestors and relatives of modern humans. His archeological excavationshave contributed fundamentally to our understanding of the lifeways of our earlyancestors; with his paleontological studies of other mammalian lineages they provide asolid cornerstone on which to build a reliable framework for understanding pastenvironments and dating very early phases of hominid evolution. By his work andpersonal example, he set standards for multidisciplinary research in his field that willendure.17DANIEL E. KOSHLANO, JR., Ph.D.) 1949Professor if Molecular and Cell BiologyUniversity if California) BerkeleyThroughout the present half-century, Daniel Koshland has been a strikingly innova­tive and lucid leader in the fields of research that seek to develop an understanding oflife processes at the molecular level. His early fundamental studies on enzymemechanisms provided the key concepts and distinctions that underlie virtually allsubsequent research in that field. His introduction of the "ligand-induced fit" conceptto the study of protein structure altered forever our understanding of the roles ofmolecular flexibility in enzyme catalysis. This idea has been truly seminal in the broadvariety of subdisciplines in which proteins are studied as the primary agents ofbiological effects.Professor Koshland's subsequent pioneering studies and insightful analysis ofbacte­rial chemotaxis, the process by which bacteria recognize and respond to food sub­stances and toxic materials, again resulted in a brilliant demonstration of the chemicalbasis for a complex biological phenomenon. This work demonstrated the existence of arudimentary memory process in bacteria and provided implications for the mecha­nisms of sensory perception in higher organisms as well. Moreover, his subsequentexpansion and generalization on these themes to encompass the entire field of metaboliccontrol mechanisms has again provided strong leadership in rationalizing what hadoften been regarded as a hopelessly complex field of research. In every case, ProfessorKoshland's creative theoretical approaches and elegant experimental work have con­tributed uniquely to our present understanding of important phenomena.There are, in each of these research areas, crucial insights first brought to the subjectby Daniel Koshland, and his ideas have been enormously persuasive and influential inall the fields they touch. One reason for this is their intrinsic merit; another is his habitof selecting research problems with fundamental and far-reaching significance; a thirdis the exceptional lucidity and gr;tce of their expression. These qualities, both in hismany written works and in his oral presentations, have excited the admiration andgratitude of audiences throughout the scientific world.The profound impact that Daniel Koshland's work has had upon chemistry, biology,and, especially, the vital field where these disciplines overlap has been achieved throughthe contribution of seminal insights that have altered the way other scientists thinkabout their research.The candidate will be presented by John Westley, Professor, Department if Biochemistry &Molecular Biology, and the College.CITATIONWho went forth from his graduate training at the University of Chicago to contributehighly original insights and innovative experimental approaches to research on themechanisms of enzyme action, the biochemical roles of protein flexibility, the molecu­lar basis of bacterial chemotaxis, and the regulation of metabolism. The elegantconceptual framework that he developed has had profound implications for the furtheradvancement of understanding in many fields of biology, chemistry, and, especially,areas where those disciplines overlap.18DONALD E. OSTERBROCKProfessor of AstronomyUniversity of California, Santa CruzProfessor Donald Osterbrock's accomplishments in astrophysics are remarkable inboth depth and breadth. He is one of the very rare people who have made seminalcontributions to both observational and theoretical astrophysics. In terms of subjects ofresearch, he is internationally recognized as one of the few most influential authoritieson (1) interstellar matter in our own Galaxy, (2) galaxies with active nuclei, and (3) thehistory of U. S. astronomy. His research in each of these distinct, major subjects hasbeen highly distinguished, yet his contributions to all three have been incorporated intoa single career. In addition, particularly before about 1970, his theoretical calculationsof many atomic transition rates, both radiative and collisional, occupied a fourth area ofresearch. Those results provided one of the indispensible keys to correctly interpretingthe telescopic data which Professor Osterbrock and his students have gathered fromour own and other galaxies.Professor Osterbrock has established many of the standard methods used byastronomers to study ionized gas in galaxies. In the mid-1960s, he began to apply thesemethods to study the nuclei of Seyfert galaxies, later understood to be relativelynearby, feeble relatives of the luminous quasars found in the most distant parts of theuniverse. Professor Osterbrock made the first measurements of electron density in theinterstellar gas by means of the emission lines of ionized oxygen, a now standardtechnique; worked out theoretically the escape of resonance-line photons throughsubstantially opaque interstellar gas; provided the first serious discussion of hydrogenmolecules in interstellar gas, including the prediction that they would be found in thepara form; predicted the ultraviolet spectra of planetary nebulae, which were later usedas the basis for determining the distances to the quasars; predicted the infrared emissionspectra of gaseous nebulae, including especially the fine-structure lines; was the first tostudy the physical state of ionized gas in elliptical galaxies; developed and elucidated theconcepts of the broad-line and the narrow-line regions in Seyfert galaxies; made the firstphotoionized theoretical models of Seyfert galaxies; demonstrated from his system­atically collected data and those of others that the optical spectra of Seyfert galaxies arebetter described by a cylindrical than by a spherical model; and systematized all of thedata on active galactic nuclei into the now standard classification system. Earlier, whilestill a graduate student at the University of Chicago, Professor Osterbrock alsoparticipated in a central way in the landmark discovery in 1951 of the spiral arms of ourGalaxy. Especially in the last decade, he has also published a host of historical studies ofU. S. astronomers and their accomplishments, including a full-length biography ofJames A. Keeler.Through his published papers, his classic textbooks, and the work of his numerousgraduate students and post-doctoral associates, Donald Osterbrock has led the way tomuch of our present understanding in several major areas of astrophysics.The candidate will be presented by Lewis M. Hobbs, Professor, Department of Astronomy &Astrophyics.CITATIONWho has made fundamental contributions to our knowledge of interstellar matter inour own Galaxy, the properties of galaxies with active nuclei, and the history ofastronomy in the United States. In his own work, and in that of the many youngercolleagues whom he has encouraged, he has led the way to much of our presentunderstanding of ionized gas in galaxies.19cJEREMIAH P. OSTRIKER, Ph.D., 1964Prcfessor and Chairman, Department if Astrophysical SciencesPrinceton UniversityPulsars are one of the types of compact objects discovered by astronomers in the lastthirty years. Soon after pulsars were identified as rotating, magnetized neutron stars,Jeremiah Ostriker, in collaboration with James Gunn, developed a theory for theevolution of pulsars that is still used today. Pulsars represent the end-point of theevolution of most massive stars, so astronomers have used observations of thedistribution of pulsars in the Galaxy to infer the rate at which such stars are born. Theideas put forth by Ostriker and Gunn are essential in this analysis.Before the late 1970's, there was no consistent theory of how cosmic rays acquiredtheir relativistic energies. Working with Roger Blandford, Jeremiah Ostriker showedhow particles could be accelerated to very high energies by bouncing back and forthacross a shock front. Several groups developed the idea simultaneously, and it is now theaccepted explanation for cosmic ray acceleration.Perhaps the most important problem in astrophysics today is to understand thelarge-scale structure of the Universe. Professor Ostriker has made, and continues tomake, major contributions to this study. In a seminal paper in 1974, he and JamesPeebles showed that galaxies were more massive than previously believed and that thisadditional mass is not very luminous. This paper marked the beginning of the seriousstudy of "dark matter" in cosmology.Professor Ostriker's work has ranged over a wide variety of astrophysical topics,from compact objects to cosmology as a whole. In each of these cases he has brought aunique combination of strong analytical skill, enthusiasm and creativity. This uniquecombination has enabled him to emerge as one of the most influential theoreticalastrophysicists in the world today.The candidate will be presented by David N. Schramm, Louis Block Professor in PhysicalSciences and Prcfessor. Departments if Astronomy & Astrophysics and Physics, Enrico FermiInstitute, the Committee on the Conceptual Foundations if Science, and the College.CITATIONWhose work has ranged over a wide variety of astrophysical topics, from compactobjects to cosmology as a whole. In each of these areas he has brought a uniquecombination of strong analytical skill, enthusiasm, and creativity. This unique combi­nation has enabled him to rise to his current high position in the world community ofastrophysics. As an alumnus he has brought great honor to our University, and it isappropriate that we return that honor by presenting him this honorary degree.20CHARLES M. STEIN, S.B., 1940Professor Emeritus of StatisticsStanford UniversityProfessor Charles M. Stein obtained a Bachelor of Science Degree at the Universityof Chicago in 1940 and taught at the University from 1951 to 1953, but for most of hiscareer he has been in the Department of Statistics at Stanford University. Through aseries of brilliant discoveries of striking originality, Stein has reoriented the waytheoretical statisticians view their field.Professor Stein's work is concerned with deep problems in the foundations ofstatistical inference. Some of this work has to do with the attainability of optimumresults with statistical data assumed to be generated within a limited class of mecha­nisms (a parametric family of distributions), and some has to do with the radicallydifferent nature of multidimensional problems in inference. His most remarkablediscovery, made in the 1950s, was of a phenomenon that was totally at odds withintuition: if you are faced with a problem involving three or more equally uncertainsimultaneous estimates, you can improve the result by "shrinking" the separateaverages towards a common value, such as zero. In a prosaic example, if you wish toestimate simultaneously the average wholesale prices of bushels of apples in Wenatchee,Washington, of oranges in Orlando, Florida, and of grapes in Modesto, California, andyou will judge their performance by a combined measure of over-all accuracy, you canexpect to improve ( on average) over-all performance by decreasing all three separateestimates, despite the fact that the problems are in an important sense unrelated! Ofcourse some assumptions are involved, but they are surprisingly benign. When CharlesStein first advanced this, it made many good scholars acutely uncomfortable, and thediscovery disturbed a whole community's complacency. Now, 35 years later, nobodyquestions the result, and although there are debates about its practical relevance, thephenomenon (variously called the Stein Paradox" or the "Stein Phenomenon") has hada profound impact on the field.Charles Stein has made several other discoveries of major importance. In particular,he discovered new possibilities of attaining asymptotic efficiency with nonparametricestimates (1956), and he invented a radically new way of obtaining normal approxima­tions (1972). Both of these works have been increasingly influential since they werepublished. Charles Stein is a brilliant, dedicated scholar; personally, he is unusuallymodest, and his prominence in the field is due entirely to the force of his ideas.The candidate will be presented by Stephen M. Stigler, Professor and Chairman, Department ofStatistics.CITATIONWhose research in mathematical statistics and probability theory, has produced a seriesof brilliant discoveries of remarkable force and originality. His work on decision theoryfirst startled and then inspired an entire community of scholars, changing forever theway statisticians view multidimensional problems of inference, and his novel methodsfor deriving approximations in probability theory have been adopted internationally.21ELIAS M. STEIN, A.B.) 1951; S.M.) 1953; Ph.D.) 1955Professor of MathematicsPrinceton UniversityElias M. Stein is a mathematician whose work extends across the entire horizon ofmathematical analysis. His contributions to the fields of harmonic analysis, partialdifferential equations, several complex variables, and representation theory have made,and continue to make, a major impact on the way mathematicians approach centralproblems in these areas. His ideas are so fundamental that it is impossible to imaginemodern analysis without them.Particularly striking are Professor Stein's achievements in the theory of singularintegrals and their applications in harmonic analysis. His concept of analytic families ofoperators is one of the most valuable tools in this field leading to dozens of importantapplications. His work on the real variable theory of Hardy spaces has revolutionizedthe subject. Today, thanks to his efforts and those of his collaborators, Hardy spaces arenot merely an interesting topic, but are an indispensable source for understanding theentire field of harmonic analysis. Elias M. Stein's extensions and applications ofLittlewood-Paley theory have completely changed the way mathematicians view thissubject. His application of this theory to problems on differentiation of integrals hasprovided analysts with a machine for solving extremely difficult problems in this area.These problems were, for many years, commonly thought to be unattainable. Theideas of E. M. Stein have permanently changed, in an absolutely decisive way, everymajor part of harmonic analysis.An excellent example of Professor Stein's work in other branches of analysis is hisstudy of an important class of problems from several complex variables. His brilliantrealization that these problems should be viewed in terms of singular integrals onnilpotent Lie groups has led to the current deep understanding of the subject. Thisrequired incredible originality and breadth, bringing together techniques from manydifferent parts of analysis. It also required a tremendous technical skill in carrying out avery difficult program. The same can be said of his ideas on the Kunze-Steinphenomenon, the lifting of sub-elliptic partial differential equations, the developmentof singular Radon transforms, and many other fundamental results.Professor Stein's contributions to mathematics extend beyond his research. He iswell known for his insightful teaching and for his great success with students at alllevels. He is also the author of one of the most important books on analysis everwritten.Elias M. Stein, having done his graduate work with Antoni Zygmund at theUniversity of Chicago, has carried out in an exemplary way the intellectual mission ofthe University. Clarity and elegance are always apparent in his exposition of mathema­tics. The combination of amazing originality, breadth of outlook, and technical powerhave become the hallmark of his research. Elias M. Stein is unquestionably one of thegreatest mathematicians of his generation.The candidate will be presented by Robert A. Fefferman, Professor, Department of Mathematics.CITATIONWhose research has had a decisive impact on virtually every area of the vast domain ofmathematical analysis. Through his revolutionary work on singular integrals and theirapplications, he has permanently changed the way mathematicians approach problemsin harmonic analysis, partial differential equations, several complex variables, andrepresentation theory. He has given great leadership to a school of mathematics that hasshaped classical analysis as a modern mathematical discipline. His books, lectures, andsupervision of students have set a new standard for the teaching of advancedmathematics. .22EDWARD C. STONE, S.M., 1959; Ph.D., 1964Projessor if Physics and Director if the Jet Propulsion LaboratoryCalifornia Institute if TechnologyEdward C. Stone obtained his S.M. and Ph.D. degrees in the Department of Physicsat The University of Chicago. His experimental thesis research carried out in theEnrico Fermi Institute included a cosmic ray instrument on board the Discoverersatellites, thus foreshadowing the direction of his future research. At the CaliforniaInstitute of Technology he is currently Professor of Physics, Director of the JetPropulsion Laboratory, and a leader in the establishment of the giant KECK telescopeson Mauna Kea, Hawaii.Professor Stone has made fundamental contributions to cosmic ray astrophysics. Hismany scientific discoveries are based on the development of superb space flightinstruments which analyze with high sensitivity and resolution, the elemental andisotopic compositions of energetic particles. He has obtained unique data on thecomposition of galactic cosmic rays and its anomalous component, of particle popula­tions in the magnetosphere of outer planets, and of solar flares. Unbiased evaluation andinterpretation of the results, with attention to instrumental limitations, are thetrademark of his work.In addition to his research, he has served as scientific focal point and leader of theVoyager missions to Jupiter, Saturn, Uranus, and Neptune, which have had a greatimpact on our knowledge of their atmospheres, satellites, rings and magnetospheres.Edward Stone is a true generalist in planetary sciences for both the scientific commu­nity and the public. His scholarship and research achievements are recognized interna­tionally. He is one of the pre-eminent figures in the space sciences.The candidate will be presented by John A. Simpson, Arthur Holly Compton DistinguishedService Professor Emeritus, Department if Physics, the Enrico Fermi Institute, and the College.CITATIONThrough his superb development of space flight instruments, he has made fundamentalcontributions to cosmic ray astrophysics. His investigations have enhanced ourunderstanding of the origin of the elements and the violent physical conditionsprevailing in the galaxy and at the Sun. As research scientist and educator, his leadershipof the Voyager spacecraft missions to the four outer planets has had a great impact on ourknowledge of their atmospheres, satellites, rings, and magnetospheres. He is one of thepre-eminent figures in the space sciences.23GERALD JOS. WASSERBURG, S.B., 1951; S.M., 1952; Ph.D., 1954John D. MacArthur Professor of Geology and GeophysicsCalifornia Institute of TechnologyGerald Joseph Wasserburg received all of his formal scientific training at theUniversity of Chicago. Here, he obtained his S.B., S.M., and Ph.D. degrees, the latterin 1954 under the supervision ofH.C. Urey and M.G. Inghram III. Throughout hislong and distinguished career, he has investigated evolutionary processes in the earth,the moon, the solar system, and the galaxy through measurements of the isotopiccompositions of rocks and meteorites.The variations in isotopic abundances so important to this effort are usually verysmall, and Gerald Wasserburg's early concentration on improving the sensitivity of themeasurement of isotope ratios is the basis of his success. First, he learned how toseparate microscopic grains of certain minerals from rocks and extract from themspecific chemical elements free of other elements under ultraclean conditions whichgreatly reduce the level oflaboratory contamination that would otherwise obscure tinysignals of interest. Second, he developed a new generation of computer-controlled,high-precision, high-sensitivity mass spectrometers with precisely programmablemagnetic fields, reliable detectors, and digital output.Armed with these techniques, Gerald Wasserburg used the isotopic compositions ofthe elemental daughters oflong-lived radioactive parents for radioactive age-dating ofearly solar system events. He established the time scale for the origin of the solar systemby measuring the first internal mineral isochron ages of stone meteorites. He workedout the detailed time scale for the history of volcanism and meteoritic bombardment ofthe moon in the period 4.5 to 3.3 billion years ago, and demonstrated that the mantle ofthe earth is inhomogeneous and incompletely mixed. Using the daughter of an extinct,short-lived radioactive parent he showed that radioactive 26 Al was still alive duringcondensation of solar system matter, reviving the idea that a supernova explosiontriggered the birth of the solar system and providing a long-sought-after, relativelyabundant, radioactive heat source capable of melting small planets early in solar systemhistory. His discovery of isotopic abundance variations in the elements calcium,strontium, barium, neodymium, and samarium in inclusions from the Allendemeteorite indicates that nuclides produced in different stars were not thoroughly mixedwith one another in the cosmic cloud that gave birth to the solar system and hasimportant implications for theories of element formation in the stars.Professor Wasserburg's measurements have established the standard of accuracy, andhis dedication, productivity, and creativity have set an example for an entire generationof isotope geochemists.The candidate will be presented by Lawrence Grossman, Professor, Department of the Geophysi­cal Sciences, the Enrico Fermi Institute, and the College.CITATIONWhose research in isotope geochemistry has told us much of what we know about theevolutionary time scale of the earth, the moon, the solar system and the galaxy. Usinghigh-sensitivity techniques that he developed, his careful measurements of the isotopiccompositions of rocks and meteorites have revealed the age of the solar system, thedetailed time scale for the early evolution of asteroids, and the history of volcanism andmeteoritic bombardment of the moon. He has also shown that nuclides from differentstars were heterogeneously distributed within the cosmic cloud from which the solarsystem was formed.24THE ALMA MATERToday we gladly sing the praiseOf her whose daughters and whose sonsNow loyal voices proudly raiseTo bless her with our benisons.Of all fair mothers, fairest she,Most wise of all that wisest be,Most true of all the true, say we,Is our dear Alma Mater.-E. H. LEWIS, PH.D., 1894THE BENEDICTIONTHE RECESSIONALSymphonie Number 1 Louis Vierne(The Congregation remains standing through the Alma Mater, the Benediction, and the Recessional)25Mauricio Javier AcebeySunil Jeram AdvaniVidhu AggarwalCraig Morrow AlbrightLara Lynn AlshabkhounIoannis AntoniadesMehmed Said ArmutcuogluMark Edwin ArndtMichael Patrick ArneyMazin Mohammed As-SanieSusannah Robin AxelrodMargaret R. BarnetteAnne Judith BarthelJohn Stewart BarwickRobert Philip BaryshKris Aaron BeckAnne W BeckerBarton Carl BeebeLorin X. BenedictMatthew Paul BenoitAndrew Hans BlomKenneth Arthur BloomStacey Michelle BosshardtSean Anderson BowlesRichard Arthur BoydMichael James BoyersSusannah Bard BradleyJohn Michael BrendelDon Howard BreslauerWilliam Samuel Merrill BrickmanThomas William Briggs, Jr.Daniel Edward Von BrighoffElizabeth Kay BrooksMargery Y BrownMichael Bennett BruckKirsten R. BrumleyChristian Tor BrunMichael Edward BucknerFaith Elaine BugelStephen Donald Bugman, Jr.Brett James BuicanKimberly Anne BurkePeter John BurkeChristopher Thomas BurtHyunjoo Laura ByunGeorge Patrick CahillRosanne Elizabeth CampbellRuby Ann Judea C. CarlosRobert Arthur CarlsonTiffanie Noelle CasonNeal David CawiMelissa A. ChadwickJessica Yi-Ju ChenWayne Wei-Jen ChenPo chen ChengMarcello CherchiAbraham Joshua ChernilaSanjay Kishin ChhablaniJulia A. ChoiSoon-Young ChoiColleen B. ChonLeah Mikele ChristensenLaurie Anne ChristiansonSteven Christopher ChudikDutch D. ChungRobert Edward ClarkAndreia ClayElizabeth Rachel ClewettGina Marie CockingJonathan David CohenMartin A. ColemanJames Henry CorcoranChristopher Lawrence CostelloJonathan Gregory CoulesGeoffrey Arthur CoulterJames David CoyerMichelle Ann CraftonBrian Padraic CurridImelda DaconesMarcus Philip DahmsAlison Rew DarnellAdam J. DavidsonBrett Raymond DavisScott Edward DavisA yelle Adele DayanAnn Marie DealLeela Ann de SouzaSilvia Leticia Del ToroChristopher Street DendyTimothy John DenisonNicole Jarnagin Deqtvaal THE AWARD OF HONORSAwarded General Honors with the Bachelor's Degree:Sonal DesaiScott John DiedeAlec P. DinwoodieThomas William DooleyArielle EckstutBenjamin Crawford EdmondsSean E. EdnerMark Andrew EdstromGretchen EisenachGarrett Bligh EislerJuliana Ibanga EkongShannon Michelle EmbreyJason Luke EngeriserPaul Joseph EricksonKenneth Esson, Jr.Keren MacKinnon FalingKate B. FeldmanMeredith Rachel FeltusKathryn Kerr FetmNino Harold FernandezSusan Esther FinkWilliiam Conrad FischerAnne Christine FlueckigerDaniel Patrick ForbesJennifer Michelle FossJoseph John FraneckiLisa Marie FriedmanBernard I ves FulghamEdward Lewis FunkRebecca Sarah GallagherMegan Candace GarveyAaron Robert GelbErika R. GeorgeAaron Sebastian GilesJennifer E. GoldbergEric James GormanJayne Ellen GreenburgSusan Elizabeth GreenebaumRobert Phillip GreenspoonThomas Bengal HafnerMeg Melissa HainerPeter Gregory HallenbergJonathan Louis HalpernBen H. HanRichard S. HanPatricia Janet HannKathleen HanviriyapuntChristina Lynn HardwayClare Anne HartMichael H. HartJames Barrett HeatonKristin Maria HeimDienne R. HiserLucretia Man Man HoSamuel A. HolcombeDavid Bruce HollanderAnne Elizabeth HollisterAndrea Camille HonigsblumTara Maureen Caroline HornellYing Hsien HuangEric W HudsonClayton Jeffrey HuestisChristopher HumberWayne S. HwangMichael George IdinopulosDeborah Jane IsraelSteven Valentino IvankovichJohn Anthony Jane, Jr.David S. JantzenPatricia Ann JasaitisLaural Shiu- Yah JinMaria Leonor Gonzales JisonLana Elaine JohnsonDana M. JonesEmily Elizabeth KadensGeorge Socrates KapotasJanice Michelle KarinSandra Adeodata KeifertJohn Hamilton KellyKevin David KellyAasma Azhar KhanMemuna Zareen KhanNoor-Aiman Iftikhar KhanSafia KhanMerle Khoo- EllisJamie Allen KiefferAndrew Hokyum KimDennis H. KimMichael Young KimPeter Young KimSang- Wook Kim William Won Shik KimSharon Ann KinekeTina Lynn KlawinskiGregory Adam KnightLeah Lynn KochJonathan Hyatt KochaviDarren Michael KocsKevin Marshall KohartKent Anthony KonkolCarlos Wilhelm KortenMatthew J. KourakisDavid Andrew KovarMatthew Jacob KrapfMathew Scott KrauseDavid Aaron KruegerJanice Lynn KuglerHeather Lee LabadotShafali LalMary Jillian LamotteVictoria Ann LanglandBryn Kristin LarsenTuri Ann LarsonDennis Youngpyo LeeNathan Sumner LeflerEmily LeishDavid Nathan LevyShira Batya LewinElizabeth Amy LiebmanFrederick B. LimPeter Chuan- Yi LinJennifer Mary ListerJames LuCatherine A. E. MacCormackLaurie A. MackJeanine R. MagillSally Lynne MaishJason Anthony MarinoPatrick Bartlett MarshallSuzannah Hasbrouck MartinLoren Adele MayorAnnette J. McCordMichael McDermottNikolaus Renz McFarlandRobert Allen McLaughlinPeter A. McNamara IIISteven Scott McPhersonBlake Colin MeyersWendy Sue MeyersWilliam Jason MichelCialin Mills-OstwaldJames K yung- Wook MinAndy J. MinnMarisa MitchellColin Thomas MoriartyIan Hugh MorrisonJustin Louis MortaraDaniel R. MosherSharon MotzkinDoris Lee MullerJu NamkungMichael David NewirthEdward Yiu-Ying NgSue Jong NohSiang Peng OhSoomin OmMary Trang OngEric OrsicRidzwan Bin OthmanBenjamin Daniel OwenAbraham A. PalmerBenjamin D. PancieraTara Anne PanellaNicholas James PappasYong 11 ParkMargaret Mary PasulkaAndrew B. PayneLisa Cristine PellegriniHolly Wen-Ho PengEric Samuel PerlsteinAaron Jeffrey PietruszkaCynthia Jane PineoJennifer Rachel PleasureJessica Ruth PoserMichael Scott PostRenee Lee PotterDaryl Grayson PressJohn Pukas IIIManya Janaky RamanJoshua Cooper RamoKate RedmondTonya Joy Reedy26 David Robert ReichmanSharon Leah ReynoldsTeresa Susan RhimMichael Angelo RiceAlfonso Pedro RiveraTzvi RobbinsRonald Stephen Rock, Jr.Adam Samuel RodPaul Charles Rohr, Jr.Francesca T. RohrFrances Amaliah RosenfeldAllegra Jill RossottiIrena RoyzmanSuzanne D. RyanRobert Anthony SadowskiHani I. SaltiPedro Antonio SanchezChristopher Thomas ScanlanAndrew John SchaeferMartha Elizabeth SchoolmanMichael Ian SchorSolan Bernhard SchwabEric William SchwarzeSook Hyun SeoManish N. ShahSamira ShahChristopher Robert SherwoodLorena Louh- Wen ShihSean Michael ShoreKatharine Anne SieckRachael Ann SimonoffJonathan David SmallDonald Andrew SmithPaul SocolowKristin Edith SpaldingJeanette Marie SperhacJulie Ann SpohnCassandra SpurlockJenifer Lee StenforsHeather Kay StettlerBrett C. StevensJesse Robert StoneThibault Christian StrackeJerome Christopher Studer, Jr.Ram Mohan SubramanianJudith SunderlandAnna M. TaruschioScott Kenneth TaylorLeslie E. S. TeoVandana ThadaniJayanthi TharimalaHilary Aurora TindleJohn Richard TiptonKaren Ann TokosJennifer Anne TomczukFrancine N goc Anh TonWilliam Everett Turner IIMeghan Katherine TwomeyJoanne R. UnderwoodMark Lynn UnruhJennifer Marie U trataKerry Lynn U zendoskiVaidas UzgirisSteven Carl ValerioNatalie Rose Vander VorstAaron Robert VarholaTimothy William VeenstraNathaniel Rogelio VelardeJohn Wilson VerbskyDonald S. WakelingSeth Ethan WeingramJennifer Elizabeth WenskaNicholas Adrian WidnellTara R. WilliamsMichael Lawrence WilsonSusannah WolfAlexander Carlos WolfeLinda Lucetta WolfendenYu WongMark A. WrightCarol Ho-I WuCarolyn Ann YackelJung A. YoonKenneth C. YuenDavidK. YumNatanya Marie ZehnleAndrea_Patricia ZemgulysShara R. ZollLeah ZonisMeryl Suzanne Beatrice ZwangerMembers elected to Beta of Illinois Chapter of Phi Beta Kappa on nomination of theUniversity for especial distinction in general scholarship in the University:1992 GRADUATES ELECTED IN THEIR FOURTH YEARMichael Patrick ArneyMargaret R. BarnetteAnne Judith BarthelKenneth Arthur BloomSusannah Bard BradleyKirsten R. BrumleyStephen Donald Bugman, Jr.Hyunjoo Laura ByunSanjay Kishin ChhablaniSteven Christopher ChudikRobert Edward ClarkElizabeth Rachel ClewettAlison Rew DarnellSonal DesaiLeela Ann de SouzaAlec P. DinwoodieJuliana Ibanga EkongPaul Joseph EricksonAnne Christine FlueckigerChristina Lynn HardwayMichael H. HartLucretia Man Man HoAnne Elizabeth HollisterAndrea Camille HonigsblumRonald James Howard Christopher Eric HumberMichael George IdinopulosEmily Elizabeth KadensNoor-Aiman Iftikhar KhanGregory Adam KnightLeah Lynn KochDarren Michael KocsDavid Aaron KruegerHeather Lee LabadotShafali LalNathan Sumner LeflerDavid Nathan LevyLoren Adele MayorAnnette J. McCordBlake Colin MeyersWendy Sue MeyersAndy J. MinnJustin Louis MortaraEric OrsicNicholas James PappasMargaret Mary PasulkaAndrew B. PayneAaron Jeffrey PietruszkaMichael Scott Post1992 GRADUATES ELECTED IN THEIR THIRD YEARNicole Jarnagin DeqtvaalScott John DiedeJennifer Michelle Foss Eric W. HudsonDana M. JonesDavid Robert Reichman1993 GRADUATES ELECTED IN THEIR THIRD YEARPatricia Linda ChengKathryn Blair CoopermanLisa Michelle DiamondRebecca Elisabeth Morss Justin NuccioDavid Jonathan PollackAmanda Ethel Quester Manya Janaky RamanKate RedmondFrances Amaliah RosenfeldIrena RoyzmanSuzanne D. RyanHani I. SaltiChristopher Thomas ScanlanSolan Bernhard SchwabManish N. ShahSean Michael ShoreJonathan David SmallDonald Andrew SmithKristin Edith SpaldingCassandra SpurlockBrett C. StevensRam Mohan. SubramanianJudith SunderlandLeslie E. S. TeoNathaniel Rogelio VelardeSeth Ethan WeingramMichael Lawrence WilsonYu WongNatanya Marie ZehnleAndrea Patricia ZemgulysShira Batya LewinSiang Peng OhBenjamin Daniel OwenThomas Warren ScanlonAnne Erin TuttleDebra Anne SteigerwaltMembers elected to the Society of the Sigma Xi on nomination of the Departments of Sciencefor evidence of ability in research work in Science:Alan S. AmentChi-Kin ChanTsung-Mei Chin Thomas F. ColtonSusmitha P. KolliAnthony G. Montag Daniel B. RukstalisPeter 0. VandervoortAssociate members elected to the Society of the Sigma Xi on nomination of the Departments ofScience for evidence of ability in research work in Science:Michael Patrick ArneyJennifer Catherine AstSarang Bhasker BamanKenneth Arthur BloomLaurie Anne ChristiansonMarta Lu DykhuizenThomas William EvansJessica Lunaas Feinleib Aaron Sebastian GilesThomas Bengal HafnerMark Anthony HarrastJonathan Hyatt KochaviMatthew J. KourakisLuisa Fernanda MadroneroEmin MaltepeNikolaus Renz McFarland27 Blake Colin MeyersWendy Sue MeyersJames K yung- Wook MinAlfonso Pedro RiveraBrett C. StevensKerry Lynn UzendoskiMaribeth May WertBruce TungRandall ViolaPeter WallskogJeffrey Y urkofskyJonathan ZaroffSeniors in the Pritzker School if Medicine elected to Beta if Illinois Chapter if AlphaOmega Alpha for excellence in the work if the School:Vincent DeGeareCheryl FongBernard GburekRichard GundermanRaymond JohnsonHsin-Yi Lee David LiebowitzDarin MillerWilliam NelsonRobert ReplogleNancy RosensteinDonald ScottMembers elected to Gamma if Illinois Chapter, Beta Gamma Sigma) on nomination if theGraduate School if Business for scholarship and accomplishment in studies in BusinessAdministration:Colleen Marie AmbroseChristopher Paul AneyBecky ArnosPeter W AugustiniJoseph]. AverkampJohn Sungho BaiMohan V. BalaKaushik BanerjeeNancy Po chis BankDavid Jonathan BarrettBernard Ladislas BotJeffrey E. BurgardDavid Curran BurrusDarrell James BurtJames Campbell ButlerDaniel Landon CullumLori Therese De CiccoDal David DeWolfKelley Rhoads DrakeStephen M. DuFourJohn Andrew ElliottPeter]. W ElstromWilliam T. EnglandHelene Carmody EnrightDebra Lynn FerruzziRajiv B. GokhaleJames Barnum GregoryRobert Mark GriswoldStephen C. HarrisJames Joseph Harvey Scott Joseph HausmanRuprecht HellauerJames E. HohmannDaniel Holliday Hoskins, Jr.Lilah L. HoueyeJulie A. HubbardMichael Christian JenningsDaniel Joel KinzlerLloyd George KirchnerLouis A. Kolssak IIIRochelle Naomi KoppThomas Michael KrasnewichJeffrey K. LarsenScot William LewisFred C. MasonHugh Colin Stephen McLeanWilliam Louis McLeod, Jr.Gillian Violet MeekingsAsheet MehtaRobert Allen MohnViola S. MongKen MoriGregory Thomas MountHasan Basri MutluMichael T. O'ConnorJohn Patrick O'ShaughnessyDouglas T. OginoJohn Roland PeirceDavid Wayne PennerDaniel Thomas Pyne Ronald Clifford RichardsKenneth A. RingwoodBrianJ. RobertsonWilliam T. RossMichael Scott RotterHoracio Daniel RozanskiCarl Joseph Schack, Jr.John Jay SchillingAndres Gabriel SchimmelAndreas]. SchwillingJames Brian ScullyDavid Alan SockelScott Blair SteeleKenneth Robert StephensAdam N. M. SticpewichDaniel Canty SullivanEric T. SunAngela Jean TeskaAntony Norman ThompsonJames Alan TuchlerEdward George TuttleYasufumi UtsumiDonald C. Van Pelt, Jr.Kamesh G. VenugopalTadas Edmund ViskantaJohanna Gezina VosEvita VulgarisDeven WaghaniRandy Jon ZinkeStuart L. ZussmanMembers if the Senior class if the Law School elected to the Order if the Coiffor excellencein the work if the School:Richard Evan AdermanDouglas Wallace AndersonTracy Victoria BareCeliza Patricia BragancaDarlene CostaSean Hoe Donahue Steven P. FinizioNathan Andrew ForresterHarold Kent GreenfieldGeoffrey Lloyd HarrisonElli LeibensteinJames Edward Murray28 Robert Garrett NewkirkSusan Lynn PacholskiNancy Rene SelbstKatharine Baird SilbaughRobin Morrison SteansTodd M. StennesThe Academy of American Poets Prize, to an undergraduate for the best poem or group ofpoems, is awarded toMichael David Newirth POEMS: "Waiting for Susan," "The FirstNight (What They Know)," "Pre­paring to be Drunk," "LovelessRoad," "Resolutions Made At theDrug Film"The Florence James Adams Prizes, for excellence in artistic reading, are awarded toRebecca M. Chung, FirstMichael P. Gotch, Second Kirsten Wonder Albrecht, ThirdKelly A. Slater, FourthThe Roy D. Albert Memorial Prize in Anthropology, to honor a student in theDepartment of Anthropology for outstanding work in the field of Anthropology, isawarded toAnne Lorimer PAPER: ''A Century of Progress: The RitualProduction of Prosperity Throughthe 1933 Chicago World's Fair"The American Medical U0men's Association Awards, to women medical students forscholastic achievement, are made toMelissa CavaghanCheryl FongShara Kronmal Hsin-Yi LeeDana LindsayNancy Rosenstein Helayne ShermanPatrice ThibodeauPeggy TongThe J Kyle Anderson Award, to the outstanding Senior baseball player, is made toCary L. FletcherThe Association for Academic Surgery Student Research Award, to a Senior medicalstudent for the most meritorious research and demonstrated academic surgical skills inboth research and outstanding performance in clinical Surgery services, is made toSunanda SinghThe Edith Ballwebber Prizes, awarded by the U0men's Advisory Boardfor Athletics andthe Department of Physical Education and Athletics to women athletes who havecontributed significantly to the varsity sport, are awarded toClass of 1992Class of 1992Class of 1993Class of 1994Class of 1995 Kimberly Anne BurkeEboni Corin HowardJennifer M. WrightNina WasyliwVicki M. WittmanThe Asilee Gary Banks Prize, to an upperclassman in Henderson House for significantcontributions to the life of the House, is awarded toAndrew B. PayneThe Ann Barber Outstanding Service Award, for the third-year student who has madeexceptional contributions to the quality of life at the Law School, is made toTheresa Ellen Cudahy29The Anna M. and George N. Barnard Memorial Prize in American History, to the bestSenior student majoring in United States History, is awarded toAndrew John Schaefer PAPER: "The Death of an Alternate Ameri­can Reality: Cairo, Illinois Duringthe Civil War"The Baroque Studies Prize, to a student in the Department ofArtfor an outstanding essay,is awarded toM. Julee Brown ESSAY: "Pseudo-Dionysian Cosmology andthe Propaganda Paintings of Philippede Champaigne"The Joseph Henry Beale Prizes, for outstanding work in the first-year legal research andwriting program, are awarded toKent David BressieDerek Morgan Bush Ward FarnsworthArthur F. Hickock Eric M. SchweikerTimothy J. SimeoneThe Wilbur Beauchamp Memorial Fund Prize, to an outstanding student in the area ofScience Education in the Department of Education, is awarded toAmy J. HackenbergThe Sonia G. Berz Honors Award, to a graduating Master's degree student in the Schoolof Social Service Administration for outstanding work, with special considerationgiven to one who shows great future promise in the field of services to the elderly, ismade toAlene Ruth McIntyreThe Millard Pierce Binyon Memorial Prizes,Jor distinction in humanistic pursuits in theCollege community, are awarded toJeremy Freeman William Jason Michel Joanne R. UnderwoodThe VJizyne C. Booth Graduate Student Prizes for Excellence in Teaching, to graduatestudents who make outstanding contributions to instructional programs in the College,are awarded toCatherine V HowardDepartment of AnthropologySean-Xavier NeathCommittee on Human Nutrition andNutritional Biology David TobackDepartment of PhysicsGeert Van CleemputCommittee on Ancient Mediterranean WorldThe T Kimball Brooker Prizes, to foster the love of the book and to encourage the classicaspect ofbook collecting among Senior and Sophomore undergraduates, are awarded toHeather Kay StettlerSenior COLLECTION: History of Paleoanthropol­ogy and ArcheologyBenjamin D. WienerSophomore COLLECTION: Media and Mass Culture/Works of Don DeLilloThe George Hay Brown Marketing Prize, to the marketing student in the GraduateSchool of Business with the most outstanding academic record, is awarded toBarbara Anne ByersThe D. Francis Bustin Prizes, for outstanding student comments published in theUniversity of Chicago Law Review or the University of Chicago LegalForum, are awarded toDale Allen Carpenter II Robert Allan Katz Ruth Frances Masters30The Joseph A. Capps Award, to a Senior Medical student for outstanding proficiency inclinical medicine, is made toDarin MillerThe Paul R. Cohen Memorial Prize, to the graduating Senior who has achieved thehighest academic record in the field of Mathematics, is awarded toRonald James HowardThe Committee on Human Nutrition and Nutritional Biology Award, to a graduatestudent for outstanding performance in the general field, is made toLaura HoffmanThe Committee on Neurobiology Award, to a Senior medical student for outstandingperformance in the general field, is made toKathleen CullenThe Ronald S. Crane Award,for distinction in scholarly writing on literary questions, ismade toDaniel J. Zimmerman ESSAY: "Living With Death: Form and Con­tent of Das Lied von der Erde, I"The Cross Prize, to a graduate student in Chemistry for excellence in research, teaching,and departmental citizenship, is awarded toJohn F. MitchellThe Dean's Awards for Distinction, to the graduating students of the Graduate School ofBusiness who have made outstanding contributions to the quality of student life, aremade toClaiborne Brogden BookerBrigid BurkeShlomo Y CrandusH. Mark DelmanSharon Lynn Martin DelmanAndrienne Diane ElsnerTwanya L. HoodLinda Vivienne Levinson Karen Kathleen LynchLeslie Jenell ManookianVictoria Catherine PieperJessica Helene RobbinsDina M. RoussetTodd William TillemansJoyce Carole WongThe Department ofAnesthesia Prize,Jor outstanding performancefrom a student enteringthe field, is awarded toRenata VariakojisThe Department of Biochemistry and Molecular Biology Award, to a graduate studentforoutstanding performance in the general field, is made toWarren SandbergThe Department of Ecology & Evolution Award, to a graduate student for outstandingperformance in the general field, is made toSusan DudleyThe Department of Internal Medicine Prize, for outstanding potential in teaching,research, and clinical medicine, is awarded toWilliam Nelson31The Department if Molecular Genetics and Cell Biology Award, to a graduate studentforoutstanding performance in the general field, is made toCatherine AtchesonThe Department if Neurology Award, for outstanding performance in the general field, ismade toMichael DieperinkThe Department if Ophthalmology and Visual Science Award, to a Senior medicalstudent for outstanding performance in the general field, is made toSharath Raj aThe Department if Pathology Award, to a Senior medical student for outstandingperformance in the general field, is made toVincent DeGeareThe Department if Pediatrics Award, given for the most meritorious research involvingchildren or Developmental Biology, is made toDaniel MikolThe Department if Psychiatry Prize,for outstanding capabilities as a student entering thefield, is awarded toShara KronmalThe Department if Surgery Award, for outstanding performance in the general field, ismade toChristian SchmidtThe Catherine Dobson Prize, to a Senior medical student for the best oral presentation ifresearch done by a non-Ph.D. student, is awarded toSteven Mutchnik PAPER: "Penile Duplex Sonography in theScreening Evaluation of Vasculo­genic Impotence"The Manuel H. Donchin Memorial Prize, to a female student who has demonstrated acommitment to act as mentor to other female students and professionals, is awarded toAdrienne Diane ElsnerThe Isaiah S. Dorfman Prize, for outstanding work in Labor Law, is awarded toSean Hoe DonahueThe Gertrude Dudley Medal, to the Senior Female Athlete who has contributedsignificantly in both leadership and performance to the lfDmen's Athletic Program, ispresented toJennifer Catherine AstThe Elsie E Filippi Memorial Prizes in Poetry, to students in the College whodemonstrate distinction in poetic composition or in the study of poetry, areawarded toAlexa L. Olesen, FirstAlexander Kostellow Morrill, SecondIrene Frances Gallagher, Third POEM: "Wrestling"POEM: "Neopolitan Villanelle"POEM: "Botticelli's Birth"32The John Billings Fiske Poetry Prize,jor an original poem or cycle ofpoems, is awardedtoRebecca L. Feldman POEM: "Water Poems, 'My Song ofMyself"The Marc Perry Galler Prizes for Student Research, to students in the Divisions and theDivinity School whose dissertations are judged as the most distinguished pieces ofscholarship in a given year, are awarded toBIOLOGICAL SCIENCESRobert James Vassar(Department if Molecular Genetics &Cell Biology, Winter, 1992) DISSERTATION: "Transgenic Mice ProvideNew Insights Into Causes ofHuman Genetic SkinDiseases"HUMANITIESLeah Rutchick(Department if Art, Summer, 1991)Kevin Michael Gilmartin(Department if English Language & Literature,Summer, 1991) DISSERTATION: "Sculpture Programs in theMoissac Cloister: Benedic­tine Culture, Memory Sys­tems, and LiturgicalPerformance"DISSERTATION: "Their Nature Contradic­tion: Hunt, Cobbett, Haz­litt, and the Literature of In­dependent Opposition"PHYSICAL SCIENCESEric Davis Gyllenhaal(Department if Geophysical Sciences,Spring, 1991) DISSERTATION: "How Accurately CanPaleo-Precipitation and Pa­leoclimatic Change Be In­terpreted from SubaerialDisconformities ?"SOCIAL SCIENCESChinhuiJuhn(Department if Economics, Summer, 1991)In-Jin Yoon(Department if Sociology, Autumn, 1991) DISSERTATION: "Decline of Male LaborMarket Participation: TheRole of Declining MarketOpportunities"DISSERTATION: "Self-Employment in Busi­ness: Chinese-, Japanese-,Korean-American, Blacks,and Whites"Laurie Louise Patton(Summer, 1991) DIVINITY SCHOOLDISSERTATION: "The Work of Languageand the Vedic fl.$I: TheBrhaddevata As Canoni­cal Commentary"The Harry Ginsburg Memorial Prizes, to students in the Department of Physiology forindustry, sincerity, and ability, are awarded toLeora B. BaumgartenKathleen CullenHeinrich]. G. Matthies DISSERTATION: "The Role ofCa+2 Channelsand Ca+2 Pools in BradyKinin-Stimulated Changesin Intracellular Ca+2 in Hu­man Fibroblasts"DISSERTATION: "Neural Mechanism Medi­ating Voluntary Control ofthe Vestibulo-occularReflex"DISSERTATION: "Regulation of Neuro­transmitter Release"33ESSAY: "The Right of Access Reconsidered:Freedom of the Press and PublicDebate"The Goethe Prize} to a College studentforexcellence in the study of Germanic Languagesand Literatures} is awarded toElizabeth R. WillisThe Harold E. Goettler Political Institutions Prize} to an undergraduate student for anessay that clearly and significantly relates to the origin} development} structure} orfunctioning of political institutions} is awarded toDaniel P. ForbesThe Lawrence and Josephine Graves Memorial Lectureship Awards} to Lecturers inMathematics who by the Spr.ing Quarter of the fourth year of lectureship have anoutstanding cumulative record of effective and responsible teaching} are made to:Jan L. Cheah Alan J. RocheThe Catherine Ham Awardfor Good Academic Citizenship} presented to a student in theDivision of the Humanities who contributes to the quality oflife in the Division} ismade toIlse Marie Anna MuellerThe Walter L. Hass Most Valuable Football Player Award} to the varsity football playerwho has made the most significant contribution to the team effort as voted by histeammates} is made toSteven Christopher ChudikThe John G. Hawthorne Prize in Classical Studies} to the graduating Senior with the bestrecord of achievement in classical languages} literatures} or civilizations} is awarded toCatherine A. E. MacCormackThe Edward M. t7ed))) Haydon Medal} to the varsity track athlete scoring the greatestnumber of points during the season} is presented toNeal David CawiThe Cathy Heifetz Memorial Award} to a student in the Department of Music whoseassociations as a member of this community have been singularly marked by a spirit ofcaring and helpfulness} is made toEmma E. ArmstrongThe Perry S. Herst Prizes} to students in the College who have combined excellence in thepursuit of studies with a profound sense of social responsibility, are awarded toMargaret R. Barnette Anne W BeckerThe Hinton Moot Court Competition Awards} to the winners of the 1991-92 competitionin brief writing and oral argument} are made toRobert Richard Gasaway Amy Beth ManningThe Dean of Students} Q[fice and the Alumni Association honor these Seniors bypresenting them with Howell Murray - Alumni Association Awards.Julia Meredith AngwinSteven Christopher ChudikChristopher LawrenceCostelloPaul Joseph Erickson Anne Christine FlueckigerEdward Lewis FunkEmily Elizabeth KadensShafali Lal William Jason MichelShirley Yun-I PaoHani I. SaltiSusannah Wolf34The Leon 0. jacobson Prize, to the Seniorfor the best presentation at the Senior ScientificSession in an area of the basic biological sciences, is awarded toWilliam Nelson PAPER: "The Effects ofHeptanol on CardiacSodium Current"The Milo P. jewett Prizes, to students in the Divinity School who submitted the bestpapers translating, interpreting, or applying the Holy Scriptures to a contemporarysituation, are awarded toShannon L. Burkes ESSAY: "Covenant or Wisdom? The OraclesAgainst the Nations in Amos1:3-2:16"Elizabeth R. Haueter ESSAY: "The Ironist as Prophet: Towards aReconsideration of the Genre of theDiscourse of the Historical Amos"The Earl S. and Esther johnson Prize, to a student in the Master of Arts Program whosepaper best combines high scholarly achievement with concern for humanistic aspira­tions and the practical applications of the Social Sciences, is awarded toEric D. OrtThe Emile Karafiol Prize, for the best Bachelor's essay in European and InternationalHistory, is awarded toFrances Amaliah Rosenfeld PAPER: "Working-class Education and theMaternal State in VictorianEngland"The Patricia R. Kirby Multi-Sport Athlete Award, to the Senior female who earned thegreatest number of Major ((C" Awards, is made toKimberly Anne BurkeThe Dr. Harold Lamport Biomedical Research Awards, for the best dissertation inBiomedical Research, are made toDavid Liebowitz Robert James VassarThe Martin C. and Margaret M. Lee Prizes, to honor the best overall performances on thecore examination and on the money preliminary examination by students in theDepartment of Economics, are awarded toTack Yun Money and Banking PreliminaryExaminationHuang He Money Core ExaminationThe Lemmon Pharmaceutical Company Student Award, in recognition of outstandingperformance in the field of Obstetrics and Gynecology, is made toCheryl FongThe Solomon 0. Lichter Memorial Prize, to a graduating Master's degree student in theSchool of Social Service Administration for scholarship and professional leadership, isawarded toKimberly L. LitzenbergThe Karl Llewellyn Memorial Cup, for excellence in brief writing and oral argument, isawarded toEvelyn Lisa Becker Geoffrey Lloyd Harrison35Ryan C. Larrenaga STORY: "Nest of Yellow Ribbons"The Perrin J Lowrey Prize, to an undergraduate student for a work if original literature,is awarded toBrenda S. BartonKeith M. Garza Daniel Wayne LevinThe Steven Lukes Memorial Prize, to a Senior medical student for excellence in the fieldsif both Internal Medicine and Neurology, is awarded toDavid MikolThe Edwin E Mandel Awards, to the graduates who have contributed most to the LawSchool's clinical education program, are made toBenjamin D. Wiener ESSAY: "Reading the Texts of Abolition: Op­positions, Situations, and RationalesWritten for 'Form, Problem, Event'"The Oscar G. and Elsa S. Mayer PrizeJor academic excellence in the M.B.A. programif the Graduate School if Business, is awarded toGregory Thomas MountThe David Blair McLaughlin Prize, to a student in the College for an essay showingspecial skill and sense ifform in the writing if English prose, is awarded toThe Franklin McLean Medical Student Research Award, to a Senior who has performedthe most meritorious research, is made toHerodotus EllinasThe Medical Alumni Prize, to a Seniorfor the best oral presentation if research done inmedical school given at the Senior Scientific Session, is awarded toDaniel Mikol PAPER: "The Oligodendrocyte-Myelin Gly­coprotein: A Novel Glycoprotein ofOligodendrocytes and Central Ner­vous System Myelin"The Olga and Paul Menn Foundation Prizes, for original literary or musical works, areawarded toMichael David Newirth POEM: "The Chocolate Birds"Christopher Street Dendy POEM: "Kin"The Franz and Gertrude Meyer Prizes, for best performances on the Master's Examina­tion in Mathematics, are awarded toSUMMER, 1991Thomas J. HainesGregory W Howell Christopher J. MonsourHaralampos TamvakisThe Herbert J and Marian L. Morris Memorial Prize, to a candidatefor a degree who is adistinguished leader through service to the University in a field if exceptionalendeavor, is awarded toWilliam Jason Michel36The Jane Morton and Henry C. Murphy Awards, presented quarterly to those studentswho have worked to improve significantly the quality if University life, are made toSPRING, 1991Nilofer AhsanEdward J. DesjardinsJudy C. KwonAUTUMN, 1991Adam M. AlonsoAnne Elizabeth HollisterWINTER, 1992Lothian Hamilton Marisa MitchellRachael Ann SimonoffJoel StembridgeKatherine M. MenendezChristopher Thomas ScanlanSarah E. WieheThe Most valuable Player (MVP), in a men's sport, is elected by his teammates on thefollowing criteria: skill, leadership, sportsmanship, and contribution to the teamBaseball- Scott Allen KenagyBasketball- Matthew Jacob KrapfCross Country-Kevin C. RobbinsFencing-Craig Albright Soccer-Matthew Christopher AyersSwimming-Felix G. PoggemannTennis-Marc H. LernerTrack and Field-Neal David CawiThe Most valuable Player (MVP) in each women's sport is elected by her teammates onthe following criteria: skill, leadership, sportsmanship, and contribution to the teamBasketball- Catherine C. FitzgeraldCross Country-Rowena R. GoshienSoccer-Jennifer Catherine AstSoftball- Katherine J. Odman Swimming-Sarah E. RiceTennis-Srirama Priya BharathiTrack and Field - Pilar Elena PereyraVolleyball-Jennifer HallThe Thomas R. Mulroy Prizes, for excellence in appellate advocacy, are awarded toEvelyn Lisa Becker** Marcel Charles Duhamel Kenneth Eng-Kong LeeSteven Paul Blonder Paul Richard Garcia Amy Beth Manning*Jason Paul Cronic Robert Richard Gasaway* Molly Elizabeth McFarlaneSusan M. Cullina Geoffrey Lloyd Harrison** Brian Terrell Robinson*with highest distinction **with high distinctionThe Mary Jean Mulvaney Scholar Athlete Award, to the Senior athlete with the highestupperclass grade point average, is made toLara Lynn AlshabkhounThe Ruth Murray Memorial Prizes, for the best graduate and undergraduate essays in theareas if women's studies, feminist criticism, or gender studies written by students, areawarded toKate AbramsonGraduate ESSAY: "The Symbolic, Practical Politics ofthe Milan Women's BookstoreCollective"ESSAY: "Beloved: A Postmodern Myth ofAutonomy"Kristin Edith SpaldingUndergraduateThe National Council for Geographic Education's and the Association if AmericanGeographer's Award for Excellence if Scholarship, is made toJohn Hamilton KellyThe Theodore Lee Neff Prize, for excellence in the study if French Language andLiterature, is awarded toNino Harold FernandezThe Elizabeth R. Norton Prize, for excellence in research in Chemistry, is awarded toTsung-Mei Chin37Donald Dale Walker PAPER: Translation of Philodemis, "On theGood King According to Homer"The Noyes-Cutter Greek Prize, for the best paper on some phase of a common dialectGreek, is awarded toAdam M. AlonsoMichelle Elizabeth MelinKatherine M. Menendez Daniel J. ZimmermanHonorable MentionThe John M. Olin Prize, to the outstanding graduate in Law and Economics, is awardedtoDonna Marie MausThe Physical Sciences Teaching Prizes, to graduate students in the Physical SciencesDivision in recognition of exceptional teaching of undergraduates, are awarded toRo bert James HindeDepartment if ChemistrySuhithi Mahesica PeirisDepartment if Chemistry Jeffrey David SensabaughDepartment if ChemistryThe Casper Platt Award, for the outstanding paper written by a student in the LawSchool, is made toTom Winston BellThe President's Awards for Student Volunteer Service, to students in the University fordedication to the community and commitment to the welfare of others, are made toThe John Vcm Prohaska Awards, for outstanding potential in teaching, research, andclinical medicine, are made toSteven Mutchnik William NelsonThe Sheila Putzel Prize, to a Senior in the College who demonstrates exceptional promiseas a future practicing physician, is awarded toDavid Aaron KruegerThe Richard W Reilly Award, to a Senior medical student for outstanding aptitude in thefield of Gastroenterology, is made toScott YenThe Center for Research in Security Prices Award, for Excellence in Finance, is made toDavid Jonathan BarrettThe Joseph Gray Rhind Awards, to advanced Divinity School students in ministry studieswhose excellence in academic and professional training gives notable promise of asignificant contribution to the life of the Church, are made toAndrew Richard Laue Kieren Maris 0 'KellyThe Susan Colver Rosenberger Prize.for constructive and original research in the DivintySchool, is awarded toCharles Robert Elder(Spring, 1991) DISSERTATION: "Psychoanalysis, Grammar,And the Limits of Critique:An Inquiry into the Concep­tual Foundations of FreudianTheory"38The Sandoz Pharmaceutical Award, to a Senior for outstanding extracurricular accom­plishments during four years in medical school, is made toJulius FewThe Mary Roberts Scott Memorial Prize, to a woman medical student for academicexcellence, is awarded toNancy RosensteinThe Lillian Gertrude Selz Prize, to the Freshman woman who completed herfirst year'swork in the College with the highest academic standing, is awarded toKirsten A. KingfieldThe Sigma Xi Prizes for Excellence in Science, to Seniors who have demonstratedoutstanding achievement, are awarded toKenneth Arthur Bloom PAPER: ''A Measurement of the Drell- VanDifferential Cross Section in pp Col­lisions at Vs= 1.8 TeV and ProtonStructure Functions at Low x"PAPER: ''An Examination of the Possible Co­existence of GABA in Spinally Pro­jecting Noradrenergic Neurons inthe Brainstem of the Rat"PAPER: "Fertility in Female Drosophilamelanogaster Heterozygous for Peri­centric Inversions"Nikolaus Renz McFarlandWendy Sue MeyersThe Bernard Smaller Prize in Magnetic Resonance, to an advanced undergraduatestudent for research contributions, is awarded toLisheng CaiThe john Rogers Snowday Memorial Prize,for an original work in the field ofliterarycriticism, is awarded to -Eric Samuel Perlstein ESSAY: "Uncovering and Un-Covering:Frame and the Interrogation of His­torical Subjectivity"The Society for Academic Emergency Medicine Excellence Award, for demonstratedexcellence in the speciality of Emergency Medicine, is made toReed BrozenThe Amos Alonzo Stagg Medal, to the Senior Male Athlete with the best all-aroundrecord for athletics, scholarship, and character, is presented toKris John AldenThe joseph M. Stampf Award, to the varsity basketball player who gives ofhimself untothe lives of his teammates and whose commitment to high values and integrity isexpressed in his relationship with his teammates and coaches, is made toBrett Raymond DavisThe jonathan D. Steiner Prize, to a graduate student in English who has completedoutstanding work in the study of drama or criticism, is awarded toStephen E. Lewis ESSAY: "Protecting and Suspecting Mon­strosity in: The Strange Case if Dr.Jekyll and Mr. Hyde"39The Nels M. Strandjord Memorial Award) to a Senior medical student for outstandingperformance in the general field of Radiology, is made toMichael DowdThe Student Laureate Award of the Lincoln Academy of Illinois.for over-all excellence incurricular and extra-curricular activities) is made toKeri E. AmesThe Nathan Sugarman Awards) to graduate students in Physics for excellence in researchdone at the Enrico Fermi Institute) are made toJoseph R. DwyerLawrence K. Gibbons RESEARCH: Particle AstrophysicsRESEARCH: Experimental Elementary Par­ticle PhysicsRESEARCH: Experimental AstrophysicsTimothy A. McKayThe Louis Sudler Prize in the Performing and Creative Arts) to a graduating Senior whohas demonstrated excellence or the highest standards ofproficiency in the creative arts)is awarded toJessica Ruth PoserThe Robert Tamura Award,for social and professional contributions to the Department ofEconomics) is made toAlexander G. TaberThe Valentine Telegdi Prize) to a graduate student in the Department of Physics for thebest performance on the Ph.D. qualifying examination) is awarded toMihir P. WorahThe Upjohn Award in Medicine) to a Senior for outstanding achievement during fouryears in medical school) is made toRichard GundermanThe Visiting Committee for the Visual Arts Prize,for distinguished work in Art History,is awarded toTara PanellaThe Wilma Walker Honor Award) to a student for outstanding work in the first year andfor promise offuture achievement in social work) is made toKathleen M. OsbergerThe Gregor �ntzel Prizes.for excellence in undergraduate teaching in the Department ofPhysics by a first-year graduate student tutor, are awarded toMichael Thayer David TobackThe Napier Wilt Prizes in English and American Literature) to the Seniors who havewritten the best Bachelor's papers) are awarded toEmily Alexander PAPERS: "Close Enough to Hit," "In theJam"Alison Rew Darnell PAPER: "The Challenge of Individuation inMrs. Dalloway"PAPER: "The Strategy of Plume-PluckedRichard"Jeffrey Howard Schultz40The E Howell Wright Award, to a Senior medical student for outstanding performance inthe general field of Pediatrics, is made toPeter CastellanosThe Wrobel Trophy, to the wrestler who scores the most team points in a season, ISpresented toPeter B. Wang41Jane Marie Masterson Jennifer Susan RayportFELLOWSHIPSThe Academy Scholars Program, Harvard UniversityMisty Laurette BastianAmerican Assembly of Collegiate Schools of Business (NDFP)Seth Ethan WeingramAmerican Association of University T#men Dissertation FellowshipPiya Chatterjee Vij ay PrashadAmerican Council of Learned Societies (East European Program)Kristi Suzanne EvansAmerican Council of Learned Societies Dissertation Research Fellowship in ChineseStudiesTeri Jayne SilvioAmerican Economic Association/Federal Reserve System Minority FellowshipDiane Marie GarciaAmerican Institute of Indian Studies Junior Research FellowshipsAmerican Musicological Society AwardAnne Elizabeth MacNeilAlexander von Humboldt Foundation Bundeskanzler ScholarshipsRichard Brian Gunderman Richard Alan HeinemannAnnette Cade FellowshipJennifer Mary ListerThe CBS Bicentennial Narrators ScholarshipLaura Blair McKnightChicago/Cambridge Exchange ScholarshipFrances Amaliah RosenfeldThe Chicago Humanities Institute FellowshipJohn Bradley ChaimovCommittee on Institutional Cooperation International Studies FellowshipVera Leigh Fennell Meskerem Brhane GebrkidanCommittee on Scholarly Communications with the People's Republic of ChinaMary Louise ScogginJing Shao Donald John Willard Hatfield42DAAD GrantsDavid Benjamin PickusBrent William Sockness Michael Joseph SosulskiJonathan Nelson StromDACOR (Bacon House Foundation Fellowship)Rosanne Elizabeth CampbellDorothy Danforth-Compton Dissertation Year FellowshipsNahum Dimitri ChandlerHector Ruben Cordero-GuzmanNilda Maria Flores-Gonzales Sylvia LopezOran McCuneLuis Edgardo Zayasu. S. Department oj Defense FellowshipLaurie Anne Christianson Lyle David Isaacs (B.A. '91)Josephine de Karman FellowshipJeffrey Todd Bloom Ellen Ruth FeldmanEisenhower World Affairs Institute/Clifford Roberts Dissertation FellowshipRachel Mary GamboneFord Foundation Dissertation FellowshipShawn Malia KanaiaupuniFulbright GrantKathleen Hanviriyapunt Yu WongFulbright IIE Overseas Dissertation Research FellowshipsGary Norman FinderChristine Isom- Verhaaren David Benjamin PickusJohn Bryan WilliamsFulbright IIE/USIA FellowshipsBarbara Lynn GistChristine Isom- VerhaarenStephen John MillerDavid Benjamin Pickus Eliza beth V RodiniJohn Bryan WilliamsYu Wongu. S. Department oj Education Fulbright-Hays Dissertation Research FellowshipsIra Robert BashkowMarda DunskyBenjamin Carr FortnaJulie Marie HesslerAlaina Maria LemonShantanu Phukan Michael John ReynoldsSuzanne Breese RyanMary Louise ScogginLaurel Elaine SteeleWoodman Lyon TaylorElizabeth Reneau VannRoyal Bank oj Canada Fulbright ScholarshipDavid Malcolm StewartGoldwater Scholarships for ScienceKristen Ann KingfieldJonas Christopher Peters Thomas Warren ScanlonMatthew Richard Tate43The David W Grainger Graduate FellowshipTimothy A. McKayThe David W Grainger Senior ScholarshipKenneth Arthur BloomHarper Dissertation FellowshipsSusan C. AlbertsOscar Martin AparicioMinghaeng ChoStephen James Ellingson David GableTimothy James GaudinSotaro KitaStephanie Ann Pauls ellBrookings Institution Robert W Hartley Fellowship in Governmental StudiesAnn Chih LinHoward Hughes FellowshipAnne Marie BronikowskiJesse Denise DixonMaria Elena MartinezIllinois Consortium for Equal Opportunity Program FellowshipGloria Jean RandleJacob K. Javits FellowshipsMark Philip FisherNoor-Aiman KhanShira Batya LewinLipman FellowshipIkumi Kaminishi Eliza Swift MorssRachel Lara Sturman (B.A. '91)Kari Marie RobinsonYul SohnEvalyn Wallace TannantMonica Marie Duffy ToftLouisville Institute for the Study of Protestantism in American Culture DissertationFellowshipPenny Ann Edgell BeckerGeorges Lurcy FellowshipElizabeth Marie SageMacArthur Research and Training GrantsCharles King ArmstrongPablo Alfredo De la FlorJames Richard HarrisNamhee LeeRobin Mills PetersenMacArthur Scholar FellowsGolfo AlexopoulosRolf Eric CarlsonMichael CresswellMichel Charles GobatJames M. GrossklagMarshall ScholarshipAlec P. Dinwoodie Esther Imperio HamburgerIvan Tiofilo HinojosaThomas More LyonsAshley Joachim TellisEric Zolov44Medical Scientists Training ProgramScott John DiedeMellon Fellowships in the HumanitiesDon Howard BreslauerFrances Amaliah RosenfeldMellon Foundation Dissertation- Year FellowshipsAnibal Jose Aponte-ColonEdward Alan BoydenEric Norman BuddKatherine Ann ChavignyDale Carter CopelandZhiyuan CuiAdam Dov Dan'elThomas Carr FrankThomas GoebelPaul Delaney Halliday Andy J. MinnRachel Lara Sturman (B.A. '91)Franz Josef HenneStathis N. KalyvasRonald Jang Ho KimMatthew John Payne IIIValerie RamseyerSudipta SenGuy Donald Francis StuartEduardo Arturo VelasquezAdam WolfsonBrian D. FieldsNational Aeronautics and Space Administration FellowshipsArthur B. KosowskyNational Endowment for the Humanities Younger Scholars GrantJonathan Blake BeereNational Physical Sciences Consortium for TfOmen and MinoritiesSibel Pervin Bayracki (B.A. '91)National Science Foundation Fellowships for the Graduate Study of Race, UrbanPoverty, and Social PolicyAvner AhituvJeffrey David MorenoffNational Science Foundation FellowshipsSibel Pervin Bayracki (B.A. '91)Richard William BlobKenneth Arthur BloomDutch D. ChungAndrea Teresa DeyrupJames FeigenbaumRonald James HowardMichael Alan KareshShira Batya LewinRichard Anthony Lupia IIBlake Colin Meyers David Ami ReingoldAlan James MolumbyGerald Bradley Penn (B.A. '90)Kari Marie RobinsonFrank Anthony RomagosaIrena RoyzmanPedro Antonio SanchezMatthew Seddon (B.A. '90)Thomas Ray WalkerSteve WangBruce Andrew Weinberg (B.A. '91)Omar Maurice McRobertsNational Science Foundation Incentives for ExcellenceNadine PierreEric Bowman AldrichTsvetan Nikolaev BeloreshkiProgram for Inter-Institutional Collaboration in Area Studies ScholarshipSusan ChaturantabutRhodes ScholarshipGregory Marshall Gunn45Rikkyo ExchangelMumbushoSuzanne Breese RyanKathleen J Shelton Traveling Memorial FellowshipJulie M. JohnsonSocial Science Research Council International Pre-Dissertation FellowshipRebecca Ellen BryantJames Curtis Farrer Eng Seng HoShawn Malia KanaiaupuniSpencer Dissertation Year Fellowships for Research Related to EducationClea B. FernandezLisa A. HoogstraSamuel Wolfe Kaplan Jill Patterson MorfordGuy Jay ParkerState Farm Fellowships for Exceptional StudentsEric EdmondsJoshua Chad Leibowitz Manya Janaky RamanPeter StoneVisiting Committee Dissertation Research FellowshipsKaren R. MathewsMitchell B. MerbackAnnie L. Novo Elizabeth V. RodiniSue C. TaylorBenjamin C. WithersTtallenberg ScholarshipChristopher Eric HumberMrs. Giles Whiting Doctoral Dissertation FellowshipsClarissa Chapman BurtDavid Joseph KathmanAugusta Madeline McMahonJohn Dixon Morillo Ellen Victoria NerenbergCarolyn Campbell RussellStuart Donaldson SearsMartha Ann Selby46CANDIDATES FOR THE MASTER'S DEGREESI. IN THE DIVISION OF THE BIOLOGICAL SCIENCESAND THE PRITZKER SCHOOL OF MEDICINEFor the Degree if Master if Science:RICHARD HENRY CARTER, JR.S.B., University <1 Delaware, 1990(Biochemistry & Molecular Biology)DEBORAH SUE DESSNER DEJOSES.B., University <1 Michigan, Ann Arbor 1977(Immunology)ANGELA BARRETT FINICLES.B., Ohio State University, 1987(Molecular Genetics & Cell Biology)GREGORY MATTHEW MIKKELSONA.B., Trinity University, 1987(Ecology & Evolution)JOSEPH NICHOLAS PIERRIA.B., University <1Chicago, 1988(Ashum)DISSERTATION: Psychoanalysis and the Social Order:Reproduction and Transformation ANDREW RICHARD ROSSA.B., Bard College, 1990(Biochemistry & Molecular Biology)CHING SONGS.B., Beijing University, China, 1988(Biochemistry & Molecular Biology)BARBARA DINETZ WOODBURYA.B., State University <1 New York, New Paltz, 1979S. M., University <1 Florida, 1982(Organismal Biology & Anatomy)PATRICK BLAISDELL WOODBURYA.B., Cornell University, 1979S.M., University <1 Florida, 1982(Organismal Biology & Anatomy)II. IN THE DIVISION OF THE HUMANITIESFor the Degree if Master if Arts:KIMBERLY DIANE ABRAHAMA.B., Pacific Lutheran University, 1991(English Language & Literaturre)MAURICIO JAVIER ACEBEY(Romance Languages & Literatures)TREVOR STEPHEN ANDERSONA.B., University <1 British Columbia, vancouver,Canada, 1989(East Asian Languages & Civilizations)KAREN E. BEATTYA.B., Columbia University, 1991(English Language & Literature)PAUL A. CEFALUA.B., Johns Hopkins University, 1988(English Language & Literature)DAVID MICHAEL CHARYTANA.B., Columbia University, 1991(Philosophy)MARCELLO CHERCHI(Lingu istics)CHRISTINE ANN COCHA.B., Yale University, 1991(English Language & Literature)DANIELA CUOMOS.B., Georgetown University, 1988(Romance Languages & Literatures)MICHAEL JOHN DEL SIGNOREA.B., State University <1 New York, Buffalo, 1991(English Language & Literature) LISE MIRIAM DOBRINA.B., University <1 Illinois, Urbana, 1988(Linguistics)CHRISTINE AGNES DOLANA.B., University <1 Chicago, 1991(Romance Languages & Literatures)JOHN JOSEPH EGAN IIIA.B., University cf California, Santa Cruz, 1990(Classical Languages & Literatures)J. ANDREW FOSTERA.B., College <1 William & Mary in Virginia, 1986(Classical Languages & Literatures)STEPHANIE J. FRIEDMANA.B., Oberlin College, 1991(English Language & Literature)JAMES DALTON GAITHERA.B., Macalester College, 1990(Romance Languages & Literatures)VERNDELL HENRY GILDHOUSEB.M.E., Southwestern Oklahoma State University,1979(Middle Eastern Studies)PAUL DAVID GILMOREA.B., University <1 Mississippi, 1991(English Language & Literature)JENNIFER GODFREYA.B., Brandeis University, 1989(Romance Languages & Literatures)LILIA M. GUIMAR.AESA.B., Northwestern University, 1988(Comparative Studies in Literature)47YOAV Z. HAMMERA.B., Tel-Aviv University, Israel, 1985LL.B., ibid., 1991(Philosophy)CHRISTOPHER MICHAEL HARGESA.B., Trinity College, Hartford, Connecticut, 1988(English Language & Literature)RACHEL E. HERSHFANGA.B., Northwestern University, 1989(English Language & Literature)CATHERINE ELIZABETH HOLCOMBEA.B., Duquesne University, 1988(Latin American & Caribbean Studies)LEO LOPUNG HSUA.B., University if Chicago, 1991(General Studies in the Humanities)AERON PATRICIA HUNTA.B., University if Toronto, Ontario, Canada, 1990(English Language & Literature)STEPHEN JAMES JESELSON, JR.A.B., University if Michigan, Ann Arbor, 1989(English Language & Literature)KELLY D. JURASA.B., Saint Mary's College, Notre Dame, Indiana,1989(Romance Languages & Literatures)AMELIA STEPHANIE KAPLANA.B., Princeton University, 1985(Music)MARK CLIFFORD KATZEFA.B., University if Miami, 1988JD., ibid., 1991(English Language & Literature)EUNSOOKIMA.B., Ewha Women's University, Seoul, South Korea,1990(Linguistics)LENORE LEE KITTSA.B., Stanford University, 1987(Comparative Studies in Literature)ANN L. KOCHA.B., College if William & Mary in Virginia, 1983(General Studies in the Humanities)SARAH ANNE KRIVEA.B., Carleton College, 1988(Slavic Languages & Literatures)ANSELM LANGEA.B., Augustana College, Sioux Falls, South Dakota,1988(English Language & Literature)MICHAEL R. LATHAMA.B., Macalester College, 1984(Germanic Languages & Literatures)STEPHEN EVARTS LEWIS, JR.A.B., Swarthmore College, 1990(English Language & Literature)LYNN ANN MACLEODA.B., Calvin College, 1983(Linguistics)PETER LANCELOT MALLIOSA.B., University if California, Berkeley, 1990(English Language & Literature)DAWN MARLANA.B., Bennington College, 1989(Comparative Studies in Literature) MICHELLE NICOLE MASONA.B., Boston University, 1988S.B., ibid., 1988(General Studies in the Humanities)MARSHA W MAXWELLA.B., University if Utah, 1988(English Language & Literature)ANDREW G. McALLISTERA.B., Trinity College, Hariford, Connecticut, 1991(English Language & Literature)JILL ANN MEYERA.B., University if California, Los Angeles, 1990(English Language & Literature)PATRICIA MARIA MONTILLAA.B., University if Michigan, Ann Arbor, 1990(Romance Languages & Literatures)MARY ELIZABETH MORLEYA.B., University if Illinois, Chicago, 1989(English Language & Literature)ILSE MARIE ANNA MUELLERA.B., York University, Downsview, Ontario, Canada,1988(Ancient Mediterranean World)JAMIL MUHAMMED MUSTAFAA.B., Lewis and Clark College, 1987(English Language & Literature)JENNIFER MARIE NEIDENBACHA.B., University if Notre Dame, 1991(English Language & Literature)LYNN NICHOLSA.B., Wesleyan University, 1988(Linguistics)LEONARD WALTER O'BRIANS.B., Illinois State University, 1965M. Th., University if Chicago, 1968A.M., University if Illinois, Urbana, 1974D.Min., University if Chicago, 1974(Philosophy)WILLIAM JAMES PRITCHARDA.B., Yale University, 1986(English Language & Literature)KAREN SUE RANDALLA.B., Smith College, 1990(Comparative Studies in Literature)LEE ANNE MARIE RICHARDSONA.B., Albion College, 1991(English Language & Literature)CORINNE LAURA SCHEINERA.B., Pomona College, 1991(Comparative Studies in Literature)KRISTINA MARIE SCHMITZA.B., University if Pennsylvania, 1989(Slavic Languages & Literatures)ROSE SHLYAMB.M., Oberlin College, 1990(Music)RACHAEL ANN SIMONOFF(Conceptual Foundations if Science)THOMAS EDWARD SMITHA.B., West Chester University if Pennsylvania, 1988A.M., Villanova University, 1990(Classical Languages & Literatures)MARY LASS STEWARTA.B., University if North Carolina, Chapel Hill, 1991(English Language & Literature)48GINA PAIGE TALIAFERROS.B., Northwestern University, 1991(English Language & Literature)CAREN BETH TEITELBAUMA.B., Columbia University, 1988(Philosophy)SCOTT E. TURNERA.B., University if Arizona, 1990(Classical Languages & Literatures)SARA ELLEN VANDENBERGA.B., University if Chicago, 1990(General Studies in the Humanities)AUDREY ELIZABETH WEINSTEINA.B., Princeton University, 1987(Art) PERRY ANDREW WHITTHORNEA.B., Oberlin College, 1989(Art)CAROLYN CIMON WILLIAMSA.B., University if Arizona, 1974(English Language & Literature)KAREN MAY WOODWORTHA.B., Iowa State University, 1987(Music)PAUL D. YOUNGA.B., University if Iowa, 1990(English Language & Literature)SHARA R. ZOLL(Linguistics)DONALD GENE ASHER For the Degree if Master if Fine Arts:KIMBERLY M. KOPPB.EA., School if the Art Institute if Chicago, 1988(Art)PAUL B. COFFEYB.EA., School if the Art Institute if Chicago, 1990(Art) B.EA., School if the Art Institute if Chicago, 1987(Art)PAULA ANNE MELVINB.EA., Northern Illinois University, 1989(Art)III. IN THE DIVISION OF THE PHYSICAL SCIENCESFor the Degree if Master if Science:STEVEN GODFREY KARLINAARON JORDAN BARTHS.B., Yale University, 1990(Physics)JEFFREY SCOTT BENENSOHNA.B., Cornell University, 1990(Astronomy & Astrophysics)SERGIO CHAYETS.B., Universidad Nacional Autonoma de Mexico,Mexico City, 1989(Physics)BRUCE B. CLAFLIN, JR.S.B., Northeastern University, 1989(Physics). JASON CLEMENT CRANEA.B., Brandeis University, 1991(Chemistry)BRIAN DAVID FIELDSA.B., Williams College, 1989(Physics)ZHAOYUGUOS.B., Beijing Normal University, China, 1990(Physics)DEBORAH APPEL HARRISA.B., University if California, Berkeley, 1989(Physics)ELKEJENSENA.B., Bryn Mawr College, 1988(Chemistry)DEBORAH SHIU-LAN JINA.B., Princeton University, 1990(Physics) S. B., University if California, Los Angeles, 1991(Statistics)WENSHUO LIS.B., University if Science and Technology if China,Hejei, Anhui, China, 1989(Physics)ROBERTO BATAN SALGADOS.B., State University if New York, Stony Brook, 1989(Physics)SCOTT ALAN SEVERSONS.B., University if Wisconsin, Madison, 1990(Astronomy & Astrophysics)FANG SHIB.E., Zhejiang University, Hang Zhou, China, 1984S.M., Chinese Academy if Sciences, Beijing, China,1987(Astronomy & Astrophysics)SACHA E. SONG-KOPPA.B., University if Chicago, 1990(Physics)DANIEL EVAN VANDEN BERKS.B., University if Wisconsin, Madison, 1990(Astronomy & Astrophysics)ELIZABETH CECILIA WEATHERHEADA.B., University if Chicago, 1985(Physics)VIKTORIA ZANKODipl., Eotvos Lorand University, Budapest, Hungary,1989(Computer Science)49SARAH MARGARET ANTONIAGUALTIERIA.B., McGill University, Montreal, Quebec, Canada,1989(Middle Eastern Studies)SANDRA JEAN GUZMANA.B., Missouri Southern State College, 1989(Psychology: Biopsychology)WILLIAM NOBLE HAARLOWA.B., Princeton University, 1989(Master if Arts in Social Sciences)KRISTIN MARIA HElM(International Relations)EDITH SMITH HEINEMANNS.B., Nazareth College, 1968(Master if Arts in Social Sciences)KAREN SUE HOFFMANA.B., North Central College, 1985A.M., Northern Illinois University, 1988(Political Science)EMILY BRENNA HOROWITZA.B., Bard College, 1991(Master if Arts in Social Sciences)MEKAYLE HINKATY HOUGHTONA.B., University if Chicago, 1987(Master if Arts in Social Sciences)YUNG C. HSUEHA.B., Nankai University, China, 1982S.M., University if Utah, 1988(Statistics)JULIE MARIE IRWINA.B., Northwestern University, 1987(Middle Eastern Studies)DEBORAH EILEEN BLOM JAINS.B., University if Houston, 1990(Anthropology)JANET MARCY JERROWA.B., Swarthmore College, 1990(Middle Eastern Studies)FEDERICO L. KAUNE MORENOBach., Universidad del Pacifico, Lima, Peru, 1988Lic., ibid., 1989(Economics)JUNKO KAWAMURAA.B., Kyoritsu U0men's College, Tokyo, Japan, 1984(Master if Arts in Social Sciences)GABOR KERTESIDipl., Karl Marx University, Budapest, Hungary, 1975Dr. Oec., ibid., 1986(Economics)BRETT EDWARD KLOPPA.B., University if Wisconsin, Madison, 1989(Political Science)MICHAEL SHALOM KOCHINA.B., Harvard University, 1989(Political Science)LISA BETH KRISSOFFA.B., Northwestern University, 1991(Master if Arts in Social Sciences)IV. IN THE DIVISION OF THE SOCIAL SCIENCESFor the Degree of Master of Arts:MICHAEL BEN-GADA.B., Hebrew University ifJerusalem, Israel, 1988(Economics)NORMAL MICHAEL BONKA.B., University if Chicago, 1988(Master if Arts in Social Sciences)CATHLEEN ANN BRIDGEMANA.B., Rhodes College, 1990(Middle Eastern Studies)REBECCA ELLEN BRYANTA.B., University if Chicago, 1988(Anthropology)PAUL MICHAEL BUTTSA.B., Haverford College, 1988(Sociology)SANDRA CHERFRERE(Master if Arts in Social Sciences)KIT-LING CHEUNGB.S.S., Chinese Univrsity if Hong Kong, 1981(Sociology)JOSHUA DAVID COVALA.B., University if Chicago, 1991(Economics)CRAIG ANDREW CUNNINGHAMA.B., Lcifayette College, 1983(Education)LOUIS DANIEL PAUL DARMSTADTERA.B., Tulane University, 1985(Middle Eastern Studies)NICHOLAS P. DEGENOVAA.B., University if Chicago, 1990(Anthropology)GRETCHEN EISENACHA.B., University if Chicago, 1992(Master if Arts in Social Sciences)KEVIN M. ESTERLINGA.B., University if Virginia, Charlottesville, 1989(Political Science)MEREDITH RACHEL FELTUS(History)EVAN RICHARD FRANKEA.B., University if California, Davis, 1989(Anthropology)KIMBERLY KAY GERMAINS.B., Massachusetts Institute if Technology, 1990(Political Science)OTILIA LUZ GIRONA.B., University if Iowa, 1973A.M., ibid., 1975(Political Science)SARITA GANESH GOLIKERIA.B., University if Chicago, 1991(Master if Arts in Social Sciences)ERIC JAMES GORMAN(International Relations)ANDREW PATRICK GRANT-THOMASA.B., Yale University, 1986(International Relations)50THOMAS R. LA PERLEA.B., Univrsity if California, Berkeley, 1991(Master if Arts in Social Sciences)DAVID PAUL MANDELLA. E., Columbia University, 1990(Political Science)ELIZABETH J. McSWEENEYA.B., Bates College, 1987(Sociology)STEPHEN PATRICK MITCHELLA.B., University if Dayton, 1987(Sociology)LALITGAURI NANDEDKARA.B., Goucher College, 1987(Master if Arts in Social Sciences)ATSUOMI OBAYASHILL.B., Kyoto University, Japan, 1983A.M., University if Chicago, 1990(Master if Arts in Social Sciences)PATRICK JERMAINE PHILLIPS(Master if Arts in Social Sciences)LINDSEY WELLS POWELLA.B., Oberlin College, 1988(Master if Arts in Social Sciences)DELA K. PREISINGERA.B., University if Massachusetts, Boston, 1989(International Relations)ETHAN ANDREW PUTTERMANA.B., University if Colorado, Boulder, 1987M. si., University if London, England, 1989(Political Sciences)FAUSTO IVAN RAMOS-GOMEZA.B., Mercy College, 1978(Political Science)MICHAEL THOMAS RAUHSB., University if Missouri, Columbia, 1990(Economics)FELICIA A. RODRIGUEZSB., MacMurray College, 1981(Education)BEDAROMANOBach., Universite Libre de Bruxelles, Belgium, 1984Laurea, Universita degli Studi di Milano, Italy, 1990(Master if Arts in Social Sciences) ROBERT KEITH SAWYERSB., Massachusetts Institute if Technology, 1982(Human Development)JOSE PABLO SILVAA.B., Harvard University, 1989(History)PAUL OLAF STROMBERGA.B., Wheaton College, Illinois, 1987Cert., Graduate Institute if International Studies,Geneva, Switzerland, 1990(International Relations)CHRISTOPHER CLANCY SUGRUE(Master if Arts in Social Sciences)IVAN MICHAEL TOFTA.B., University if California, Santa Barbara, 1990(Political Science)MONICA MARY DUFFY TOFTA.B., University if California, Santa Barbara, 1990(Political Science)DENNISE MICKELLE TURNERA.B., Spelman College, 1991(History)EDWARD RIMAS TUSKENISA.B., University if Illinois, Chicago, 1986(International Relations)SUDHIR ALLADI VENKATESHA.B., University if California, San Diego, 1988(Sociology)JIAN WANGA.B., Institute if International Relations, Beijing,China, 1986(Political Science)JOAN BETH WOLFA.B., Michigan State University, 1989(Political Science)DAWNIE LEE WOLFEA.B., University if Arizona, 1989(Anthropology)RENEE E. WORRINGERA.B., St. Olaf College, 1986(Middle Eastern Studies)ALFORD A. YOUNG, JR.A.B., Wesleyan University, 1988(Sociology)CANDIDATES FOR PROFESSIONAL DEGREESI. IN THE DIVISION OF THE SOCIAL SCIENCESFor the Degree of Master of Science in Teaching:JULIE ANN BLUMENTHALA.B., University if Michigan, Ann Arbor, 1990(Elementary Education)JUAN CARLOS ESPINOZAA.B., University if Chicago, 1991(Elementary Education) MEGAN MARIE GOSSARDA.B., University if Colorado, Boulder, 1991(Elementary Education)DEAN JACOB GROSSHANDLERA.B., University if Chicago, 1985(Elementary Education)51KAREN ELAINE HAMRICKA.B., Northwestern University, 1985M.Ed., University if Virginia, Charlottesville, 1991(Elementary Education)REBECCA EVA PARISHA.B., University if Chicago, 1991(Elementary Education) JENNIFER LYNN SHEIDLEYA.B., Carleton College, 1988(Elementary Education)JULIE RUTH SUSSMANA.B., Colorado College, 1989(Elementary Education)II. IN THE PRITZKER SCHOOL OF MEDICINEFor the Degree oj Doctor oj Medicine:ALAN S. AMENTA.B., Carleton College, 1988KYONGTAE TYLER BAES.B., Seoul National University, South Korea, 1981S.M., University if Iowa, 1983S.M., University if Pennsylvania, 1988Ph.D., ibid., 1988PETER THEOPHILUS BANOSA.B., University if Chicago, 1987AMIR ASAAD LOUCAS BASTAWROUSA.B., University if Chicago, 1988ALEX SCOTT BEFELERA.B., University if Chicago, 1988SANGEETA MARUTI BHORADEA.B., University if Chicago, 1988SCOTT MICHAEL BORNSTEINS.B., Stanford University, 1988EDWARD M. BOTTEIS.B., University if Notre Dame, 1988REEDBROZENA.B., Yale University, 1988JOHN MARTIN BUERGLERA.B., Northwestern University, 1988PETER W CASTELLANOSS.B., University if Miami, 1988MELISSA KATHLEEN CAVAGHANA.B., Carleton College, 1987PATRICK SHENG-ME AU CHANGS.B., University if California, Riverside, 1988MAY SHU CHENS.B., University if Illinois, Urbana, 1988MICHAEL CHIH- TUNG CHENA.B., University if California, San Diego, 1987SHI-CHI CHENGA.B., Cornell University, 1988BENJAMIN CHIUS.B., Indiana University, Bloomington, 1988HYUNGKI CHOIS.B., JiT.estern Illinois University, 1984Ph.D., University if Chicago, 1990ALEXANDER RALPH COBITZS.B., University if Chicago, 1984Ph.D., ibid., 1990VINCENT S. DEGEAREA.B., University if Missouri, Columbia, 1988MICHAEL EDUARD DIEPERINKS.B., University if Wisconsin, Madison, 1982Ph.D., University if Chicago, 1989 MICHAEL THOMAS DOWDA.B., Kalamazoo College, 1985S. M., University if Chicago, 1986SHARON MEGAN D'SOUZAA.B., Augustana College, Sioux Falls, South Dakota,1988ROBERT DUNNA.B., Boston University, 1984Ph.D., University if Chicago, 1991HERODOTOS ELLINASA.B., University if Chicago, 1988PANG-CHIEH JERRY EUA.B., Cornell University, 1988JULIUS W FEW, JR.CHERYL LEE FONGA.B., Stanford University, 1988BERNARD MICHAEL GBUREKS.B., University if Michigan, Ann Arbor, 1988JOHNH. GONGA.B., Northwestern University, 1987RICHARD BRIAN GUNDERMANA.B., Wabash College, 1983Ph.D., University if Chicago, 1989• WITH HONORSSAMIR K. GUPTAA.B., University if Chicago, 1988RONALD JACK HAPKES.B., Bob Jones University, 1988WILLIAM AARON HELLERA.B., JiT.esleyan University, 1986ROBERT JOSEPH HERCEGS.B., University if Chicago, 1988EDWARD JAMES HOS.B., University if Notre Dame, 1988ELIZABETH ANN HOLLENBACKS.B., University if Wisconsin, Madison, 1988JUDY HOPE HUANGA.B., Harvard University, 1988RAYMOND MORRIS JOHNSONA.B., Lawrence University, 1984Ph.D., University if Chicago, 1989• WITH HONORSKANNAN KANDALLUS.B., University if Illinois, Chicago, 1988ADYKENDLERA.B., Northwestern University, 1983Ph.D., University if Chicago, 199052CHRISTINA J. KIMSB., University of Chicago, 1988FRANCIS YOUNG-JIN KIMA.B., Brown University, 1988JEEHEE KIMA.B., Northwestern University, 1987JANE PARKKOSB., Massachusetts Institute of Technology, 1988SHARA LEE KRONMALA.B., Stanford University, 1983SM., ibid., 1983Ph.D., University of Chicago, 1990ROBERTO DANILO LACHICAS.B., University of Illinois, Urbana, 1988RITCHIE ALLEN LARSONSB., University of Wisconsin, Madison, 1988WILLIAM JOHN LAUERA.B., Northwestern University, 1988DIANAH. LEEA.B., Smith College, 1988HSIN-YI LEESB., University of California, Irvine, 1988• WITH HONORSJENNIFER LYNN LESSINSB., Duke University, 1985ROBERT MORRIS LEVYSB., Emory University, 1988S.B., ibid., 1988JAMES CHI-KONG LISB., University of California, Los Angeles, 1987ALEX JOHN LICKERMANA.B., University of Chicago, 1988DAVID NEAL LIEBOWITZSB., Emory University, 1984SM., ibid., 1984Ph.D., University of Chicago, 1989• WITH HONORSALBERT CHAO-TUN LINS.B., University of Wisconsin, Madison, 1988DANA LYNN LINDSAYSB., University of Miami, 1987AMON YII-ZEN LIUA.B., Yale University, 1988DANIEL DAVID MIKOLSB., Loyola University of Chicago, 1983Ph.D., University of Chicago, 1989• WITH HONORSDARIN JAMES MILLERSB., University of Illinois, Urbana, 1988CASSANDRA ROCHELLE MINORA.B., Harvard University, 1988STEVEN EDWARD MUTCHNIKA.B., Amherst College, 1988• WITH HONORSLARRY LEONARD MYERS, JR.A.B., Northwestern University, 1988WILLIAM LAWRENCE NELSONSB., Stanford University, 1985SM., ibid., 1987• WITH HONORSQUYEN HUYNH NGO-METZGERA.B., Illinois Wesleyan University, 1988 CRAIG PATRICK NOLANA.B., University of Chicago, 1988AMIR DANIEL NOURMANDSB., University of California, Los Angeles, 1988RICHARD IN PARKA.B., University of Chicago, 1988JOSEPH NICHOLAS PIERRIA.B., University of Chicago, 1988SM., ibid., 1992GINELL RISTIC POSTSB., University of California, Irvine, 1984SB., ibid., 1984Ph.D., University of Chicago, 1991JEAN PRINGLEA.B., Occidental College, 1985SARA ELAINE QUADROSA.B., University of Chicago, 1988SHARATH CHANDRA RAJAA.B., Princeton University, 1988DAVID ADAM RASKINA.B., University of Chicago, 1984ROBERT EDWARD REPLOGLEA.B., Stanford University, 1988• WITH HONORSHERMINIA DIANA ROSASA.B., Harvard University, 1986NANCY ELLEN ROSENSTEINA.B., University of Pennsylvania, 1987BRUCE WAYNE ROWELLSB., Wheaton College, Illinois, 1987SM., University of Chicago, 1988GEORGE ISA SALTIA.B., University of Chicago, 1988WILLIAM MERRICK SANDERSA.B., University of Chicago, 1984JIGISHA N. SANGHAVIA.B., University of Chicago, 1988CHRISTIAN MAXIMILLIAN SCHMIDTA.B., University of Chicago, 1988• WITH HONORSDONALD WRIGHT SCOTTSB., American University, 1987SURIT KUMAR SHARMAS.B., University of Illinois, Urbana, 1988HELAYNE LESLIE SHERMANSB., Bucknell University, 1984Ph.D., University of Chicago, 1990SUNANDA SINGHA.B., University of Chicago, 1985DAVID JAN SLOTWINERA.B., University of Chicago, 1988CHRISTOPHER MONROE STRAUSA.B., University of Chicago, 1988STEPHEN EDWIN SULLIVANSB., University of Arizona, 1986JULIO TALLETSB., Massachusetts Institute of Technology, 1981Ph.D., University of Chicago, 1991• WITH HONORSPATRICE THIBODEAUA.B., Bowdoin College, 198753PEGGY TONGS.B., University of Michigan, Ann Arbor; 1988ANTRANVANS.B., Iowa State University, 1988JEFFREY REID TRIMARKS.B., University of Michigan, Ann Arbor; 1988HANS HOFFMAN TRUONGS.B., University of Illinois, Urbana, 1988BRUCE YU-HSIN TUNGS.B., Massachusetts Institute of Technology, 1988RENATA JURATE VARIAKOJISA.B., University of Chicago, 1988SURESH VEDANTHAMA.B., Northwestern University, 1988RANDALL W VIOLAA.B., Cornell University, 1988• WITH HONORSPETER ALAN WALLSKOGA.B., Marquette University, 1987MICHAEL JOHN WOODBURYA.B., Harvard University, 1988 ELIZABETH FAY SHU WUA.B., Stanford University, 1988CHARLES BOR-CHAU YANGS.B., University of Michigan, Ann Arbor; 1988LEE-ANN YANGA.B., University of Chicago, 1988SCOTT SHINKUN YENA.B., Princeton University, 1987ELIZABETH H. YIM-LEONA.B., University of Chicago, 1988CHRISTOPHER YOS.B., California Institute of Technology, 1985Ph.D., University of Chicago, 1990ANDY SIU-ON YUA.B., University of California, Berkeley, 1987JEFFREY B. YURKOFSKYA.B., University of Pennsylvania, 1988JONATHAN G. ZAROFFA.B., Yale University, 1988• WITH HONORSCANDIDATES FOR THE DEGREE OFDOCTOR OF PHILOSOPHY1. IN THE DIVISION OF THE BIOLOGICAL SCIENCESAND THE PRITZKER SCHOOL OF MEDICINEKIMBERLY A. NEELYS.B., Pennsylvania State University, 1980M.D., Vanderbilt University, 1984(Ophthalmology & Visual Science)DISSERTATION: Influence of Isovolemic Hemodilutionon Preretinal Oxygen Tension in CatsTHOMAS FREDERICK POCHEA.B., University of Pennsylvania, 1985(Biochemistry & Molecular Biology)DISSERTATION: Regulation of the Rat Alpha-Feto Pro­tein PromoterSTEVEN ROGER POSTS.B., University of Illinois, Urbana, 1986(Biochemistry & Molecular Biology)DISSERTATION: Dissection of Glucagon-Receptor Inter­actions by Use of Permeabilized Canine Hepatocytes NANCY LOUISE REAGANS.B., Saint Mary's College, Notre Dame, Indiana, 1979S.M., �stern Carolina University:1984(Ecology & Evolution)DISSERTATION: Evolution of Sexual Isolation in Sala­manders of the Genus PlethodonDAVID LAWRENCE SCOTTS.B., University of Florida, 1983D. VM., Cornell University, 1990(Biochemistry & Molecular Biology)DISSERTATION: The Structural Basis of Secretory Phos­pholipase A2 Function and Pharmacological ControlMICHELE D. WITTELSA.B., Mount Holyoke College, 1977(Molecular Genetics & Cell Biology)DISSERTATION: Entry of Herpes Simplex Virus intoCellsII. IN THE DIVISION OF THE HUMANITIESLOREN J. BUTLERA.B., Princeton University, 1984A.M., University of Michigan, Ann Arbor; 1986(Conceptual Foundations of Science)DISSERTATION: Mathematical Physics and the Ameri­can Mathematics Community: Disciplinary Values,Professional Interests, and the Place of BorderlandResearch-1880-1940 LINDA CAROLE BYRDA.B., Texas A & M University, 1984A.M., University of Chicago, 1985(Comparative Studies in Literature)DISSERTATION: Elena Poniatowska and the LiteraryCollage54BRIAN MARSHALL DUVICKA.B., University qf Minnesota, Minneapolis, 1981A.M., ibid., 1984(Classical Languages & Literatures)DISSERTATION: A Translation and Analysis qf Proclus'In Platonis Cratylum CommentariaANNE M. FARLEYA.B., University qf Virginia, Charlottesville, 1984A.M., University qfChicago, 1986(Linguistics)DISSERTATION: Individual Variation in PhonologicalDevelopment and ImitationJOSEPH MARCUS FELSERA.B., Boston University, 1979A.M., University qfChicago, 1988(Philosophy)DISSERTATION: R. G. Collingwood's Early Philosophyqf Religion and Its DevelopmentSTUART STILLMAN GLENNANA.B., Yale University, 1985A.M., University qfChicago, 1988(Philosophy)DISSERTATION: Mechanisms, Models, and CausationEILEEN RUTH ROBERTSON HAMERA.B., University qf Illinois, Chicago, 1967A.M., University qf Illinois, Urbana, 1985(Art)DISSERTATION: Patronage and Iconography in Ro­manes que England: The Herefordshire School inContextVINAY LALA.B., Johns Hopkins University, 1982A.M., ibid., 1982(South Asian Languages & Civilizations)DISSERTATION: Committees qf Inquiry and Discoursesqf 'Law and Order' in Twentieth-Century BritishIndia ROBERT N. LINROTHEA.B., University qf Minnesota, Minneapolis, 1983A.M., University oj Chicago, 1984(Art)DISSERTATION: Compassionate Malevolence: WrathfulDeities in Esoteric Buddhist ArtJOSEPH GILBERT MANNINGA.B., Ohio State University, 1981A.M., University oj Chicag«, 1985(Near Eastern Languages & Civilizations)DISSERTATION: The Conveyance qf Real Property inUpper Egypt during the Ptolemaic Period: A Study qfthe Hauswaldt Papyri and Other Related DemoticInstruments qf TransferLISA CARROLE ROBERTSA.B., University cf Chicago, 1981A.M., ibid., 1985(History qf Culture)DISSERTATION: From Knowledge to Narrative: Educa­tors and the Changing MuseumELIZABETH JANE STARTA.B., Oberlin College, 1982B.M., ibid., 1982M.M., Northern Illinois University, 1984M.M., ibid., 1986(Music)COMPOSITION: Sonata for Violoncello and PianoPATRICIA EUGENIA VILCHESA.B., University of Illinois, Chicago, 1986A.M., University qfChicago, 1987(Romance Languages & Literatures)DISSERTATION: Times qf Mendacity (Censorship, Si­lence, Dissimulation, and Lies): A Study qf Lying in16th and 17th Century Italian and Spanish LiteraturesIII. IN THE DIVISION OF THE PHYSICAL SCIENCESSTEPHEN CHARLES ANCOS.B., California Institute qf Technology, 1984(Physics)DISSERTATION: Construction of Locally-SymmetricLagrangian Field Theories from Variational IdentitiesMITA CHATTORAJS.B., Calcutta University, India, 1984S.M., Jadavpur University, Calcutta, India, 1986A.M., Columbia University, 1987(Chemistry)DISSERTATION: Intramolecular Electron and EnergyTransfer in a Molecular BeamDAVID LOUIS COOKE, JR.A.B., Grinnell College, 1982A.M., Columbia University, 1984(Physics)DISSERTATION: Sun-Pumped Lasers: Revisiting an OldProblem with Non-Imaging OpticsPANAGIOTA DASKALOPOULOSS.M., University cf Chicag«, 1988(Mathematics)DISSERTATION: The Cauchy Problem for GeneralizedPorous Medium Equations BENJAMIN LEE FINEA.B., Yale University, 1981JD., University qf Chicago, 1984S.M., ibid., 1986(Mathematics)DISSERTATION: Disconnected Equivariant Rational Ho­motopy Theory and Formality qf Compact G-KiihlerManifoldsALBERT JAMES GOODMANA.B., Grinnell College, 1987S.M., University oj Chicago, 1988(Mathematics)DISSERTATION: Automorphism Groups qf Graphs:Asymptotic ProblemsKARL ROBERT GUTSCHERAA.B., Harvard University, 1986S.M., University qf Chicago, 1987(Mathematics)DISSERTATION: Ergodic Elements for Actions qf LieGroups55BING LISB., Beijing Institute if Technology, China, 1982SM., ibid., 1986SM., University if British Columbia, Umcouver,Canada, 1989(Statistics)DISSERTATION: Some Topics in the Moment-BasedTheory if Statistical InferenceSTEPHEN JOHN MARTIN MILDENHALLSB., University if Warwick, England, 1986SM., University if Chicago, 1987(Mathematics)DISSERTATION: Cycles in a Product if CurvesJEFFREY ANTHONY MUNNA.B., Northwestern University, 1983SM., University if Chicago, 1984(Astronomy & Astrophysics)DISSERTATION: Stellar Population Gradients in Early­Type GalaxiesKURT RANDALL MYERSA.B., Reed College, 1986SM., University if Chicago, 1990(Chemistry)DISSERTATION: Renormalization Group Theory ofPolymers Near SurfacesBRYAN PENPRASES.B., Stanford University, 1985SM., ibid., 1985(Astronomy & Astrophysics)DISSERTATION: Photometric and Spectroscopic Analysisif High Galactic Latitude Molecular Clouds JAMES ERIK POMMERSHEIMS.B., Bucknell University, 1986SM., University if Chicago, 1987(Mathematics)DISSERTATION: The Todd Class if a Simplicial ToricUiriety, Dedekind Sums, and Lattice Points in aTetrahedronTHOMAS RICHARD RUTTLEDGEA.B., Wayne State University, 1987SB., ibid., 1987(Chemistry)DISSERTATION: The Involvement if a Redox Process inDevelopmentSEOKMIN SHINSB., Seoul National University, South Korea, 1985SM., ibid., 1987(Chemistry)DISSERTATION: Theoretical Studies if the Structure andPhase Transitions if Liquid Supported MonolayersADAM JAY SIMONA.B., University if Rochester, 1986SB., ibid., 1986(Physics)DISSERTATION: Localization, Escape, and Synchroni­zation if a Stochastic ProcessJIANMING YES.B., Xiamen University, Fujian, China, 1985(Statistics)DISSERTATION: Deconvolution and jump DetectionUsing the Method if Local Approximation with Ap­plications to Magnetic Resonance ImagingIV. IN THE DIVISION OF THE SOCIAL SCIENCESMALCOLM K. BRACHMAN, JR.A.B., University if California, Berkeley, 1976A.M., University if Chicago, 1984(Psychology: Human Development)DISSERTATION: Effects if Patient and Therapist Age andGender on Psychotherapeutic Process in Early Ses­sions: Patients' Experiences of Relationship andInvolvementNORMAN BRAUNDipl., Friedrich- Alexander- Uni versitat Erlangen-Nurenburg, Germany, 1988A.M., University if Chicago, 1990(Sociology)DISSERTATION: Restricted Exchange SystemsRAYMOND ALBERT BUCKOA.B., Fordham University, 1978M.Div., jesuit School if Theology, 1983S TM., Regis College, Toronto, Ontario, Canada, 1984(Anthropology)DISSERTATION: Inipi: Historical Transformation andContemporary Significance if the Sweat Lodge inLakota Religious PracticeJEFFREY S. CHAMBERLAINA.B., Bryan College, 1980M.Div., Trinity Evangelical Divinity School, 1985A.M., ibid., 1986(History)DISSERTATION: "The Changes and Chances if ThisMortal Life": The Vicissitudes if High Churchman­ship and Politics among the Clergy of Sussex,1700-1745 PAUL DAVID CHIRONNAA.B., University if Chicago, 1980A.M., ibid., 1986(Social Thought)DISSERTATIoN:jonathan Edwards' Ethic if Consent andthe Moral Sense TheoryJAMES RAYMOND COLDREN, JR.A.B., Rutgers, State University if New jersey, Newark,1976A.M., University if Chicago, 1983(Sociology)DISSERTATION: Patuxent Institution: A Case Study inthe Adaptation and Survival if a Public OrganizationJOHN MICHAEL DENNISA.B., University if Texas, Austin, 1984A.M., ibid., 1986(Political Science)DISSERTATION: The Politics if Kidney TransplantationMITCHELL DOUGLAS DUNEIERA.M., University if Chicago, 1985(Sociology)DISSERTATION: Slim's Table: Race, Respectability, andMasculinityJO ANN BARGIEL EISENBERGA.B., University if Illinois, Urbana, 1968M.Ed., ibid., 1972(Education)DISSERTATION: A Psychosocial Profile if Traditionaland Non- Traditional Custody Parents56MARIANE CONCHITA FERMEA.B., Wellesley College, 1981A.M., University if Chicago, 1984(Anthropology)DISSERTATION: "Hammocks Belong to Men, Stools tovu,men": Constructing and Contesting Gender Do­mains in a Mende Village (Sierra Leone, West AJrica)JOSEPH P FERRIEA.B., Williams College, 1983A.M., University if Chicago, 1988(Economics)DISSERTATION: 'We Are Yankeys Now': The EconomicMobility if Two Thousand Antebellum Immigrants tothe u.s.EDWARD LUDWIG GLAESERA.B., Princeton University, 1988(Economics)DISSERTATION: Two Essays on InJormation and LaborMarketsFREDERIC WRIGHT GLEACHS.B., Virginia Commonwealth University, 1984A. M., University if Chicago, 1987(Anthropology)DISSERTATION: English and Powhatan Approaches toCivilizing Each Other: A History if Indian- WhiteRelations in Early Colonial VirginiaDIANE ELIZABETH JOHNSONA.B., Malone College, 1966A.M., Bowling Green State University, 1969A.M., University if Chicago, 1988(Sociology)DISSERTATION: The Politics if Good Reasons: Buildingthe Regulatory State and the Process if AssentHEDI DIEGO KALLALDipl., Ecole Poly technique, Paris, France, 1988(Economics)DISSERTATION: Arbitrage and Equilibrium underTransaction CostsDAE IL KIMA.B., Seoul National University, South Korea, 1984A.M., University if Chicago, 1986(Economics)DISSERTATION: Industry TMlge Differences: The Unob­servable Human Capital HypothesisSE-JIK KIMB.Econ., Seoul National University, South Korea, 1983M.Econ., ibid., 1985(Economics)DISSERTATION: Taxes, Growth, and Welfare in an En­dogenous Growth ModelDAVID JOHN KROEZES.B., Wheaton College, Illinois, 1973S.M., Monmouth College, 1976(Education)DISSERTATION: District Context and Its Impact on theInstructional Leadership Role oj the ElementarySchool PrincipalYOUNGJAE LIMB.Econ., Seoul National University, South Korea, 1982M.Econ., ibid., 1984(Economics)DISSERTATION: Disentangling Permanent Income andRisk Sharing: A General Equilibrium Perspective onCredit Markets in Rural South India TOM SCOTT LOVELESSA.B., University if California, Berkeley, 1975A.M., California State University, Sacramento, 1984(Education)DISSERTATION: The Politics if Untracking California'sMiddle SchoolsSUZANNEL.MARCHANDA.B., University if California, Berkeley, 1984A.M., University if Chicago, 1986(History)DISSERTATION: Archaeology and Cultural Politics inGermany, 1800-1965: The Decline if PhilhellenismGERALD C. MATTRANA.M., University if Chicago, 1966(History)DISSERTATION: Prairie Statesmen: The Illinois GeneralAssembly, 1900-1920CHUNG-KI MINB.Econ., Seoul National University, South Korea, 1981M.Econ., Korea Advanced Institute if Science andTechnology, Seoul, South Korea, 1983(Economics)DISSERTATION: Economic Analysis and Forecasting ifInternational Growth Rates Using BayesianTechniquesMARYJANE OSAA.B., Bard College, 1983A.M., University if Chicago, 1986(Sociology)DISSERTATION: Pastoral Mobilization and SymbolicPolitics: The Catholic Church in Poland, 1918-1966JOSHUA STEPHEN PARENSA.B., Stjohn's College, Annapolis, Maryland, 1984A.M., University if Chicago, 1988(Political Science)DISSERTATION: The Foundations and DeJense if Law:Plato's Laws and Farabi's SummaryFAITH GLORIA PAULA.B., University if Illinois, Urbana, 1961M.A. T, University if Chicago, 1966A.M., University if Hawaii at Manoa, Honolulu, 1976(Education)DISSERTATION: Mission and Purpose: Gatekeeper toOpportunityESWAR SHANKER PRASADA.B., Madras University, India, 1985A.M., Brown University, 1986(Economics)DISSERTATION: Employment, TMlge, and ProductivityDynamics in an Equilibrium Business Cycle Modelwith Heterogeneous LaborMARK GORDON ROBECKA.B., StanJord University, 1982A.M., Duquesne University, 1983(Political Science)DISSERTATION: Free Speech, Equal Respect, and Re­flective Dialogue: Public Ji6ice as a Basis Jor JusticeJAEWOORYOOB.Econ., Seoul National University, South Korea, 1979M.Econ., ibid., 1984(Economics)DISSERTATION: Two Essays on the Markets Jor Prcfes­sional vu,rkers57MOON]OONG TCHAB.Econ., Seoul National University, SouthKorea, 1984(Economics)DISSERTATION: Altruism and Migration-Korea andthe us.XIAO-LEI WANGA.B., Nanjing Normal University, China, 1983M.Ed., Loyola University if Chicago, 1988(Education)DISSERTATION: Resilience and Fragility in LanguageAcquisition: A Comparative Study if the GesturalCommunication Systems if Chinese and AmericanDecif Children if Hearing Parents CAROL J. WARDA.B., North Texas State University, 1973A.M., ibid., 1976(Sociology)DISSERTATION: Social and Cultural Influences on theSchooling if Northern Cheyenne YouthEDGARDO ENRIQUE ZABLOTSKYLic., Universidad de Buenos Aires, Argentina, 1981Dipl., Centro de Estudios Macroeconomicos deArgentina, Buenos Aires, 1984A.M., University if Chicago, 1986(Economics)DISSERTATION: The Economic Theory of Autocracy: APublic Good Approach to Military Coups d'Etat58BRUCE TAMMEN, Cha el Choir ConductorWOLFGANG ROBSAM, University OrganistWYLIE CRAWFORD, iversity CarillonneurMAR ALROBERT LOVETT ASHENHURSTVICE-MARSHALGEOFFREY c. M. PLAMPINASSISTANT MARSHALSTED COHENFRANK W FITCHROBERT S. HAMADARICHARD H. HELMHOLZBERNARD McGINN JOHN R. SCHUERMANHERMAN L. SINAIKOLORNA P. STRAUSRONALD A. THISTEDLINDA J. WAITESTUDENT MARSHALS, 1991-1992KERI ELIZABETH AMESMARK EDWIN ARNDTMARGARET R. BARNETTEKENNETH ARTHUR BLOOMSUSANNAH BARD BRADLEYKIRSTEN R. BRUMLEYELIZABETH RACHEL CLEWETTMEREDITH JANE CRICCOALISON REW DARNELLNICOLE JARNAGIN DEQTVAALSCOTT JOHN DIEDEJULIANA IBANGA EKONGPAUL JOSEPH ERICKSONDAVID MICHAEL FARNUMJENNIFER MICHELLE FOSSERIC W HUDSONDANA M. JONESEMILY ELIZABETH KADENSMATTHEW SCOTT KRAUS DAVID NATHAN LEVYSHIRA BATYA LEWINNICHOLAS ARTHUR MANCINIBLAKE COLIN MEYERSERIN KATHLEEN MORANJUSTIN LOUIS MORTARABENJAMIN DANIEL OWENNICHOLAS JAMES PAPPASDAVID ROBERT REICHMANFRANCES AMALIAH ROSENFELDHANI I. SALTIDONALD ANDREW SMITHCASSANDRA SPURLOCKRAM MOHAN SUBRAMANIANVAIDAS UZGIRISYUWONGNATANYA MARIE ZEHNLEANDREA PATRICIA ZEMGULYSSTUDENT MARSHALS, 1992-1993JEFFREY TODD BLOOMDAVID JASON CALICCHIAPATRICIA LINDA CHENGKATHRYN BLAIR COOPERMANLISA MICHELLE DIAMONDERIC EDMONDSGYU IL GANGLEWIS NEWELL GARVINGREGORY JOHN GBURJOHN FRANCIS HAGAN, JR.WARREN SZUTSE UANGWIN HWANGBOJULIET CHRISTINE J COBSENSOOYONGKIMJACQUELINE MARIE ILLERNICOLE YEN-I MORG NREBECCA ELISABETH MORSS ZIAD WAEL MUNSONJUSTIN NUCCIOJENNIFER LEIGH PALSNADINE PIERREDAVID POLLACKDENNIS PRESLOCKAMANDA ETHEL QUESTERTHOMAS WARREN SCANLONMARTIN ANDREW SCHLENKERALISON KAREN SMITHDEBRA ANNE STEIGERWALTPETER STONESTEFANIE STELLA TCHAROSJEFFREY TOLINANNE ERIN TUTTLEJEAN MARIE TWENGEEVA L. ZASLOFF