Gustave Solomons, Jr. leads a dance group, ca. 1973 Source: MIT in Perspective by Francis E. Wylie (Little, Brown and Company, 1975)In recent years, students--especially those in architecture--have regarded the Rogers lobby [Lobby 7] as not just a place to pass through but as one of community interaction. Elaborate experimental structures have been built and performances have included nearly everything except an elephant act. In this one, Gustave M. Solomons Jr. '61, architecture graduate who became a dancer, leads his group [circa 1973].Francis E. Wylie, MIT in Perspective: A Pictorial History of the Massachusetts Institute of Technology (Little, Brown and Company, 1975), p. 202 Timeline: 1970s School: School of Architecture and Planning Department: Architecture Career: Arts & HumanitiesCommunity Object: Image Collection: Integration and Differentiation 1969-1994, Students, The Solomons