Circle Campus Memories
I don't know how to start and what to skip as all places seem permanent
in my memory lane. But the best memory of all of them is the cafeteria at the
College of Business building. I still relish the exotic atmosphere there and
a view to the adjacent buildings and passing blue trains across the street.
Amandeep
Samant '02 CBA, MS '04 CBA
I remember using the swimming pool and
sauna as my "secret" way to
relax. The pool was never overcrowded,
and I spent many hours there between my
day classes and my night classes.
Anne Sromek
’02 CBA
Student government
in the Student Union; gym classes at Navy
Pier; the debate team offices in University
Hall 20th Floor; wind on the ram under
University Hall; taking the “L”
to school; the “Shelf” and
pitchers of beer; the riots following
the death of Martin Luther King; Action
party, Tony Podesta, Andy Dolan and Deb
Benjamin; the McCathy campaign on campus;
lunch in the Pier Room.
Dr. Peter A.
Andersen ’69 LAS
My BA from LAS
was awarded in June 1970. I was 35, an
“old” student, unusual then.
Course by course I was finishing an interrupted
degree program. I did not have student
friends – what I had was the delight
of ideas not related to children and the
excitement of an architectural gem, a
perfect expression of the time; a gathering
place to mark Martin Luther King’s
death; the anticipation of exploring the
art and architecture building; the please
in the “I”-shaped bricks goofy
things like memorizing my SSN as I wandered
empty buildings (slated for demolition?)
to register, and of course the satisfaction
in the quality of instruction; the campus
was a new thing – hopeful in its
way, a celebration of an exciting city.
Lois Kavanagh
’70 LAS
Moving from Navy
Pier to the Circle; Dr. Peltas of the
German Department (he let me write a paper
on Luther); having to graduate from summer
school; the elderly lady majoring in speech
amid all us younger students; going to
our German professor’s house for
a snack, party or dinner.
John H. Wilson
’67 LAS
Martin Luther King
assassinated and Chicago’s West
Side burned; raising funds for homeless
people; anti-Vietnam protests; Bobby Kennedy
assassination; Chicago Democratic Convention
protests; working for Eugene McCarthy;
Chicago 7 Trial; working at the Chicago
Seed as a book reviewer; playing bridge
in the Union; listening to the complete
plays of Shakespeare in the library’s
media room.
Kathleen de
la Pena McCook ’69 LAS
The popularity
of Tootsie Roll Pops in spring 1965, when
the candy counters in the CC center opened.
They cost two cents and we could barely
keep enough in stock, especially chocolate
(I was on the initial candy counter staff);
at the Homecoming concert in October 1966,
the comedian who preceded Chad Mitchell
(David Steinberg, I think) used my economics
text book (Samuelson, 2nd ed.) as a prop
in his routine (I was chair of the Homecoming
Committee that year); getting Judy Collins
a cup of coffee in the kitchen of the
CC Center dining room before the Oct.
1965 Homecoming concert (I was in charge
of the concert); hanging out on the exedras;
studying until 9 p.m. in the new library;
during my senior year (’66-‘67),
the ongoing pinochle game in the CC Center
cafeteria that began at 7:30 a.m. and
lasted until 4:30 p.m. M-F; players drifted
in the and out, but I stayed at the same
table; renown senior faculty brought to
UICC – history – John Wolf,
an expert on Louis XIV and political science;
Herman Finer, an expert in comparative
government; favorite faculty: P. Craig
Smith, Karl Schleanes for history; Melvin
Holley, also history.
Dr. Mitchell
E. Rubinstein ’67 LAS
A fascinating criminology
course; steps, steps and more steps.
UICC Alum
Great teachers,
great education at a low cost; anti-war
speakers 1970; Jake Morowitz of the SDS;
snow falling on me from upper level; great
Italian food on Halsted North of freeway;
the “Upside-down Building”;
bowling; bookstore; Greek restaurants
Halsted and Madison; marching against
Cambodian invasion; computer cards for
courses.
Frederick Vinson
’70 LAS
My graduation,
June 1969. The most successful dinner-dance
with the Greek Club; it took place at
St. Demetriy Church, with 800 people attending.
I was the chairwoman of the event. The
head of the department of multicultural
events was astonished. I remember the
last talk in the cafeteria with all young
Greek boys getting together and some girls
talking, just having fun. I remember the
huge lecture halls and walking from cars
to classes. Also, the weekly tests in
biology and, most of all, the friendliness
of the teachers with the students
Helen C. Georgopoulos
’69 LAS
Convenience to
the campus – great location! Excellent
instructors/professors; closely ethnic
neighborhoods/relationships with University;
easy scheduling of classes in addition
to having to work part-time; diversity
of classes offered; enjoyed being student
with other older students; as American
Literature major, very much appreciated
professors who were dedicated with impressive
backgrounds; good counseling with class
choices; professors/instructors demanded
high standards from students – no
easy A’s!; great overall experience,
even when University was in its embryonic
phase.
UICC alum
Bouncing trampoline
in the old Bank Building with friends;
studying for anatomy finals at night with
cadavers requiring origin, insertion,
action; anatomy finals – stick pins
on muscles; Mrs. Thomas, PE teacher/advisor,
taking the gymnastic team to her cottage
overnight on a trip for a meet at Purdue;
Erna Wachtel, gymnastic coach and former
Olympian, who coached at UIC from 1966-70;
lunch in the Coles; eating Italian subs
from a grocery store west of school; exploring
Maxwell St. with friends during breaks;
trying to get to class from Bank Building
across campus; taking the Dan Ryan expressway
while trying to make 8 a.m. class; first
classes to completely graduate from UIC.
Roberta M. Polikwoski
Bus ride to gym
classes at Navy Pier and its “aroma”;
Omega Beta Pi Fraternity (pre- med) Beanels;
staff at the Student Union; riding the
“El” every day for years!
Graduation day! Demonstrations at the
amphitheater; Timothy Leary on campus;
bowling as a class! Chemistry 112 (I still
have no idea what it was about!); being
a James Scholar.
Sam J. Sugar
MD ’68 LAS, MD ’72 COM
Listening to the
seamen on the ships parked outside the
classrooms, speaking in so many foreign
languages; water leaking in the hallways
from a heavy rain or melting snow; warm
spring mornings sitting by the lake studying;
I was only at the Pier for my freshman
year, 1963-64, and I’ll never forget
the sadness and fear when we heard JKF
was shot and killed in Dallas on Nov.
22.
Brian J. Silverman
’68 BUS
My favorite memory
of my years at the University of Illinois
Circle Center has to be the blizzard of
January 1967. The snow began falling in
the afternoon. By the next morning we
had 26 inches of snow in 24 hours. Then
the winds started creating a blizzard.
The highway and street departments were
unable to keep up. All the roads were
closed. The only thing moving were the
trains; some of us took the train to the
loop. The crews had been working all night
with heavy equipment, taking the snow
to the lake. Most of the loop was eerie.
There were no cars, but the streets and
sidewalks were completely clear! We returned
and walked around campus and on the area
streets. On the major streets such as
Halsted and Damon, multiple cars were
buried under deep snow. The striking sight
was multiple city buses deeply immovable
under snow and ice, but the engines running
and the drivers in their seats. Many received
overtime for the 48 hours or so they remained
at their posts. The cars of the students
parked along Wolcott, and others impossibly
buried under mountains of snow. Most would
not move for seven to 10 days. The city
was literally paralyzed for three days.
As students we were extremely disappointed
at missing gross anatomy and physiology
labs and lectures, but persevered playing
in the snow.
Dwain C. Illman
MD ’70 COM
Mickey Mouse clock
on Racine Ave. building; long lines to
register for classes – no computers!
Homecoming game at Soldier Field against
UW-Whitewater, which we lost! Big snow
in either1967 or ’69, and classes
cancelled.
Robert E. Marsh
The Royal Order
of Excedra Sitters; the yearbook staff
and putting it together; the parties that
the “Sitters” had; moving
from Navy Pier to the “Circle;”
eating lunch in the neighborhood; shopping
on Maxwell St.
Roza Berlinski
Gossage
’68 LAS
Pier Room; afternoon
dance mixers; TV lounges (Channel 7);
swimming requirement was cancelled; Black
Panther party rallies; black student organization;
French classes; Behavioral Science Building
(BSB); good charbroiled hamburgers in
the cafeteria; golf class; graduation
at Chicago Stadium.
Barbara M. Jones
’70 LAS
Packing chemistry
equipment to move from Navy Pier; the
incredible “newness” of the
Circle Campus; needing a map to find classrooms
at Circle; missing the Pier and its old
elegant parts; spent one semester (fall
1964) at the pier – admired the
professors; spent one semester (winter
1965) at Circle Campus; transferred to
Medical Center and Circle Campus; thought
the administration building very odd looking;
wore one of those paper dresses to class
one day and the books tore it apart by
mid-afternoon.
Pauline J. Kock
Registering for
the first time in June 1966 at a brassiere
factory on the other side of the Eisenhower
Expressway. I had married the year before,
been out of school and was starved for
it; buying up my stack of shiny French
novels and absconding with them to my
apartment in Evanston; not a “fond”
memory at all, but arriving in class the
morning after Charles Speck murdered the
student nurses (summer ’66); doing
my homework on the “El” –
I first commuted from Evanston and later
from Cicero; meeting new friends in my
education classes with Dr. Morris and
Dr. Monroe (George); buying my lunch from
the machines in the basement of University
Hall and eating it while I read for my
afternoon classes; enjoying Circle’s
amazing architecture every morning; walking
past Hull House on a regular basis; receiving
my B.A. (French) at the Chicago Auditorium
on W. Adams St. on Sunday, June 16, 1968;
having “B.A., University of Illinois,
Chicago Circle” on my C.V. ever
since.
Carla J. Graham
’68 LAS
The city’s
paralyzing snow storm of January 1967,
which closed the University for several
days, and the whole metropolitan area;
the riots of 1968 and ‘69 on the
west side of Chicago. I had to travel
through those areas on my way to and from
the University; my first registration
for classes in January 1966. Since I was
entering in on an off quarter (winter)
and applied for admissions late, I had
to register for classes on the first day
of class. The registration for 5,000 continuing
students were lost, so I was registering
for classes along with almost 6,000 students.
The number of students overwhelmed the
system. It took me three days to register;
being a commuter school at the time and
many students working, I did not make
any long-term friends. I never developed
the ability to make friends quickly; watching
the construction of some of the buildings
on campus, like the addition to the library;
some of the extracurricular activities
like playing basketball in the student
union and taking swimming lessons, and
some of the movies I saw; taking the elective
class “Film as an Art Form.”
It gave me a very different perspective
on films; working as a lab assistant to
a chemistry professor and seeing chemical
research firsthand was an eye-opener.
It was nothing like the movies; for me,
the quarter system instead of semesters
was great. We finished final exams before
Christmas, so the Christmas break was
relaxing and we had three weeks off. The
quarters were short enough that I wasn’t
asking myself, “What did we cover
those first six weeks of the semesters?”
The material was still fairly fresh in
my memory for 10 weeks; there wasn’t
strong school spirit while I attended
the University, unlike at the high school
I attended. I missed that school spirit.
There was no on-campus housing at the
time, and most students worked. The environment
was not conducive to a strong school spirit.
UICC alum
Coming from a junior
college and feeling so small in the lecture
halls.Whenever any of us would see another
junior college person we would embrace
like we had found a long lost friend.
Crazy professors who thinned classes by
giving out extra-hard expectations, then
after most had dropped the class they
would proceed. The professor who asked
on a quiz who smoked big cigars, the physiological
psych class where I had to learn all about
the human eye while my friend took a class
requiring her to learn all the bones in
a bird's body (she was in nursing). Drinking
my first mixed drink at a professor's
home and freezing while waiting for the
el. The food court had delicious food
including Greek chicken and baklava. UICC
was the place to find the doorway to open
the whole world for you!
Diann Taylor
Symonds
'76 LAS
Standing on a piece
of plywood in single digit weather to
hear Mayor Daley dedicate the school;
beef sandwiches at Vittoni’s on
Taylor (much better than Al’s);
parking in the neighborhood and having
my battery stolen; playing cards in the
cafeteria (watching people flunk out who
over- indulged); fraternity tables in
the cafeteria; Dr. Klee’s organic
chemistry class; seeing The Animals, Mitch
Ryder and The Outsiders at Friday night
union dances; lots of Madras shirts and
penny loafers; constant construction the
first few years; leaving in 1966 to go
to Dental School down the street.
James Arient
’70 DENT
I was in Chicago
from September 1964 through August 1965,
but I was never actually at the Circle
except to sightsee, because I lived in
the dorm on Walcott St. and took all my
classes in the DMP building. I was interested
in how the Chicago Campus area was built
pretty uniquely; loved the tours of Cook
County; enjoyed going to the “Greeks”
for a beer and something to eat with other
continuation RV students; enjoyed the
great food at the dorms – those
ladies prepared the best-tasting food!
I was amazed at the huge lecture halls
where many of our classes were held; also
interesting how, in the old parts of the
hospital, there were colored lines on
the floor that we were directed to follow
to get to the various departments.
Charlotte Golden
’66 NURS
I remember the
students taking trays and using them as
sleds to slide down the snow-covered stairs
in the Center; Bill Raffeld doing ballet
with the class at the beginning of acting
class; oatmeal in the morning in the Pier
Room; the students sleeping in the union
the night of the 1967 snowstorm; the white
mice escaping in the biology building;
all the trees were shorter than I am (5’2’’);
students crowding in the TV room to catch
“Batman;” the tension on campus
the day Martin Luther King died; Dr. Vest
reading Chaucer in Middle English to his
class; swimming in the Anphce Theater
in the Spring.
Linnea Forsberg
’68 LAS, MA ’75 LAS
“Studying”
at the Greeks on Harrison Ave.; the horse-draw
vegetable/fruit cart on Taylor St.; professor
Dan Nonah teaching me the meaning of “Sagacity;”
in the Shadows of Cook County Hospital,
I discovered Rita, the woman I couldn’t
explain. Forty years, four children, several
jobs and relocations, and four grandchildren
later, she still remains “the woman
I can’t explain”…
Jim Pavlacic
’69 PHARM
Hanging out with
Helen Hayes and several other drama students,
14th floor, University Hall; seeing Timothy
Leary at Circle Center; a visiting production
of “A Midsummer Night’s Dream”
at Circle Center, which included nudity;
seeing Sen. Paul Douglas (D-IL) elucidate
his Vietnam exit plan at Circle Center
(he lost to Chuck Peray); the wind tunnel
formed by the elevated walkway (long gone?),
most unpleasant; taking gym class at the
former girdle factory on Racine and having
ten minutes to shower and get back; the
introduction of computerized registration,
a seven day process turned into a six
week process; filming scenes for “The
Mouitors” on the walkway; campus
closing early – the great snowstorm
of 1967; my first day on campus I did
a self-orientation: walked through my
class schedule and bought a U of ICC jacket
at the bookstore.
UICC alum
The Great Blizzard,
going into an afternoon P.E. class “dry”
and coming out 45 minutes later into 18
inches of snow! Fencing lessons in the
old Scabrous Girdle Factory; the lady
who managed the Language Laboratory with
an iron fist; having to take a written
and oral contemporary theater final exam
the day after Bobby Kennedy was shot;
the entire class showed up in shock; analytical
chemistry professor “Student Gottlieb”,
organic chemistry prof. Ron Baumgarten,
IDA prof. Edward “Teddy” Minieka;
UIC Theater production of Cherry Orchards
and Night of the Iguana, exceptionally
well done; 1966 – when female students
attended class wearing suits and high
heels; 1968 – culture changed to
jeans, sweats and sneakers! Dad getting
my grade reports by mail – fall
quarter one always showed up on Christmas
Eve! Total frustration with computer programming
classes and waiting all night for printouts
to be “filed” in; studying
in stairwells of SEL (vending machine
candy bars cost 25 cents, sharing my crackers
and cheese pack with rescued Lab mice
“pets!” The “BSBA-PM”
program administrative Staff 1985-94,
especially Ms. Nowacki.; entomology students
filling their entire required “100
different bud collection” on campus!
1970 – received my degree diploma
by first class mail; 1993 – received
my degree diploma by third class mail;
the day all the grasshoppers got loose
in the research lab; snakes dropping from
the ceiling duct onto bench (surprise!)
in SEL (there were notes on blackboards
to phone prof. if his critters were found!).The
Cell Physiology Lab had any piece of lab
equipment worth having; it was advantageous
to cultivate the TAs! The Great Hurdle
for chem. majors was physical chemistry;
for biology majors it was cell physiology.
Having tennis classes at 11 a.m. (very
hungry) and smelling chocolate chip cookies
and chocolate smells from the neighborhood
factors. YUM. Barnaby’s Beer and
Pizza; I suspect a first date place for
many of my generation. For many students
coming out of Chicago’s ethic neighborhoods
it was a first exposure to culture diversity,
classical music and fine arts.
UICC Alum
Sunbathing on the
small bench; UI football team went to
the Rose Bowl January 1964; President
Kennedy shot November 1963; received two
special gifts at the end of my first week
of school, a dictionary and a string of
pearls; I was thirty-six my freshman year.
Was a platinum blonde for one week! Made
many friends, both students and teachers;
the transition experience of going from
Navy Pier to Circle Campus was amazing;
I will always have a soft spot in my heart
for Navy Pier; I have lived within five
minutes (walking) of Navy Pier the past
40 years.
UICC alum
Riding a school
bus to and from Circle Center each day
from the Medical Center Campus; we would
walk the 10 blocks down Taylor through
Little Italy in nice weather. During the
blizzard of 1967 our bus did make it to
Circle; on arrival we learned that classes
were cancelled. We hopped back on the
bus and inched our way to the Medical
Center. The wind at Circle’s entrance;
it drove a fine grit under my contacts
and made my eyes tear; the student nurses
registered for class after all other students
classes were often filler. We obtained
permission from an American Literature
professor to overfill his class by eight
students, but we had to sit on the floor!
My primary campus was the Medical Campus,
where I obtained a BS in nursing in 1969.
We were required to take sciences and
humanities at Circle.
Vada Grant
’69 NURS
The most vivid
memory I have about Circle Campus is from
the winter of 1977-78. I was a science
major, so many of my classes were within
the science buildings. That was an extraordinarily
cold winter, and I remember walking between
the science buildings and how cold and
breezy it was between those tall buildings.
In fact, that is one of the main reasons
I have been living in Arizona for the
last 25 years!
Laurecia
Dailey-Evans
1976-80
My most vivid memory
is Life in the Forum. This was the center
of student activity outdoors. We'd go
to the cafe and grab lunch, then hang
out on the steps of the Forum and watch
life walk by. Often we would play hacky
sack or frisbee (many times with the cafe
lunch trays!) or just bag some rays.
The elevated walkway was the best way
to get from one end of campus, usually
PEB to UH Building or the Arts Building.
Best part was using them for cover in
snow and rain.
As I lived in the Gymnastic dorm south
of PEB on Maxwell St. (Maxwell St. Market!!!),
I often used the walkways on weekends
to ride my bike, very fast.
UIC is also where I began my triathlon
career in 1985. To date, I have done more
than 150 triathlons, including the Ironman
(2.5 mile swim/112 mile bike/ 26.2 mile
run), and continue to race and coach today.
Though I live in Austin, Texas, today
and do not get to visit much, I still
have fond memories of UICC, CJ Johnson,
the best gym team in the country and a
wonderful campus.
Chris
Summers
1981-85
I remember taking
the "now" Red Line to Grand/State
subway station from the South Side and
coming out of the station, where students
would transfer to an eastbound CTA trolley
bus on the Grand Avenue route. A CTA conductor
would always be there, opening up the
back door of the bus, and when it was
okay for the driver to go, he would tap
on the back door with his "transfer
puncher" and holler, "Okay,
Jimmy! We would all laugh and say, "Isn't
it interesting how "all" of
the bus drivers are named Jimmy!"
George
L. Lee
1964-65
If you have any
questions, please contact Tiffany Murkey
at 312/355-2549 or
tmurkey@uic.edu.
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