REEC Faculty


PAUL P. BERNARD , Professor of History. Ph.D., University of Colorado. Early modern European history; Habsburg Empire; Central Europe.

MAUREEN H. BERRY , Associate Professor of Accountancy. Ph.D., UCLA. Public sector accounting; international accoun ting; Polish economy.

DMITRY V. BOBYSHEV , Assistant Professor of Slavic Languages and Literatures. Leningrad Technological Institule. Russian prose and poetry; Russian literary criticism.

EVELYN C. BRISTOL , Professor of Russian. Ph.D., University of California at Berkeley. Russian literature, nineteenth and twentieth centuries; Russian poetry.

ROBERT H. BURGER , Professor of Library Administration and Head of the Slavic and East European L ibrary. Ph.D., University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign. Russianbibliography; R ussian pre-revolulionary serials; cataloging and classification; information policy.

MARIANNA TAX CHOLDIN , C. Walter and Gerda B. Mortenson Distinguished Professor for International Library Programs. Ph.D., University of Chicago. Russian and Soviet bibliography; Russian and Soviet censorship.

DARINKA CRAFT , Assistant Professor of Library Administration and Assistant Slavic Librarian (Cataloger). MLS, University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign. Slavic cataloging.

VIKTORIA DALKO , Visiting Assistant Professor of Economics. Ph.D., University of Pennsylvania. International economics; economics of transition.

SALLY E. EWING . Visiting Lecturer in Sociology. Ph.D., Princeton University. Sociology of culture; sociology of law.

MAURICE FRIEDBERG , Professor of Slavic Languages and Literatures. Ph.D., Columbia University. Russian language and literature; Soviet literature; Russian poetry; Russian dissident literature; Polish literature; Soviet Jewry.

FRANK Y. GLADNEY , Associate Professor of Slavic Languages and Literatures. Ph.D., Harvard University. Polish, Czech, and Russian languages; Slavic linguistics.

JAN GORECKI , Professor of Sociology. Dr.Sc.Jur., University of Cracow. Sociology of law; sociology of ethics; human rights; criminal justice; family, former USSR and Eastern Europe.

FRED M. GOTTHEIL , Professor of Economics. Ph.D., Duke University. Comparative economic systems; economic thought; Marxist economics.

STEVEN P. HILL , Associate Professor of Russian and Cinema Studies. Ph.D., University of Michigan. Slavic linguistics; Russian and East European cinema; Russian drama; literary and technical translation; statistical linguistics, testing, and evaluation.

KEITH A. HITCHINS , Professor of History. Ph.D., Harvard University. East European history; Russia and the Danubian Basin; the growth of national movements in Austria-Hungary, 1867-19 18; modern Romanian history and literature; history and culture of Azerbaijan, Uzbekistan, Kazakhstan, and Tajikistan.

HANS H. HOCK , Professor of Sanskrit and Linguistics. Ph.D., Yale University. Indo-Eu ropean linguistics; Germanic and Balto-Slavic linguistics; Lithuanian; Indo-Iran ian; Sanskrit; general historical linguistics.

RONALD C. JENNINGS , Professor of History and Asian Studies. Ph.D., University of California at Los Angeles. Society, economy, and legal procedures of the Ottoman empire.

ROGER E. KANET , Professor of Political Science, Director of International Programs and Studies, and Associate Vice Chancellor for Academic Affairs. Ph.D., Princeton University. Soviet and post-Soviet foreign and domestic politics;comparat ive communism; East European politics; the former USSR and developing nations; international relations.

DIANE P. KOENKER , Professor of History and Director of the Russian and East European Center. Ph.D., University of Michigan. History of modern Russia and the Soviet Union; 1917 revolulion; Russian and Soviet working-class history; social history of the USSR, 1917-1930.

CAROL S. LEFF , Assistant Professor of Political Science. Ph.D., Harvard University. East European politics, especially Czechoslovakia; Soviet and post-Soviet politics; comparative politics (nationalism and democratization).

JOHN W.R. LEPINGWELL , Assistant Professor of Political Science. Ph.D., Massachusetts Institule of Technology. Russian civil-military relations and security policy; Russian-Ukrainian relations and s ecurity issues; Ukrainian security policy.

JOSEPH L. LOVE , Professor of History and Director of the Center for Latin American and Caribbean Studies. Ph.D., Columbia University. Third-world development; political awareness and participation; regionalism; comparative studies of Brazil and Romania.

PETER B. MAGGS , Corman Professor of Law. J.D., Harvard Law School. Soviet law; comparative studies of the legal regulation of economic activity in Russia, Ukraine, Kazakhstan, and East Central and Soulheastern Europe; law and technology.

HENRY P. MAGUIRE , Professor of Art. Ph.D., Harvard University. Ancient, medieval, and Byzantine art; Byzantine literature.

JOHN P. MCKAY , Professor of History. Ph.D., University of California at Berkeley. Russian and European economic and social history; economic development of Russia, 1880-1917.

LAURENCE H. MILLER , Professor of Library Administration and Senior Slavic Bibliographer. M.A., Indiana University. Slavic bibliography (history of Russian libraries and bibliography, technical services, and reference work).

ROBERT G. OUSTERHOUT , Professor of Architecture. Ph.D., University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign. Byzantine architecture; medieval and ancient architectural history.

TEMIRA PACHMUSS , Professor of Slavic Languages and Literatures. Ph.D., University of Washington. Russian literature of the eighteenth, nineteenth, and twentieth centuries; Russian emigre literature; comparative literature.

HANNS-MARTIN W. SCHOENFELD , H.T. Scovill Professor of Accountancy and Business Administration. Dr.habil. (Ph.D.), Technical Institule of Braunschweig. International accounting; management accounting; accounting history; accounting under centrally-controlled economies.

KARL-HEINZ J. SCHOEPS , Professor of German. Ph.D., University of Wisconsin. Bertolt Brecht; German literature; East German literature.

PAUL W. SCHROEDER , Professor of History and Political Science. Ph.D., University of Texas. Modern European diplomatic history; Central Europe; theory of history.

M. MOBIN SHORISH , Associate Professor of Comparative Education and Economics of Education. Ph.D., University of Chicago. Comparative education; Central Asia; education and economic development; education and national minorities.

DMYTRO M. SHTOHRYN , Professor of Library Administration and Associate Slavic Librarian (Cataloger). Ph.D., University of Ottawa. Slavic cataloging; Slavic bibliography; Ukrainian bibliography and literature.

OLGA SOFFER , Professor of Anthropology and Head of the Department of Slavic Languages and Literatures. Ph.D., City University of New York. Archaeology of the Old World (with emphasis on the prehistory of the former USSR and Eastern Europe); hunter-gatherer adaptations; anthropological and archaeological theory; paleoanthropology; Pleistocene ecology; archaeozoology.

RICHARD TEMPEST , Associate Professor of Russian. D.Phil., Oxford University. Nineteenth -century Russian literature; Chaadaev; Soviet youlh; Bulgarian literature.

BENJAMIN UROFF , Associate Professor of History. Ph.D., Columbia University. Russian history; pre-Petrine Russia; Russian cultural and intellectual history.

MARVIN G. WEINBAUM , Professor of Political Science and Director of the Program in Soulh and West Asian Studies. Ph.D., Columbia University. Iran, Afghanistan, Pakistan, and Russian/Soviet relations with them; Egypt; development politics; food and agricultural politics.

LADISLAV ZGUSTA , Professor of Linguistics and the Classics and Director of the Center for Advanced Study. Ph.D., Prague University. Indo-European comparative linguistics; lexicogr aphy; linguistics of Asia Minor; Ossetic and other languages of the Caucasus; Hittite; ancient and modern Greek.

Vesna Radnovic-Kocic
Helen F. Sullivan
Elizabeth M. Talbot


PAUL P. BERNARD

Title: Professor of History
Appointed at Illinois: 1968
Education:
University of Denver, BA (social science), 1948
University of Colorado, MA (history), 1952
University of Colorado, PhD (history), 1955
Previous experience:
Instructor in French, University of Colorado, 1955
Instructor to professor of history, Colorado College, 1955-68
Honors and awards:
Fellow, Ford Foundation, 1960-61
Fellow, American Philosophical Society, 1971-72
Senior fellow, National Endowment for the Humanities, 1975-76
Fellow, American Council of Learned Societies, 1982-83
On program: 20 percent
Fields: Early modern European history; Habsburg Empire; Central Europe
Languages: French, German, Italian, Flemish, Czech, Swedish
Main relevant publications:
The Limits of Enlightenment. University of Illinois Press, 1979.
"Kaunitz and the Cost of Diplomacy," East European Quarterly, Vol. XVII, 1983.
"Kaunitz and Austria's Secret Fund," East European Quarterly, Vol. XVI, 1982.
"How Not to Invent the Steamship," East European Quarterly, Vol. XIV, 1980.
"The Emperor's Friend: Joseph II and Field Marshal Lacy," East European Quarterly, Vol. X, No. 4, 1976, pp. 401-408.
"The Philosophe as Public Servant: T.P. Gebler," East European Quarterly, Vol. VII, 1973.

(Bernard's main scholarly publications, including 5 books and many articles, are in the field of the Habsburg Monarchy and touch on Bohemia and Moravia to a relatively minor extent.)

MAUREEN H. BERRY

Title: Associate Professor of Accountancy
Appointed at Illinois: 1974

Education:
California State University at Los Angeles, BS, 1965
California State University at Los Angeles, MBA, 1967
UCLA, PhD, 1976
Previous experience:
Assistant professor of accountancy, California State University at Northridge, 1969
Teaching associate, Graduate School of Management, University of California at Los Angeles, 1970-71
Assistant professor of accountancy, California State University at Los Angeles, 1972-73
Cooperative research with several scholars in Poland, 1974--
Fulbright lecturer, Central School of Planning and Statistics, Warsaw, 1983-84
On program: 50 percent
Fields: Public sector accounting, international accounting, Polish economy
Languages: French, Polish, German
Overseas experience: Poland
Main relevant publications:
"The Reshaping of the Accounting Function in Poland" (with Gertruda Krystyna Swiderska), International Handbook of Accounting Education and Certification, Pergamon Press, 1992, pp. 499-516.
."Accounting's Role in Economic Development: Some Normative Evidence from the German Democratic Republic (with O. Finley Graves), International Journal of Accounting, pp. 189-220.
"Accounting's Cultural Development in the People's Republic of China," The Accounting and Economic Problems of Contemporary Importance to the Far East, Center for International Education and Research in Accounting, University of Illinois, April 1986.
"The Current Status of the Accounting Function in Poland," Soviet and East European Accounting Bulletin, Aulumn 1985.
"Accounting in Socialist Countries," International Accounting, H. Peter Holzer, ed. Harper & Row, 1984.
"Economic Integration versus National Sovereignty: Problems with Intergovernmentalism," Stymulatory Rozwoje w Procesach Integracyjnych Krajow EWG i RWPG (Developmental Stimulants in the Integration Processes of the EEC and COMECON Countries), Antoni Marszalek, ed. Ksiazka i Wiedza, 1984.
"Harmonization of Financial Accounting and Reporting in the EEC: Current Developments," Proceedings of the Convention of Polish Chartered Accountants. Kolobrzeg, Poland, May 1984.
"The Accounting Function in Socialist Economies," International Journal of Accounting, Vol. 18, No. 1 (Fall 1982), pp. 185-198.

(Also a number of other scholarly publications not related to the East European field.)

DMITRY BOBYSHEV

Title: Adjunct Lecturer in Slavic Languages and Literatures
Appointed at Illinois: 1985

Education:
Leningrad Technological Institule

Other experience:
Russian poet, member of Writers' Union, St. Petersburg, Russia
Lecturer, University of Wisconsin, Milwaukee, 1982-85
Visiting lecturer, St. Petersburg University, fall 1991
Visiting lecturer, Hertzen Russian State Pedagogical University, St. Petersburg, fall 1991, summer 1993
On program: 50 percent
Fields: Russian prose and poetry; Russian literary criticism
Languages: Russian
Overseas experience: Russia
Main relevant publications:
Russkie tertsinyi i drugie stihotvorenija. St. Petersburg, 1992.
Polnota vsego, izbrannye stikhi i poemy. St. Petersburg, 1992.
"History of Russian Emigr‚ Literature" (notes for the course), Sankt-Petersburgskii Universitet, 34-50 (1991), 1-4 (1992).
Beasts of St. Anthony. New York, 1989.
Ziyaniya: Sbornik stikhotvorenii i poem. Paris, 1979.
Various poems published in Kontinent, Vremya i my, Vestnik RKhD, Znamya, Zvezda, Russkaya mysl', and other periodicals.
Various articles and reviews published in Kontinent, Streletz, Znamya, Zvezda, and The New Review.

EVELYN CORDELIA BRISTOL

Title: Professor of Russian
Appointed at Illinois: 1965

Education:
University of California at Berkeley, BA, 1946
University of California at Berkeley, MA, 1948
University of California at Berkeley, PhD, 1959
Previous experience:
Acting assistant professor, University of Washington, 1957-58
Acting assistant professor, UCLA, 1958-59
Research linguist, University of California at Berkeley, 1959-60
Assistant professor, University of Texas, 1960-65
Research, Leningrad University, 1963-64
On program: 100 percent
Fields: Russian literature, 19th and 20th centuries; Russian poetry
Languages: Russian, Polish, Czech, Serbo-Croatian, French, German, Spanish
PhDs supervised: 11
Main relevant publications:
A History of Russian Poetry. New York: Oxford University Press, 1990.
Russian Literature and Criticism: Selected Papers from the Second World Congress for Soviet and East European Studies, ed. and intro. Berkeley Slavic Specialities, 1983.
East European Literature: Papers from the Second World Congress for Soviet and East European Studies, ed. and intro. Berkeley Slavic Specialties, 1982.
Fedor Sologub, Rasskazy (Short Stories), selection and intro. Berkeley Slavic Specialties, 1979.
"The Avant-Garde in Russia and the West," American Contribulions to the XIth International Congress of Slavists, Robert Maguire, ed. Berkeley: Berkeley Slavic Specialties, 1993.
"Chapter 8. The Turn of the Century, 1895-1925," Cambridge History of Russian Literature, Charles Moser, ed. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 1989, pp. 387-457.
"Blok between Nietzsche and Soloviev," Nietzsche's Influence on Russian Symbolists and Their Circles, Bernice G. Rosenthal, ed. Princeton University Press, 1986.
"Pasternak: In Search of Literary Simplicity," Russian Literature and American Critics, Kenneth Brostrom, ed. University of Michigan Press, 1984, pp. 77-84.
"From Romanticism to Symbolism in France and Russia," American Contribulions to the Ninth International Congress of Slavists, Paul Debreczeny, ed. Slavica, 1983.

ROBERT H. BURGER

Title: Associate Slavic Librarian (Reference) and Professor of Library Administration; Head of the Slavic and East European Library; Coordinator, Area Studies Division, University Library
Appointed at Illinois: 1976

Education:
Tufts University, BA (Russian), 1969
University of North Carolina, MA (Slavic), 1975
University of North Carolina, MLS, 1976
University of Illinois, Certificate of Advanced Studies in Librarianship, 1978
University of Illinois, PhD (library and information science), 1988
Professional activities:
Advisory Committee, American Bibliography of Slavic and East European Studies, AAASS, 1991--
On program: 100 percent
Fields: Russian bibliography; Russian pre-revolulionary serials; cataloging and classification; information policy
Languages: Russian, French
Main relevant publications:
Information Policy: A Framework for Evaluation and Policy Research. Norwood, NJ: Ablex Publishing Co., 1993.
Privacy, Secrecy, and Information Policy (editor), Library Trends, Summer 1986.
Aulhority Work:
The Creation, Use, Maintenance, and Evaluation of Aulhority Records and Files. Libraries Unlimited, 1985.
Scientific Communications and Informatics, A. I. Mikhailov, A. I. Chernyi, eds.; and R. S. Giliarevskii, translator. Information Resources Press, 1984.
"Aulhority Control," Festschrift for Katheryn Lulher Henderson, by Linda C. Smith and Rulh Carter, eds. (at press).
"O filosofii razvitiia bibliotechnogo dela v SShA" (On the Philosophy of the Development of Librarianship in the USA). Bibliteki i bibliotechnoe delo SSha Kompleksnyi podkhod (Libraries and Librarianship in the USA: A Complex Approach), V. V. Popov, ed. Moscow: Nauchno-proizvodstvennoe predpriiatie "Inform- Sistema," 1992, pp. 6-10.
"Compuler Assisted Theory-Building in Library Technical Services," Library Resources and Technical Services, Vol. 36, No. 4 (Oct. 1992), pp. 461-469.
"Use of Literature by East European Scientists: What Influences Place of Publication of Sources Cited?" with F. W. Lancaster and Beverly Rauchfuss, Scientometrics, Vol. 24, No. 3 (1992), pp. 419-439.
"NCCP as a National Information Policy: An Evaluation," Technical Services Quarterly, Vol. 8, No. 2 (1990), pp. 55-56.

MARIANNA TAX CHOLDIN

Title: C. Walter and Gerda B. Mortenson Distinguished Professor for International Library Programs
Appointed at Illinois: 1969

Education:
University of Chicago, BA (Russian), 1962
University of Chicago, MA (Slavic), 1967
University of Chicago, PhD (librarianship), 1979
Previous experience:
Slavic bibliographer, Michigan State University Library, 1967-69
Head, Slavic and East European Library, University of Illinois, 1982-89
Director, Russian and East European Center, 1987-89
Professional activities:
Chairman, Bibliography and Documentation Committee, AAASS, 1978-83; member, Board of Directors, 1987-89; co-chair, Program Committee, National Convention, Chicago, November 1989
Member, Subcommittee on Bibliography, Information Retrieval, and Documentation of the Joint Committee on Soviet Studies and the Joint Committee on Eastern Europe (ACLS-SSRC), 1984--
Member, Board of Directors, IREX, 1991--
Member, IREX Committee on Archival, Library, and Information Sciences, 1991--
On program: 100 percent
Fields: Russian and Soviet bibliography; Russian and Soviet censorship
Languages: German, Russian, French
Main relevant publications:
Tsenzura inostrannykh knig v Rossiiskoi Imperii i Sovetskom Soiuze: katalog vystavki, Moskva, Mai-Iiun' 1993 (The Censorship of Foreign Books in the Russian Empire and the Soviet Union: Catalog of an Exhibition, Moscow, May-June 1993), guest curator and aulhor of introductory essay, "Rudomino," 1993.
The Red Pencil: Artists, Scholars, and Censors in the USSR, Maurice Friedberg, ed. Unwin and Hyman, 1989.
Books, Libraries, and Information in Slavic and East European Studies: Proceedings of the Second International
Conference of Slavic Librarians and Information Specialists, ed. Russica, 1986.
A Fence around the Empire: Russian Censorship of Western Ideas. Duke University Press, 1985.
Censorship in the Slavic World: Catalog of an Exhibition in the New York Public Library, June 1-October 15, 1984, guest curator and aulhor of catalog. New York Public Library, 1984.
Access to Information in the 80s: Proceedings of the First International Conference of Slavic Librarians and Information Specialists, ed. Russica, 1982.
"Foreign Publications in Soviet Libraries from Lenin to Gorbachev," Libraries and Culture, Vol. 26, No. 1, Winter 1991, pp. 135-150.
"The Archives of Springer-Verlag (Heidelberg) as a Source for Russian and Soviet Book History," Slavic Review, Vol. 48, No. 1, Spring 1989, pp. 100-103.
"Recent Developments in U.S.-Soviet Library Relations," Solanus, n.s. 2, 1988, pp. 81-87.
"The New Censorship: Censorship by Translation in the Soviet Union," Journal of Library History, Vol. 21, No. 2, 1986, pp. 334-349.

DARINKA CRAFT

Title: Assistant Slavic Librarian (Cataloger) and Assistant Professor of Library Administration
Appointed at Illinois: 1968 (professional: 1974)

Education:
University of Belgrade, BA equivalent (French), 1958
University of Illinois, MLS, 1974
On program: 100 percent
Field: Slavic cataloging
Languages: Serbo-Croatian, Russian, French, Italian, Ukrainian, Slovenian, Macedonian, Czech, Bulgarian, Romanian, Polish

VIKTORIA DALKO

Title: Visiting Lecturer in Economics
Appointed at Illinois: 1993

Education:
MA, University of Economic Sciences, Budapest, Hungary, 1987
PhD, University of Pennsylvania, 1992
Previous experience:
Principal adviser to the Speaker of the Hungarian Parliament Chief of Staff, 1990-91
Depuly manager, National Bank of Hungary, 1991
Depuly manager, Monetary Research Department, National Bank of Hungary, 1992-93
On program: 30 percent
Fields: International economics, economics of transition
Languages: Hungarian, English, German
Main relevant publications:
Business Economics (co-aulhor, edited by Attila Chikan), University of Economic Sciences. Budapest: Akademia Kiado, 1989.
"Modeling Time Varying Risk Premium," University of Pennsylvania, 1990.
"Demographic Transition and Its Implications on Aggregate Savings in the U.S., 1830-1900," University of Pennsylvania, 1992.

SALLY E. EWING

Title: Visiting Lecturer in Sociology
Appointed at Illinois: 1992

Education:
Tufts University, BA (Russian studies), 1974
Moscow State University, 1979-80
Princeton University, PhD (sociology), 1984
Previous experience:
Assistant instructor, Princeton University, 1981
Honors and awards:
IREX grant, 1979-80
On program: 100 percent
Fields: Sociology of culture, sociology of law
Languages: Russian, German
Main relevant publications:
"The Russian Social Insurance Movement, 1912-1914: An Ideological Analysis," Slavic Review, Vol. 50, No. 1, Winter 1991.
"The Science and Politics of Insurance Medicine," Health and Society in Revolulionary Russia, S. Solomon and J. Hulchinson, eds. Indiana University Press, 1990.

MAURICE FRIEDBERG

Title: Professor of Russian Literature (Head of Department, 1975-93)
Appointed at Illinois: 1975

Education:
Brooklyn College, CUNY, BS, 1951
Columbia University, AM and Certificate of Russian Institule, 1953
Columbia University, PhD, 1958
Previous experience:
Lecturer to associate professor, Russian Division, Hunter College, CUNY, 1955-65
Visiting assistant and associate professor, Columbia University, 1961-62 and 1965
Professor, Indiana University, 1966-75 (director, Russian and East European Institule, 1967-71)
Honors and awards:
Fulbright visiting professor, Hebrew University, Jerusalem, 1965-66
Guggenheim fellowships, 1971-72, 1981-82
Directeur d'etudes invite, Ecole des Haules Etudes en Sciences Sociales, Paris, 1985
National Endowment for the Humanities fellowship, 1990-91
On program: 100 percent
Fields: Russian language and literature; Soviet literature; Russian poetry; Russian dissident literature; Polish literature; Soviet Jewry
Languages: Polish, Russian, Yiddish, French, German, Ukrainian, Hebrew, Belorussian
PhDs supervised: 20
Main relevant publications:
Translation in Russia: History, Theory, Practice, and Impact (to appear in 1993).
How Things Were Done in Odessa: Cultural and Intellectual Pursuits in a Soviet City. Boulder: Westview Press, 1991, 146 pp.
The Red Pencil: Artists, Scholars, and Censors in the USSR, with Marianna Tax Choldin, eds. Boston: Unwin and Hyman, 1989, 240 pp.
Soviet Society under Gorbachev, with Heyward Isham, eds. Armonk, NY and London: M. E. Sharpe, Inc., 1987, 160 pp.
Russian Culture in the 1980s. Washington, D.C.: Center for Strategic and International Studies, Georgetown University, 1985, 88 pp.
Reading for the Masses: Popular Soviet Fiction 1917-1980. Washington, D.C.: International Communications Agency, 1981, 103 pp.
A Helsinki Record: The Availability of Soviet Russian Literature in the United States. New York: U.S. Helsinki Watch Committee, 1980, 63 pp.
A Decade of Euphoria: Western Literature in Post-Stalin Russia. Bloomington: Indiana University Press, 1977, 371 pp.
The Young Lenin, by Leon Trotsky, trans. by Max Eastman, edited and annotated by Maurice Friedberg. New York: Doubleday, 1972, 224 pp. British edition: David and Charles, 1972.
(Plus over 70 articles on related topics.)

FRANK Y. GLADNEY

Title: Associate Professor of Slavic Languages and Literatures
Appointed at Illinois: 1963
Education:
Harvard University, BA, 1957
Harvard University, MA, 1959
Harvard University, PhD, 1966
Professional activities:
Editor, Slavic and East European Journal, AATSEEL, Vols. 15-19, 1971-75.
On program: 100 percent
Fields: Polish, Czech, and Russian language, Slavic linguistics
Languages: Russian, Polish, Czech, German, French
PhDs supervised: 5
Main relevant publications:
Handbook of Polish. G&G Press, 1983, 155 pp.
"Russian Stanovitsja `Stands up' and +i Imperfective Thematization," Journal of Slavic Linguistics, Vol. 1, No. 2, 1993, pp. 61-79.
"On Glides Following Vocalic Verbs in Russian," Linguistic Studies in Memory of Theodore M. Lightner, Studies in the Linguistic Sciences, Vol. 15, No. 2, Fall 1985, pp. 130-152.
"Prepositions and Case Government in Russian," Case in Slavic, R.D. Brecht and J. S. Levine, eds. Slavica, 1986, pp. 130-151.
"Did Slavic Develop Declension Classes?" American Contribulions to the Ninth International Congress of Slavists (M.S. Flier, ed.), Vol. 1, Slavica, 1983, pp. 119-130.
"The New Polish Dictionary," Dictionaries, Vol. 4, 1982, pp. 169-200.

JAN GORECKI

Title: Professor of Sociology
Appointed at Illinois: 1970

Education:
University of Cracow, Mgr. Jr., 1947
University of Wroclaw, Dr. Jr., 1949
University of Cracow, Dr. Sc. Jur., 1958
Previous experience:
Junior assistant, University of Cracow, 1947-50; senior assistant, 1950-51
Associate professor, Polish Academy of Sciences, 1959-64
Associate professor, University of Cracow, 1959-68
Honors and awards:
British Council Scholar, London School of Economics, 1959-60
Foreign Universities exchange visitor, University of London, 1963
Fellow, Center for Advanced Study in the Behavioral Sciences, Stanford, 1969-70
Rockefeller Fellow in the Humanities, 1976-77
Associate, Center for Advanced Study, University of Illinois, 1976-77, 1983-84
On program: 25 percent
Fields: Sociology of law; sociology of ethics; human rights; criminal justice; family, USSR and Eastern Europe
Languages: Polish, Russian, German, French
Overseas experience: Poland
Main relevant publications:
Capital Punishment: Criminal Law and Social Evolulion. Columbia University Press, 1983.
A Theory of Criminal Justice. Columbia University Press, 1979.
Sociology and Jurisprudence of Leon Petrazycki. University of Illinois Press, 1975.
Divorce in Poland: A Contribulion to the Sociology of Law. Moulon, 1970.
"Justification of Human Rights," American Journal of Jurisprudence, Vol. 34, 1989, pp. 43-59.
"Human RightsțExplaining the Power of a Legal and Moral Idea," American Journal of Jurisprudence, Fall 1987.
"Capital PunishmentțFor and Against," Michigan Law Review, Vol. 4, 1985.
"Crime Causation TheoriesțFailures and Perspectives," British Journal of Sociology, Vol. 4, 1974.
"Communist Family Patterns," University of Illinois Law Forum, Vol. 1, 1972.
"Industrial Accident Compensation in Eastern EuropețAn Empirical Inquiry," Stanford Law Review, Vol. 2, 1971.
"Recrimination in Eastern Europe," American Journal of Comparative Law, Vol. 4, 1966.

FRED M. GOTTHEIL

Title: Professor of Economics
Appointed at Illinois: 1959

Education:
McGill University, BA, 1954
Duke University, MA, 1957
Duke University, PhD, 1959
Previous experience:
Instructor, Duke University, 1956-59
On program: 20 percent
Fields: Comparative economic systems, economic thought, Marxist economics
Languages: French, Hebrew, Russian
Main relevant publications:
Marx's Economic Predictions. Northwestern University Press, 1966, 216 pp.
"A Neoclassical Interpretation of the Withering of the Soviet State," Economic Systems and Public Policy: Essays in Honor of Calvin Bryce Hoover, Smith and de Vyver, eds. Duke University Press, 1966, pp. 193-206.

(Other recent publications, in the field of economic thought and comparative economics, are focused on Israel rather than on the Soviet Union or Eastern Europe.)

STEVEN P. HILL

Title: Associate Professor of Russian and Cinema Studies
Appointed at Illinois: 1961

Education:
Stanford University, BA, 1957
University of Michigan, MA, 1958
University of Michigan, PhD, 1965
On program: 100 percent
Fields: Slavic linguistics; Russian and East European cinema; Russian drama; literary and technical translation; statistical linguistics, testing, and evaluation.
Languages: Russian, French, German, Polish.
Main relevant publications:
Behind the Soviet Screen, Val Golovskoy and John Rimberg, eds., and trans. of appendices. Ardis: Ann Arbor, 1986, pp. 116-144.
The N-Factor and Russian Prepositions. Moulon, 1977, 365 pp.
"Career Survey of Capra, Lubitsch, Sternberg, and Wyler," Master SpacețFilm Images of Capra, Lubitsch, Sternberg, and Wyler, Barbara Bowman, ed. Greenwood: NY, 1992, pp. 145-159.
"The Strange Case of the Vanishing Epigraphs [of Battleship Potemkin]," Eisenstein's Battleship Potemkin, Herbert Marshall, ed. Avon, 1978, pp. 74-68.
"Ilia Frez and Russian Children's Films," Film Culture, No. 58, 1974, pp. 293-335.
"The Beginnings of Soviet Broadcasting and the Role of V.I. Lenin" (with Thomas Guback), Journalism Monographs, No. 26, 1972, 43 pp.
"A Quantitative View of Soviet Cinema," Cinema Journal, Vol. 11, No. 2, 1972, pp. 18-25. (Later reprinted in Cinema Examined, R.D. Mac Cann, ed.) Dulton: NY, 1982, pp. 76-83.
"The Classic Period of Soviet CinemațKuleshov, Eisenstein, and the Others," Film Journal, Vol. 1, No. 3, 1971, pp. 16-33.
"Russian Drama after ChekhovțA Guide to English Translations, 1900-1969," with John Dunkelberger, Theatre Documentation, Vol. 2, No. 1, 1969, pp. 85-108.
"Russian Film Terminology," Slavic and East European Journal, Vol. 12, No. 2, 1968, pp. 199-205.

KEITH A. HITCHINS

Title: Professor of History
Appointed at Illinois: 1967

Education:
Union College, BA, 1952
Harvard University, MA, 1953
Harvard University, PhD, 1964
Previous experience and professional activities:
Instructor and assistant professor of history, Wake Forest College, 1958-65
Assistant professor, Rice University, 1966-67
Member, Joint Committee on Eastern Europe, ACLS-SSRC, 1982-89
Member, Committee on Bibliography, Information Retrieval, and Documentation, Joint Committee on
Soviet Studies, ACLS-SSRC, 1986-89
Honors and awards:
Nicolae Iorga Prize for History, Romanian Academy of Sciences, 1985
Member, Romanian Academy of Sciences, 1991
Doctor Honoris Causa, University of Cluj, Romania, 1991
Doctor Honoris Causa, Faculty of Theology, University of Sibiu, Romania, 1993
On program: 100 percent
Fields: East European history; Russia and the Danubian Basin; the growth of national movements in Austria-Hung- ary, 1867-1918; modern Romanian history and literature; history and culture of Azerbaidzhan, Uzbekistan, Kazakhstan, and Tajikistan
Languages: Romanian, French, German, Hungarian, Bulgarian, Slovak, Russian, Serbo-Croatian, Albanian, Azerbaijani, Turkish, Kazakh, Uzbek, Tajik
Overseas experience: Romania
PhD supervised: 5
Main relevant publications:
Constiinta nationala si actiune politica la Romanii din Transilvania, 1700-1868. Editura Dacia, 1987, 256 pp; Vol. 2 (1868-1918), Editura Dacia, 1992, 244 pp.
The Idea of Nation. The Romanians of Transylvania. 1691-1849. Editura Stiintifica si Enciclopedica, 1985, 221 pp.; second edition, 1988.
Studies on Romanian National Consciousness. Nagard, 1983, 259 pp.
Hungarica 1961-1974. Literaturbericht ber Neuerscheinungen zur Geschichte Ungarns von den Arpaden bis 1970. Historische Zeitschrift, Sonderheft 9, Oldenbourg Verlag, 1981, 144 pp.
Studies in East European Social History (editor), Vols. 1 and 2, E. J. Brill, 1977-81, 380 pp.
Orthodoxy and Nationality. Andreiu Saguna and the Rumanians of Transylvania, 1846-1873. Harvard University Press, 1977, 322 pp.
The Nationality Problem in Austria-Hungary. Alexander Vaida's Reports to Francis Ferdinand's Chancellery, E.J. Brill, 1974, 188 pp.
Rumanian Studies (editor), Vols. I-V, E.J. Brill, 1970-85, 1062 pp.
The Rumanian National Movement in Transylvania, 1780-1849. Harvard University Press, 1969, 311 pp.

HANS HENRICH HOCK

Title: Associate Professor of Linguistics and the Classics
Appointed at Illinois: 1967

Education:
Munich University and Free University of Berlin, 1962
Northwestern University, MA, 1962
Yale University, PhD, 1971
Previous experience:
Instructor in German, Tuskegee Institule, summer 1964
Visiting lecturer in linguistics, University of Pennsylvania, spring 1972
On program: 10 percent
Fields: Indo-European linguistics, Germanic and Balto-Slavic linguistics, Lithuanian, Indo-Iranian, Sanskrit, general historical linguistics.
Languages: German, French, Spanish, Italian, Latin, Lithuanian, Norwegian, Danish, Swedish, Sanskrit, Greek.
Main relevant publications:
Principles of Historical Linguistics. Berlin: Moulon de Gruyter, 1986, 722 pp. [Also Principles of Historical Linguistics, second, corrected and augmented edition, 1991.]
Papers on Diachronic Syntax: Six Case Studies (editor), Studies in the Linguistic Sciences, Vol. 12, No. 2, 1982.
Papers on Historical Linguistics: Theory and Method (co-editor), Studies in the Linguistic Sciences, Vol. 5, No. 2, 1975.
Studies in Baltic Linguistics (with M.J. Kenstowicz, eds.), Studies in the Linguistic Sciences, Vol. 2, No. 2, 1972, 203 pp.
"Causation in Language Change," Oxford International Encyclopedia of Linguistics, W. Bright, ed., 1.228-231. London and New York: Oxford University Press, 1992.
"Initial Strengthening," Phonologica 1988: Proceedings of the 6th International Phonology Meeting, W.U. Dressler, et al., eds. Cambridge: University Press, 1991, pp. 101-110.
"Reconstruction and Syntactic Typology: A Plea for a Different Approach," Explanation in Historical Linguistics, G.W. Davis & G.K. Iverson, eds. Amsterdam & Philadelphia: Benjamins, 1992, pp. 105-121.
"On the Origin and Development of Relative Clauses in Early Germanic, with Special Emphasis on Beowulf," Stțfcrțft: Studies in Germanic Linguistics, E.H. Antonsen & H.H. Hock, eds. Amsterdam & Philadelphia: Benjamins, 1991, pp. 55-89.
"AUX-Cliticization as a Motivation for Word Order Change," Studies in the Linguistics Sciences, Vol. 12, No. 1, 1982, pp. 91-101.
"The Sanskrit Quotative: A Historical and Comparative Study," Studies in the Linguistics Sciences, Vol. 12, No. 2, 1982, pp. 39-85.
(Other publications are in Germanic, Indo-European, Indo-Iranian, Sanskrit, and general historical linguistics.)

RONALD C. JENNINGS

Title: Professor of History and Asian Studies
Appointed at Illinois: 1972

Education:
Harvard University, BA, 1963
Harvard University, MA (Miulie East studies), 1967
University of California at Los Angeles, PhD (Islamic studies), 1972
Honors and awards:
Institule of Turkish Studies, 1987-1988
Research grant, Joint Committee on the Near and Miulie East of the American Council of Learned
Societies and the Social Science Research Council, 1978-79
National Endowment for the Humanities fellowship, 1975-76
On program: 100 percent
Fields: Society, economy, and legal procedures of the Ottoman empire
Languages: Turkish, French, German, Arabic
Main relevant publications:
Christians and Muslims in Ottoman Cyprus and the Mediterranean World, 1571-1640. New York University Press (at press).
"Pious Foundations in the Society and Economy of Ottoman Trabzon, 1565-1640," Journal of the Economic and Social History of the Orient, Vol. 33, 1990, pp. 217-336.
"Black Slaves and Free Blacks in Ottoman Cyprus, 1590-1640," Journal of the Economic and Social History of the Orient, Vol. 30, 1987, pp. 286-302.
"The Population, Taxation, and Wealth in the Cities and Villages of Cyprus, According to the Detailed Population Survey (defter-i mufassal) of 1571," Inalcik Festschrift, Journal of Turkish Studies, Vol. 10, 1986, pp. 175- 189.
"The Society and Economy of the District of Macuka in the Ottoman Judicial Registers of Trabzon, 1560-1640," Continuity and Change in Late Byzantine and Early Ottoman Society, H. Lowry and A. Bryer, eds. Birmingham and Washington, 1986, pp. 129-154.
"Some Thoughts on the Gazi-thesis," Wiener Zeitschrift fr die Kunde des Morganlandes, Vol. 76, 1986, pp. 151- 161.
"The Population, Society, and Economy of the Region of Erciyes dagi in the Sixteenth Century," Contribulions a l'histoire economique et sociale de l'empire ottoman, Collection Turcica III, 1983.
"The Legal Position of Women in Kayseri, a Large Ottoman City, 1590-1630," International Journal of Women's Studies, Vol. 3, 1980, pp. 559-582.
"Limitations of the Judicial Powers of the Kadi in Seventeenth-Century Ottoman Kayseri," Studia Islamica, Vol. 50, 1979, pp. 151-184.
"Kadi, Court, and Legal Procedure in Seventeenth-Century Ottoman Kayseri," Studia Islamica, Vol. 48, 1978, pp. 133-172.

ROGER E. KANET

Title: Associate Vice Chancellor for Academic Affairs, Director of International Programs and Studies, and Professor of Political Science
Appointed at Illinois: 1974 (visitor, 1973-74)

Education:
Berchmanskolleg, Pullach-bei-Muenchen, Germany, PhB (philosophy), 1960
Xavier University, AB (philosophy), 1961
Lehigh University, MA (international relations), 1963
Princeton University, AM, (political science), 1965
Princeton University, PhD (political science), 1966
Previous experience:
Assistant professor and associate professor, Kansas, 1966-74
Professional activities:
Lecturer, U.S. Information Agency, 1976, 1979, 1980, 1983, 1985
Member, Governing Board of the International Security and Arms Control Section, American Political
Science Association, 1990--1992
Chair, American-Soviet Relations Section, International Studies Association, 1990--1992
On program: 50 percent
Fields: Soviet foreign and domestic politics; comparative communism; Eastern European politics; USSR and developing nations; international relations
Languages: German, Russian, French, Polish
PhDs supervised: 15
Main relevant publications:
Soviet Foreign Policy in Transition, with Deborah Nulter Miner and Tamara J. Resler, eds.; and aulhor of one chapter with Garth T. Katner. Cambridge, 1992, xvi, 308 pp.
The Cold War as Cooperation: Superpower Cooperation in Regional Conflict Management, with Edward A. Kolodziej, eds.; and aulhor of one chapter. London: Macmillan and Johns Hopkins, 1991, xv, 439 pp.
The Limits to Soviet Power in the Developing Nations: Thermidor in the Revolulionary Process, with Edward A. Kolodziej, eds.; and aulhor of two chapters. London: Macmillam and Johns Hopkins, 1989, xx, 531 pp.
The Soviet Union, Eastern Europe, and the Developing States, ed. and aulhor of two articles. Cambridge, 1987, xvi, 233 pp.
Soviet Foreign Policy and East-West Relations, ed. and aulhor of one article. Pergamon, 1982, x, 197 pp.
Soviet Foreign Policy in the 1980s, ed. and aulhor of one article. Praeger, 1982, xxii, 364 pp.
Background to Crisis: Politics and Policy in Gierek's Poland, with Maurice D. Simon, eds.; and aulhor of one article. Westview, 1981, 436 pp.
Soviet Economic and Political Relations with the Developing World, with Donna Bahry, eds.; and aulhor of one article. Praeger, 1975, 242 pp.
"The Russian Federation and Its Western Neighbors: Developments in Russian Policy toward Central and Eastern Europe," Demokratizatsiya: The Journal of Post-Soviet Democratization, Vol. 1, No. 3, 1993, pp. 33-57.

DIANE P. KOENKER

Title: Director of the Russian and East European Center; Professor of History
Appointed at Illinois: 1983

Education:
Grinnell College, BA, 1969
University of Michigan, MA, 1971
University of Michigan, PhD, 1976
Previous experience:
Assistant to associate professor, Temple University, 1976-83
On program: 100 percent
Fields: History of modern Russia and the Soviet Union; 1917 revolulion; Russian and Soviet working-class history; social history of the USSR, 1917-1930.
Languages: Russian, French, German.
Overseas experience: Russia, Australia
PhDs supervised: 6
Main relevant publications:
Notes of a Red Guard, by Eduard Dune (edited and translated with S.A. Smith). University of Illinois Press, 1993.
Strikes and Revolulion in Russia, 1917, with William G. Rosenberg. Princeton University Press, 1989.
Party, State, and Society in the Russian Civil War: Explorations in Social History, with William G. Rosenberg and Ronald G. Suny, eds. Indiana University Press, 1989.
Tret'ya Vserossiiskaya Konferentsiya Professional'nykh Soyuzov, 1917, Stenograficheskii Otchet (reprint of 1927 edition), ed. Kraus-Thomson Organization, 1982.
Moscow Workers and the 1917 Revolulion, Princeton University Press (Studies of the Russian Institule, Columbia University), 1981.
"Labor Relations in Socialist Russia: Class Values and Production Values in the Printers' Union, 1917-1921," The Making of the Soviet Working Class, Lewis Siegelbaum and Ronald G. Suny, eds. Cornell University Press, forthcoming 1994.
"Class and Consciousness in a Socialist Society: Workers in the Printing Trades during NEP," Russia in the Era of NEP: Explorations in Soviet Culture and Society, Sheila Fitzpatrick, Alexander Rabinowitch, and Richard Stites, eds. Indiana University Press, 1991.
"Perceptions and Realities of Labor Protest, March to October 1917," with William G. Rosenberg, Revolulion in Russia: Reassessments of 1917, Edith Rogovin Frankel, Jonathan Frankel, and Baruch Knei-Paz, eds. Cambridge University Press, 1991.
"The Limits of Formal Protest: Worker Activism and Social Polarization in Petrograd and Moscow, 1917," with William G. Rosenberg, American Historical Review, Vol. 92, No. 2, April 1987, pp. 296-326.
"Urbanization and Deurbanization in the Russian Revolulion and Civil War," Journal of Modern History, Vol. 57, Sept. 1985, pp. 424-450.

CAROL SKALNIK LEFF

Title: Assistant Professor of Political Science
Appointed at Illinois: 1993 (visiting, 1986-87, 1989-93)

Education:
Oberlin College, BA (government), 1969
Harvard University, MA (government), 1971
Harvard University, PhD (government), 1979
Previous experience:
Instructor, College of the Holy Cross, 1976-77
Visiting lecturer, Washington University, 1978-85
On program: 100 percent
Fields: East European politics, especially Czechoslovakia; Soviet and post-Soviet politics; comparative politics (nationalism and democratization)
Languages: French, Russian, Czech, Slovak, German
Main relevant publications:
National Conflict in Czechoslovakia: The Making and Remaking of a State, 1918-1987. Princeton University Press, 1988.
"The Changing Character of Soviet-Czechoslovak Relations in the Gorbachev Era," East-Central Europe and the USSR. St. Martin's Press, 1991, pp. 147-164.
"Czechoslovakia," Yearbook on International Communist Affairs, 1991. Hoover Institulion Press, 1991, pp. 269- 282.
"Toward an Alliance Politics: The Individuation of Security Policy in the Warsaw Treaty Organization," Swords and Ploughshares, Spring 1990.
"The Politics of Ineffectiveness: Federal Firearms Legislation, 1919-1938," with Mark H. Leff, Annals, 1981, p. 455.

JOHN W.R. LEPINGWELL

Title: Assistant Professor of Political Science
Appointed at Illinois: 1988

Education:
Massachusetts Institule of Technology, SB, 1981
Massachusetts Institule of Technology, PhD, 1988
Honors and awards:
Ford Foundation Dual Expertise Fellow, 1984-86
Harvard University Center for Science and International Affairs, Adjunct Pre-Doctoral Research Fellow, 1986-88
On program: 88 percent
Fields: Russian civil-military relations and security policy; Russian-Ukrainian relations and security issues, Ukrainian security policy.
Languages: Russian
Overseas experience: Germany
Main relevant publications:
"The Russian Military in the 1990s: Disintegration or Renewal?" Russia's Fulure: Consolidation or Disintegration, Douglas Blum, ed. Boulder: Westview Press, forthcoming 1994.
"Restructuring Soviet Civil-Military Relations: Civilian Control or Military Intervention," World Politics, 1992.
"Soviet Military Reform: Past, Present, Fulure?" Orbis, Winter 1991-92.
"Stealthy Pressures on Soviet Air Defense," Air Force Magazine, March 1990.
"Soviet Strategic Air Defense and the Stealth Challenge," International Security, Vol. 14, No. 2, Fall 1989.
"The Laws of Combat? Lanchester Reexamined," International Security, Vol 12, No. 1, Summer 1987.

JOSEPH L. LOVE

Title: Professor of History and Director of the Center for Latin American and Caribbean Studies
Appointed at Illinois: 1966

Education:
Harvard, AB (economics), 1960
Stanford, MA (history), 1963
Columbia, PhD (history), 1967
Previous experience:
Visiting Professor, Pontifica Universidade Catolica (Rio de Janeiro), June-August 1987
Honors and awards:
Ford Foundation Foreign Area Fellowship
Fulbright-Hays Research Grants (two)
Guggenheim Fellowship
IREX Research Grant
NEH Senior Reserach Fellowship
SSRC Fellowship
Woodrow Wilson Fellowship
On program: 10 percent
Fields: Third world development, political awareness and participation, regionalism
Languages: Portuguese, Spanish, French, German, Romanian, Italian
Overseas experience: Romania, Brazil
PhDs supervised: 4 in past six years (none in Russian and East European studies)
Main relevant publications:
Crafting the Third World: Theorizing Underdevelopment in Rumania and Brazil. Stanford University Press, forthcoming.
Guiding the Invisible Hand: Economic Liberalism and the State in Latin American History, with Nils Jacobsen, eds. New York: Praeger Publishers, 1988, xii, 221 pp.
"Modeling Internal Colonialism: History and Prospect," World Development, Vol. 17, No. 6, June 1989, pp. 905- 922.
"Theorizing Underdevelopment in Latin America and Romania, 1860-1950," Review, Vol. 11, No. 4, Fall 1988, pp. 453-496.
"Manoilescu, Prebisch, and Unequal Exchange," Rumanian Studies, Vol. 5, 1986, pp. 125-133.

PETER B. MAGGS

Title: Corman Professor of Law
Appointed at Illinois: 1964

Education:
Harvard College, AB, 1957
Harvard Law School, JD, 1961
Leningrad State University, 1961-62
Previous experience:
Acting dean, College of Law, fall 1990
Professional activities:
Editor, Soviet Statules and Decisions, 1976-84
Chairman, American Bar Association Committee on Soviet Law, 1975-81
Honors and awards:
Guggenheim Fellow, 1979
Member, American Academy of Foreign Law, 1986--
Corresponding Member, International Academy of Comparative Law, 1988--
On program: 75 percent
Fields: Soviet law; comparative studies of the legal regulation of economic activity in Russia, Ukraine, Kazakhstan, and East Central and Soulheastern Europe; law and technology
Languages: Russian, Serbo-Croatian, Romanian, Bulgarian, French, German
Main relevant publications:
Spravochnik po zakonodatel'stvo liia rabotnikov organov prokuratury, suda i Ministerstva vnulrennykh del, with Ger P. van den Berg, co-editor. IDC, Leiden, 1990.
Stuchka: Selected Writings on Soviet Law and Marxism, trans. and ed. M.E. Sharpe, 1988.
Law After the Revolulion, co-editor. Oceana Publications, 1988.
The Soviet Economic System: A Legal Analysis, with O.S. Ioffe. Westview, 1987, 326 pp.
The Soviet Legal System: The Law in the 1980s, with John Hazard and William Buller, eds. Oceana, 1984, 424 pp.
Soviet Law in Theory and Practice, with O.S. Ioffe. Oceana, 1983, 327 pp.
Law and Economic Development in the Soviet Union, with Gordon B. Smith and George Ginsburgs, eds. Westview, 1982, 293 pp.
Soviet and East European Law and the Scientific-Technical Revolulion, with Gordon B. Smith and George Ginsburgs, eds. Pergamon, 1981.
Pashukanis: Selected Writings on Marxism and Law, trans. Academic Press, 1980, 374 pp.
Social Engineering through Law in the USSR, with Donald Barry and George Ginsburgs, eds. Sifthoff and Noordhoff, 1978, 349 pp.

HENRY P. MAGUIRE

Title: Professor of Art
Appointed at Illinois: 1979

Education:
Cambridge University, BA, 1965
Harvard University, MA, 1967
Harvard University, PhD, 1973
Previous experience:
Assistant lecturer, Manchester University, England, 1968-70
Instructor, University of Massachusetts, 1972-73
Assistant professor, Byzantine Center, Dumbarton Oaks, Washington, D.C., and Department of Fine Arts,
Harvard University (joint appointment), 1973-79
Honors and awards:
Senior Research Associate, Dumbarton Oaks, Washington, D.C., 1989-90
Member, Committee of Senior Fellows, Byzantine Center, Dumbarton Oaks, 1986
On program: 15 percent
Fields: Ancient, medieval, and Byzantine art; Byzantine literature
Languages: Latin, Ancient Greek, French, German, Italian
Main relevant publications:
Earth and Ocean: The Terrestrial World in Early Byzantine Art, College Art Association Monograph Series, Vol. 43, 1987.
Art and Eloquence in Byzantium, Princeton University Press, 1981.
"The Art of Comparing in Byzantium," Art Bulletin, Vol. 70, 1988, pp. 88-103.
"The Depiction of Sorrow in Miulie Byzantine Art," Dumbarton Oaks Papers, Vol. 31, 1977, pp. 125-174.
"Trulh and Convention in Byzantine Descriptions of Works of Art," Dumbarton Oaks Papers, Vol. 28, 1974, pp. 113-140.

JOHN P. MCKAY

Title: Professor of History
Appointed at Illinois: 1966

Education:
Wesleyan University, BA, 1961
Fletcher School of Law and Diplomacy, Tufts University, MA, 1962
University of California at Berkeley, 1969
On program: 30 percent
Fields: Russian and European economic and social history; economic development of Russia, 1880-1917
Languages: French, Russian, German
PhDs supervised: 3
Main relevant publications:
A History of World Societies, Vol. 2: From 1500 to the Present. Houghton Mifflin, 1984, 701 pp. (3rd ed., 1992.)
A History of Western Society, Vol. 2: From Absolulism to the Present. Houghton Mifflin, 1979, 499 pp. (3rd ed., 1987, 510 pp.; 4th ed., 1991.)
The Industrialization of Russia. Forum Press, 1976, 16 pp.
Tramways and Trolleys: The Rise of Urban Transport in Europe. Princeton University Press, 1976.
Pioneers for Profit: Foreign Entrepreneurship and Russian Industrialization, 1885-1913. University of Chicago Press, 1970, 442 pp.
"The House of Rothschild (Paris) as a Multinational Enterprise: 1875-1914," Multinational Enterprise in Historical Perspective, Alice Teichova, et al., eds. Cambridge University Press, 1986, pp. 74-87.
"Baku Oil and Transcaucasian Pipelines, 1883-1891: A Study in Tsarist Economic Policy," Slavic Review, Vol. 43, Winter 1984.
"Entrepreneurship and the Emergence of the Russian Petroleum Industry, 1813-1883," Research in Economic History, Vol. 8, 1983, pp. 47-91.
"Foreign Enterprise in Russian and Soviet Industry: A Long-Term Perspective," Business History Review, Vol. 48, 1974, pp. 336-356.
"Foreign Businessmen, the Tsarist Government, and the Briansk Company," Journal of European Economic History, Vol. 2, 1973, pp. 273-293.

LAURENCE H. MILLER

Title: Senior Slavic Bibliographer and Professor of Library Administration
Appointed at Illinois: 1959

Education:
Kansas, BA (English), 1954
Indiana, MA (library science), 1959
Previous experience:
Organizer and first chair, Slavic and East European Section, American Library Association, 1963-64
Director, Institule for training Slavic librarians, 1970
In charge of Illinois-Helsinki cooperative microfilming for scarce Russian books, 1977-93
Director, Title II-C acquisitions and cataloging project to strengthen the Slavic Reference Service, 1979-82
On program: 100 percent
Field: Slavic bibliography (history of Russian libraries and bibliography; technical services; reference work)
Languages: Russian, German, Czech, French
Main relevant publications:
"Academy of Sciences Library, St. Petersburg, Russia," Encyclopedia of Library History, 1994, pp. 14-15.
"Slavica," with M. T. Choldin, Non Solus, No. 6, 1979, pp. 20-25.
"University of Illinois," East Central and Soulheast Europe, Clio Press, 1976, pp. 187-92, 196-97.
"East European History," Bibliography: Current State and Fulure Trends, University of Illinois Press, 1967, pp. 392-406.

ROBERT G. OUSTERHOUT

Title: Professor of Architecture
Appointed at Illinois: 1983

Education:
Institule of European Studies, Vienna, 1970-72
University of Oregon, BA (art history), 1973
University of Cincinnati, MA (art history), 1977
University of Illinois, PhD (art history), 1982
Previous experience:
Assistant professor of art history, University of Oregon, 1981-82
Resident Associate Program, Smithsonian Institulion, 1981, 1982
Division of Community Education, Emory University, 1975-77
Honors and awards:
NEH Summer Stipend, 1993
NEH Travel to Collections Grant, 1993
UIUC University Scholar Award, 1992-95
UIUC College of Fine and Applied Arts Oulstanding Faculty Award, 1991
On program: 20 percent
Fields: Byzantine architecture; medieval and ancient architectural history
Languages: German, French, Italian, Spanish, Turkish, Modern Greek.
Main relevant publications:
The Blessings of Pilgrimage, ed. with intros. and one chapter). University of Illinois Press, 1990, 204 pp.
The Architecture of the Kariye Camii in Istanbul, Dumbarton Oaks Studies, No. 25, 1987.
"Originality in Byzantine Architecture: The Case of Nea Moni," Journal of the Society of Architectural Historians, Vol. 51, 1992.
"Constantinople, Bithynia, and Regional Developments in Later Byzantine Architecture," The Twilight of Byzantium (edited by S. Curcic and D. Mouriki), Princeton, 1991, pp. 75-91.
"The Temple, the Sepulchre, and the Martyrion of the Savior," Gesta, Vol. 29, 1990, pp. 44-53.
"Rebuilding the Temple: Constantine Monomachus and the Holy Sepulchre," Journal of the Society of Architectural Historians, Vol. 48, 1989, pp. 66-78.
"Notes on the Monuments of Turkish Thrace" (with S. Y. ™tken), Anatolian Studies, Vol. 39, 1989, pp. 121-149.
"The Byzantine Church at Enez: Problems in Twelfth-Century Architecture," Jahrbuch der Osterreichischen Byzantistik, Vol. 35, 1985.
"A Sixteenth-Century Visitor to the Chora," Dumbarton Oaks Papers, 1985.
"Meaning and Architecture: A Medieval View," Reflections, Vol. II, 1984.

TEMIRA PACHMUSS

Title: Professor of Slavic Languages and Literatures and of Comparative Literature
Appointed at Illinois: 1960

Education:
University of Melbourne, BA (with honors), 1954
University of Melbourne, MA, 1955
University of Washington, PhD, 1959
Previous experience:
Court interpreter and research analyst, U.S. Military Government Courts, Germany, 1945-49
Instructor in Russian, University of Michigan, 1958-59
Instructor in Russian, University of Colorado, 1959-60
Honors and awards:
Fulbright-Hays award, 1965, 1986-87
American Philosophical Society award, 1967, 1969, 1993
ACLS grants, 1971, 1973, 1990
NEH Travel Grants, 1984, 1990
Finnish Ministry of Education Specialists Scholarship, 1988
NEH Research Grant for Estonia, 1993
On program: 100 percent
Fields: Russian literature of 18th, 19th, and 20th centuries; Russian emigre literature; comparative literature
Languages: Russian, German, French, Polish
PhDs supervised: 19
Main relevant publications:
A Moving River of Tears: Russia's Experience in Finland. Peter Lang, 1992, 300 pp.
Russian Literature in the Baltic between the World Wars. Slavica, 1990, 450 pp.
D. S. Merezhkovsky in Exile: The Master of the Genre of Biographie Romanc‚e. Peter Lang, 1990, 354 pp.
D. S. Merezhkovsky: The Little Therese, ed., intro., and commentaries). Hermitage Press, 1984, 206 pp.
Zinaida Hippius. Selected Poetry, ed. and compiler. YMCA-Press, 1984, 144 pp.
A Russian Cultural Revival: A Critical Anthology of Emigre Literature before 1939, ed. and trans. University of Tennessee Press, 1981, 454 pp.
Women Writers in Russian Modernism: An Anthology, ed. and trans. University of Illinois Press, 1978, 376 pp.
Between Paris and St. Petersburg: Selected Diaries of Zinaida Hippius, ed. and trans. University of Illinois Press, 1975, 344 pp.
Intellect and Ideas in Action: Selected Correspondence of Zinaida Hippius, ed. and trans. Wilhelm Fink Verlag, 1973, 784 pp.
Selected Works of Zinaida Hippius, ed. and trans. University of Illinois Press, 1972, 326 pp.

HANNS-MARTIN W. SCHOENFELD

Title: H.T. Scovill Professor of Accountancy and Business Administration
Appointed at Illinois: 1962

Education:
University of Hamburg, Germany, Dipl. Kfm. (MBA), 1952
University of Hamburg, Dr. rer. pol. (DBA), 1954
Technical University of Braunschweig, Germany, Dr. habil. (PhD), 1966
(All in business administration with major in accounting.)
Professional activities:
Member, editorial boards:
Management International Review, 1969-80
Journal for International Business Studies, 1980-83
The Accounting Historian, 1980-84, 1988--
International Accounting Journal, 1988--
Cooperative research with scholars at University of Lodz, Poland
Honors and awards:
IREX grants, Poland, 1957, 1976
Award for best publication in accounting history from Academy of Accounting Historians, 1975 (for the book Cost Terminology and Cost Theory: Its Development and Present State in Central Europe)
On program: 20 percent
Fields: International accounting, management accounting, accounting history, accounting under centrally-controlled economies
Languages: German, French
Main relevant publications:
Managerial Accounting and Analysis in Multinational Companies (with H.P. Holzer), Walter DeGruyter and Company, 1986, 286 pp.
"Major Influences Which Shape Accounting Systems: An Attempt of an International-Historical Analysis," An
Historical and Contemporary Review of the Development of International Accounting (edited by A. Roberts), Proceedings of the Third Charles Waldo Haskins History Seminar, Academy of Accounting Historians, Atlanta, Georgia, 1980, pp. 45-58 [reprinted in Selected Papers from the Charles Waldo Haskins Accounting History Seminars (edited by James F. Gaertner), Academy of Accounting Historians Monograph #4, San Antonio, Texas, 1983, pp. 153-172].
"International Accounting: Development, Issues, and Fulure Directions," Journal of International Business Studies, Vol. XII, No. 2, Fall 1981, pp. 83-100.
"Social Reporting at the Enterprise Level in Poland" (with Alicja Jaruga, et al.), The Status of Social Reporting in Selected Countries, Contemporary Issues in International Accounting: Occasional Paper Number 1, Center for International Education and Research in Accounting, Urbana, 1978, pp. 1-71.
"Problem Mierzenia Nakladow Kapitalowycz w Przedsiebiorstwie" ("Problems of Measuring Capital Inpuls in the Firm"), Acta Universitatis Lodziensis Nauki Ekonomiczne, Seria III, No. 25, Czesc II, Lodz, 1976, pp. 203-225.

PAUL W. SCHROEDER

Title: Professor of History and Political Science
Appointed at Illinois: 1963
Education:
Texas Christian University, MA, 1956
University of Texas, PhD, 1958
Previous experience:
Associate professor, Concordia Senior College, 1958-63
Honors and awards:
Albert J. Beveridge Prize, American Historical Association, 1956
Fulbright Scholar in Austria, 1956-57
United States Steel Foundation Fellow, 1957-58
Walter Prescott Webb Memorial Prize, 1962
Senior Fellow, National Endowment for the Humanities, 1973
Senior Fellow, American Council of Learned Societies, 1976-77
Fellow, Woodrow Wilson International Center for Scholars, 1983-84
British International Studies Association prize, 1990
Jennings Randolph Peace Fellow, United States Institule of Peace, 1992-93
Senior University Scholar, 1989-92
Jubilee Professor of Liberal Arts and Sciences, 1992--
On program: 30 percent
Fields: Modern European diplomatic history; Central Europe; theory of history
Languages: German, French, Italian, Romanian, Dulch, Russian
PhDs supervised: 3
Main relevant publications:
The Transformation of European Politics, 1763-1848. Oxford University Press, 1994. Austria, Great Britain, and the Crimean War: The Destruction of the European Concert. Cornell University Press, 1972, 544 pp.
Metternich's Diplomacy at Its Zenith, 1820-1823. University of Texas Press, 1962.
The Axis Alliance and Japanese-American Relations, 1941. Cornell University Press, 1958.
"Napoleon's Foreign Policy: A Criminal Venture," Journal of Military History, April 1990.
"Failed Bargain Crises, Deterrence, and the International System," Perspectives on Deterrence, Paul C. Stern, et al., eds. Oxford University Press, 1989, pp. 67-83.
"The Nineteenth-Century Balance of Power: Balance of Power or Political Equilibrium?" Review of Internation- al Studies, Vol. 15, April 1989, pp. 135-153.
"The Collapse of the Second Coalition," Journal of Modern History, Vol. 59, No. 2, June 1987, pp. 244-290.
"The Nineteenth-Century International System: Changes in the Structure," World Politics, Vol. 39, No. 1, October 1986, pp. 1-26.
"Alliances, 1815-1945: Weapons of Power and Tools of Management," Historical Dimensions of National Security Problems, Klaus Knorr, ed. University of Kansas Press, 1976, pp. 247-286.

M. MOBIN SHORISH

Title: Associate Professor of Comparative Education and Economics of Education
Appointed at Illinois: 1971 (visiting, 1969-71)

Education:
University of Michigan, AB (economics), 1960
University of Michigan, MA (economics), 1965
University of Chicago, PhD, 1972
On program: 50 percent
Fields: Comparative education, Soviet Central Asia, education and economic development, education and national minorities
Languages: Tajik, Persian, Dari, Pashto, Turkman, Uzbek, Arabic, Urdu, Russian, German, Kirgiz, Kazakh
Overseas experience: Uzbekistan, Tajikistan
PhDs supervised: 3
Main relevant publications:
"Bilingual Education in Soviet Central Asia," International Handbook of Bilingual Education, Christina Bratt Paulston, ed., 1987, 36 pp.
"From Nomadism to Socialism: An Inquiry into the Soviet Educational Policies in Kazakhstan," Education and Social Concern: An Approach to Social Foundations, R. Lawson, V. Rust, and S. Shafer, ed., 1987, pp. 160-174.
"Traditional Islamic Education in Central Asia Prior to 1917," Passe Turko-Tatar, Present Sovietique, Chantal Lemercier-Quelquejay, Gilles Veinstein, and S. Enders Wimbush, eds. Editions Peeters, 1986, 36 pp.
"Education of National Minorities in the Soviet Union," Education and the Colonial Experience P. Altbach and G. Kelly, eds. Transaction Books, 1984, pp. 205-225.
"The Impact of Kemalist Revolulion on Afghanistan," Journal of Soulh Asian and Miulie Eastern Studies, Vol. 7, No. 3, 1984, pp. 34-45.
"Islam and Nationalism in West Turkestan (Central Asia) on the Eve of the October Revolulion," Nationalities Papers, Vol. 12, No. 2, 1984, pp. 247-263.
"Planning by Decree: The Soviet Language Policy in Central Asia," Language Problems and Language Planning, Vol. 8, No. 1, 1984, pp. 35-49.
"The Pedagogical, Linguistic, and Logistical Problems of Teaching Russian to the Local Central Asians," Slavic Review, Vol. 35, No. 3, 1976, pp. 443-462.
"Who Shall Be Educated: Selection and Integration in Soviet Central Asia," The Nationality Question in Soviet Central Asia, Edward Allworth, ed. Praeger, 1973, pp. 86-98.
"Dissent of the Muslims: Soviet Central Asia in the 1980s," Nationalities Papers, Vol. IX, No. 2, pp. 185-194.

DMYTRO M. SHTOHRYN

Title: Associate Slavic Librarian (Cataloger) and Professor of Library Administration
Appointed at Illinois: 1960
Education:
Ukrainian Free University, Munich, BA equivalent, 1949
University of Ottawa, MA (Slavic studies), 1958
University of Ottawa, BLS (library studies), 1959
University of Ottawa, PhD (Slavic studies), 1970
On program: 100 percent
Fields: Slavic cataloging, Slavic bibliography, Ukrainian bibliography and literature
Languages: Ukrainian, Polish, Russian, other Slavic languages, German
Main relevant publications:
Ukrainians in North America: A Bibliographical Directory . . . AAUS, 1975, 424 pp.
Lights and Shadows of Ukrainian Studies in Harvard. TSUM Association, 1973, 79 pp.
Catalog of Publications of the Ukrainian Academy of Sciences, 1918-1960, Slavic Bibliographical Materials. Association of Librarians of Ukrainian Descent (ALUD), 1966, 358 pp.
"Mytropolyt Ilarion in ioho `Slovo o zakoni i blahodati'" (Metropolitan Ilarion and His Sermon on Law and Grace), Tysiacholittia Khreshchennia Rusi-Ukrainy, UFU (Munich), 1988-89, pp. 639-657.
"Bibliohrafiia prats' Mykoly Chubatoho," with Iaroslav Padokh, Zapysky Naukovoho tovarystva im. Shevchenka, Vol. 205, 1987, pp. 51-61.
"Ukrainian Subjects in the Subject Headings and Classification Schedule of the Library of Congress," Bulletin of ULAA, No. 22, 1987, pp. 3-4 and supp. pp. 1-11.
"The Rise and Fall of Book Studies in the Ukraine," Books, Libraries, and Information in Slavic and East European Studies: Proceedings of the Second International Conference of Slavic Librarians and Information Specialists. Russica Publishers, 1986, pp. 17-27.
"Lysty pro O. Kandybu-Ol'zhycha," Ukrains'kyi istoryk, Vol. 22, 1985, pp. 156-166.
"Oleh Kandyba-Ol'zhych: Bibliography," Ukrains'kyi istoryk, Vol. 22, 1985, pp. 167-183; Vol. 23, Nos. 1-2, 1986, pp. 87-105.
"Volodymyr Ianiv, iak poet; rannia tvorchist'," Symbolaie in Honorem Volodymyri Janiw. Universitas Libera Ucrainensis, 1984, pp. 74-95.

OLGA SOFFER

Title: Professor of Anthropology and Head of the Department of Slavic Languages and Literatures
Appointed at Illinois: 1985

Education:
Hunter College, City University of New York, BA (political science), 1966
Hunter College, City University of New York, MA (anthropology), 1975
Graduate Center, City University of New York, PhD (anthropology), 1984
Previous experience:
Adjunct instructor, Hunter College, City University of New York, 1976, 1978-80
Adjunct instructor, Lehman College, City University of New York, 1979-80
Instructor, University of Wisconsin at Milwaukee, 1980-85
Professional activities:
Editorial Board, Soviet Anthropology and Archaeology, 1988--
Editorial Board, Journal of World Prehistory, 1987--
Honors and awards:
Gustav O. Arlt Award in the Humanities, Council of Graduate Schools in the U.S., 1986
Fulbright Faculty Lecturing-Research Abroad Grants: Czechoslovakia, 1987, 1988; USSR, 1991-92
National Endowment for the Humanities Summer Stipend, 1990
University of Illinois, University Scholar, 1989
On program: 100 percent
Fields: Archaeology of the Old World (with emphasis on the prehistory of the USSR and Eastern Europe), hunter-gatherer adaptations, anthropological and archaeological theory, paleoanthropology, Pleistocene ecology, archaeozoology
Languages: Russian, Serbo-Croatian, Italian, French, Spanish, Polish, Ukrainian, Czech, Bulgarian, Latin
Overseas experience: Russia, Ukraine, Czechoslovakia
PhDs supervised: 5
Main relevant publications:
From Kostenki to Clovis: Upper Paleolithic-Paleoindian Adaptations, with N.D. Praslov, eds. and contrs. New York: Plenum Publishing Corp., 1993, 334 pp.
The World at 18 000 BP: Northern Latitudes, with C. Gamble, eds. and contrs. Allen and Unwin, Vol. 1, 1990, 353 pp.
The World at 18 000 BP: Soulhern Latitudes, with C. Gamble, eds. and contrs. Allen and Unwin, Vol. 2, 1990, 344 pp.
The Pleistocene Old World: Regional Perspectives, ed. and contr. New York: Plenum Publishing Corp., 1987.
The Upper Paleolithic of the Central Russian Plain. Academic Press, Inc., 1985, 635 pp. Soviet Anthropology and Archaeology (guest editor, issue on "Female Imagery in the Paleolithic"), Vol. 27, No. 4, 1989.

HELEN F. SULLIVAN

Title: Manager, Slavic Reference Service
Appointed at Illinois: 1984

Education:
University of Illinois, MS (Anthropology), 1976
University of Illinois, ABD (Anthropology), 1978
University of Illinois, MS (Library & Information
science), 1990
On program: 100 percent
Fields: Russian bibliography. reference, anthropology
Languages: Russian, Ukrainian, French
Main relevant publications:
Russia and the Former Soviet Union: A Bibliographic Guide to English Language Publications: 1986-1991, with Robert Burger, Littleton, CO: Libraries Unlimited, 1994.

ELIZABETH M. TALBOT

Title: Oulreach Coordinator (with rank of Specialist in Education)
Appointed at Illinois: 1978 (instructor in Russian, 1967-69)

Education:
Boston University, BA (Slavic history and literature), 1962
Brown University, MA (Slavic languages and literatures), 1965
Brown University, PhD (Slavic languages and literatures), 1973
Professional acitivities:
Associate editor, AAASS Newsletter, 1968-69
Secretary, Illinois Chapter, AATSEEL, 1977-79; president, 1990-91
Member, Committee on College and Pre-College Russian, 1984--
Member, Education Committee, AAASS, 1986-91; chair, 1992--
Consultant, Globe Book Company (for Soviet section of a world geography textbook for grades 7 and 8), 1986
Member, Execulive Committee, Midwest Slavic Conference, 1987-90
Consultant, Learning Connections Publishers (textbook on the Soviet Union for grade 7), 1988-91
Workshops for high school teachers:
American Forum for Global Education, May 1989
Seton Hall University, April 1990
University of Hawaii at Manoa, July 1990
NCSS Great Lakes Regional Conference, April 1992
University of West Virginia and Franklin Marshall University, August 1992 (2 weeks)
Eastern Illinois University, October 1992
Springfield miulie schools, February 1993
Illinois Council for Social Studies, October 1993
On program: 75 percent
Fields: Russian literature, Soviet society
Languages: Russian, French
Main relevant publications:
A Guide to Print Materials for Teachers: Russia/Soviet Union, with Janet Vaillant, eds., 1985, 104 pp.
"Teaching aboul the Soviet Successor States: A Teacher's Guide and Resource," AAASS, 1993, pp. 42-48.
"Teaching aboul Language Issues in the Soviet Union," Social Education, Vol. 49, No. 2, February 1985, pp. 122-123.
"Russkii khor illinoiskogo universiteta," Novoe Russkoe Slovo, December 29, 1978, p. 4.
Update (Russian and East European sections), University of Illinois, 1977--. Update is a quarterly publication for pre-college teachers, published jointly by the four area centers.

RICHARD V. TEMPEST

Title: Associate Professor of Russian
Appointed at Illinois: 1982
Education:
Oxford University, BA, 1977
Oxford University, MA, 1982
Oxford University, DPhil, 1982
On program: 100 percent
Fields: Nineteenth-century Russian literature, Chaadaev, Soviet youlh, Bulgarian literature
Languages: Russian, Bulgarian, French, Spanish
Main relevant publications:
Russkie Grezy. "Kniga" publishing house, Moscow.
Philosophical Writings of Petr Chaadaev, with Raymond McNally, eds. The Hague: Kluwer Academic Publishers, 1991.
Pierre Tchaadaev. Ouevres in‚dites ou rares, ‚dit‚es par R. McNally, F. Rouleau et R. Tempest. BibliothŠque Slave, 1990.
Russian Dreams. Omega Books, 1987.
Entry on Aleksandr Turgenev, Modern Encyclopedia of Russian and Soviet History, Vol. CVIII. New York: Academic Publishers, 1990, pp. 60-70.
"The Young Pushkin and Chaadaev," Issues in Russian Literature before 1917, J. Douglas Clayton, ed. Slavica, 1990.
"Chaadaev and Tiulchev," Studies in Soviet Thought, Vol. 32, No. 4, November 1986, pp. 303-320.
"Madman or Criminal: Government Attitudes to Petr Chaadaev in 1836," Slavic Review, Vol. 42, No. 2, 1984, pp. 282-287.
"Soviet Youlh Culture Today," Problems of Communism, May-June 1984, pp. 60-64.
"La d‚mence de Tchaadaev," Revue des ‚tudes slaves, fascicule 2, 1983, pp. 305-314.

BENJAMIN UROFF

Title: Associate Professor of History
Appointed at Illinois: 1965

Education:
Yale University, BA, 1954
Columbia University, PhD, 1970
Previous experience:
Instructor, University of Minnesota, 1963-64
Professional activities:
President, Early Slavic Association, 1989-90
On program: 100 percent
Fields: Russian history, pre-Petrine Russia, Russian cultural and intellectual history
Languages: Russian, French, German, Swedish, Latin
PhDs supervised: 4

MARVIN G. WEINBAUM

Title: Professor of Political Science and Director of the Program in Soulh and West Asian Studies
Appointed at Illinois: 1965
Education:
City University of New York (Brooklyn), BA, 1957
University of Michigan, MA, 1958
Columbia University, PhD, 1965
Previous experience:
Instructor, Colby College, 1961-63, 1964-65
On program: 15 percent
Fields: Iran, Afghanistan, Pakistan, and Soviet relations with them; Egypt; development politics; food and agricultural politics
Languages: Persian, Dari
Main relevant publications:
Pakistan and Afghanistan: Resistance and Reconstruction. Boulder: Westview Press, 1993.
Egypt and the Politics of U.S. Economic Aid. Boulder: Westview Press, 1986.
"Pakistan and a Negotiated Peace to the Afghan War," Pakistan 1992, Charles Kennedy, ed. Boulder: Westview Press, 1992, pp. 107-132.
"Iran and Afghanistan; Precedents and Prospects for Superpower Cooperation," The Cold War as Cooperation, Edward Kolodziej and Roger Kanet, eds. Macmillan Publishers, 1991, pp. 310-340.
"Pakistan and Afghanistan: The Strategic Relationship," Asian Survey, Vol. 31, June 1991, pp. 496-511.
"Soviet Strategies, Afghan Refugees and Pakistan's Security," The Cultural Basis of Afghan Nationalism, Ewan Anderson and Nancy Hatch Dupree, eds. Pinter Publishers, Ltd., 1990, pp. 193-216.
"The Politics of Afghan Resettlement and Rehabilitation," Asian Survey, March 1989.
"The Soviets in Afghanistan: Risks, Costs, and Opportunities," The Limits of Soviet Power in the Developing World: Thermidor in the Revolulionary Struggle, Roger Kanet and Edward Kolodziej, eds. Macmillan Publishers, 1989.
"Soviet Strategies and Afghan Refugees," Swords and Ploughshares, Program in Arms Control, Disarmament, and International Security, University of Illinois.
"The Internationalization of Domestic Conflict in the Miulie East," Miulie East Review, Vol. 10, No. 1 (Fall 1987), pp. 31-42.
"Afghanistan, International Responses and Responsibilities," Afghan Alternatives, Ralph Magnus, ed. Transaction Books, 1985, pp. 107-118.
"Soviet Policy and the Constraints of Nationalism in Iran and Afghanistan," The USSR and the Muslim World, Yaacov Ro'i, ed. Allen and Unwin, 1984, pp. 226-260.

LADISLAV ZGUSTA

Title: Professor of Linguistics and the Classics, and Director of the Center for Advanced Study
Appointed at Illinois: 1970

Education:
Prague University, PhD (classical philology and indology), 1949
Prague Academy, Dr. Sc. (philology of Asia Minor), 1964
Previous experience:
Successive ranks at University of Prague, 1949-65, and Oriental Institule, Academy of Sciences, Prague, 1949-70; head, Section of Linguistics, Oriental Institule, 1959-70
Consultant on Ossetic dictionary in Georgian SSR, 1963-1965
Professor of Indo-European comparative linguistics, Brno University, 1968-70
On program: 15 percent
Fields: Indo-European comparative linguistics, lexicography, linguistics of Asia Minor, Ossetic and other languages of the Caucasus, Hittite, ancient and modern Greek
Languages: Czech, German, Latin, Greek, Russian, Italian, French, Ossetic
Main relevant publications:
The Old Ossetic Inscription from the River Zelencuk. Akademie der Wissenschaften, 1987.
"Onomastic Gleaning in Yugoslavia" (in Czech), Zpravodaj, Vol. 10, 1969, pp. 269 ff.
"The Last Fifty Years of Development of Ossetic" (in Czech), Novy Orient, Vol. 22, 1967, pp. 250 ff.
"Studies in Ossetic Onomasiology," Archiv Orientalni, Vol. 35, 1967, pp. 407 ff.
"K tipologicheskim ob'iasneniniam i interpretatsiiam," Lingvisticheskaia Tipologiia i vostochnye iazyki, 1965, pp. 256 ff.
"Some Problems of a Czech-Chinese Dictionary," with P. Kratochvil, et al., Archiv Orientalni, Vol. 30, 1962, pp. 258 ff.
"Ossetic Proverbs" (in Czech), Novy Orient, Vol. 15, 1960, pp. 28 ff.
"The Eastern Indo-European Languages" (in Czech), Novy Orient, Vol. 12, 1957, pp. 77 ff.
"Modern Ossetic" (in Czech), Novy Orient, Vol. 12, 1957, pp. 116 ff.
"The Ancient Population of European Russia" (in Czech), Novy Orient, Vol. 9, 1954.
(Most of Zgusta's publications, amounting to over 300 items including five books, pertain to fields related peripherally to the USSR and Eastern Europe. Many deal with Asia Minor, lexicography, and various aspects of Indo-European linguistics.)