Jo Jones first made contact with the Delta Sigma Theta Sorority Incorporated Alpha Nu Chapter at the University of Illinois on a high school visit. She enrolled at the University of Illinois in 1959 and, although the Chapter House was sold in 1962 (the year following her initiation), she remembers her experience as an undergraduate and as an Alpha Nu very fondly. Meeting lifelong friends, experiencing personal growth, and playing cards with sisters are among the highlights she mentions.
Joe Kraus (1917-2010) came to the UI Library School in fall of 1938, but his education was suspended after Pearl Harbor in late 1941. After being drafted, he served as a teacher in the Officer Candidate School and as a director of technical libraries on Army bases during the war before eventually returning to get a PhD in Library Science during the 1950s.
Joseph “Joe” Rank’s connection with the University of Illinois goes back to 1952, when he and his family moved to Champaign-Urbana. As an undergraduate from 1965-69, he studied advertising, and was active in the Sigma Alpha Epsilon fraternity, the Marching Illini, and Naval ROTC. He returned to teach naval science and attend graduate school in the early ‘70s and came back once again to work at the Alumni Association from 1995 to 2018. Then, he helped establish the history and traditions program and rededicate Memorial Stadium. In this interview, he discusses these experiences and shares stories of his longtime association with the University.
John Arenas – Former COVID-19 Testing Strategy Coordinator for Illinois Department of Public Health (IDPH). Oral history conducted for inclusion in the COVID-19 Documentation Project, a collaboration between the University of Illinois Archives and the University of Illinois System.
Jonathan Allen completed his Ph.D. at the University of Pennsylvania and is Professor of Electrical Engineering at the University of Illinois , where his work includes research on speech recognition and cochlear technologies. During his undergraduate years at Illinois, he played guitar and banjo and was a member and former president of the Campus Folksong Club. A key event in his involvement with the club was an interview that he conducted with Doc Watson during his visit to the campus.
Joseph T. Tykociner was a professor of Electrical Engineering at the University of Illinois from 1921 to 1949 and a professor emeritus from 1949 to 1969. In this interview, conducted on March 9, 1967, Tykociner discusses his early interest in sound recording and sound in moving pictures, experience as a student/research engineer/faculty at the University, research and experiments with sound recording, career as a research engineer for Marconi/German companies on radio telegraphy/radio communications at Russian companies/Army, his return to the US in 1920, his later demonstration of sound in film, and commercials and films using his sound system.
Joy Valentine, Director of the UIC Early Outreach Program at the University of Illinois Chicago. Oral history conducted for inclusion in the COVID-19 Documentation Project, a collaboration between the University of Illinois Archives and the University of Illinois System.