Scholar at the top

November 25, 1986

When Hanna H. Gray accepted her present position as president of the University of Chicago in 1978, she took up what Newsweek magazine described as ``the most prestigious academic post ever held by a woman.'' Setting ``first woman'' records, however, was nothing new to Mrs. Gray: She was the first woman to be dean of arts and sciences at Northwestern University (1972-74), and later the first woman provost of Yale University (1974-78).

Born into a distinguished academic family in Heidelberg, Germany, she was raised in New Haven, Conn., where her father had accepted a post at Yale after leaving Germany because of his opposition to the Nazis. She once recalled being brought up ``under all kinds of German theories'' that included having no pillows, no white bread, and only two radio programs a week. A great fan of such entertainers as Edgar Bergen and Fred Allen, she told an interviewer that she once aspired to a career as radio comedian.

She graduated summa cum laude from Bryn Mawr College, studied under a Fulbright Scholarship at Oxford, and earned her PhD in history from Harvard. A scholar of Renaissance and Reformation history, she holds honorary degrees from 42 colleges and universities and is a member of the Pulitzer Prize board.

She currently oversees a university of nearly 10,000 students and a budget of more than $290 million - not an easy task. ``The university's characteristic state,'' she told the university senate last winter, ``may be summarized by the words of the lady who said, `I have enough money to last me the rest of my life, unless I buy something.''' -R.M.K.