Special 
                Report 
               "I 
                will do my best for this instituion which I love." With 
                those words, Edward Hirsch Levi, PhB'32, JD'35,
"I 
                will do my best for this instituion which I love." With 
                those words, Edward Hirsch Levi, PhB'32, JD'35, 
                accepted the presidency of the University of Chicago in September 
                1967. The University's eighth--and first alumnus--president 
                died March 7 at age 88.
              
                 
                  |  | 
                 
                  | In 
                    a different lifetime 
                    centered on Chicago quads, Edward Levi made his mark: as bow-tied 
                    intellectual and administrator. | 
              
              Addressing 
                the entering College class in October 1972, Edward Hirsch Levi, 
                PhB'32, JD'35, paraphrased a famous remark made by Robert Maynard 
                Hutchins, Chicago's president when Levi himself was an undergraduate. 
                "He said it really is not a very good university," Levi told the 
                assembled first-years, "but it happens to be the best." He paused. 
                "Sometimes I think it is the only university." 
              Edward 
                Levi spent more than 50 years in the service of the only University--including 
                terms as a professor in the Law School and the College, as dean 
                of the Law School, as Chicago's first provost, and as president. 
                President emeritus of the University, the Glen A. Lloyd distinguished 
                service professor emeritus in the Law School and the College, 
                and a University life trustee, Levi died in Hyde Park on March 
                7, after six years of suffering from Alzheimer's disease. He was 
                88. 
              On 
                the national stage, Levi was best known as President Gerald Ford's 
                choice for U.S. attorney general, a position he assumed in 1975, 
                after the credibility of the Justice Department had been eroded 
                by the Watergate scandal. Ford called Levi a "superb" attorney 
                general. "When I assumed the presidency in August 1974, it was 
                essential that a new attorney general be appointed who would restore 
                integrity and competence to the Department of Justice" in the 
                wake of Watergate and the war in Vietnam. Levi, said Ford, "was 
                a perfect choice." 
              Supreme 
                Court Justice Antonin Scalia, who was a senior official under 
                Levi in the Justice Department, seconded Ford's assessment, telling 
                the New York Times that in Levi's two years as the nation's 71st 
                attorney general, he "brought the department through its worst 
                years....He brought two qualities to the job, a rare intellectuality 
                and a level of integrity such as there could never be any doubt 
                about his honesty, forthrightness, or truthfulness." 
              Seen 
                by politicians of all persuasions as an exemplary attorney general, 
                Levi exhibited the characteristics that were--along with his ever-present 
                and sometimes slightly askew bow tie--hallmarks of his career 
                on the quads: force of personality, keen intellect, and unwavering 
                integrity. 
              "Educated 
                at the Laboratory Schools, the College, and the Law School, he 
                breathed deep the air that Robert Maynard Hutchins described as 
                'electric,'" said President Hugo F. Sonnenschein, at whose 1993 
                inaugural festivities Levi was an honored guest, "and the University's 
                sensibilities helped to shape the man he became." 
              The 
                institution did much to mold the pattern of Levi's life, but Levi 
                did much to shape the life of the institution. "Our University 
                bears the stamp of Edward Levi's accomplishments and of his character," 
                said former U of C president Hanna Holborn Gray, who now teaches 
                history at Chicago, "and it will be measured always by the high 
                standards and demanding ideals that he insistently, and unforgettably, 
                placed before us." 
              A 
                legal scholar whose Introduction to Legal Reasoning (University 
                of Chicago Press, 1949) remains a classic, Levi was also famed 
                for his teaching ability, blending clarity, wit, innovation, and 
                intellect. As dean of the Law School in the 1950s, he led the 
                school's physical and intellectual advances, building the Laird 
                Bell Quadrangle and fostering a merging of law and other disciplines, 
                including the influential law and economics movement. As provost 
                (1962-68), he spent several years as acting dean of the undergraduate 
                College, reorganizing it into five divisions with a Common Core 
                program for the first two years. He also played a key role in 
                what was at that time the largest fund-raising endeavor of any 
                U.S. university. 
               
 