EPiroKrA* aFFice....and Aramaic when he received his Ph.D. from the Uni versity in 1935 and...
Transcript of EPiroKrA* aFFice....and Aramaic when he received his Ph.D. from the Uni versity in 1935 and...
EPiroKrA* aFFice.
THE ORIENTAL INSTITUTE REPORT 1967/68
oi.uchicago.edu
oi.uchicago.edu
TO THE MEMBERS AND FRIENDS OF THE ORIENTAL INSTITUTE
George R. Hughes, Director
A year ago when the annual report to the members was being compiled the brief but momentous Arab-Israeli war had just ended. It is an understatement to say that the Oriental Institute was vitally interested in many ways, for one, in what the convulsion would ultimately mean to its field operations and to the mobility of its scholars in pursuit of their investigations. Although some limitations on mobility have resulted and the prospect is obscured by uncertainty, it is an indication of a certain maturity in East and West that cordial scholarly and personal relations as well as institutional esteem have suffered no serious blight despite political strains.
The first of the expeditions to return to the field for a new season after the conflict was the Epigraphic Survey. It was back at work in Luxor, Egypt, by mid-November, only a month later than normal, and that largely owing to initial reluctance on the part of the United States to permit its nationals to go out. Professor Nims's accompanying report on the ensuing season reflects the surprisingly warm reception and assistance accorded this veteran expedition. In January Professor Zabkar and his staff also returned to the Nile Valley for a second and final season of excavation of the fortress and cemetery at Semna South in the northern Sudan.
Other expeditions had not been scheduled to take to the field last winter, but the coming autumn and winter will again see the Institute well represented in Turkey, Iraq, Egypt and Iran.
A report to the members ought to chronicle a few of the milestones passed by the Institute and its staff during the year which do not otherwise figure in the summaries of current enterprises. It is, however, a somewhat hazardous undertaking, for the staff is a large one with catholic interests, and any chronicler, especially a very new director, is likely to overlook or be unaware of some significant achievement or development.
At the end of August, 1967, the Oriental Institute was host to an international representation of Assyriologists for the Rencontre Assyriologique held for the first time in its existence in the United States. Most of those attending came directly from the triennial XXVIIth International Congress of Orientalists at Ann Arbor, Michigan. Despite the fact that the idea of assembling scholars from all over the world periodically to learn from each other is a laudable one, still, after almost a century since the first Congress was held in Paris in 1874, the fact of the accumulation of data and the inevitable proliferation of recondite disciplines dealing with a multiplicity of cultures from Anatolia and North Africa to Japan and
Southeast Asia leaves special groups like the Assyriologists seeking occasions for more significant exchanges of detailed problems and insights.
May 8th marked the opening of the Prehistoric Project's exhibit in two alcoves of the east gallery of the Museum. The colorful, diagrammatic display is a distinct departure for the Institute's Museum. Dictated in part by the nature and objectives of the Prehistoric Project itself, it is the first attempt on the part of Professor Braidwood to communicate graphically what he and his diverse staffs have learned and hope to learn about early man in Iraq, Iran and Turkey: the where, when, how and why of man's first attempts to utilize his environment and its resources. The exhibit was conceived of as experimental and for that reason its execution, the relatively modest space it occupies notwithstanding, was a long and trying task. We are deeply indebted to Mrs. Alexander Langsdorf, Jr., for voluntarily contributing her artistry and long hours of work to the venture as well as to Mr. Robert Middaugh and the regular members of the staff, Robert Hanson, Ursula Schneider and Robert Ahlstrom, who worked with her.
We cannot but express vicarious satisfaction in the visit of His Majesty Mohammed Reza Pahlavi, the Shah of Iran, to the campus on June 14th and 15th for the purpose of dedicating the site of the new Pahlavi building to be built immediately east of the Oriental Institute. A reception in his honor sponsored by the Center for Middle Eastern Studies was held in the galleries of the Museum. The new building will house the Center for Middle Eastern Studies as well as the Adlai Stevenson Institute of International Affairs. The Center's major purposes as a research organization, like its building, adjoin and supplement those of the Institute.
The University of Chicago will begin participation in 1968 along with eighteen other American universities in a newly instituted five-year Ford Foundation program for graduate student training in field archeology. It has long been a disability felt by American archeologists working outside the country that there has generally been a lack of opportunity for promising American students to get to the field. This is in contrast to, for example, France and Germany, with their great national institutes with branches in various countries. The greater distance from the United States to the Near East, for one thing, has usually kept the personnel of our investigative groups to a minimum which barely represented the essential disciplines and therefore largely excluded graduate students.
The receiving of a one-year grant by Professor Emeritus Keith C. Seele from the National Foundation for the Arts and the Humanities has helped toward solution of
1
oi.uchicago.edu
a perennial problem, that of processing archeological finds and preparing, among other things, the photographs and drawings for their publication. Inasmuch as the funds of the new Foundation are limited and competition for them has mounted rapidly in the brief period of its existence, the recognition of the significance of the material and our obligation to make it available as well as the confidence shown in Dr. Seele are a source of satisfaction to us all.
The Oriental Institute is a living organism, not just a research organization with a building, a budget, a library, a museum and some field headquarters. It is, first of all, a group of persons, and we are sharply reminded of that fact periodically, but rarely as forcibly as we are being reminded in 1968.
On April 26th in the death of Benno Landsberger at the age of 77, Assyriology and Sumerology lost one of the giants of all time. After professorships in the Universities of Leipzig and Marburg in Germany and Ankara in Turkey, Professor Landsberger came to Chicago in 1948 at the height of his scholarly powers. Although he retired in 1955, he remained a keen and active scholar in the Oriental Institute's community almost to his death. He had been the teacher of the world's leading Assyriologists and remained the mentor and friend of them all.
June 30, 1968, inexorably brings the retirement of three members of longest standing: Raymond A. Bowman, Elizabeth B. Hauser and John A. Wilson. It is a satisfaction that we need not say farewell to them, for all three give every evidence of carrying on unfinished tasks in our midst with the vigor they have shown in a combined service of over a century among them.
Professor Bowman became an instructor of Hebrew and Aramaic when he received his Ph.D. from the University in 1935 and continued through the ranks to a Professorship of Oriental Languages. For the last six years he has been Chairman of the Department of Near Eastern Languages and Civilizations. Dr. Bowman's uncompromising scholarship has been equaled only by his devotion to continuous teaching and his variety of extracurricular services to the Department, the Divinity School, and the Institute. His Introduction to Ezra and Nehemiah in "The Interpreter's Bible" was a major contribution to Biblical studies. His Aromatic Ritual Texts from Persepolis, the publication of texts from the Persepolis excavations, which is now in press, will be an equally important contribution in another area. We expect that it will not be his valedictory.
Mrs. Hauser became an assistant to Dr. T. George Allen in 1931 in the editorial office and upon Dr. Allen's retirement in 1950 she became the Oriental Institute's second Editor. The existence of its own editorial office from the beginning was recognition of the peculiar prob
lems presented by the diverse and unusually complex material which generally characterizes Oriental Institute publications. Mrs. Hauser proceeded to familiarize herself with manuscripts whatever their content until she was often as conversant with them as the authors themselves. Far from being a mere checker of references and proofreader, although she has not spared herself in those tasks she has ranged from the planning of the composition of books, the translating and supplementing of them, to the problems of costs and the last details of their printing. To a research group for whom the best possible communication of its findings is all important, Betty Hauser has been the untiring intermediary.
Professor Wilson became a member of the staff of the Oriental Institute when he received his Ph.D. under Breasted and became an Egyptologist of the Epigraphic Survey in Luxor in 1926. In 1931 he returned to the campus as a member of the faculty and began teaching. Five years later he succeeded Breasted as Director of the Oriental Institute. Since 1953 he has been the Andrew MacLeish Distinguished Service Professor of Egyptology in the University. He has filled these 42 years with productive and exacting scholarship in the voluminous translation and interpretation of Egyptian texts and the writing of history. It was inevitable that he should become the representative of American Egyptology and the much sought after spokesman for Near Eastern studies generally.
No finer or more enduring tribute could be paid any scholar than was paid Dr. Wilson in the establishment of the John A. Wilson Professorship of Oriental Studies by an anonymous gift to the University. The Oriental Institute as academic beneficiary can only express profound appreciation of the caliber of John Wilson which inspired the gift and of the imaginative generosity of the donor in establishing the Institute's first named professorship.
Dr. Edmundo Lassalle repeated his personal gift of 1966/ 67 to ancient Egyptian and Coptic studies and thus completely financed the publication of the Beit el-Wali Temple in Nubia and again provided fellowships for two graduate students. The Lassalle fellowships are granted to students who are nearing the end of their training and are preparing their doctoral dissertations. In the 1966/67 annual report (p. 5) Dr. Lassalle's gift was erroneously, to our embarrassment and his, called a "grant from the Lassalle Foundation of New York," a non-existent foundation.
Again in the spring of 1968, enlarging upon experience gained on the Turkish Trip in 1966, our vigorous Visiting Committee member, Mr. W. Press Hodgkins, planned for and led a group of members and supporters of the Oriental Institute and the Center for Middle Eastern Studies on a trip to Lebanon, Iran, Pakistan and Afghanistan. Prior to departure the participants had the opportunity to hear specialists speak on various aspects of the
2
oi.uchicago.edu
cultures, ancient and modern, of the countries to be visited. On the trip they were guided and briefed by knowledgeable persons resident in the host countries and were given ample opportunities to meet with a wide spectrum of people not only in antiquities services but in education, business and government.
Since the days of its forerunner the Haskell Oriental Museum between Swift Hall and Harper Library, the Oriental Institute Museum has been popular to a select clientele, usually individuals or families who came to browse in the peaceful galleries. Less frequently larger groups might ask one or another of the faculty or the Secretary of the Museum to act as guide on their visits. Then about 15 years ago it seemed expedient to employ first a graduate student part-time, then a full-time docent to be available when groups, usually from the public schools, scheduled visits and to take educational materials to the local schools upon request, and the demand from this quarter kept growing. Nevertheless, the collections both on view and off remained largely the scholar's province, probably better and more favorably known to specialists in the ancient Near East elsewhere than to the surrounding community.
That was the gradually changing picture until barely a year and a half ago when Mrs. John Livingood, the Museum's indefatigable Secretary, opened the gates to the pent up demand and met it in a variety of new ways by enlisting the help of like-minded volunteers. If the public demand was overwhelming, no less so was the response of capable people in the Chicago area who in two groups have, since 1966, undertaken courses of instruction and reading to prepare themselves to be interpreters of the collections and the work of the Institute. The once spare offerings of mementoes at the information desk has become a growing variety and quantity to meet a multiplying demand in the new Suq, the shop in the lobby, which is itself the inspiration and gift of a friend. These activi
ties are modestly described elsewhere in this report. We of the faculty and staff can only express awed appreciation to our band of devoted volunteers who have in so short a time become so much a part of us, relied upon implicitly by the public and ourselves. It is one thing to contribute one's time and energy casually for a worthy purpose, it is something else to commit oneself to seeing that the shop is manned and supplied and sales accounted for day after day and to being on hand to meet scheduled groups any day.
Some of the volunteers have also been assisting usually short-handed field directors in mending and drawing pottery for publication, among other things. Mr. Donald D. Bickford of Honolulu, not exactly a "local" volunteer, has given unremittingly for the entire academic year his time and skill as an architect and draftsman to Dr. Seele's work on the voluminous Nubian material.
Finally, on June 30,1968, Robert McC. Adams completes six years as Director of The Oriental Institute and leaves the post. He will continue to be very much a part of the Institute and the University, but by resigning the directorship he will be free to pursue his surface reconnaissance of southern Iraq about half of each year. In addition he will combine his survey for three years with the directorship of the Baghdad School of the American Schools of Oriental Research.
These six years have been good years marked by strong, steady leadership which has given an organization whose business it is to look backward an expectant, forward outlook and has set a tone of buoyancy. If it is, as it would seem to be, the role of the director of a research institution not only to provide an example of scholarship himself but to recognize ambitious and adventuresome investigation in areas outside his own competence and to understand, encourage and support it without attempting to force its proponents into a preconceived mold, then Robert Adams has interpreted the role well.
3
oi.uchicago.edu
EXCAVATIONS AT CHOGA MAMI, IRAQ
Report by the Director of the British School of Archaeology in Iraq, Dr. David Oates, on work partially sponsored and supported by the Oriental Institute
The excavations at Choga Mami, east of Baghdad and not far from the Iranian border, were begun in December, 1967, and were finished in February, 1968. The surviving occupation levels at Choga Mami, as far down as we have excavated, represent a large village or small town of the Samarra period (ca. 5000 B.C.). A very extensive collection of surface material has not produced anything that is certainly earlier, although there are some Jarmo flints and pottery (ca. 6750 B.C.) on nearby mounds. On the other hand there was evidently later occupation, the evidence for which has been lost by erosion. The latest level of which vestiges remain yielded pottery of transitional Samarra/Hajji Muhammad (ca. 4900-4300 B.C.) type. Sunk through this, from an even higher occupation level that has totally disappeared, was a well containing sherds of late Halaf (ca. 5200 B.C.) polychrome pottery of the best Arpachi-yah type, together with other hitherto unknown but approximately contemporary material, probably of Iranian origin. Elsewhere on the mound another late well produced Hajji Muhammad and later eUbaid (ca. 3500 B.C.) types, and a large pit contained a consistent range of Early Dynastic material, probably ED I-II (2900-2600 B.C.).
One important aspect of the site, therefore, is the evidence that it yields for chronological relationships between North and South Mesopotamian cultures, at least in the area of Mandali, and for connections with Iran. Our first impression of this evidence is that the culture represented by Samarra pottery is, at least at Choga Mami, quite distinct from Hassuna(ca. 5600 B.C.). We found no Hassuna pottery, and it is rare at the closely comparable site of Tell es-Sawwan near Samarra. It seems that Hassuna is essentially a culture of the rain-fed northern plain of Mesopotamia, while Samarra flourished in central Mesopotamia on the fringes of the alluvium.
Our Samarra material also showed relationships with the true southern cultures of the Eridu(ca. 5300-5000 B.C.) /Hajji Muhammad/'Ubaid sequence. One sherd of early Eridu ware (Eridu XVII) was stratified in a Samarra level and, as we have noted, our latest surviving occupation level produced pottery which appears to be transitional between Samarra and Hajji Muhammad. True Hajji Muhammad and cUbaid came later, in levels that have now been eroded, as did late Halaf material. Unfortunately, these two groups of material, though homogeneous in themselves, cannot be chronologically related to one another since they derive from the fill of later wells.
A most important piece of evidence bearing on the relation between Samarra and the southern cultures is the discovery in true Samarra context of a series of broken terra-cotta female figurines with heads rendered in a naturalistic manner, but with an elongated profile and hair style which in its most pronounced form is an obvious lineal antecedent of the 'Ubaid "lizard-headed" figurines from Ur. We would therefore suggest as a working hypothesis that the prosperous Samarra settlement at Choga Mami represents an intermediate stage between the early rain-fed agriculture of the northern plain, as typified by Hassuna, and the full efflorescence of the eUbaid economy in the south, which must have been based on large-scale irrigation.
This observation accords with others that we have made. In cutting a section against the north side of the mound we identified a series of water channels, the latest of which is modern, while others are clearly of Samarra date. Some if not all of these ancient channels can be almost certainly identified as artificial irrigation ditches, since they apparently run well above ancient plain level. We cannot yet certainly identify the canal from which these channels were fed. But we have observed and followed a marked depression that approaches the site from the direction of Mandali. At the point where this depression cuts through high ground just southeast of Choga Mami its sides are lined with what appear to be artificial spoil banks. Along its course are sites of all periods, including Samarra and Hajji Muhammad, and we think it probable that it marks the line of a canal bringing water from the point where the Mandali river, the Gan-gir, debouches from the Iranian foothills into the plain. It is unlikely to be a natural watercourse, since it runs from southeast to northwest, almost parallel with the first ridge of foothills, cutting across the natural gullies that descend from the ridge toward the southwest.
It is worthy of note that this area around Choga Mami, where we postulate irrigation in the Samarra period, would have been particularly suitable for an early canal system, since it lies in a triangle between two rivers, the Gangir and the Ab-i-Naft, of which the former provides a head of water and the latter, at a lower level, a natural drainage outlet. It is in fact the lower Tigris-Euphrates basin in miniature, with the problems of drainage and stagnation virtually eliminated by the more rapid drop in land levels owing to its position on the outer slope of the foothills. Complementary evidence of climatic and ecological conditions at the time of the settlement was obtained by the collection of animal bones totaling more than 1000 identifiable specimens and seed and grain samples from different levels.
4
oi.uchicago.edu
With the exception of a puzzling tower-like structure of Late Samarra date on the north edge of the mound, the buildings were remarkably uniform in plan. The tower needs further study, but there is as yet no evidence that it formed part of a town wall; it is more likely to have been a watch-tower, perhaps at one of the entrances to the settlement, for immediately beside it we found the top of an ascending ramp. The standard house type within the settlement consisted of two or three rows of small rooms, of regular layout, with external buttresses corresponding with the internal partition walls and at the corners. The largest measured some 1 0 x 7 meters overall and contained twelve rooms in three rows. One of the most interesting features of the houses was the way in which they were built directly on top of, or in some cases within, the walls of their predecessors in earlier levels. The most
THE EPIGRAPHIC SURVEY
Charles Francis Nims, Field Director
At the end of the summer of 1967 the prospects for the immediate continuation of the work of the Epigraphic Survey were uncertain. Diplomatic relations between the United States and the United Arab Republic were severed; our country forbade American citizens to travel in Egypt, and there was little information as to how Americans would be received in that country. In late September the Field Director was told indirectly that the Department of Antiquities in Egypt hoped that our work would continue. He went to Washington to consult with the appropriate officials at the Department of State. There it was agreed that he alone might go to Egypt to explore the possibilities of resuming the work of the Epigraphic Survey.
He arrived in Cairo on October 5th. Everyone there was most friendly and helpful. However, the security section of the government still had under consideration the position of all foreign archeological enterprises, and it was not until three weeks later that permission for such work to continue was given, with each group to be considered separately. Permission for the work of the Epigraphic Survey was given concurrently. It took two more weeks for members of the staff to complete their travel arrangements and arrive. The season opened on November 15th, a month late.
First attention was given to the completion of our projects at Medinet Habu and the Tomb Chapel of Kheruef. John Romer made pencil reinforcements of photographs of the rubbed painted designs in the reveals of an upper
probable motive for this strict adherence to earlier boundaries would seem to lie in the existence of continuing and rigidly observed property rights. Moreover we think that we have detected in the area so far exposed, larger buttressed walls which did not form part of any particular structure, though smaller buildings were often backed against them. These look like the boundary walls of larger units, perhaps comparable with the modern bayt in the sense of an extended household.
To sum up, we think that we have obtained significant evidence bearing on the cultural connections of an important Samarra settlement, and also the outline of an equally valuable picture of its economy, against the background of the contemporary climate and ecology of the region.
window at the former site. The work of editing the volume on the High Gate will continue this summer, and we hope to turn the material over to the University of Chicago Press before we return to Luxor.
Reginald Coleman, who was completing his drawings at Kheruef, was joined at this site by Grace Huxtable and John Romer in the copying of the marginal material. The finishing touches on the copies of all scenes and inscriptions on the walls will be done this summer and autumn, leaving only a few fragments to be gathered together and copied.
Because of the delays, and because we were short an artist, the work at the Temple of Khonsu did not progress as far as we had earlier hoped. It was expected that we would be joined on January 1st by Martyn Lack, who, as a young man, had served as an artist on the Sakkarah Expedition. Mr. Lack was holding a teaching position in Hastings, England, and our permission to work came subsequent to the time he would have had to tender his resignation. He will join us at the beginning of the 1968/69 season.
There are few exciting discoveries in our work. However, one of great importance to a historical problem was made just before the close of the season. On the basis of a drawing from the Temple of Khonsu in Lep-sius, Denkmaler, Egyptologists had always considered that Piankh, who succeeded Herihor as First Prophet of Amon, was the son of his predecessor. Reginald Coleman, who was drawing the scene, and Edward Wente, who was helping him to interpret the traces on
5
oi.uchicago.edu
the damaged wall, discovered that where Lepsius had indicated a broken area the wall surface was preserved, and that the son named, whoever he was, could not have been Piankh. This was an important discovery for all of us, and particularly to Edward Wente, who is one of the foremost authorities on this period of Egyptian history.
This discovery was made in Wente's last few days on the expedition; henceforth he will be at the Oriental Institute teaching Egyptology. In the next season he will be succeeded as epigrapher by David Larkin, who was with us in 1966/67, joining Carl DeVries and the Field Director.
In 1932 John Healey joined the Epigraphic Survey as Superintendent in charge of maintenance. Through his skill and efforts, often heroic in the face of almost insurmountable difficulties, Chicago House has functioned smoothly. Though he has been with the Oriental Institute longer than all but a few members of its staff, he had never been to the United States. In June,
with his wife Doris, he came to Chicago that he might confer with us concerning the physical problems of our plant and explore the matter of finding his successor. He must retire at the end of the 1969/70 season.
Since the beginning of the 1965/66 season the greatest part of the operational and travel expenses of the expedition have come from grants from the Smithsonian Institution made through the American Research. Center in Egypt. This has enabled us to use funds from the Oriental Institute for needed replacement of capital equipment.
In the first months of our past season we found it inadvisable to receive guests at Chicago House. Later we were able to do so, but there were few visitors in Luxor until almost the time of our departure. We expect that next season there will be many more coming to Egypt, and we invite the members of the Oriental Institute to visit us at Chicago House. Insofar as we have room we will welcome you as guests.
6
oi.uchicago.edu
ORIENTAL INSTITUTE VISITING COMMITTEE, 1967/68
Chairman
Mr. JohnNuveen*
Mr. Arthur S. Bowes
Mr. H. W. Branigar, Jr.
Mrs. George G. Cameron
Mr. Arthur Dixon
Mr. Howard Goodman
Mr. W. Press Hodgkins
Mr. William O.Hunt
Mrs. John Livingood
Mrs. C. Phillip Miller
Mr. Albert H. Newman
Dr. Froelich Rainey
Mr. William J. Roberts
Mr. Sanger P. Robinson
Mr. William M. Spencer
Mr. Sydney Stein, Jr.
Mr. Gardner H. Stern
Mr. Carroll H. Sudler
Mr. & Mrs. Theodore D. Tieken
Mr. & Mrs. Chester D. Tripp
Mr. & Mrs. Roderick S. Webster
ORIENTAL INSTITUTE VOLUNTEERS, 1967/68
Museum Docents
Chairmen:
Mrs. Charles Shields, Downers Grove
Mrs. Russell Fernald, Downers Grove
Mrs. Robert Baker, Flossmoor
Mrs. Helmut Baum, Chicago
Mrs. Sanford Blum, Hubbard Woods
Mrs. Edwin Crosbie, Park Forest
Mrs. J. R. DePencier, Chicago
Mrs. Paul Farber, Chicago
Mrs. L. E. Fisher, Chicago
Mrs. David Foulser, Chicago
Mrs. Richard Frank, Chicago
Mrs. Martin Gabor, Wilmette
Mr. Albert Haas, Chicago
Mrs. Albert Haas, Chicago
Mrs. David Hershenon, Chicago
Mrs. David Hess, Downers Grove
Mr. Helmut Hoernes, Chicago
Mrs. Edward Hutchens, Hinsdale
Mrs. A. Imberman, Hinsdale
Mrs. Henry Irwin, Chicago
Mrs. Margaret Johnson, Chicago
Mrs. William Jentes, Chicago
Mrs. Irving Levin, Michigan City, Ind.
Mrs. David Maher, Chicago
Mrs. George Mills, Glencoe
Mrs. Ronald Orner, Chicago
Mrs. Henry Perlman, Chicago
Mrs. Edgar Peterson, Clarendon Hills
Mrs. George Plamandon, Chicago
Mr. Harold Rantz, Chicago
Mrs. John Reid, Clarendon Hills
Mrs. John Robey, Chicago
Mrs. Donald Ross, Flossmoor
Mrs. Patrick Ryan, Chicago
Mrs. Gene Saper, Wilmette
Mrs. Noel Seeburg, Jr., Chicago
Mrs. Doris Shayne, Chicago
Mrs. Bernard Siegan, Chicago
Mr. O. J. Sopranos, Chicago
Mrs. James Spiker, Hinsdale
Mrs. Lester Stephens, Hinsdale
Mrs. Harry Waddington, Chicago
Mrs. Peter L. Wentz, Chicago
Mrs. Gordon Williams, Flossmoor
The Suq (Museum Shop)
Chairman:
Mrs. Norman Cooperman, Chicago
Mrs. John Abraham, Flossmoor
Mrs. Albert Droste, Chicago
Mrs. Henry Dry; Chicago
Mrs. Evelyn Gifford, Flossmoor
Mrs. Ezra Hurwich, Lincolnwood
Mrs. David Klahr, Chicago
Mrs. Harry Kinzelberg, Highland Park
Miss Edith S nee nan, Chicago
oi.uchicago.edu
MEMBERS OF THE ORIENTAL INSTITUTE 1967/68
Mr. & Mrs. Julius J. Abler, Libertyville
Mr. & Mrs. J. M. Abraham, Flossmoor
Mr. & Mrs. Lauress V. Ackman, Wayzata, Minn.
Mr. Cyrus H. Adams HI, Chicago
Mrs. Robert MoCormick Adams, Chicago
Dr. & Mrs. William E. Adams, Chicago
Robert S. Adler Family Fund, Chicago
Mr. Vaughn Aiello, Chicago
Mr. & Mrs. Angus A. Alheison, Albany, Ga.
Mr. & Mrs. Lee W. Alberts, Banington
Dr. & Mrs. W. W. Allen, Prospect Heights
Miss Sydney Anne Airport, Downers Grove
Mr. & Mrs. Joseph Airworthy, Chicago
Mrs. Geraldine S. Alvarez, Clarendon Hills
Miss Scribner Ames, Chicago
Mr. Donald H. Amidei, Park Ridge
Mr. & Mrs. Hugo A. Anderson, Chicago
Mr. & Mrs. Roger A. Anderson, Hinsdale
Mr. & Mrs. Albert L. Arenberg, Highland Park
Mr. Richard Armstrong, Chicago
Mr. & Mrs. George Arquilla, Jr., Flossmoor
Mr. & Mrs. Clayton Ashe, Chicago
Dr. & Mrs. N. A. Ashford, Chicago
Mrs. Courtney C. Ashley, Hinsdale
Mr. George Atherton, Geneva
Mr. & Mrs. Richard K. Ausbrook, Chicago
Mrs. A. B. Ayars, Northbrook
Miss Lubov Babe no, Chicago
Mr. Henry B. Bab son, Chicago
Mr. & Mrs. Ira J. Bach, Chicago
Mr. & Mrs. Arthur A. Baer, Chicago
Mr. & Mrs. Russell M. Baird, River Forest
Mr. & Mrs. Robert K. Baker, Flossmoor
Balzekas Museum of Lithuanian Culture, Chicago
Mrs. A. H. Barber, Winnetka
Mr. L. L. Barber, Winnetka
Mrs. Henry G. Barkhausen, Chicago
Mrs. Claude A. Barnett, Chicago
Dr. & Mrs. Marvin Barnett, Margate, N.J.
Mr. & Mrs. Roy E. Ban, Chicago
Mrs. Avis Barrett, Chicago
Miss Nancy E. Barrick, Rockford
Miss Patricia A. Barton, Chicago
Dr. & Mrs. W. W. Bauer, Chicago
Dr. & Mrs. Helmut Baum, Chicago
Mrs. Elsie J. Baumgartel, Oxford, England
Mr. & Mrs. Mark L. Baxter, Wilmette
Mr. & Mrs. Donald P. Bean,Palo Alto, Calif.
Mr. &. Mrs. Walter L. Beck, Chicago
Dr. & Mrs. Jerome S, Beigler, Chicago
Dr. Helen R. Beiser, Chicago
Mrs. Laird Bell, Winnetka
Mr. Lanny D. Bell, Philadelphia, Pa.
Mr. Dominic Benedict, Chicago
Mrs. Jack A. Benjamin, Glencoe
Mr. & Mrs. William Berger, Chicago
Mr. & Mrs. E. A. Bergman, Chicago
Mr. & Mrs. Nathan N. Bernstein, Highland Park
Mr. & Mrs. Saul Bernstein, Highland Park
Mr. & Mrs. Henry S. Berry, Milwaukee, Wis.
Dr. Henry B. Betts, Chicago
Dr. & Mrs. Charles L. Bidwell, Chicago
Mr. & Mrs. Emery J. Biro, Chicago
Mr. & Mrs. Storrs M. Bishop, Aspen, Colo.
Mr. & Mrs. Hill Bteckett, Newton, Go.
Mr. Blake Blair, Chicago
Mr. & Mrs. Robert J. Blakely, Chicago
Mr. & Mrs. Ray H. Blecker, Homewood
Mr. & Mrs. Leigh B. Block, Chicago
Mr. & Mrs. Philip D. Block, Jr., Chicago
Dr. & Mrs. S. Ray Blum, Hubbard Woods
Mrs. Arthur B. Bohan, Chicago
Mr. & Mrs. Chauncey Borland, Chicago
Miss Harriet Borland, Washington, D.C.
Mr. Charles Borsom, Hinsdale
Mrs. Augustine Bo we, Chicago
Mrs. Clymer S. Bowen, Lake Forest
Miss Eleanor R. Bower, Saratoga, Calif.
Mr. & Mrs. Arthur S. Bowes, Chicago
Mr. & Mrs. J. A. Bowman, Evanston
Mrs. T. Kenneth Boyd, Winnetka
Mr. William R. Boyd, Lake Wales, Fla.
Rev. Prof. Raymond Boyer, La Crau, France
Mrs. Charles T. Boynton, Elkhart, Ind.
Mr. H. W. Branigar, Jr., Banington
Mr. & Mrs. Donald L. Brehm, Carbondale
Mrs. Hugh Bridegroom, Winnetka
Mrs. Lester H. Brill, Highland Park
Mr. & Mrs. Thomas V. Broadbent, Chicago
Mr. & Mrs. A. L. Brody, Chicago
Mr. & Mrs. George H. Bromberg, Lake Forest
Mr. & Mrs. Allan M. Brown, Highland Park
Mr. Baird Brown, Chicago
Mr. Cameron Brown, Lake Forest
Mr. & Mrs. Charles H. Brown, Lake Forest
Mrs. Granger Brown, Libertyville
Mr. & Mrs. F. Quentin Brown, Evanston
Mrs. Walther Buchen, Winnetka
Mr. & Mrs. Ralph W. Buddington, Kenilworth
Mrs. Robert M. Buddington, Winnetka
Dr. & Mrs. John M. Budinger, Bronxville, N. Y.
Mr. & Mrs. C. W. Buerkle, Bakersfield, Calif.
Mr. & Mrs. George M. Burditt, La Grange
Dr. & Mrs. Samuel J. Burrows, Chicago
Mrs. Edwin M. Bush, Jr., Winnetka
Mrs. John Meigs Butler, Winnetka
Mrs. Morton D. Cahn, Winnetka
Mr. & Mrs. Thomas Caie, Gambier, Ohio
Mr. & Mrs. Leon J. Caine, Highland Park
Mr. & Mrs. Lynn H. Caldwell, Downers Grove
Mr. & Mrs. George G. Cameron, Ann Arbor, Mich.
Mr. Michael Campion, Encino, Calif.
Mr. & Mrs. Robert F. Carr, Chicago
Mr. & Mrs. L. A. Carton, Lake Forest
Mrs. Jane S. Cavanaugh, Winnetka
Miss Georgiana D. Ceder, Chicago
Mrs. Edward J. Chalifoux, La Grange
Mr. Dave Chapman, Chicago
Mr. & Mrs. Ernest E. Christensen, Glenview
Mr. George B. Christensen, Glencoe
Mrs. William E. Church, San Diego, Calif.
Mr. William J. Clancy III, Chicago
Mrs. Charles V. Clark, Evanston
Mrs. H. J. Clarke, Hinsdale
Mrs. J. Beach Clow, Chicago
Dr. Sidney Cohen, Chicago
Mr. & Mrs. Irving Colburn, Lake Forest
Mrs. Fairfax M. Cone, Chicago
Mr. & Mrs. Rufus E. Cook, Bakersfield, Calif.
Mrs. Marie E. Cooper, Downers Grove
Dr. & Mrs. N. R. Cooperman, Chicago
Mrs. William N. Copley,New York, N. Y.
Mr. & Mrs. John S. Coulson, Oak Park
Dr. Jack P. Cowen, Chicago
Mrs. George L. Cragg, Chicago
Mr. & Mrs. William A. Cremin, Winnetka
Mrs. Albert V. Crewe, Pahs Park
Miss Virginia Croon, Chicago
Mrs. A. H. Cross, Lombard
Mr. & Mrs. Robert S. Cushman, Highland Park
Dr. & Mrs. A. A. Dahlberg, Chicago
Mr. & Mrs. Harry L. Dale, Elmhurst
Mr. George E. Danforth, Chicago
Miss Marie E. Dargan, Chicago
Mr. & Mrs. William W. Darrow, Winnetka
Mrs. Justin W. Dart, Los Angeles, Calif
Mr. & Mrs. George Daskal, Jr., Chicago
Mr. & Mrs. John Davenport, Elmhurst
Mr. & Mrs. Sigmund W. David, Glencoe
Mr. Brooks Davis, Chicago
Mr. & Mrs. DeForest P. Davis, Lake Forest
Mrs. Guy B. Davis, Paxton
Mr. Joseph Davis, Chicago
Mr. & Mrs. Murray Dawson, La Grange
Miss Henrietta T. Deane, Chicago
Mrs. C. S. DeLong, Lake Forest
Mrs. Roger Delong, Racine, Wis.
Mrs. Ida B. DePencier, Chicago
Mr. & Mrs. Gus C. Detlefsen, Chicago
Mr. & Mrs. Robert G. Dettmar, Hinsdale
Mr. & Mrs. Edison Dick, Lake Forest
Mrs. William R. Dickinson, Jr., Lake Forest
Dr. & Mrs. Richard C. Dickmum, Br'zersfield, Calif.
Dr. & Mrs. Joe N. Dillard,Z,ifffe/toc*, Ark
Mr. & Mrs. Arthur Dixon, Lake Forest
8
oi.uchicago.edu
Dr. & Mrs. Bayard Dodge, Princeton, NJ.
Mrs. Edmund J. Doering, Lake Forest
Mrs. Muriel P. Donaldson, Hollywood, Calif.
Mrs. Bernice E. Dorner, Evanston
Mr. Querin P. Dorschel, Chicago
Prof. Georges Dossin, Wandre, Belgium
Dr. & Mrs. Ralph C. Dougherty, Columbus, Ohio
Mrs. Kingman Douglass, Lake Forest
Mrs. Lyman M. Drake, Jr., Glencoe
Mr. & Mrs. Henry Dreyfuss, So. Pasadena, Calif.
Mr. Albert C. Droste, Chicago
Mr. &. Mrs. Albert Drucker, Chicago
Mrs. Henry Dry, Chicago
Mr. & Mrs. Lester E. Dunbar, Chicago
Mr. & Mrs. Harry J. Dunbaugh, Hubbard Woods
Mr. & Mrs. Allison Dunham, Chicago
Mr. Dows Dunham, Boston, Mass.
Mr. & Mrs. William E. Dunlap, Chicago
Mr. Winfield T. Durbin, Chicago
Mr. Carl Durrell, So. Pasadena, Calif.
Mr. Lowell B. Dwinnell, Evanston
Mr. & Mrs. Robert C. Dyer, Hinsdale
Mr. & Mrs. Richard V. Earle, Chicago
Mrs. Margaret P. Eastman, Buffalo, N. Y.
Miss Mary W. Eaton, Chicago
Mr. Louis E. Ebersold, Oak Park
Dr. F. L. Ebstein, Forest Hills, N. Y.
Mrs. Anne S. Ederheimer, Winnetka
Mrs. Edwin Eells, St. Charles
Miss Dorothy B. Eich, Oak Park
Mr. & Mrs. E. K. Eichengreen, Chicago
Dr. John L. Eiklor, Cedar Falls, Iowa
Dr. & Mrs. W. G. Eilert, Aurora
Mr. Jerome M. Eisenberg, New York, N. Y.
Mr. & Mrs. Lee C. Ellenbeigei, Maywood
Mrs. G. Corson Ellis, Chicago
Mrs. George Ellis, Orange, Conn.
Mr. Stephen Ellis, Rockford
Mr. & Mrs. R. Winfield Ellis, Chicago
Mr. Alex Elson, Chicago
Mrs. B. F. Enelow, Chicago
Mr. & Mrs. Sidney Epstein, Chicago
Mrs. Jay Erens, Chicago
Mr. Donald Erickson, Chicago
Mr. Robert E. Erickson, Chicago
Mrs. Thurlow G. Essington, Chicago
Mr. George W. Evans, Madison, Wis.
Miss Irene E. Fagerstrom, Chicago
Dr. Walter A.Fairservis, Jr., New York, N. Y.
Mr. & Mrs. Ralph Falk II, Libertyville
Dr. & Mrs. Adolph Faller, Chicago
Mr. & Mrs. Paul L. Farber, Chicago
Mr. & Mrs. Robert S. Faurot, Winnetka
Mrs. Howard Fenton, Chicago
Mr. & Mrs. Russell G. Fernald, Downers Grove
Mr. Emery T. Filbey, Chicago
Dr. & Mrs. Jack P. Fink, Evanston
Mr. & Mrs. Hy Fish, C/iia^c?
Dr. & Mrs. Morris Fishbein, Chicago
Mrs. L. E. Fisher, Chicago
Mr. & Mrs. Walter T. Fisher, Highland Park
Mrs. Lillian H. Florsheim, Chicago
Mr. Stanley J. Flowers, Chicago
Mr. Monroe Floyd, Chicago
Mr. & Mrs. Joseph L. Fontana, Chicago
Mr. & Mrs. John E. Forss, Fort Wayne, Ind.
Mr. & Mrs. Hugh Foster, Chicago
Mrs. David A. Foulser, Chicago
Dr. & Mrs. Earle B. Fowler, River Forest
Mrs. Anne R. Frank, Bellaire, Texas
Dr. & Mrs. Richard Frank, Chicago
Dr. & Mrs. Edward M. Franklin, Chicago
Dr. & Mrs. Thomas M. French, Chicago
Mr. & Mrs. G. S. Freudenthal, Jr., Chicago
Mr. Fred M. Friedlob, Chicago
Mr. & Mrs. Maurice Friedlander, Chicago
Mr. & Mrs. Roy J. Friedman, Chicago
Mr. & Mrs. Paul Fromm, Chicago
Miss Jeanne Frost, RN, Chicago
Mr. & Mrs. David Fryberger, Chicago
Mr. & Mrs. Ivan Fuldauer, Chicago
Mr. & Mrs. Martin Gaber, Wilmette
Galerie Israel, Ltd., Tel Aviv, Israel
Mrs. Anne Rickords Gait, Chicago
Mr. Alexander S. Gardner, Evanston
Mrs. Paul Gebhard, Chicago
Mr. & Mrs. Allan P. Geddes, Rockford
Dr. & Mrs. John E. Gedo, Glencoe
Miss Sari Georges, Chicago
Mr. Carl E. Geppinger, Hinsdale
Mrs. Jesse R. Gerstley, Chicago
Mr. Donald R. Getz, Chicago
Mr. & Mrs. Bruce E. Gideon, Chicago
Mr. & Mrs. Willard Gidwitz, Highland Park
Mrs. Evelyn B. Gifford, Flossmoor
Mr. & Mrs. J. S. Giles, Hinsdale
Mr. & Mrs. James G. Gilkey, Jr., Chicago
Mrs. John B. Gittings, Marine, Wis.
Mr. & Mrs. Bertrand Goldberg, Chicago
Mr. Lawrence Goldberg, Chicago
Mrs. Myron Goldsmith, Chicago
Mr. Chester S. Goldstein, 6te* Park
Mr. Arnold Goodman, Racine, Wis.
Mrs. Eileen L. Goodman, Downers Grove
Mr. Howard Goodman, Chicago
Mr. & Mrs. James H. Goodman, Chicago
Mr. & Mrs. William Goodman, Chicago
Dr. & Mrs. Edward E. Gordon, Chicago
Mrs. S. A. Gordon, Downers Grove
Dr. Samuel A. Goudsmit, Bayport, N. Y.
Mrs. Everett D. Graff, Winnetka
Mrs. John M. Graham, Chicago
Mr. & Mrs. W. Crosby Graham, Chicago
Mr. & Mrs. Richard Gray, Chicago
Miss Ruth E. Green, Lake Forest
Mrs. Lehnd Greenleaf, Elkhart, Ind.
Dr. & Mrs. Tibor J. Greenwalt, Washington, D.C
Mrs. D. M. Greer, Naperville
Mrs. Stephen S. Gregory, Winnetka
Mr. & Mrs. William D. Gregory II, Wayzata, Minn
Rev. Francis X. Grollig, S.J., Chicago
Mrs. Nels Gross, Los Angeles, Calif.
Miss Helene C. Grossenbacher, Park Ridge
Mrs. Mary Jane Grunsfeld, Chicago
Dr. W. A. Gruse,Pittsburgh, Pa.
Mrs. Paul Guenzel, Winnetka
Mr. & Mrs. Edwin L. Gustus, Chicago
Mr. Leo S. Guthman, Chicago
Mr. & Mrs. Albert F. Haas, Chicago
Mr. & Mrs. Charles C. Haffner, Jr., Lake Forest
Mr. James W. Halley, Chesterton, Ind.
Mr. W. J. Halhgan, Chicago
Mrs. Homer Hargrave, Chicago
Mrs. Paul C. Harper, Lake Forest
Rev. Charles U. Harris, Evanston
Mr. William E. Hartmann, Chicago
Mr. & Mrs. C. Daggett Harvey, Chicago
Mr. & Mrs. S. G. Haskins, Lake Forest
Mr. &. Mrs. John G. Hawthorne, Chicago
Mr. Boyd Hay ward, Phoenix, Ariz.
Mrs. William H. Hazlett, Chicago
Rev. Ronald Haznedl, Aurora
Mr. & Mrs. Herbert P. Heath, Western Springs
Mr. John F. Hegarty, Chicago
Dr. & Mrs. Richard E. Heller, Chicago
Mr. & Mrs. Richard N. Henritze, Flossmoor
Dr. Henrietta Herbolsheimer, Chicago
Mr. & Mrs. John J. Herrmann, Jr.,Rome, Italy
Dr. & Mrs. David B. Hershenson, Chicago
Mr. & Mrs. David C. Hess, Downers Grove
Mrs. Murray Hetherinton, Chicago
Mr. & Mrs. James O. Heyworth, Libertyville
Mrs. Boyd Hill, Lake Forest
Dr. & Mrs. F. M. Hi\peTt,Racine, Wis.
Mr. & Mrs. John Hilty, Toledo, Ohio
Mr. & Mrs. George D. Hirsch, Chicago
Mrs. Frank P. Hixon, Lake Forest
Mr. & Mrs. W. Press Hodgkins, Lake Forest
Mrs. G. C. Hodgson, La Grange Park
Mr. Helmut H. Hoernes, Chicago
Mrs. Robert Hofeller, Valparaiso, Ind.
Mr. & Mrs. Frank V. Hoffman, Chicago
Mr. & Mrs. Marshall M. Holleb, Chicago
Mrs. Thor A. Holm, Chicago
Mr. & Mrs. John C. Hood, Short Hills, NJ.
Mr. Albert L. Hopkins, Chicago
Mr. J. G. E. Hopkins,Mrw York, N. Y.
Mr. & Mrs. Bernhard L. Hormann, Honolulu, Hawaii
Mr. Charles L. Horn, Minneapolis, Minn.
Mr. & Mrs. Cyril O. Houle, Chicago
Mr. & Mrs. James E. Howie, River Forest
Mr. & Mrs. John L. Howie, Decatur
Mrs. Fred B. Huebenthal, Istanbul, Turkey
Mr. & Mrs. Harvey C. Hull, Lake Bluff
9
oi.uchicago.edu
Mr. James P. Hume, Chicago
Dr. Horace D. Hummel, Chicago
Mr. & Mrs. William 0 . Hunt, Chicago
Mr. & Mrs. Howard P. Hunter, Princeton, Mass.
Miss Libby Hurbanek, Berwyn
Dr. & Mrs. Ezra I. Hurwich, Lincolnwood
Mr. & Mrs. Edward J. Hutchens, Hinsdale
Mrs. Chauncey K. Hutchins, Lake Forest
Mrs. Eleanor Huzar, East Lansing, Mich.
Mrs. A. A. Imberman, Hinsdale
Mr. Spencer F. Irons, Flossmoor
Mr. & Mrs. Henry Irwin, Chicago
Miss Barbara Iwatiw, Chicago
Mrs. J. A. Jacobs, St. Louis, Mo.
Mr. & Mrs. Wyatt Jacobs, Highwood
Dr. Leon 0. Jacobson, Chicago
Mr. & Mrs. M. D. Jahn,Riverside
Mr. T. G. Harry James, London, England
Mrs. John A. Janzen, Chicago
Mr. & Mrs. Willard K. Jaques, Lake Forest
Mr. Charles C. Jar chow, Glenview
Mr. & Mrs. Christian E. Jarchow, Wilmette
Miss Corinne Jembrzcki, Chicago
Mrs. William R. Jentes, Chicago
Mrs. Constance C. Jewett, New York, N. Y.
Miss Lenore S. John, Chicago
Mr. & Mrs. Paul A. Johns, Lockport
Miss Lola Marie Johnson, Chicago
Mrs. Margaret Johnson, Chicago
Mr. Samuel Curtis Johnson, Racine Wis.
Miss Eva Josephine Jolly, Chicago
Mrs. Elsie B. Jones, Wilmette
Mr. & Mrs. George Roberts Jones, Chicago
Mr. & Mrs. Robcliff V. Jones, Bronxville, N Y.
Mr. & Mrs. Robert I. Jones, Lake Forest
Mr. & Mrs. Wylie Logan Jones, Bakersfield, Calif.
Mrs. Perry Kallison, San Antonio, Texas
Mr. & Mrs. Frank L. Kaplan, Chicago
Mr. & Mrs. Stanley A. Kaplan, Chicago
Mr. John Karahalios, Detroit, Mich.
Mr. & Mrs. Edward W. Kase, Wilmette
Mr. Jack P. Katz, Glencoe
Howard R. Kaufman, Esq., Chicago
Mr. John F. Keane, Geneva, Switzerland
Mr. & Mrs. A. C. Keith, Jr., Colorado Springs, Colo.
Mrs. Stanley Keith, Chicago
Mrs. Willard H. Keland,/?aci/ie, Wis.
Mrs. M. Cotton Kelley, Lake Forest
Mr. & Mrs. Charles F. Kellner, Highland Park
Mr. James H. Kellogg, Chicago
Mr. John P. Kellogg, Chicago
Mr. & Mrs. Carl D. Kelly, Winnetka
Mr. & Mrs. Thomas A. Kelly, Chicago
Mrs. August Kern, Chicago
Dr. Mrs. Graham Kernwein, Rockford
Dr. & Mrs. R. Lincoln Kesler, Oak Park
Mrs. Meyer Kestnbaum, Chicago
Mrs. M. S. Kharasch, Chicago
Miss Deidre D. Kieckhefer, itom/i^fow
Dr. & Mrs. Joseph H. Kiefer, Chicago
Mr. R. J. Kiln, Hertford, Herts., England
Dr. & Mrs. Lowell R. King, Chicago
Miss Cindi Kincaid, Park Forest
Miss Margaret S. King, Chicago
Mr. W. S. Kinkead, Chicago
Mrs. H. Kinzelberg, Highland Park
Mr. James G. Khkwood, Milwaukee, Wis.
Mr. & Mrs. David Klahr, Chicago
Dr. & Mrs. Harold L. Klawans, Chicago
Mr. & Mrs. Herbert Klee, Highland Park
Dr. & Mrs. G. J. Klein, Hazel Green, Wis.
Dr. William P. Kleitsch, Phoenix, Ariz.
Mr. & Mrs. Maurice G. Knoy, W. Lafayette, Ind.
Miss Ann K. Knudsen, Chicago
Mr. & Mrs. A. L. Knudstad, St. Louis, Mo.
Mr. & Mrs. Robert J. Koch, Chicago
Mr. & Mrs. Jack A. Koefoot,£Va/wf0/i
Dr. Robert Koff, Chicago
Miss Grace S. Kohatsu, Chicago
Mr. Frank F. Kolbe, Winnetka
Mr. & Mrs. Howard G. Kornblith, Chicago
Mr. & Mrs. Morton I. Kovin, Skokie
Mrs. Carl H. Kraeling, Hamden, Conn.
Dr. & Mrs. Paul Kramer, Chicago
Mrs. Louis J. Kraus, Detroit, Mich.
Mrs. A. R. Kreck, Glenview
Mr. Fred A. Krehbiel, Downers Grove
Mr. & Mrs. Sigmund W. Kunstadter, Highland Park
Mr. & Mrs. L. B. Kuppenheimer, Winnetka
Mr. George Laadt, Chicago
Mr. & Mrs. Louis E. Laflin, Jr., Lake Forest
Dr. Claude Lambert, Chicago
Mr. & Mrs. Richard H. Lamberton, Lake Forest
Mr. William LaMere, San Francisco, Calif.
Mrs. George T. Langhorne, Chicago
Dr. & Mrs. Alexander Langsdorf, h.,Roselle
Mr. J. Patrick Lannan, Chicago
Mr. & Mrs. E. C. Lapping, Buffalo, N. Y.
Mrs. Walter D. Larkin, Chicago
Mr. & Mrs. Jack A. Larsh, Chicago
Mrs. Norman Laski, London, England
Dr. Edmundo Lassalle, Atew York, N. Y.
Mrs. Robert J. Lavidge, Western Springs
Mrs. Samuel T. Lawton, Jr., Highland Park
Mr. & Mrs. Alan F. Lee, Keokuk, Iowa
Mrs. Beckwith Lee, Lake Forest
Mrs. Margaret M. Let, Hillsborough, Calif
Mrs. Oscar Lee, Chicago
Mr. & Mrs. F. Filce Leek, Hemel Hempstead,
Mr. Peter K. Lehnert, Houston, Texas En8bnd
Dr. & Mrs. Eugene Leman.itorfc Forest
Mr. & Mrs. Harry C. Lepinski, Western Springs
Dr. & Mrs. George V. LeRoy, Detroit, Mich.
Mr. & Mrs. John W. Leslie, Evanston
Mr. Victor D. Lespinasse II, Chicago
Mr. & Mrs. Nathaniel Leverone, Chicago
Mr. & Mrs. Irving Levin,Michigan City, Ind.
Mr. & Mrs. Richard B. Lewy, Wilmette
Dr. Robert B. Lewy, Chicago
Mr. & Mrs. Herschel Linsky, Chicago
Dr. & Mrs. Samuel D. Lipton, Chicago
Mrs. Vladimir Littauer, Syosset, N Y.
Mr. & Mrs. John Livingood, Hinsdale
Mrs. Francis V. Lloyd, Jr., Chicago
Mr. & Mrs. Glen A. Lloyd, Libertyville
Mr. & Mrs. J. P. Lockwood, Freeport
Mr. Lawrence L. Lohr, Ji., Ann Arbor, Mich.
Mr. & Mrs. Gordon Loud, Washington* D.C
Mr. & Mrs. Albert E. M. Lower, Highland Park
Mrs. Josiah 0 . Low, Chicago
Mr. Winfield Lowe, Ankara, Turkey
Mr. & Mrs. Curtis Lowell, Chicago
Dr. & Mrs. M. Lubran, Chicago
Mr. Earle Ludgin, Hubbard Woods
Mr. Louis E. ludwig, Chicago
Mr. & Mrs. Harold H. Lundberg, Wilmette
Mr. & Mrs. B. H. Lunde, Park Ridge
Mr. Erling H. Lunde, Chicago
Mrs. H. H. Luning, Hinsdale
Dr. & Mrs. Eugene F. Lutterbeck, Chicago
Mr. Joseph V. Lynskey, River Forest
Mr. & Mrs. Donald MacArthur,£erti7wprf/i
Mr. & Mrs. Joseph H. MacKenzie, New Castle, Pa.
Mr. & Mrs. F. B. MacKinnon, Barrington
Miss Peggy Mackowiak, Chicago
Mrs. James MacRae, Barrington
Mrs. Dorothy B. MacVicar, FranksviUe, Wis.
Mr. & Mrs. David W. Maher, Chicago
Mr. & Mrs. R. W. Mahnke,Gfen Ellyn
Mr. & Mrs. Arnold H. Maremont, Winnetka
Mr. & Mrs. Asher J. Margolis, Chicago
Mr. & Mrs. John H. Marshall, Chicago
Mrs. Lynn Martin, Chicago
Mr. & Mrs. Wilbur W. Martin, Polos Park
Mr. Seabury C. Mastick,Pfcasonrvi/fe, N. Y.
Dr. & Mrs. Edward J. Matson, LibertyviUe
Mr. & Mrs. Leonard Mautner, Los Angeles, Calif
Dr. & Mrs. Herbert G. May, Oberlin, Ohio
Mrs. David Mayer, Jr., Chicago
Mr. Gerhard Mayer, Highland Park
Mr. & Mrs. Robert B. Mayer, Winnetka
Mrs. Donald Mazer,San Francisco, Calif
Mr. & Mrs. E. C. Mazzie, Bakersfield, Calif
Mr. & Mrs. J. R. McAdams, Evanston
Mrs. Donald McClain, ,4/&nfa, Ga
Dr. & Mrs. J. D. McCollum, Munster, Ind.
Mr. & Mrs. Brooks McCormick, Chicago
Mr. & Mrs. W. Sloan McCrea, Miami, Flo.
Mr. A. Robert McCully, Prospect Heights
Mr. & Mrs. Paul McCurry, Lake Forest
Mrs. Robert McDevitt, Chicago
Mrs. John Miller McDonald, Wilmette
Mr. Richard J. McDonough, Wilmette
Mr. & Mrs. David B. McDougal, Chicago
10
oi.uchicago.edu
Mr. & Mrs. Robert McDougal, Jr., Chicago
Mr. John McDowell, New South Wales, Australia
Mr. Michael C. McGraw, Winfield
Mr. & Mrs. Ralph T. McKean, Elmhurst
Mrs. George B. McKibbin, Chicago
Mr. & Mrs. Geo E. McPherson, Chicago
Dr. & Mrs. Richard C. McVey, Valparaiso, Ind.
Mr. Robert Megowen, Chicago
Mrs. Vera Megowen, Evanston
Mr. & Mrs. John F. Meissner, Jr., La Grange
Mr. & Mrs. Leon Mendelsohn, Chicago
Mrs. Jeanetta L. Menninger, Chicago
Mr. & Mrs. Charles E. Metcalfe, Glen Ellyn
Mrs. Herbert H. Metz%et, Flagstaff, Ariz.
Mr. & Mrs. J. Theodore Meyer, Chicago
Mr. & Mrs. Leonard B. Meyer, Chicago
Mr. & Mrs. Verner M. Meyers, Lincoln, Nebr.
Mr. & Mrs. WiHiam J. Meyers, Chicago
Mr. & Mrs. Daniel Michel, Chicago
Mrs. Charles H. Miele, Lombard
Dr. & Mrs. C. Phillip Miller, Chicago
Miss Dorothy L. Miller, Rockford
Mr. George B. Miller,Racine, Wis.
Mr. & Mrs. Maurice Miller,Michigan City, Ind.
Mr. & Mrs. Thomas S. Miller, Chicago
Mr. & Mrs. Francis M. Millican, San Diego, Calif.
Mrs. Minda Mills, Glencoe
Mrs. Harold Minkus, Chicago
Mr. & Mrs. Samuel M. Mitchell, Washington, D.C
Mr. & Mrs. William H. Mitchell, Lake Forest
Mrs. Horace M. Moderwell, Evanston
Mr. & Mrs. Edward P. Molloy, Chicago
Mrs. J. M. Mora, Chicago
Mrs. William J. Morden, Greenwich, Conn.
Mr. Clarence C. Morgan, Chicago
Prof. & Mrs. Hans J. Morgenthau, Chicago
Mr. & Mrs. Thomas J. Morison, Wayzata, Minn.
Mr. Robert H. Moseley, Deerfiekl
Mr. & Mrs. C. Leon Moyer, Lake Forest
Mr. & Mrs. Robert Muckley, Chicago
Mrs. John C. Murphy, Chicago
Mr. Robert H. Murray, Valparaiso, Ind.
Mr. William C. Musham, Kenitworth
Mr. & Mrs. Arthur L. Myrland, Chicago
Mr. Yasuhiko Nara.Atew For*, N Y.
Mr. & Mrs. A. Raymond A. Nasr, CoralviUe, Iowa
Mr. Bernard Nath, Highland Park
Mr. & Mrs. Leston B. Nay, Chicago
Mrs. James V. Netrey, Glenview
Mr. & Mrs. Walter A. Netsch, Jr., Chicago
Mr. Fred W. Neubauer, Aurora
Mr. & Mrs. Albert H. Newman, Chicago
Mr. & Mrs. Richard T. Newman, Evanston
Mr. & Mrs. Ernest L. Newton, Evanston
Mrs. Del Nord, Chicago
Miss Karen Nordheim, Downers Grove
Mr. John Norsym S., Chicago
Mr. & Mrs. Richard Norton, Winnetka
Mr. & Mrs. Donald J. Novotny, La Grange
Mr. John Nuveen, Winnetka
Mrs. Robert J. Nye, Oak Park
Miss Constance Obenhaus, Chicago
Mr. & Mrs. Victor Obenhaus, Chicago
Miss Alice O'Connor, Chicago
Mrs. Joseph E. O'Connor, Chicago
Mr. & Mrs. William R. Odell, L<arte Foresr
Mr. William W. Oelman, N Riverside
Miss Lucille Ogle, New York, N Y.
Mrs. C. H. Olmsted, Lake Forest
Miss Lois Olson, Washington, D.C.
Mr. & Mrs. R. Thomas O'Neil, Afuwfer, Ind.
Mr. & Mrs. Ronald A. Orner, Chicago
Dr. Marie Ortmayer, Carmel, Calif.
Mr. & Mrs. Gilbert H. Osgood, Winnetka
Mr. & Mrs. David H. Padden, Chicago
Mrs. Elizabeth Paepcke, Chicago
Dr. & Mrs. Robert G. Page, Chicago
Mrs. Walter H. Page, Long Island, N Y.
Dr. & Mrs. John Paisios, Hinsdale
Mr. David V. Palmer, London, England
Dr. & Mrs. Robert Palmer, Chicago
Dr. & Mrs. Walter L. Palmer, Chicago
Col. Francis W. Parker, Highland Park
Mr. & Mrs. Norman S. Parker, Evanston
Dr. & Mrs. Zane Parzen, Chicago
Mr. Herbert C. Paschen, Winnetka
Dr. & Mrs. Paul J. Patchen, Chicago
Dr. William G. Peacher, Syracuse, N. Y.
Mrs. Caleb J. Penniman, Lake Forest
Mr. & Mrs. Charles H. Percy, Washington D.C.
Mr. & Mrs. Lawrence B. Perkins, Evanston
Mr. & Mrs. Alfred B. Perlman, Chicago
Dr. & Mrs. Henry B. Perlman, Chicago
Mr. & Mrs. Max S. Perlman, Chicago
Mr. & Mrs. Edgar M. Peterson, Clarendon Hills
Mr. & Mrs. Howard R. Peterson, Chicago
Mr. William O. Peterson, Chicago
Dr. & Mrs. David T. Petty, Evanston
Dr. Charles F. Pfeiffer,M. Pleasant, Mich.
Mr. Robert B. Picking, Chicago
Mr. & Mrs. G. L. Plamondon, Jr., Chicago
Mrs. Roy C. Poirot, Flossmoor
Mr. & Mrs. Maurice A. Pollak, Highland Park
Dr. & Mrs. George H. Pollock, Chicago
Mr. & Mrs. Leon Pomerance, Great Neck, N. Y.
Mr. & Mrs. Irvin C. Pool, North Highlands, Calif.
Mrs. George A. Poole, Lake Forest
Mr. & Mrs. Hairy H. Porter, Silver Spring, Md.
Dr. & Mrs. J. C. Postorino,/tecine, Wis.
Mr. William Potts, Philadelphia, Pa.
Mrs. R. D. Present, Knoxvitte, Term.
Mrs. Philip Price, Jr., Philadelphia, Pa.
Mr. & Mrs. Emmett D. Quan, Flossmoor
Dr. Jeremiah Quin, Chicago
Mr. David C. Quinn, New York, N. Y.
Miss Karen Lee Rankin, Western Springs
Mr. & Mrs. George A. Ranney, Libertyville
Mr. Harold A. Rantz, Chicago
Mr. Rudolph S. Rasin, Hinsdale
Mr. Leonard C. Rattner, New York, N. Y.
Mr. George C. Ray, Downers Grove
Mr. & Mrs. Albert L. Raymond, Northfield
Mr. John Ret, Oak Park
Mr. William M. Redfield, Chicago
Mrs. Florence A. Reed, Long Grove
Mr. & Mrs. Woodrow W. Reed, Flossmoor
Mrs. Richard H. Reel, Hinsdale
Mr. & Mrs. Henry Regnery, Chicago
Mr. & Mrs. John A. Reid, Clarendon Hills
Mr. Frank M. Richards, Chicago
Mr. Harper Richards, Chicago
Mr. Irving Richardson, Wheaton
Dr. & Mrs. Guenter B. Risse,Homewood
Mr. & Mrs. Harry S. Roberts, Hammond, Ind.
Mr. & Mrs. William J. Roberts, Lake Forest
Mrs. John Brett Robey, Chicago
Mr. & Mrs. Sanger P. Robinson, Chicago
Mr. & Mrs. Ralph K. Rockwood, Jr., Lancaster, Ohio
Mrs. Florence Roe, Chicago
Mr. Walter S. Rogal, Chicago
Mrs. James W. Rogers, Chicago
Mrs. Lilly M. Rosenberg, Evanston
Diane D. Ross, Elmwood Park
Mr. & Mrs. Donald C. Ross, Flossmoor
Mr. & Mrs. Charles Roudane, Glen Ellyn
Dr. & Mrs. Bernard Rubin, Chicago
Mr. John Ruettinger, Winnetka
Mr. & Mrs. Kenneth Russ, Wilmette
Mrs. Robert S. Ruwitch, Northbrook
Mrs. Patrick G. Ryan, Chicago
Mrs. T. E. Ryan, Wilmette
Mr. & Mrs. Edward L. Ryerson, Chicago
Mr. Francis J. Ryley, Phoenix, Ariz.
Mr. Benjamin Saks, Gary, Ind.
Mrs. Joseph Sample, Billings, Mont.
Miss Hannah S. Samuels, Chicago
Mrs. Gene Saper, Wilmette
Dr. Eric Saphir, Chicago
Mrs. Caroline S. Sarver, Evanston
Mrs. Henry Scarborough, Chicago
Mr. William C. Schaefer, Riverdale
Mrs. Vernon J. Scharp, Stockholm, Sweden
Miss Iris K. Schimkus, Chicago
Mr. Norbert Schimmel, Kings Point, N. Y.
Mr. & Mrs. David P. Schippers, Northbrook
Mr. Franklin B. Schmick, Chicago
Miss Anna P. Schneider, Chicago
Mr. & Mrs. Albert Schnitzer,Mounfa//uJtfe, A /̂.
Dr. & Mrs. Roger A. Scholten, Kalamazoo, Mich.
Mr. Lee Schooler, Chicago
Miss Evelyn D. Schulgasser, Chicago
Mr. & Mrs. M. D. Schwartz, Torrance, Calif.
Dr. & Mrs. Harold Schwartz, Highland Park
Dr. & Mrs. Wendell G. Scott, St. Louis, Mo.
11
oi.uchicago.edu
Mr. Robert L. Scranton, Chicago
Mrs. Noel M. Seeburg, Jr., Chicago
Mr. & Mrs. Franklin J. Siebert, Western Springs
Mr. & Mrs. Richard L. Selle, Chicago
Mr. & Mrs. Ovid R. Sellers, Sante Fe, N.M.
Mr. & Mrs. Everett E. Sentman, Lake Bluff
Dr. & Mrs. H. M. Serota, Chicago
Mrs. Van Vechten Shaffer, Cedar Rapids, Iowa
Mr. Charles D. Sharp, Chicago
Mr. Michael B. Sharpe, Chicago
Mr. & Mrs. Siegfried Shattil, Wilmette
Mrs. Doris S. Shayne, Chicago
Mr. Joseph G. Sheard, Charleville, Australia
Mr. CarlT. Shelby, Muncie, Ind.
Mr. & Mrs. Theodore Sheldon, Winnetka
Mrs. Merrill J. Shepio, Riverside
Mr. & Mrs. Charles R. Shields, Downers Grove
Mr. & Mrs. David L. Shillinglaw, Chicago
Mrs. John E. Shirley, Hinsdale
Miss Joann Sholts, Chicago
Mrs. Joseph C. Sibley, Hinsdale
Mr. & Mrs. Bernard Siegan, Chicago
Dr. & Mrs. Harley M. Sigmond, Northbrook
Mr. & Mrs. George N. Simpson, Chicago
Dr. & Mrs. F. Marott Sinex, Wellesley, Mass.
Rev. Richard J. Sklba, Milwaukee, Wis.
Mr. & Mrs. Frederick Slayton, Ontarioville
Mr. Allen E. Smith, Medical Lake, Wash.
Mr. & Mrs. Curtis Smith, Chicago
Mr. & Mrs. Farwell Smith, Chicago
Miss Gertrude Smith, Chicago
Mr. & Mrs. Hermon D. Smith, Lake Forest
Mr. & Mrs. Perry D. Smith, Winnetka
Mrs. Ralph W. Smith, Niles, Mich.
Mr. Richard W. Smith, Chicago
Mr. & Mrs. Solomon B. Smith, Lake Forest
Mrs. Walter Byron Smith. Chicago
Mr. William D. Smith, Toledo, Ohio
Mr. Robert K. Smither, Hinsdale
Mrs. Frank G. Snyder, Wheaton
Mr. Frederick Soderberg, Chicago
Miss Therese A. Solti, Gary, Ind.
Mr. Orpheus J. Sopranos, Chicago
Mr. & Mrs. John A. Spanogle, So. Portland, Me.
Mr. & Mrs. Allen P. Spaulding, A mado, Ariz.
Mr. & Mrs. William M. Spencer, Chicago
Mr. & Mrs. Herman Spertus, Glencoe
Mr. & Mrs. Robert E. Spiel, Lake Forest
Mrs. James L. Spiker, Hinsdale
Mr. Joel J. Sprayregen, Chicago
Mr. & Mrs. Edgar Stanton, Ji., Aspen, Colo.
Mr. & Mrs. Francis Stanton, Winnetka
Dr. & Mrs. Ward C. Starrett, Aurora
Mr. & Mrs. Henry B. Steele, Jr., Chicago
Mr. & Mrs. Henry L. Stein, Aspen, Colo.
Mr. & Mrs. Sydney Stein, Jr., Chicago
Mr. A Mrs. Samuel C. Steinman, Highland Park
Mr. & Mrs. Lester C. Stephens, Hinsdale
Mr. & Mrs. Gardner H. Stern, Chicago
Mr. John N. Stern, Chicago
Mrs. Roberta P. Stern, Wilmette
Mr. & Mrs. Ernest J. Stevens, Chicago
Mr. & Mrs. Lester C. Stephens, Hinsdale
Mr. Adlai E. Stevenson III, Chicago
Miss Nellie R. Stickle, Elmhurst
Dr. & Mrs. Jack Stillerman, Chicago
Mr. & Mrs. Walter T. Stockton, Evanston
Mr. & Mrs. Leon Stolz, Chicago
Mrs. James H. Stone, Cincinnati, Ohio
Mr. & Mrs. Lloyd Stone, Northbrook
Miss Ruth E. Strand, Elmhurst
Mr. & Mrs. Frederick W. Straus, Chicago
Mrs. Robert E. Straus, Chicago
Mr. & Mrs. Harold E. Strauss, Chicago
Mr. & Mrs. Clement Studebaker, Chicago
Dr. & Mrs. Robert S. Study, Chicago
Mr. Carroll H. Sudler, Lake Forest
Mrs. Shirley S. Swanson, Chicago
Mrs. Carl E. Swartz, Hinsdale
Mr. & Mrs. Gustavus F. Swift, Jr., Chicago
Mrs. Phelps H. Swift, Lake Bluff
Mr. Gale Thacker, Buffalo, N. Y.
Mrs. Ruth Thienpont, Chicago
Mr. & Mrs. B. Russell Thomas, Chicago
Mr. & Mrs. Eugene Thomas, Chicago
Mrs. T. M. Thomas, Lake Forest
Dr. John B. Thomison, Nashville, Tenn.
Mrs. R. E. Thompson,Racine, Wis.
Mr. Anthony Thormin, Los Angeles, Calif.
Mr. & Mrs. Theodore D. Tieken, Chicago
Mrs. W. M. Tomkins, Hinsdale
Mr. & Mrs. Serwyn H. Torff, Hinsdale
Mr. Philip Torno, Toronto, Canada
Mr. George P. Torrence, Jr.,Rockford
Mr. & Mrs. George W. Traver, Chicago
Mrs. Susan Trevelyan-Syke, Chicago
Mr. & Mrs. Chester D. Tripp, Chicago
Dr. & Mrs. Alex S. Tulsky, Chicago
Mr. & Mrs. Walter S. Underwood, Chicago
Dr. Klaus R. Unna, Hinsdale
Mrs. Clifton Utley, Chicago
Mr. Herbert A. Vance, Jr., Lake Forest
Mrs. Noah Van Cleef, Chicago
Mrs. Archibald B. Van Deusen, Winnetka
Mr. & Mrs. Errett Van Nice, Chicago
Mrs. Allen Van Wyck, Decatur, III
Mr. & Mrs. Harold Volkert, Chicago
Mr. Hans von der Marwitz, Chicago
Dr. & Mrs. Howard F. Vos, Evanston
Dr. & Mrs. H. K. Waddington, Chicago
Mr. & Mrs. Maurice Walk, Highland Park
Mrs. Allyn D. Warren, Lake Forest
Miss Mary Chilton Watrous, Athens, Greece
Mr. & Mrs. Philip M. Watrous, Lake Forest
Mr. & Mrs. Richard A. Watson, Stanford, Calif
Mr. & Mrs. Roderick S. Webster, Winnetka
Mr. & Mrs. Newell P. Weed, Chicago
Mr. & Mrs. Francis D. Weeks, Highland Park
Mr. David M. Weil, Chicago
Dr. Blanche C. Weill, Oakland, Calif.
Mr. & Mrs. Morton I. Weinberg, Lockport, N. Y.
Mr. Edward H. Weiss, Chicago
Mr. John R. Weiss, Chicago
Mrs. John P. Welling, Chicago
Mr. Ross S. Welch, Kenilworth
Mr. & Mrs. Preston A. Wells, Winnetka
Mr. & Mrs. Arthur D. Welton, Jr., Lake Forest
Mr. & Mrs. Barrett Wendell, Chicago
Mr. & Mrs. Peter L. Wentz, Chicago
Mr. & Mrs. Jan Wepsiec, Chicago
Mr. Benjamin E. Werremeyer, Chicago
Mrs. Joseph A. Wheelock, Jr., Los Angeles, Calif
Mr. William E. White, Oak Park
Mr. & Mrs. A. D. Whitney, Winnetka
Miss Jean Whitney, Chicago
Dr. & Mrs. J. Coburn Whittier, LaCanada, Calif.
Dr. & Mrs. R. E. Wiederanders, Wiltiston, N.D.
Wilbour library of Egyptology, Brooklyn, N. Y.
Mr. George D. Wilkinson, Jr., Chicago
Mr. & Mrs. Phillip Will, Jr., Evanston
Mr. & Mrs. Wayne Wille, Chicago
Mr. & Mrs. Gordon Williams, Flossmoor
Mrs. Lynn A. Williams, Sr., Chicago
Mr. Charles Mack Wills, Jr., Honolulu, Hawaii
Mr. Edward Thomas Wilson, Washington, D.C
Mrs. Elizabeth Wilson, Cleveland Heights, Ohio
Mrs. J. Parmenter Wilson, Chicago
Mr. & Mrs. John P. Wilson, Jr., Lake Forest
Mrs. Mildred W. Wilson, Birmingham, Ala.
Mr. & Mrs. S. J. Winkelman, Detroit, Mich
Mrs. E. K. mtcher, Pueblo, Colo.
Mr. Burleigh Withers, Western Springs
Dr. & Mrs. Ernest S. Wolf, Winnetka
Mr. John R. Womer, Chicago
*Mr. & Mrs. Rollin D. Wood, Winnetka
Miss Vivian Wood, Chicago
Mr. & Mrs. Frank H. Woods, Lake Forest
Miss Ruby K. Worner, New Orleans, La.
Mr. & Mrs. David B. Wrisley, Sr., Hinsdale
Dr. Stephen Yonick, OFM, St. Louis, Mo.
Mrs. Emily G. Young, Chicago
Mr. Ralph Youngren, Chicago
Mr. & Mrs. Frank Zapolis, Evergreen Park
Mrs. Harold F. Zeigler, Riverside
Mr. William N. Zeisel, Jr., Chicago
Mrs. Ernest Zeisler, Chicago
Mr. & Mrs. Austin M. Zimmerman, Algonquin
Mr. Robert Zimmermann, San Marino, Calif.
Mr. Robert Zinner, Beverly Hills, Calif
Mr. Charles F. Zukoski, Jr., Birmingham, Ala.
Mrs. Suzette M. Zurcher, Chicago
12
oi.uchicago.edu
ORIENTAL INSTITUTE MEMBERSHIP FUND
Condensed Statement 1967/68
Balance, July 1,1967
Restricted purposes
General
Total
Income July 1,1967-June 30,1968
Members' dues and gifts
Total
Expenditures, July 1,1967-June 30,1968
Support of Oriental Institute activities Museum Development Program Joint Oriental Institute-Middle East
Studies Center Tour Purchase of 5 Yortan Pottery Vessels Prehistoric Project Expense Chicago House Book Purchases 1966/67 Annual Report
$20,000.00 3,969.06
3,316.25 300.00 563.31 833.48
1,947.91
$16,822.53
3,766.80
$20,589.33
62,443.76
$83,033.09
Purchase of all terrain vehicle which Robert McC. Adams will use in Iraq field work 1,645.00
Lectures, Duplication and Entertainment 1,847.73
Total $34,422.74 $34,422.74
Balance, June 30,1968 $48,610.35
Held for restricted purposes $29,323.95
Operating balance, general purposes $19,286.40
oi.uchicago.edu
oi.uchicago.edu