16 new studentsHP project begins.,,(left to right) Alderman Leon M. Despres, Mayor RichardJ, Daley, Phil A. Doyle, Chicago land clearance commission'sexecutive director and UC Chancellor Lawrence A. Kimptonappear at the Hyde Park redevelopment ceremony thatmarked the beginning of construction on the project. Vol. 67, No. 5 « University of Chicago, Friday, October 3, 1958 31Shapiro lends paintingsfor rental to UC studentsJoseph Randall Shapiro, noted Chicago art collector,, has made a loan of over 100 paint¬ings to the University to be used for exhibition in student rooms. The exhibit is called “Artfor Living.”The paintings, largely by Chicago artists, will be available to undergraduate students liv¬ing in the dormitory system for rental on a quarterly basis. Interested persons should fillout registration cards at the Ida Noyes desk.in Ida Noyes at 2* pm. Students Shapiro, a member of the Ren-whose cards are drawn first will aissance society hoard of directorshave first choice on the paintings, gathered the main part of the re-A rental charge of 50 cents per cent Marc Chagall exhibit at thequarter will be charged to defray society.costs of insurance and handling. Currently Shapiro is sponsoringEach quarter, the pictures will be an exhibit at the Arts club en-re-exhibited and rented. titled “Surrealism, then and now.’’iimiiiiiiiiittiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiitiiiiiiiiitittimttiiitiifiiiimitiiiiimiiiintiiiiitiiiiitiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiitiiitittiiiiiimimiiimniThe exhibit, which is beingheld in the Ida Noyes lobbywill last until October 19. OnOctober 20, a drawing will be heldchosenas' University scholars'Sixteen of the entering classwill be the first members ofthe newest of the University’shonor societies. They are to becalled University scholars.Membership is open to thosemembers of this and succeedingentering classes selected by acommittee consisting of suchpeople as the dean of the college,committee, and the dean of admis-the chairman of the scholarshipsions. This special recognition isthe result of their outstandingacademic and community records,their college board scores, andpreadmission interviews.Recommended by the facultycommittee on scholarship policy,the society will meet informally five or six times during the yearwith distinguished visitors to thecampus. Margaret Perry, assist¬ant dean of the college, com¬mented that the design of thegroup and purpose of its programwas to extend the potential ofleadership of the 16.George Playe, director of finan¬cial aid and spokesman for thefaculty committee explained that,in addition, special financial con¬sideration was extended, in antici¬pation to their coming leadership.The University scholars are:Brenda Beck, New York; KennethDriesell, West Bend, Washington;Barbara Flynn, Chicago; KentHull, Menlo Park, California; Marna Motler, Bremerton, Wash¬ington; Nathalie Ostroot, Minne¬apolis; Leon Rochester, Chicago;Joe Young, .Middletown, Ohio;Sally Akan, Spokane, Washing-'ton; Karl Bemesderfer, Hamilton,Ohio; John Berry hill, CouncilBluffs, Ohio; Aaron Douglas,Evanston, Illinois; Martha Kings¬bury, Kansas City, Missouri; Rob¬ert Lavine, Evanston, Illinois;James Stanek, Forest Lake, Min¬nesota; Bernard Susser, Albany,New York.(Editor’s note: For further in¬formation on the entering class,see Enrollment story, page 2;Housing and new student profiles,page 3.) No park bench in f58by Rochelle DubnowNo need to resort of the soft grass of the Midway or apark bench — the fate predicted for UC students by DeanRuth O. McCarn at this time last year—during the housingshortage. This quarter a luxurious new dorm awaits its“coed” inhabitants.UC, no doubt, in keeping with its tradition of liberaleducation has allotted one section of the “new women’s dor¬mitory” now discreetly known as East and two North andWest houses of C-group (Nancy Kelly and Foster) to thegentlemen (God bless them). The plan initiated last yearin C-group worked out blissfully well.... only one prob¬lem, the ladies and gentlemen seemed to have difficulty shar¬ing laundry facilities. No need for panty raids at Chicago,just stop off in the communal laundry room and take yourpick. (Note to anxious parents: never fear . . . the housingbureau is making absolutely sure that every window, firedoor, mouse hole, etc. is securely locked . . . assuring thesafety of your sons and daughters.)iiiniiiiiiiiiiiiiiutiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiitiiiiiiiiiiiMimiimiiiiimiiiiiiiiKiiiiiiiiwiiiiimiiiitiniitiiiiutiiiiiiimitiiiiiiiiiiMiaiInitiate health insurance planFor the first time Univers¬ity of Chicago students arebeing offered enrollment in agroup plan for accident and sick¬ness insurance which is low incost and provides extensions ofservices currently available fromthe student health service. Whileenrollment in the plan is entirely\oluntary, students will be re¬quired to state in writing whetheror not they wish to have this in¬surance.Dr. Henrietta Herbolsheimer,Director of student health servicehas worked with the insurer todevelop a plan particularly suit¬able for this University. The com¬pany selected is supplying similarinsurance to a large number ofAmerican colleges and universitiesincluding Harvard. Yale, North¬western and UCLA.Cost of insuranceThe cost of twelve consecutivemonths of coverage ranges from$10 per year for those registeredfor four quarters to $20.50 peryear for those registered for onlyone quarter. The difference infates is explained by the factthat the four-quarter student hasbasic student health coveragethroughout four quarters, where¬as the student who is registeredfor but one quarter a year has nobasic student health coverage forthree quarters of the insurancePeriod.Basic student- health coverageThe main service of any healthservice for students is the provi¬so1* of ambulatory-patient carefor both prevention of illness and early diagnosis and treatment.These services, if properly used,often obviate the need for costlyhospitalization and keep the stu¬dent at his class work. Ambula¬tory medical care, in ihe opinionof medical-care experts, is themost important part of healthservice for people. UC studentshave basic ambulatory service aspart of their studem health serv¬ice coverage during the quartersthey are registered and pay theGeneral service fee. “Ambulatorymedical care is so expensive andso difficult to administer that nomajor insurance company has beenable thus far to cope with it,”said Dr. Herbolsheimer. “Studentsare urged to - recognize, thatwhether they carry the new in¬surance or not, they are entitledto ambulatory care at studenthealth service,” she continued,“only during periods when theyare registered and have a validIB card.”In addition to care for ambula¬tory patients, the service has pro¬vided some measure of hospitalcare for students suffering fromserious illness or accidents. Itprovides complete coverage formedical and hospital expenses ofregistered students for the firstweek of care in the UC hospitals.The hospital coverage under thebasic student health program haslong been recognized to have fourlimitations: 1. Students are notcovered adequately between quar¬ters, 2. Students have no coveragefor these costly services when theyare not registered, 3. Students arenot covered for care in hospitals when they are stricken and needhospital care away from campus,and 4. Students under no circum¬stances are covered for a longenough time to take care of themajority of protracted illnesses.Coverage provided bythe insuranceThe new insurance plan extendsthe coverage for hospital care. Itprovides a maximum of 31 days;it starts with the eighth day forstudents with basic student healthservice coverage who are hospital¬ized in UC hospitals, and startswith the first day for those stu¬dents who do not have basic stu¬dent health coverage or those stu¬dents who, because of absencefrom the city, require hospitaliza¬tion elsewhere. The usual exclu¬sions of accident and sickness in¬surance policies apply in the newinsurance. These exclusions arelisted in a brochure available atcentral registration in Bartlettgymnasium.The question may be f sked, Whydoes not the insurance cover allhospital care? Why bother at allto have the University include cov¬erage for the first seven days?,or any other period of time? Dr.Herbolsheimer stated. The an¬swer, she explained, is “simply”that the arrangement at UC savesthe student money - nd at thesame time assures his access tocare of the highest quality. Mostother colleges cannot consider ourkind of arrangement; because, un¬like UC, their student health serv¬ices are not completely integratedwith a medical-school and hospital facility as part of the university.Dr. Herbolsheimer went on toquestion: “why is the student oncampus not free under the' planto select his own hospital? Again,she explained, the answer is“cost.” Built into the plan beingoffered the students here is a typeof control over unnecessary hospi¬talization which cannot be exer¬cised in dealing with, other insti¬tutions in the community.”“Why the limitation to 31 days?Once again, cost. In any insuranceplan, one gets no more than hepays for or, conversely, has topay for all of the embellishmentswhich he demands. Protractedcoverage, which is seldom neces¬sary for young adults, merelyraises the costs for all partici¬pants. Similarly, excessive usagefor elective procedures or for carethat can be provided on an ambu¬ latory basis, raises premiums as¬tronomically. The 31-day span ofcoverage built into the UC plan isbased on study of almost a decadeof experience among our students.In all but a very few cases, thisperiod was adequate. The 120-daycoverage and the so-called majormedical and deductible planswhich are being offered the publicat large have been considered andare judged not particularly "appli¬cable to the health needs needs ofstudents.“Why is the plan voluntaryrather than required of all? Be¬cause it is the present opinion ofthose concerned in structuring thsihsurance plan that it would bedesirable to allow the studentsthe right to make a choice withregard to extension of their basicstudent'' health service benefits.(see “Insurance,” page 2)lllllilll1lll!llliiillltlllllillllllllll!!llltilltll!llllllt||i|||||HHThe first in '67...The Maroon presents the first 36 page issue in its 67 yearhistory. Featured in this issue are a series of Maroon firsts . . ,our first completely separate supplement printed on gloss stock,a new logo, first of a series of articles on College departments,the function of the National student association, sports news,the first student opinion column and sports calendar.In addition to these innovations we are pleased to introduceto you "Moleville” by Ron Burton, the Maroon's answer toArnold, Peanuts, Charlie Brown, Sick Sick, Sick and Pogo.For index see page 2.UUIIIIIltlllllllUlllUffllfHIHIIIMIIlIUltlllHtltHIlllllllliHItHIUHIIIItflflllHfHfmillllimillllflKHIItllllfJtltfffUlftfllSfliV"In this 36 page issue:Additional bus service 2Enrollment 2Parking regulations 3Entering class profile 3Editorial pages , 4, 5, 6College series - placements 7Culture vulture 9, 10Hyde Park redevelopment 14/ 15Orientation supplement insertSports . 26,21Summer review 24Calendar 4. 27 UC Insurance plan starts(from pe*e 1)Some students, through individualor family arrangements, alreadyhave availed themselves of addi¬tional medical and hospital cover¬age.“What should the student do,who already has some kind ofcoverage for hospital expenses?This is a diffipult question to an¬swer, because there are hundredsof hospital insurance plans in thiscountry, some of which promisemuch but provide little in theway of protection. All too often,New campus bus addedfor UC north-soufh routeThe “lonesomest” bus driv¬er at UC now has a companionin his solitary transit system.As of last week the Univer¬sity has aranged with Chicagoschool transit, Incorporated tofurnish north-south transporta¬tion in the vicinity of campus.This service will be experi¬mental in nature during a trialperiod operating several months.If sufficient need for the serviceis shown during the trial period,Its operation will continue, “w’ith such modifications as may be indi¬cated by experience.” The bus willbe identified by a sign above thewindshield, “UNIVERSITY CAM¬PUS BUS.”The new campus bus will travelalong Woodlawn avenue between48th street and 50th street andreturn making intermediate stopsat street intersections for pas¬sengers at 48th, 59th, 51st, 53rd,55th, 57th and 59th streets. Thebus will complete a round tripapproximately every twenty-fiveCasual eloquenceNorfolk |ocke(-Shetland-designed weave fabric*34.95Our Prices Can't Be Beat . . . It's Smart To Buy For LessD & G Clothes Shop744 E. 63rd St. MI 3-2728“f» the Neighborhood for 40 Years*9Moon: 9 «.m. - 8 p.m., Mon. - FrL — 9 a.m. - 9 p.m., Saturday people only learn of the limita¬tions of their coverage when theyattempt to draw upon their policy.The advice of the University isthat if the student has any doubtat all about the adequacy of hiscoverage under any other arrange¬ment, he should apply for the UCStudents’ Accident and SicknessExpense Insurance.”How to applyThrough advance mailings andat registration on October 4 and 6,each student will be provided witha brochure on the insurance plantogether with an attached applica¬tion blank. Students of legal ageand minors jointly with their par¬ents. must either sign up for theinsurance or state in writing thatthey do not wish the coverage.In either event, the applicationblank must be returned to theBursar. If the student wishescoverage, he has to do two things:1. He must specify on the blank,by checking the appropriate box,the number of quarters he expectsat the time of registration to bein residence, and 2. He must at¬tach to the application form acheck or money order, not cash,in the appropriate amount asstated opposite the box he checks.Some of the early registrants, mis¬understanding the instructions,have returned the blanks with arequest for coverage but havefailed to include the fee, thusmaking extra work for themselvesand everyone else concerned, Dr.Herbolsheimer pointed out.When to get theS-A-S insuranceEvery student who wishes thestudents’ accident and sicknessexpense insurance must apply andpay the appropriate fee [not incash ] to the Bursar at registrationor not later than seven days afterminutes, under normal drivingconditions.The bus will not operate on offi¬cial University holidays. It willoperate Monday through Friday:the bus will make one round trip• Morning (starting at 48thstreet) from 7:30 am to 9:30am.• Afternoon (starting at 59thstreet) from 4:30 pm to 6:30pm.In addition to the hours above,the bus will make one round-tripstarting at 59th street at the fol¬lowing times:• at 12 noon, 2:15 pm, 3:15 pm,7:30 pm and 9:30 pm.The “east-west” service initiatedlast year will continue with thefollowing changesThe fare on the bus will be in¬creased to ten cents per ride. Thebus will be operated during thehours below, Monday through Fri¬day:• from 7:30 am to 11:45 am.• from 12:30 am to 2 pm.• from 3:45 pm to 7:15 pm.• from 8 pm to 9:15 pm.• from 10 pm to 10:30 pm. by Mary FinkleBecause of legal restrictions, Enrollment statistics will maintain the steady level es-T^US 1S X!nlted tablished for the two previous years at UC, as an expected-- niversi y ac- 435 entering students registered for autumn quarter classes.This figure issued by Charles D. O’Connell, director of ad¬missions represents an in- —crease of six over the 1957 that date. Applications may bemade in person, or by mail. TheBursar will not be able to acceptapplications after October 15.Where to ask questionsStudents who have questionswhich have not been answered inthe brochure or in this article,may contact the dean of students,the Bursar and the Director ofstudent health service.The Director of student healthservice, together with a represen¬tative of the insurance carrier, willplan to meet with students in theGoldblatt conference room of thehospital from six to seven on theevenings of Monday, October 6,Tuesday, October 7, and Wednes¬day, October 8, in order to answerquestions on the S-A-S insurance.The Goldblatt conference room islocated on the first floor of thehospital, near the S.H.S. entrance.In addition, a representative ofthe insurance carrier will be pres¬ent at the student health servicetable in Bartlett Gymnasium dur¬ing central registration.Change in registrationstatus of studentAny change in a students’ regis¬tration status should be reportedat once to student health in orderthat they may help the student toassure continuity of coverage orto obtain a refund if one is inorder.* * •The insuring agency, Higham,Neilson, Whitridge & Reid, Inc.,of Chicago, has worked with thestaff of the Student Health Serv¬ice, the Bursar and the Dean ofStudents, in an attempt to devisea plan particularly suited to theneeds of UC students. Suggestionsfrom the students for improve¬ment of the plan will be welcome.Such suggestions may be broughtto Student Health Service.485 enter Universityulty, staff and students. Passen¬gers will be admitted to the vehi¬cle upon the presentation of aticket to the driver. The driverwill not be permitted to acceptcash or sell tickets. One ride Pre-registration estimatetickets of 10 cents each are sold During the same two-yearat the following locations:• Bursars office (5801 Ellis).• Reynolds club desk.• Billings hospital• Blaine hall.• International house. period, Illinois high schools havegraduated their smallest classesin about a quarter century.Included in the 485 are 27 earlyentrants. The 125 transfer studentsabout to begin their studies on★ RALEIGH★ RUDGE• ★ RANGERJACKSON PARKBIKE SHOPFor bicycles builtto iost.Authorized dealer★ GAZELLE★ SCHWINN★ DUNELT| ★ and OTHER FINE FOREIGN MAKESExpert repairs on all makes \and modelsParts and accessories'domestic and foreignYea! We tare atill in Hyde Hark5333 S. LAKE PARKDO 3 7524HO 7-9860* -*■ - campus bring to 610 the totalnumber of new undergraduatesfrom approximately 2100 appli¬cants.382 entering students, exclusiveof transferees, will be housed inthe residence halls.Secondary schools of metropoli¬tan Chicago are the largest singlesource of new students, sending117 to the Midway this autumn.65 from elsewhere in Illinois, 57from New York, and 33 from Cali¬fornia head the numerical list ofstates and the five foreign coun.tries represented.160 of the 330 males and 152females will begin their collegecareers on scholarship.2 • CHICAGO MAROON • Oct 3, 1958 Kt«p On YourTo«* With NSQOZWhen the student body sit*in class all day, getting numbat both ends, be craey likea fox. Keep on your toes withNoDoz. Be alert for late-bourstudying and hep on latedates. Safe as coffee and muchmore convenientA Note to ProxyHo Dot wiltkeep yourFoovltitt alort. too. *\BOOKSTORE1311 CAST 57th STREET2 BLOCKS EAST OF MANDEL HALLEVENINGS — Monday, Wednesday, Friday to 9:00 P.M.STORE HOURS: DAILY 8:00 A.M. to 6:00 P.MFour hundred - eighty - five UCnew students make up its largest“in-residence” first year classsince World War II.Nearly 80 per cent of the firstvear students will live on campusthis year, Charles D. O’Connell, di-rector of admissions, reported.O’Connell said that 382 men andwomen in the Class of 1962 havesigned up for rooms in the Uni¬versity residence halls. Ninety-eightwill live at home and five otherswith relatives in the Chicago area.‘ This will mean that a greaterpercentage of the entering classthan in many years will live closerto their classrooms/’ observedO’Connell.He added:“As in the past, UCs College isin great part a residential.“What pleases us particularly(his year is the fact that many ofour Chicago area students will beliving on the Quadrangles, par¬ticipating still more fully in campuslife.“Additional facilities now underconstruction will permit even more students to live in residence at theUniversity."The total number of students inall the various academic activitiesof the University, including theDowntown center, is expected toreach 9,000 when regular classesbegin October 9, Van Cleve said.This total includes nearly 2,500undergraduates and 3,800 graduatesand other full-time students oncampus.Robert E. Streeter, dean of theCollege, told the entering studentsof the four years ahead in theseterms:“You are entering upon an or¬ganized curriculum of liberal stu¬dies based on this University's be¬lief that educated men and womenshould possess, in common, skilland judgement in the use of in¬dispensable intellectual tools, anda clear grasp of essential elementsin the great fields of human in¬quiry.”Statistics produced this “pro¬file” of the entering class:• Nearly 90 per cent were 17or 18 years old. • The ratio of boys to girlswas 2 to 1.• Nearly 80 per cent will liveon-campus.• Nearly 40 per cent startout expressing interest in amajor in the physical sciences.• Another 40 per cent beginswith a major in mind in eitherbiological sciences, social sciences,or the humanities.• 40 per cent had a “B” aver¬age in high school; 46 per centan “A” average; 4 per cent be¬low “B”.• Scholarships are being ex¬tended to 36 per cent, including97 by the State of Illinois and11 by the National Merit scho¬larship corporation.• Illinois students number 37per cent, New York 12 per cent,California 7 per cent.• A total of 37 states, Dis¬trict of Columbia, Alaska, Ha¬waii and five foreign countriessent new students. O’Connell said that over 1,500applications were received foradmission to this class. He saideach student was judged indi¬vidually.Those who did not gain ad¬mission, he said, included over400 who were turned down onbasic requirements, others whowere unsuccessful scholarship candidates and those urh© hadsubmitted multiple applicationsand presumably had enrolledelsewhere.“Despite the stepped-up selec¬tivity that all colleges and uni¬versities must adopt as thenumber of applicants soars,”O’Connell said, “our criteria of(see “University’s,” page 21)A PROFILEOF THE UNIVERSITY OF CHICAGOCLASS OF 1962What will they study?Cars must be registeredMrs. Ruth McCarn, assistant dean of students and chairman of the UC parking com¬mittee has announced that “the increasing gravity of the parking problem in the Univer¬sity neighborhood has made necessary a program of automobile registration.”During central registration all students will be given an application for the registra¬tion of a car. If they do not drive a car they so state by signing the card. If they do drivea car they complete the rest —ot the information requested tion up to date at all times,” Mrs. facilities, Mrs. McCarn enumerat-► on the card. Students withcars should come to registrationknowing the license number.An identification sticker withinstructions for its use will beissued for each automobile regist¬ered.Application for registrationmust be initiated as any studentbegins to make use of a car in thecampus area. “It is the studentsresponsibility to keep the registra- McCarn stressed. ed.Failure to register a car, stu- The Parking committee is adent owned or student operated joint student-faculty-administra-entails a fine of $5 payable to tion committee. The two studentthe Bursar. members are nominated by theMrs. McCarn explained that President of Student Governmentregistration will have distinct ad- and appointed by the Dean of Stu- BiologicolSciencesHumanitiesPhysicalSciencesSocialSciencesProfessionalSchoolsThinkingit overvantages for the car driver. “Itwill facilitate the recovery ofstolen cars, minimize car theft,and give the University a basisfor planning additional parking dents. The Committee meets regu¬larly throughout the year to re¬view petitions, coordinate proced¬ures, and recommend policy.(see editorial, page 4) Nearly forty per cent of the freshman class entering the University of CMcafoin the autumn of 1958 have indicated a preference for studying physical sciences.The rest of the students who have expressed their interest are about equallydivided among biological sciences, humanities and social sciences.hew TEXT BOOKSSTUDENT SUPPLIESf * v - ;FOUNTAIN PENS-NOTE BOOKS-r STATIONERY— LAUNDRY GASESBRIEF CASES - SPORTING GOODSTYPEWRITERS sold-rented-repairedPOSTAL STATION RENTAL LIBRARYUSEDwm—m! i i fi \ f| ; : EIII U! iff\ > r j*jl—»_ ■_BUIIWjnBUSUC’s : ost important tradition—freedom—Our University posses some degree of noto¬riety as being without traditions; we have nosymbols or colors or mottos, except in name.Whether this is good or unfortunate is a con¬troversial point. This is not our point.For actually we do have traditions, strongtraditions and dynamic ones. Not as the wordis normally used to indicate that spirit whichbrings crowds into the open air in the midstof a snow storm to watch a football game;not the traditions which bring credulousfreshmen to Hell week; and not the type oftraditions associated with green beanies.But we do have a tradition of freedom, in¬tellectual, academic and social. We have along heritage at this University of assumedresponsibility; a tradition of maturity, a cus¬tom of serious study. And most significantly,from our standpoint we have a strong tradi¬tion of a free press. This was perhaps bestexpressed in a 1954 Maroon editorial:"The University of Chicago, now your Uni¬versity for four or perhaps more years, hasone tradition that we feel stands above allothers. This is freedom of inquiry in all in¬tellectual pursuits in both academic andextra-curricular areas."It is this tradition far more than two-yearcollege programs that has caused wide mis¬understanding of your University. We believethat it is this tradition, however, that hasmade Chicago one of the foremost centers ofeducation in the world."In the spirit of this tradition the Collegeprogram of the University has undergone con¬tinual evolution. In the spirit of this traditionstudents and faculty members feel free to ex¬press their views on all subjects. In short, webelieve that it is this tradition that has at¬tracted so many great scholars of the worldto the University of Chicago. "The Maroon is proud to share the role ofmaintaining this tradition."The Maroon as the only newspaper at theUniversity has a special role in this tradition—to serve the interests of the UC studentcommunity.""The Maroon has stood for equal rights forall students and will not accept any advertis¬ing which discriminates against any studenton a religious or racial basis."The Maroon believes that the widest pos¬sible coverage of student activities is a basicobligation to the student body. With this inmind, the Maroon publishes this Orientationissue."This is your newspaper as much as ours.Membership on the Maroon staff is open toany University student — the only require¬ment being interest."Opinions expressed in the editorials of theMaroon are the opinions of the majority ofthe members of the Maroon staff. The editoris elected by all staff members, not a smalleditorial board."There is no board of publications, so fa¬miliar at other institutions, standing over theMaroon. You, all the students of the Univer¬sity, are the only board of publications weknow or recognize. The letters-to-the-editorcolumn and the newly created Student opin¬ion column is open to any student—or othermember of the University community. Let¬ters are encouraged from the students andfaculty who have a particular problem orviewpoint which they .would like to expressto the University community.‘This, in brief, is how we believe theMaroon strives to be a part of the most impor¬tant of University traditions."And that, in part, is how we hope to main¬tain those University traditions.Energetic, histrionic, literary, artisticjoin UC’s many student activitiesEnergetic, aesthetic, artistic, literary, his¬trionic, musical, political, "new student" geni¬uses of the world UNITE and join the Univer¬sity of Chicago’s many and varied studentactivities.You have already exhibited your discern¬ing taste and good judgment by choosing oneof America’s most distinguished Universitiesas your school.At UC you will receive something that willbecome one of your most prized possessions... an outstanding education.During your academic career at the Univer¬sity of Chicago you will be exposed to a trulyunique educational system, to the finest offaculties, and you will have the most superiorfacilities at your disposal. These things areyours for the taking.During your schooling at UC you will also be exposed to approximately 111 student ac¬tivities . . . these too are a part of your edu¬cation ... for certainly lessons of responsi¬bility and leadership are to be learned here.If you don’t find your "niche" in UC’s vastarray of activities you and nine of your co¬horts are encouraged to be UC’s 112th cam¬pus organization (don’t forget to register itin the student activities office).Take advantage of your superior academicopportunities at the University, but surelydo not overlook the rewarding and enrichingexperience of taking an active, interested partin the student organization of your choice.Whether interested or indifferent . . . giveyourself and UC’s organizations a chance . . .attend SG’s activities night, tomorrow eve¬ning in Ida Noyes hall.No garden—no parking eitherLast year, the zoning board of the city ofChicago informed the University that regula¬tions would require that the administrationprovide about 120 parking places for the newdormitories UC was constructing betweenWoodlawn and Kimbark avenues.Attempting to save money, the administra¬tion revolted. It is absurd to have to provideparking space for the new women’s dormi¬tories since few of the residents own cars.They painstakingly pointed out that out ofthe approximately 200 residents of C-group,less than ten owned cars.The zoning board felt sorry for our almamater and said that they would reduce therequirement to roughly 80 parking spaces.Last spring, tearful UC students watchedtheir peaceful garden tom up behind IdaNoyes hall by George Sollit construction com¬pany bulldozers. "Where are we going to holdour golf classes,” cried women’s physical edu-4 • CHICAGO MAROON • chicaiIssued every Friday throughout the University of Chicago school year andIntermittently during the summer quarter, by the publisher, the Chicago MaroonIda Noyes hall, 1212 East 59th street, Chicago 37, Illinois. Telephones: Ml 3-0800extensions 3265 and 3266. Distributed wlthoat charge on campus, subscriptionsby mail, 63 per year. Office hours: 1 to 5 pm, Monday through Friday. Deadlinefor all material 3 pm, WednesdayEditor-in-chiefRochelle M. DubnowBusiness Manager Advertising ManagerLawrence D. Kessler Gordon L Briggsstudent opinionD. Ish voices viewsTo the entering male studentit frequently comes as a sur¬prise — that there are nationalfraternities on the Universityof Chicago campus. My ownreaction to this fact in the firstweek of my first year here wasone of surprise. And then laterI said to myself "Oh well, I didnot come here to join a frater¬nity. I came here to avoid thatsort of thing." Ths "sort ofthing" I was thinking of werethe stories I had heard aboutfraternities at Big Ten schools.About hazing, about degrad¬ing, often sadistic practicesthat, are frequently associatedwith Creek-letter groups. Sto¬ries about "conformity" andsocial pressure to "be likeeverybody else." I had con¬demned the fraternity systemat the University o' Chicagobefore I had even seen it. I hadcondemned it on prejudice —on a preconceived attitude thatdid not rest upon the facts ofthe situation — just as surelyas the agitator and bigot con¬demns whole races and reli¬gions.Through a series of fortun¬ate circumstances I was in aposition to examine the facts.I saw the fraternity system, Iwent through "rush." And ofall things, I joined a fraternity!I joined because I had becomeacquainted with the facts andbecause I realized that nothingwhich I had heard about fra¬ternities had anything to do with the fraternity l joined orany fraternity on the universitycampus. Because I realized thatjoining a fraternity was not tobe equated with "loss of indi¬viduality"; that becoming amember of a social group didnot mean yielding to socialpressure. I learned that indi¬viduality was not tolerated —it was encouraged. It was en¬couraged because fraternitiesrecognize, in their desire forgrowth, the need for individualexpression of ideas and atti¬tudes for the improvement ofitself and all its members. Ilearned that the pledging per¬iod was not a period of humili¬ation, but a time for meninterested in joining the fra¬ternity to become acquaintedwith the workings of the or¬ganization and with its mem¬bers.I was happy when I joinedmy fraternity — and even hap¬pier now — that I had givenmyself the opportunity to lookat the fraternity system andevaluate it. And I would liketo encourage every male en¬tering student to give himselfthe same opportunity, regard¬less of prior attitudes. Whenthe ten national Greek-letterfraternities on this campus for¬mally open their doors thiscoming January to meet theentering class during "rush"week that opportunity will bethere for you. Use it!Dave Ishmeetcation, as the bulldozers tore up the puttinggreen. "Where are we going to hold our orien¬tation week picnic?" queried an O-boardmember. >The more materialistic students had gleamsin their eyes. It meant room for 80 moreChevrolets (or 160 Izetas) at a Universitywith a parking problem.But these materialists forgot about thematerialists in the administration building.Shortly before orientation week a sign ap¬peared in front of the parking lot: "FEEPARKING AFTER OCTOBER 13." If wehave to build it, let’s charge for it, said thefifth floor administrators. To add insult toinjury, residents of the new dorm will haveto pay for the use of the lot, too!Parking is becoming a premium for stu¬dents at this University . . . unless they arewilling to pay for it.Oct. 3, 1958 STVRftT STUDENT ‘S(IKSsome Mia 6mi cameeisientiauOFF ffetR gomeS BN0 FIGHT rBohemians in barroom wauilsT "insiaifeishould make Alt jf?id [uCH"b Gi*L A eftlARRtfTMfRS, aHE'S CtftVCAT!CARHUTHCRS, WHO HAS AM iNTERESTHrMfvjoH in applied leprosy, uho hasHKOWUlKr ATTACKS OF CRnmONlCschizophrenia, AND who is A BED*WETTER to BOOT? „' 15 -A D F LYWhere didyouWhat did go?Apartment hunting,you find? Nothing.Dear sweet, fresh, naive, newstudents —Our topic today is the threatof creeping improveinentism.Creeping improvement ism is betterknown as Hyde Park redevelop¬ment. It means that our old, de¬crepit, crime-ridden communitywill slowly be replaced by a new,clean and virtuous neighborhood.Hurrah for the destruction of theold fi ret raps, rattraps, and vice-traps. We welcome the thought ofwalking the streets at night safelyonce again. We look forward to thespectacle of massive high-riseapartment buildings glorifying ourlandscape.But amid all this jubilation, anagging voice keeps whisperingto me, “What about the students?Where do we fit in }n Hyde Parkredevelopment?” Every time aslum or near slum area is re¬placed by a high-rise or parkanother space once open to stu¬dent housing vanishes forever.We poor intellectuals cannot quiteafford to pay the $40 per roomrent of the high-rises.SOONER or later most of younew students will leave your dor¬ mitories for the freedom and tran¬quility of your own apartment. Butwhen you start looking for one ofthese apartments, how successfulwill you be in finding one to fityour bank account? It is a curiousdilemma: each year more studentsenter the University of Chicago,but each year we find less avail¬able apartments in the area.The all-too-obvious solution is toretreat back into the dormitoriesor fraternity (maybe someday sor¬ority) houses. We note that as theneighborhood is torn down, newdorms are built up. While the Uni¬versity may applaud the return ofIts natives back into their super¬vised fold, it is an idea that manyof us do not relish.WHAT, THOUGH, could theUniversity do? We think that theUniversity could campaign for lowcost housing in Hyde Park. Thisweek the Hyde Park redevelop¬ment project is up for final ap¬proval in the City council (see theHyde Park Herald of Sept. 24 fora full report), and many peopleare advocating the greater inclu¬sion of low cost public housing inthe project. Low cost housing isThe Qreen Door Book ShopHY 3-5829 1451 EAST 57TH STREETChicogo 37, III.Quality paperbacks — Fine children's booksSpecial orders filled promptly certainly what we students needaround here.The University, then, could tellthe City council that it too warnsmore low cost housing in the area.But instead, the University, “takesno stand, for or against publichousing.” This is shocking. Notonly from the point of view of theadministration’s disregard of stu¬dent needs, but also because nouniversity ought ever ignore thesocial and moral situation or thecommunity in whose midst it existsand ought to honor by its presencetheir. If a University, one of thelast bastions of human decency inour over-materialtstic, witch-hunt¬ing, down-with-the-Supreme-Courtsociety, fails to speak up for theneeds of the poor, who will?SOME PEOPLE are, however,holding out for lower cost housing.But their pleas are drowned out bythe voices of the South East Chi¬cago commission which says theinclusion of low cost public hous¬ing might jeopardize private invest¬ment in the neighborhood. Thisargument sounds fishy to say theleast, Especially when the ChicagoMortgage Barkers associations saysthat it is willing to lend 30 milliondollars for neighborhood improve¬ment whether or not high cost orlow cost housing is built. Perhapsa more significant reason for those opposing to public housing is thefact that according to federal lawpublic housing must be integrated.But descending from ideals backinto realities, what is to be done toensure our existence as present andfuture student apartment dwellers?If the City council has already de¬cided the issue by the time thiscolumn is printed, then there isreally nothing that can be done(except perhaps to start a cooper¬ative student pup-tent project outon the Midway). Even if the planhasn’t yet been approved, there j ■probably nothing that we meremoneyless students can do. But ilwouldn’t hurt if Student Govern¬ment went down to the publichearing to say that students weregetting the short end of the re¬development deal (that is, if theStudent Government can turnitself away from its crucial task of sending telegrams to Eisen¬hower telling him what to do aboutFormosa). Maybe a letter to youralderman mig ht help. Do youknow who he is, or has UC’s em¬phasis on the true, the good, andthe beautiful kept you from learn¬ing anything about how yourneighborhood is run?DON'T THINK, entering stu¬dents, that this isn’t your problem.It’s not your problem yet whileyou are safe and snug in the dorms(where you belong anyway for acouple of years). But someday itwill be you who will spend thosefruitless weeks looking at holes inthe wall renting for one hundreddollars a month. Meanwhile let usall carry on our noble battle for anon-discriminatory housing file,forgetting for the moment that anon-discriminatory housing doesn’tmean a thing if there is no hous¬ing at all for us. ICLOTHES FOR "CLASSAll wool flannels pants $7.95Corduroy pants $4.95Ivy shirts $2.95 & up100 % Imported lambs wool sweaters. . .$4.95Corduroy sport coats $9.95Our Prices Can't Be Beat . . . It's Smart To Buy For LessD & C Clothes Shop744 E. 63rd St. MI 3-272S“In the Neighborhood tor 40 Year*”Hours: 9 o.m. - 8 p.m., Mon. - Fri. — 9 o.m. - 9 p.m., Saturday Nachman’sOWN MADE• CHOCOLATES • COOKIES• CANDIES •HYDE PARK 3-98821307 east 53rd st. Gadfly PolicyGadfly is an attempt on the part of the Maroon to pro¬vide provocative ideas to the campus at large. The columnis meant to be written by students and faculty memberswho wish to have their ideas expressed in the Maroon, andis not a Maroon staff editorial column. Articles will beprinted unsigned, and the author's name will be held inthe strictest confidence by the Gadfly editor.The opinions expressed in the column Gadfly do notnecessarily represent the editorial policy of the Maroon,or its staff.Readers are invited to express their views on Gadflyarticles in the "Letters to Gadfly."KGDL KROSSWORD No. 1ACROSSi '1411 E. 53rd FA 4-5525 — HY 3-5300Cafe EnricoFeaturing Our Hors d'oeuvres TableFree Delivery to U.C. StudentsComplete Italian-American RestaurantON ALL PIZZACHEESE 1.25SAUSAGE 1.50ANCHOVY 1-50PEPPER and ONION 1.35SHRIMP 2.00COMBINATION 2.00SPECIAL!Vi Fried Chicken 1.25LimitedINTRODUCTORY OFFERwith this couponOFF ONALL PIZZA25A. A. A. A AAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAA*«**MAt*«i**MJifM . 1. Marilyn’s firstpicture8. “Are you Koolto Krackthis?"11. A place forcold potatoes12. Way to speak14. Half of nine15. Vintage suds17. Willie in person19. Sign of success20. Dog star21. Frenchconnective23. Canadianimport, liquid24. What they doin Virginia25. Hollywoodword for “good"27. Ballplayer(abbr.)28. Lynne29. Firat word of‘Star-SpangledBanner”31. Willie’s pond33. Products ofMadison Ave,36. Oranges andhotels growhere (abbr.)37. Pogo in person41. Coney orCrete (abbr.)42. What an 8 cyl¬inder “bomb”does to gas(2 words)44. and behold45. A tree;part Urge,part lurch47. Don s49. Cool adjectivefor Koolwords) DOWN1. Matrimonialagency2. The BarefootConteasa3. Marlene’strade-mark4. Bug;destrengthen6. Legal pickupartist6. High spot7. A shad’s legacy3. Lucia diLammermoor’eboy friendf. What a frater¬nity pin doee10. Student’snightmare13. Where to meetIrene Dunne16. Firat name ofa cowardly beer18. Kind of lees22. Where to findblazers26. Bake withcrumbs or in acream sauce30. Kind of been32. Backwardpsychiatrist34. Travelingsecretary35. How Kools feelto your throat36. Who’s on T37. Kind of wise38. Letter finals39. What she sayawhen pinched40. Drinking place43. Erskine Cald¬well’s property •46. Melodic tool(2 w<62. It rides onmany a horse53. Part of pajamas54. Cenozoicor Jazz65. Kind of bone (jumbled)48. Ballplayer’sreport card50. Moet unpopularword on a dale51. Jayne’s kind ofappealWhat a wonderful difference when, youswitch to Snow Fresh KOOL! At onceyour mouth feels clean and cool...your throat feels smoothed, refreshed!Enjoy the most refreshing experiencein smoking. Smoke KOOL .. . withmild, mild menthol... for a cleaner,fresher taste all through the day! *Answer on Pg. 16KOOL GIVES YOU A CHOICE-REGULAR ...OR...KING-SIZE WITH FILTER IC 1958, Brown & Williamson Tobacco Corp.Oct. 3, 1958 • CHICAGO MAROON • 5 i i\■ 1m. t ifIf’> $>HITHER AND YON30 years of freedom threatened(University of San Fran¬cisco) ‘The road to tyranny”(front page editorial)Next Tuesday an amend¬ment to the ASUSF constitu¬tion will be presented to theAssociated students that wouldput an end to 30 years of freedomof the press at this university.The proposed, which is stated anddefended elsewhere on this page,purports to gain equal represen*tation for the Legislature on thePublications council.Before voting for or against it,however, we ask the student bodyto consider the Publications coun¬cil’s case, which opposes theamendment.We contend that the approvalof such an amendment wouldradically change the set-up ofstudent government and studentpublications as it has stood for30 years. It is detrimental to thefreedom of expression and thetradition initiated and continu¬ally upheld by the student bodyand the presidents of the Uni¬versity of San Francisco.First, let us define the natureand functions of the Publicationscouncil. With the approbation ofthe Rev. John F. X. Connolly, S.J.,and the Associated students, thePublications council was formu¬lated in a unique position amongcampus organizations.IT IS PART of student govern¬ment only in the sense that stu¬dents participate in the publica¬tions. In any and all other sensesIt is distinct from student govern¬ment and owes its derivation di¬rectly from the administration.Constitutionally speaking, thePublications council supervises"the interests and affairs of allstudent-edited publications . . .(and is) supreme within its ownsphere.”FURTHERMORE, the ASUSFby-laws stipulated the compositionof the Publications council whichMr. Fracchia seeks to amend was approved this year. This we be¬lieve is indicative of the 1957-58Legislature’s feeling on the mat¬ter. In addition, the previousConstitution also granted the Pub¬lications council supremacy “with¬in its own sphere.”Mr. Fraechia’s amendment istantamount to accusing thepresent council of mismanage¬ment of its own affairs. His actbelittles the abilities of the stu¬dent editors, the faculty moder¬ators, the ASUSF treasurer, andthe dean of students, who havebeen granted supervision of theinterests and affairs of publica¬tions by the student body andFather president.As a remedial measure, hisamendment posits the Legisla¬ture’s ability to manage effectu¬ally its own interest and affairs.But can Mr. Fracchia argue thatthe Legislature has handled itsown affairs with any great degreeof efficiency and prudence whichmight supersede the Publicationscouncil’s abilities?CERTAINLY THE Legislaturehas done a great deal of good. Sohas the Foghorn — which seemsto be Mr. Fracchia’s particulartarget. As for the mismanage¬ments and oversights, we hardlythink that student government isin a position to boast about the$3,000 deficit on the Jazz festival,the disappointing club benefitsduring the Homecoming festivalthe $1,800 deficit with which theASUSF began the year.Student publications do notclaim to be infallible. However,we do not see, especially in lightof this year’s record of studentgovernment, where infallibilitycan be better fostered or guar¬anteed in this newspaper by theaddition of legislature membersto the Publications council.MR. FRACCHIA’S amendmentimplies that the Legislaturewould want to gain more poweron the council. Yet, as a memberof the first body, he made no at¬tempts this week to obtain any&fie PHOTOGRAPHERS1171 EAST 55th STREET MIDWAY 3-4433 sentiment for his amendmentfrom the Legislature.It should be understood thatneither student government norstudent publications have a“check” on each other. The Pub¬lications council cannot noteany member of student govern¬ment out of office; neither canany body of student govern¬ment, including the Legislatureexpel a member of the Publica¬tions council.EACH YEAR since the emerg¬ence of the first student publica¬tion the administration has seenfit to continue the independentorganization of the student pub¬lications. The Publications councilis satisfied with its compositionand its function; the administra¬tion has maintained this separa¬tion of government and pressthroughout the years. But Mr.Fracchia seeks to destroy thisfreedom of press.Contrary to his statement, thisamendment if passed will changethe structure of the Publicationscouncil by elimination of the mu¬tual independence of governmentand publication.■ The proposal will shackle thefree press from performing oneof its basic functions — criti¬cism — for fear of undue re¬prisal. Under those circum¬stances no publication can workto the best interests of the stu¬dent body wltich each publica¬tion represents.The Legislature never has beenrefused the opportunity to discussany matter when they so desired.In fact, Mr. Fracchia’s explana¬tion of his amendment on thispage is concrete proof of the Pub¬lications council’s outlook. Thepublication of letters to the editorboth pro and con disprove the“autocracy” of the Publication’scouncil.We ask you, the voters, to up¬hold one of the basic freedomsof man, the freedom of expres¬sion to vote NO to the amend¬ments on Tuesday. (The SanFrancisco Foghorn.)Small Cheese .... 95cSmall Sausage . $1.15NICKYS1235 E. 55 NO 7-9063 Attempt not uniqueto stifle free press(University of San Francisco) The present movement byASUSF officials is not unique among attempts to stifle free¬dom of the student press.USF voters in 1956 sent to resounding defeat a Studentlegislature attempt to change the organization of the Pub¬lications council.Two years later, the attempt is again being made.The changes in the Publication council were stipulated ina set of student body bylaws, which were called “infamous’’by the Student court. In a unanimous decision against legis¬lative interference in the council, the court said:“Actions taken like these reflect only immaturity andan incapacity to work to the betterment of the ASUSF.”A joint statement issued by the editors of all three campuspublications strongly opposed any changes in the setup of thePublications council and condemned the action as “small,petty, and biased.”Stanford’s campus was the scene of a similar battle lastyear when, after the Stanford legislature empowered itselfto appoint the editor of the Stanford Daily, the staff walkedout in protest.The Stanford student body later repudiated the legislativeaction by a referendum in the student body elections, return¬ing the Stanford Daily to complete independence from thestudent government.Steve Toy, editor of this year’s Stanford Daily, told theFoghorn yesterday that “the students resented politicianscontrolling the only avenue of information available to themcocerning legislative affairs.”—(The San Franeiseo Foghorn)NEW-TEXT BOOKS-usedNote BooksPencilsPaper STUDENT SUPPLIES Fountain PensBrief CasesFiling EquipmentPoliticalPhilosophyPsychologyBeligion GENERAL BDOKS MagazinesNewspapersSubscriptionsArt PrintsNewBecenditlenedl TYPEWRITERS BentedRepairedGreeting CardsInfants9 WearWomen’s Wear GIFTS and NOVELTIES CosmeticsSocial StationeryCostume JewelrySandwichesSoft DrinksMot Coffee SNACK BAR CigarettesTobaccoPipedCamerasAccessories PHOTOGRAPHIC SUPPLIES Fast and ExpertDeveloping Serviceoi C BOOKSTORE5802 ELLIS AVENUE • • •(from page 7)the foreign language requirement,but many people are excused fromSoc. Sci. I and Math. This is notbecause the tests are easier or thestandards more lenient; ratherhigh schools tend to give a muchmore adequate preparation in thesefields than in foreign languages ofcollege writing.Having spent almost all his lifeIn and around the University, HillIs fully equipped to cope with theproblems of the examiner’s office.His father taught in the Labschool and in the old college. Hill,himself, holds three degrees fromthe University, A B.S. from thedepartment of Geography, an M.A.from the department of Music anda -Ph.D. from the department ofPhilosophy.Hill has taught in the depart¬ments of music and philosophy aswell as O.M.P. and all three Hu¬manities comps. This year he willteach Hum. Ill in the college.After joining the faculty in 1939,Hill has been away only one year.In 1953 he did research in philos¬ophy and aestetics at Yale and Co¬lumbia for the Ford Foundation.Hill is married and the father offour children. One daughter, Vir¬ginia, is currently enrolled in thecollege and one really rather won¬ders what she thinks of collegeplacement tests.6 • CHICAGO MAROON • Oct. 3, 1958r^ .. iwm^ ~tttiii ii l Mill -rrtjpirrin; iirjii^ynn mmg 0 ■ ■ | ■ _First of a series... examiner Hill commentson UC placement systemKnox Hill’s article on the college placement system inaugu¬rates a new Maroon feature serits which win attempt to con¬st met (or perhaps reconstruct) the philosophy of the Univer-Several professors and administrators about campus havebeen asked to write articles revealing the history, origins, basicintent and expected future development of their course depart¬ment or division.We have begun with the first thing any entering under¬graduate encounters: the college placement system. In thefollowing weeks of this quarter we hope to have the chairmanof each college comprehensive course write a similar essay.During Winter quarter we shall continue with examinationsof various inter-departmental committees and program and inSpring we shall conclude the forays into the four depart¬ments and the six professional schools.Because the men who will be writing these articles areamong the most significant and well known figures on campus,we will run a concomitant series of biographical interviewswith these men.In the course of this we expect to come up with a rathercomplete statement of the basic ideology of the Universitywritten by themen who are currently creating it. by Knox HillReaders of the Maroon who have already taken the College placement tests do not need tohave them described; others, if they are interested, can And description in an official publicationconcerning them. Instead of offering a new description of the tests I shall, therefore, present a fewcomments on the purposes of the tests, and upon problems connected with them in the past and atpresent.The placement tests are intended as an instrument to be used in planning programs of collegeeducation. Any planned activityThis isby Neal JohnstonMany entering undergraduates, enduring their twenty oddhours of placement tests, often feel as if they had just en¬countered the some of the most confusing multiple choices inthe world. Their confusion is clear and placid compared tothe complexity faced by the ~ . - .— — —The fourteen college comprehen-sives represent fourteen differentaeadmic disciplines; the ability toutilize and organize information inthe proper manner is just as sig¬nificant as the knowledge of sub¬ject matter. The examiner’s officefeels that if a student is guessingproperly, he is at least thinkingproperly; this, in the final analysisis what is important. This is whystudents are urged to answer allquestions.Hill also denied the currentstory that students registered innever ending fight to explode some physics are excused from compsof tlie never ending local myths that students registered in othermen who construct and ad¬minister these tests.A University examiner bears thebrunt of responsibility for the co¬ordination of matters of policy inthe writing and administration ofall comps and placements. KnoxHill, one of our examiners, revealssome of the problems and purposesof these tests elsewhere on thepage.And, in a Maroon interview, Hillrevealed some of the additional dif¬ficulties besetting his job.Not the least of these is theabout comps and placements."First of all, there is no curveused in the evaluation of place¬ment scores. While the tests them- departments would be held for.There is no double standard usedin the placement recommenda¬tions. If a budding young poet isselves are constantly being wilted by not placing out of Humchanged, the standards are rather can tske some solace fromfirmly constructed. These stand¬ards are determined by a complex the fact that he would still' betaking Hum. I if he were an eagersystem of comparison with other young nuclear physicist,tests and by the inclusion of anchor He also explained why almostitems from old comprehensives. n° one places out of English orSecondly, there is no subtrac- the f o r e i g n .language require-tion of wrong answers from ‘right’ rnont, but many people are ex-answers. (The quotes around cused from social science I and‘ripht* atp Trill*1? ) Thprp ^itnnlv Mflth. This IS not b6C&USG tllG tGStSis no uUerior motives £ urging are easier or the standards morepeople to guess if they don’t know lenient; rather high schools tendwhat is correct. (see “This is . ..” page 6) should take proper account ofthe circumstances which furnishits starting point. If we are to plana student’s education we must as¬sess the results of his previous edu¬cation. It has always been the pur¬pose of the placement tests to dothis, and to do it in relation tothe courses of instruction whichrepresent the College’s educationalresources. The extent to which thetests have been directly related toactual College courses has varied,for reasons I shall indicate.Estimate potentialThere are, of course, other kindsof evidence about the education ofthe entering student. There aretranscripts of high school records,and there are the results of en¬trance tests such as those of theCollege Entrance ExaminationBoard. Both kinds of evidence areuseful, but primarily with respectto questions about admission. Theycan tell us much about a student’schances of doing successful workhere; but they do not furnish ade¬quate bases for planning what heshould do while he Is here. Highschool transcripts could he said tolook backward—to be assessmentsof the high school achievements ofour entering students. (It shouldbe added that these achievementsare hard to assess on the basis ofhigh school transcripts, becausethe nature and quality of workvaries so much from high schoolto high school.) Entrance tests aremore like examinations of the stu¬dent’s present capacity for doingcollegiate work. Our placementtests have always attempted, to agreater or lesser degree, to lookforward—to see what results whenthe student tries his wings in vari¬ous areas of college-level work.This is important if we hope todecide that a student needs thiskind of college work but not thatkind; or that he needs this kindmore than that kind.The questions addressed byplacement tests can be formulatedin different ways. We may ask howwe can avoid duplication—how wecan be prevented from requiring a student to repeat work which hehas already completed. We couldphrase a closely related question inthis way: How fast can we give astudent a college degree? It is verydifferent to ask: How can we bestutilize the student's available time?Placement tests are now beingoridnted more and more towardquestions like the last one. TheUniversity has been increasinglyconcerned with discovering howour resources (actual or possiblecourses of study) can he mostfruitfully used for the educationof each student.When the curriculum of the Col¬lege was made up of a fixed num¬ber of fourses required of all stu¬dents it was natural to ask: Howfast can we give each student adegree? In the past the placementtests have been more concernedwith the question than they are atpresent. As a result they havebeen shifting their emphases incertain respects. When the Col¬lege program was planned as afour-year program, running fromthe eleventh through the four¬teenth grades, high school gradu¬ates entered the program in themiddle, at the thirteenth or four¬teenth grade levels. This meantthat their program would havebeen unduly long if they had beenrequired to begin at the begin¬ning. One of the most importantfunctions of the placement testsat this time was to give a sort of“credit” for work done in highschool; it would be an exaggera¬tion, however, to say that creditwas given for high school work,because the tests tried to ensurethat the accredited work was col¬legiate in quality, even though itwas done in high school. The sit¬uation has become significantlydifferent. Students are not enter¬ing in the middle of the program,and can not normally expect col¬lege credit for work done in highschool. (The University of Chi¬cago, and many others of the bestcolleges and universities do con¬tinue to recognize that some stu¬dents reach college levels on some of the work they do in highschool.) The changing situationhas influenced our thinking aboutplacement tests. The chief changehas been an increasing effort tomake the criteria used in theplacement tests conform moreclosely to the criteria used inthe comprehensive examinations.When the length of a student’sprogram depended upon howmuch credit was given for workdone in high school, criteria appli¬cable to work done in the Collegewere not readily applicable. Nowthat our undergraduate programsare normally expected to requirefour years work after high schoolgraduation, we can more reason¬ably base our placement decisionsupon criteria which are closelyrelated to the objectives of collegework, as we at the University ofChicago understand those objec¬tions.Best use of timeThe change does not necessarilymean that placement tests will inthe future more closely resemblecomprehensive examinations. Thechanging circumstances haveturned us more toward the ques¬tion: How can the student bestutilize the time he has availablefor his college education? Properconcern for this question may weltlead us to produce tests which willenable us to compare*'* student’astrengths and weaknesses, withoutdirect reference to the objectivesactually sought in our particularcourses. The Faculty is still experi¬menting with placement tests, try¬ing to make them more effectiveinstruments for determining whatparts of a liberal college educa¬tion a student has already ac¬quired, what things he must studybefore proceeding to comparative¬ly advanced studies, and where heis strongest and where weakest. Ifthe experiments are successful wewill he better able to plan pro¬grams which will make the besteducational use of each student’*time.CO-OP IS FOR EVERYONEWhoever you ore, Co-op is for you. Cooperatives ore ownedby their customers and the customers benefit in many ways:• Finest Super Mart in Hyde Park• Home Economist to help you plan• Credit Union for Loons and Savings• Best Meat and Produce• Largest selection of frozen foods in Chicago• Profits Returned to Customer-Owners• Plenty of Free ParkingSHOP AT THE CO-OP SUPER MART5535 South Harper Avenue■kletter to vultureDear vulfure international house movieswelcome October 6Father Brown, DetectiveDear Mr. Cultural Vulture, Welcome back:I wish you could have been with us this summer for I think you would have enjoyed ourproduction of “Coriolanus,” “The Imaginary Invalid,” and ‘The Cenci.”For the last four years the Court theatre has been producing interesting, exciting, contro¬versial and sometimes entertaining classics during the hot months of July and August. Over ninethousand people from the University, the city, and the area attended this last season.There was an excellent • assembly house, 8 pm• monday evenings• 50cwas an excellent re¬sponse to our first musical, “TheImaginary Invalid.” M o 1 i e r ethree centuries ago write this bril¬liant comedy satirizing hypochon¬driacs, the medical profession andlove. Little did the old boy dreamthat in 1958 the University of Chi¬cago would translate, adapt, addfourteen songs and pass it off asa classic. It was accepted! The difficulty with producing amusical is the necessity for coop¬eration between the director, musi¬cal director, lyricist and actors andsingers. A secondary but equallyfrustrating problem is one of un¬derstudies. William Bezdek, whoplays the title role, became so in¬volved in his part (method acting)that his throat became sore onlyReviewer asks why'of 'Mask and Gown'“Mask and Gown,” an intimate and (here I‘m quoting, notpronouncing) ‘hilarious’ musical review starring T. C. Jones, isbeing presented at the Great Northern theatre under the paternalguidance of Leonard Sillman.Having now delved into ‘who,’*what,’ ‘where,’ and ‘when’ wemust go on to that age old ques¬tion of ‘why’.On one level this is easily an¬swered. “Mask and Gown” is be¬ing presented to make money; it’sbeing presented to keep someactors off the streets; it’s beingpresented to give the verytalented Mr. Jones a vehicle. Butwhy this particular show? Thisrm at a loss to explain.T. C. Jones is a versatile andpolished female personator. All heneeds to give a great performanceIs a little more variety, a muchbetter book and either a few moreor four fewer associate performers.The flaws in the show must ulti¬mately lie in the lap of Mr. Sill-man. Too much of the material hehas compiled is stale and wellworn. This show’s first act curtain(the curtain, by the way, neverdoes come down) is remarkablysimilar to the first act curtain ofNew Faces of ’52.But, Mr. Jones is often superb.His impressions of Ethel Mermanplaying Juliet and Judy Holltdayas Portia are genuinely funny. Hisopening monolog, his Hollywoodspectacular—“Don’t Give Up theShip” and his noveau-French song“Je couvre la Waterfront” areequally rewarding.His dancers dance well enough,especially when that is all thatthey’re expected to do. RodStrong especially impressed me.Former Sillman proteges Ronny Graham and June Carroll con¬tributed some pleasant material.And the orchestra, consisting of aceleste, drums and piano, was pro¬ficient.Nevertheless one was left andthe theatre was left with oneburning question in mind—why?Neal Johnston in the evenings between 8:30 and11. Don McClintock, chief maleunderstudy stepped in and mem¬orized the entire role. Bezdekfinally played the “Invalid” andMcClintock carried the pills.So, Mr. Vulture, the show is onthe boards again and none theworse for a two-month hangover.It will play for only three nightsin Mandel Hall and all seats are $1for students. I know I’ll see yourhypercritical face this next Thurs¬day, Friday and Saturday (Oct. 9-10-11) and perhaps some of yourreaders will come.P.S.: Neville Black’s fine com¬pany of modern dancers will givea concert in Mandel the followingweek, October 17 and 18. And Uni¬versity theatre will announceshortly its first theatre party forall new ’ and interested students.The first major production of theyear will probably go into rehearsalthe third week in October.Yours, for a good cultural sea¬son,Marvin E. Phillips.Director, University theatre i -WELCOMECornell Avenue Baptist- Church8200 S. Cornell AvenueAffiliated with the Southern Baptist ConventiontUelimk JaKJut'tafcte907. mWlSMlOUt.* » i ' “WELCOMEto Fail quarter — '58 — and to the Hyde Park Theater.To those who are old friends a very special home comingto you. After an eight month leave of absence, I am hap¬py to be back too. To the new students — come over soonand find out for yourself why the Hyde Park Theater hasbecome part bf the campus, if not of the curriculum.Don't forget to ask for your special privilege — the studentadmission rate.Sincerely,Rose Dunn, Managing DirectorStarting Friday, October 3ROONEYA British comedy delight!and NOWStarring John GregsonBarry FitzgeraldMuriel PaulowAlastair Sim inTheOriginal%coming soon:A StreetcarNamed DesireGates of ParisI AccuseA Man Escaped BELLES OF ST. TRINIANSLehrer to singon October 11,12Tom Lehrer, Harvard’s formermath instructor, will performUCers October 11 and 12.The concert, sponsored by theUC Communication club and theHyde Park Youth committee forthe benefit of the Hyde Park Neigh¬borhood club, will be in KAMTemple, 930 E. 50th st.Admission for the concert is $1.50,student; $2.50, general, and $3.50,reserved. Tickets may be purchasedat Ida Noyes hall, the Neighbor¬hood club, 5480 Kenwood avenue,MI 3-4063, or at the Hyde ParkCo-op._ _ _ _ _ _8 • CHICAGO MAROON • Oct. 3, 1958 Night of CabiriaMystery of PicassoA GodessA Witness for theProsecutionFREE BILLIARDSAND POOL FREEThis coupon entitles new studentsto 1 hour FREE Billiards or PoolGood October 3 and 4 onlyReynolds Club Basement; YOUNG MANwith creative flairThe young man we are looking for is not satisfied to fade Intothe crowd. He enjoys exercising his own distinctive tastes andhe's long on self confidence. Cricketeer's Trimlines West Endmodel suit, pictured here, appeals to him for its colorful cheviotfabric and smart English vest (coat and vest both lined in afoulard print). He likes othpr new ideas, hopsacking and thenew dark olive colors for example, in both suits and sportcoats.Naturally his taste Is for the modern young men's cut withunpadded shoulders, slightly shorter coat, and neat pleatlesstrousers.This Individualistic young man will find everything to satisfyhit creative flair in our new collection of Cricketeer Trimlinessuits and sportcoats. Suits are $49.95 and $59.95. Sportcoatsstart at $35.Our Prices Can't Be Beat It's Smart To Buy For LessD s G Clothes Shop1 744 E. 63rd St. Ml 3-2728Tn the Neighborhood lor 40 Years**Hours: 9 e.m. - 8 p.m., Mon. - Fri. — 9 c.m. - 9 p.m., SaturdayCulture VultureAfter a summer spent among towering mountains and tempestuous tourists in one of our grandar nationalparks, your erstwhile culture vulture can assure you with utter abandon that the University of Chicago is themost beautiful grey gothic ivory tower in the world. And what have we here to take such excessive pride in,besides the high brack walls, the grinning gargoyles and Stagg field? Among other things, the following:On campusTheatreFor many years Universitytheatre has had to content itselfwith a wealth of talent; thissummer UT also and incidentallyfound itself the proud possessorsof a minor wealth of money. Itsentire summer season was profit¬ably well received, especially itsnew musical version of “TheImaginary Invalid."With the prospect of makinghappy those unfortunates whomissed the first run and with theadditional hope of making evenmore hard cash, UT has decided torevive Moliere’s miscreant.Dick D’Anjou’s new version ofthe famous farce, with music andlyrics by William Mathieu andJoanne Phillips, will be performedon the Mandel hall stage, October9. 10 and 11.All three productions have an8:00 curtain; student-faculty tick¬ets cost $1, others will have to payan additional 50 cents.And without even taking time tosweep the stage, the theatre willswing into its next production, foron the following weekend NevilleBlack and his company present anevening of modern dance. Blackand his nine associates have al¬ready entered into intensive re¬hearsal of the ten numbers they'representing on the 17th and 18thof October. Again, the Mandel hallstage will be used.Tickets for both shows are onsale at the Reynolds club desk.There are no reserved seats. Tick¬ets are still available for all per¬ formances, but the Saturday nightproduction of ‘The Imaginary In¬valid” is selling out quickly. Actwith proportionate haste and alldeliberate speed.Concerts and RecitalsWe actually do have them, de¬spite all the observable evidenceon campus this week. Once theacademic year assumes somemore normal position of realitywe’ll begin having regular andquite irregular musical eventsfloating about campus, from Man-del to Int. house.On the 21st of November the UCconcert series commences whenLeonard Shure plays Schumann,Beethoven and S h u b e i4. Fiveother concerts will be included inthe series: the Claremont quartet,and Parrenin quarete, the SocietaCorelli, the Quartetto ItaiJano andthe New York Woodwinu quintet.A series ticket for these Fridayevening concerts costs $8. with in¬dividual tickets $2. Students canpurchase single tickets for $1, or aseries ticket for $6.Many other musical groups aremore or less intermittently active.The Folklore society presentsmany wingdings and assortedgroup gatherings, plus a suffi¬cient number of folk singers. TheApolloninan society, the Bachsingers, the UC choir, the Gleeclub and the Magrigal singers all welcome interested students, bothto perform and to attend perform¬ances.The Musical society, operatingnow as a wing of the music depart¬ment, offers frequent concerts ofinfrequently heard contemporarymusic.But nobody, nobody is offeringanything this week!Art ExhibitionsMuch the same as above. In fact,my description of this week’s con¬certs is a word for word descrip¬tion of this weeks art exhibitions.But again, eventually, we dohave them. The Renaissance so¬ciety, located in first floor Good-speed hall is the most ambitiousart group on campus. Last yearthey sponsored five or six majorshowings, including a one manshow of the work of Marc Chagall.Lexington hall is usually the siteof something, sometimes somethingsignificant, as are also Harper Li¬brary and Reynolds club.Ida Noyes, that sprawling build¬ing somewhere near the Newdorms, so seldom seen by anyoneexcept Maroon staff members, isnow housing a show compiled byJoseph Shapiro from his vast col¬lection. More information aboutthis is located elsewhere in theMaroon.Motion PicturesInt. house opens its Autumn series of foreign Imports with theBritish film: “Father Brown —Detective.” There is a 50 cent ad¬mission charge to these Mondaynight movies. They are screenedin the home room at Int. house. Documentary film society usu¬ally presents at least one seriesa quarter, and in the past Burton-Judson has always shown films(Continued on page 10)James Oleson, DonaldMcClintock and Phoebe Ter¬rance in rehearsal tor thenew musical based on Moli-ere's 'The Imaginary In¬valid/' performed this sum¬mer for two weeks and nowbeing repeated in Mandelhall, October 9, 10, and 11.Curtain time — 8 pm.for the best in jassvisit theBlue NoteOct 1 - 12Earl iBostic QuintetOct. 15 - Nev. 9Dakota Staton and "TheMaster Sounds"Nev. 11-23"The Divine" Sarah VaughanNov. 26 - 30Harry James and his BandDec. 3-14Stan Kenton and his BandDec. 17-Jon. 4Duke Ellington and his BandThe Blue Note S E E G E RAdded AttractionSONNY TERRYORCHESTRA HALLSAT., OCT. 25HeChoice seats at $2.20, $3.30 &$4.40 from the Chicago Councilof American-Soviet Friendship.32 W. Randolph st.Suite 1102 AN 3-1877 :la rktheatre 11 n. darkat madisonenjoy our special student rate50 at all timesfor any college student presentingstudent I.D. card at our box office£*| • home of the Sunday Film Guild• - • a different double feature every doy£ | 3 f" 1C • Night owl show starts at 4 a m.write for our free monthly program guide TOMLEHRERpresented byCommunication ClubandH.P. Youth CommitteeOCT. 11 & 12KAM TempleDraxal and 50thStudent tickets — $1.50Others —$2.50 * $3.50 (res.)On sale ad Ido Nay as Desk andH.P. Neighborhood Club(Ml 3-4063)Subscribe Nowat Halt Price*You can read this world-famduldaily newspaper for the next sixmonths for $4.50, just half theregular subscription rate.Get top news coverage. Enjoyspecial features. Clip for refer¬ence work.Send your order today. Enclosecheck or money order. Use cou¬pon below.The Christion Science Monitor F-CNOne Norway St., Boston 15, Moss.Send your newspaper for the timechecked.□ 6 months $4.50 □ I year $9□ College Student □ Faculty MemberNameAddressCity Zone State ’*Thit special offer mailable ONLY to cotlegettudoMs, faculty members, and college libraries. 1367 '"Disc E. 57th ST.DISCOUNTS^ RECORDSSPECIAL SALE °f EPIC RECORDS1ONLY 2 MORE WEEKSALL ,39,_!i5L NOW $249 —ALL $49,jist NOW *349DIAMOND NEEDLESS NOW *798OPEN Weekdays Noon ’til 10 p.m.—Saturday 10 a.m. ’til 5 p.m.Oct. 3, 1958 • CHICAGO MAROON • 9. %a Culture vulture annex...□ KAAA XPI^TOYrENNIA* *vW □International house has begun the sale of Christmas cards.The proceeds of the cards designed by UC student PatriciaJackson will go to the Room scholarship fund to pay rentat International house for superior students from abroadwho could not otherwise come to the United States for study.The card pictures the Three Wise Men extending Christ¬mas greetings in English, French, German, Chinese, Spanish,Arabic, Greek and Hindu. These eight greetings, movingclockwise around the Wise Men form the border of the card.The Christmas cards sell for 15 cents each or two for 25 centsat International house. (Continued from page 9)on Friday or Saturday nights. Atthe moment however nothing hasbeen announced.Off campusand there really is such a placeTheatreThree legitimate plays are cur¬rently running downtown. “MyFair Lady,” playing at the Shu-bert, is really no longer running,rather it seems to have settleddown permanently to a nice, com¬fortable existence where it in¬tends to stay until it reachessenility. Yet, although the playhas been here for almost a year,the production is still impeccable.Constance Bennett is appearingin “Auntie Marne” at the Erlanger.No one was amazingly impressedby the show or the production, butmost people seemed to enjoy itwell enough.And T. C. Jones, a very talentedyoung refugee from "New Faces”is running away with what littleof “Mask and Gown” there is torun with. Unfortunately, run isall the fellow can do for the show,playing at the Great Northern,never gets off the ground. “Tunnel of Love,” with EddieBracken is scheduled to open Mon¬day, October 13th at the Black-stone. In addition, the Northwest¬ern and Goodman repertoiretheatre will begin producing aboutthe end of the month.Also to be looked forward to isMiss Mary Martin’s appearance intown on the 21st and 22nd of thismonth in a program of musicalcomedies classics. Word has it thatshe is including a third performanceduring her stay.Concerts and RecitalsThe Chicago Symphony orchestragives its first performance onThursday, October 23rd withBeethoven’s Ninth as the majorwork, until then, however, thereis not an over-abundance of seriesmusic.The folksier people, though, haveenough in town to keep themmore than busy at their guitars.Tonight Josh White, Oscar Brandand Jean Ritchie are appearing inone program with Studs Terkel asmaster of ceremonies at Orchestrahall. Tickets, running from $1.85 to$4.50 are still available at the boxoffice.Martha Schlamme will give twoconcerts, tomorrow and next Satur-SATISFYING FLAVOR...djy to your taste!No -Flat"-Filtered-out"flavor!No dry "smoked-but"taste!• A » C* You canlight eitherend!See howPbll Mall'sgreater lengthof fine tobaccosfilters the smokeand makes Itmild —but does notfilter out thatsatisfyingflavor 1 FOR FLAVOR AND MILDNESS, FINS TOBACCO FILTERS BESTI You get greoter length of the rt Pall Moll's greeter length Q Filters it over, under, around and•finest tobaccos money con buy §m filters the smoke noturollv.. O through Pall Mall's fine tobaccos!OutStanding-. -and they are Mild!Frodutt 4/ tj/truueem. yiaty — it out middU Mint day. Tomorrow she will performin the Washington school audi¬torium in Chicago Heights in abenefit sponsored by the Jewisheducation committee. If you'reunder 18 you can get in for $1.25,otherwise admission is $2.Tom Lehrer, whose infamousrecord no one owns but everyoneknows by heart, is appearingtwice. Next Saturday and Sundayfor $2.50 or $3.50 you can see.hear and touch Mr. Lehrer in theKAM temple, 930 E. 50th.And if all else fails there is al¬ways the Gate of Horn at 753 \.Dearborn which invariably presentssomething worth the trip uptown.Art ExhibitionsThe most succinct-critique of theart of painting I’ve ever heard i<=the following: Think how a houselooks after ten years; it needs anew coat of paint —think how aRembrandt looks after ihreehundred years?But for those of you who don'treally care what you’re house lookslike, and what UC student does,there are a number of Interestingand worthwhile galleries abouttown.Foremost^ of course, is the Artinstitute of Chicago. Open everyday of the week, the institutehouses an impressive collection ofpaintings 'especially French Im¬pressionists), ceramics, etchings,and artifacts. The new Orientalgalleries will open on the 18th ofthis month and the first majorshow “The Artist looks at people”starts on the 13th of November.At the moment the museum isshowing twenty-one water colorsby the American artist John Marin.The Arts club of Chicago at 109E. Ontario is showing ‘SurrealismThen and Now’; the Cjiplow-Piercogallery at 430 N. State is housingsilk screen prints by Okamura andsome oils by Don Stewart. 7 heFeingarten gallery exhibition ofoils by Neil Barrett will runthrough next Friday at 58 E. Wal¬ton.The Main Street gallery, whichis also a great hook store is show¬ing works by two Prix de Romewinners: Cavat and Kachadoorian.And Harold Haydon, who is alsoknown for some non-plastic ac¬complishments has abstract oilshanging in Marguerite Hohen-berg’s gallery at 102 E. Oak.LecturesThe Downtown center of theUniversity has started a numberof interesting lecture series. Un¬fortunately, none of them are freeand all of them are some distanceaway.On Monday, Ralph W. Heinefrom the department of psychia¬try delivers the last of a series“Psychotherapy and personal ad¬justment: The psychotherapistand his patient.” And the sameevening Edward W. Rosenheimdelivers the first in a series offive lectures “Censorship of crea¬tive expression: censorship andthe work of art.” Admission toboth is $2.On Wednesday George V. Bobrinskoy will speak on the “Languages and literatures of India,”single admission $2.25. On Thurs¬day, Walter^Tondorf addressesthe topic “Americans in the warof words.” Single admission $2.And finally, next Friday, thefirst of seven lectures-studies onmotion pictures will begin treat¬ing the subject “Cinematic in¬tegrity-problems of adaptingstage drama to the film.” Allthese lectures are held in thedowntown center 64 E. Lake.In the air —Under this highly specializedcategory we include only one item.Radio station WFMT. Presenting afull air schedule of music andthought, the station provides noend of solace for the solitary soul.This week it presents such high¬lights as “The Yeoman of theGuard,” a preview of the LyricOpera’s “Falstaff,” and concertsfrom the Sibelius fe'stival and theBerkshire festival.In addition to its vocal value,WFMT also publishes a monthlyfine arts guide, costing only $4 ayear. This magazine lists almostevery concert, play and exhibitionof note occurring in the city. Italso provides your Culture Vulturewith no end of material to pla-guarize.■, - • •••: ■' ,." . i .. ' .• ■• HHHHHHHHI•" * ’*£, u-‘••ir,has more leisure'Today’s Americans have moreleisure time—and more prob¬lems in utilizing it—than thenineteenth century ever dreamedof, according to Reuel Denney, anassociate of UC’s Center for theStudy of Leisure.“Today the ‘leisure class’ is aterm which no longer identifiesanybody in particular. Industryprovides to many the hours free oflabor that the plantation systemreserve for Uncle Tom's master,along with the income to spend onleisure,” stated Denney in the Octo¬ber issue of Esquire magazine.“But the most extraordinaryaspect of today's leisure is thatit has created problems that thenineteenth century never dreamedof,” he added. “Arguably, we havegot too rich too fast in our acquisi¬tion of leisure time, and we behave,both as a society and as individuals,with the lack of ease and gracecommon to parvenus.”A member of the new leisureclass is typically a working man,and an "other-directed” workingman, at that. He spends one outof every six dollars in “consum¬ing” his spare time perhaps inspectator activities, but more like¬ly in individual or participativesports and interests.Change In attitudeUnlike the “inner-directed” manof the past century he is notashamed of his new role as a manof leisure. If the “inner-directed”found an idle moment, “he spentit usefully—in self-improvement,in fixing a bathroom leak, in build¬ing a retaining wall," Denney said.“Today, many Americans wouldadmit unabashedly that they workonly to find time and money toenjoy themselves."But, according to the professor,this abundance of spare time andspare cash has created problemsand perplexities of choice for theAmerican who must use them.The young, for instance, are compelled “to wait in school untilthe labor force can make room forthem.” For many, school becomesa prison and leisure time is timefor juvenile delinquency.Even greater, he cited, are theproblems faced by the elderly“whose leisure is forced uponthem by retirement. A womansuffers less than her husband,most of whose self-esteem, fan¬tasy, and sociability have clus¬tered about his job. These haunthis post-employment life likeghosts.”The shift of the bulk of leisureincome to the middle and lowerclasses has meant that all incomegroups must now seek new anddistinctive, means of using thiswealth, according to Denney.“The US's unique socialmobility has given US leisureanother distinctive character. Thedifferent income groups spendabout the same proportion oftheir income for leisure and rec¬reation.”Classes differThe lowest income group, per¬haps because members of thisclass “include the least ambitiousand the most resigned,” tends toconcentrate its spending on spec¬tator activities. “They are not in¬clined to cut down on their pleas¬ures for the sake of doubtful ad¬ vancement. To hell with it, let’s goto the ball game, is their attitude,”Denney added.But for the middle-income group,spare time has become mor# andmore the time for social advance¬ment. Under the $10,000 a yearbracket, members of this groupsave for a new car or a new andbetter house; above this mark,they attempt to keep up with theJoneses through their swimmingpools, motor boats and photo¬graphic equipment.Suburban hypocrisyThe middle - and high - incomegroup man is frequently a sub¬urban man, Denney stated, and heearnestly uses his leisure to ad¬just to suburban life where hissocial status is frequently deter¬mined by the quality of his gardenor the pedigree of his daughter’shorse.“Instead of going to the ballgames, he is impelled, by the socialpressures surrounding him, to playa round of golf, to buy a boat, orto purchase a home movie camerasimilar to that which the Smithshave.”“Dr. Samuel Johnson once pro¬nounced: ‘No man is a hypocrite inhis pleasures’,” Denney quoted. “Inthe US suburb, it would seem, thepontifical doctor was dead wrong.“Can the freedom created for masses be leavened by somethingmore than mass use of leisure?” hequeried. “Roy Harrod, British econ¬omist, says no. . . . Modem indus¬trial democracy succeeds brilliantlyin satisfying the middling demandsfor leisure, but not the demands ofthe higher end of the scale.”Need rediscoveryThere -remains, for instance,Denney noted, the area of innerresources, where the aim is the de¬velopment of the whole man, sofar neglected."This (development) calls forthe rediscovery of the traditionalleisure activities such as reading,listening to music, and conversa¬tion, all of which have as their goalthe cultural enrichment of a man— which in the end leads to the in¬dividual’s intensification of the en¬joyment of living. Leisure alsoneeds its pioneers—individuals all—with highly individual aims. Skindiving did not become popular untila few daredevils risked and losttheir lives with utterly novelequipment at unheard-of-depths.”“Culturally speaking,” Denneystated, ‘the next problem of USleisure is to find a way to fosterthe successors to the skin-diver.”STUDENTWIVESWORK ON CAMPUSThe Personnel Office has avariety of full-time clericaland technical positions avail¬able.WE NEEDSecretariesStenographersTypistsClerksClinical TechniciansResearch Technicians(including)Medical ChemistsHematologistsHistologistsBacteriologistsBENEFITS INCLUDE3 weeks' paid vacation2 weeks' sick leaveTuition remissionLibrary and recreationalprivilegesapply NOWPersonnel Office956 1. 58Hi 91. Cinema©beaterChicago ave. at MichigonStudent Rates75cevery day except Saturdayupon presentationof I.D. cards MALATTBARBER SHOPacross from B-Jserving UCcommunity since 1921WEEKDAYS9 o.m. - 7 pan.SATURDAY9 o.m. - 6 p.ei.WEDNESDAYdosed all fey1011 E. 61st StreetFor engineering freshmen...drawinginstrumentsandslide rules... are important, in college and after. That's whythe wise choice is K&E, America's oldest and largestmaker of engineering supplies and equipment.When It comes to Slide Rules...take the K&E Decltrig* :Its versatile scales team up to give faster Solu¬tions of complex problems. A dual purposeD scale and three LL scales cover a log log rangeof 1.00... to 22,000. And the A-B scales makequick, non-stop work of square root derivations.Sharp, engine-divided graduations permit accu¬rate readings in a hurry. And...look at K&E DrawingInstruments,But remember, there’s more to drawing instru¬ments than the way they look. It’s the important“extras,” such as accuracy, materials, workman¬ship, manufacturer's reputation, that determinegenuine value. Every K&E set-and they comein a wide price range-offers you the “extra”features that mean extra values.“Your K&E College Buying Guido”—will give you useful information on the materials you’ll need for yourengineering courses...36 pages, with plenty of pictures, and handycheck-list. Get it at your college store.lrvrfi KEUPFEL & ESSER CO.York • Hoboken, N. J. • Detroit • Chicago • St. Louie • Dallas • San Francisco • Los Angeles • Seattle * MontrealOct. 3# 1958 • CHICACO MAROON • !1WEntering nnd Returning StudentsHnuses of Ulorship Welcome VouROCKEFELLER MEMORIAL CHAPEL< Non-Denominational)59th and Wood lawnRev. Ewell J. Reagin, MinisterWorship Service 11 :00 a m. SundayOrgan Recital:Heinrich Fleischer 5:00 p.m. SundayThere are four houses on the quadrangles designedto meet the religious needs of all faiths:Chapel House, 5810 Woodlawn, sponsored by theUniverstiy and cooperating Protestant groups.Hillel Foundation, 5715 Woodlawn, serving Jewishstudents.Calvert Club, 5735 University, an organization ofRoman Catholic students.Brent House, 5540 Woodlawn, Episcopal StudentCenter.ROMAN CATHOLIC ,SAINT THOMAS THE APOSTLE5472 South Kimbark Avenue FA 4 2626Father Edward S. KrakowskiSunday Masses—6, 7, 8, 9, 10:15, 11:15 a.m.,4 2:15 p.m.Weekday Masses—6:30, 7, 7:30, 8 a.m.Confessions—Saturdays and Thursday before firstFridays and evening of Holy Days of Obligation:4-6 p.m. and 7:30-9 p.m.JEWISHK.A.M. TEMPLE(Reform)930 East 50th Street .. KE 8-3300. Jacob J. Weinstein, D.D., RabbiFriday evening services ........ 8:15 p.m.Saturday morning services 11:15 a.m.Students will be cordially welcomed at all services.Married students are invited to join the Temple'syoung marrieds group.TEMPLE ISAIAH ISRAEL(Reform)1100 Hyde Park Boulevard WA 4-1234Hayim Goren Perelmuter, RabbiFriday evening services 8:15 p.m.Saturday morning services 11 :00 a.rri.All students are cordially invited to join in ourworship services.CHICAGO SINAI CONGREGATION(Reform)5350 South Shore Drive BU 8-1600Dr. Louis L. Mann, RabbiBernard Martin, AssociateFriday Vesper services 5:30- 6:00 p.m.Sunday morning services 11 :00 a.m.All students are welcome. Complete program ofcultural and social activities. Sinai Temple Forumpresents world renowned personalities.PL 2-2244CONGREGATION RODFEI ZEDEK’ (Conservative)5200 Hyde Park BoulevardRalph Simon, RabbiMaurice Goldberg, CantorLate Friday evening services 8:30 p.m.Sabbath morning services 9:00 a.m.For information regarding cultural and social ac¬tivities for college age students call PL 2-2244.%PROTESTANTFIRST PRESBYTERIAN CHURCHAn Intergrated Membership and MinistryKimbark Avenue at 64th Street DO 3-0505Ulysses B. Blakeley, MinisterCharles T. Leber, Jr., MinisterHarold L. Bowman Pastor, EmeritusSunday morning service 11 .00 a.m.FIRST BAPTIST CHURCH OF CHICAGO930 East 50th Street KE 6-3430Rev. Charles R. Andrews, PastorSunday:Church school 9:45 a.m.Worship 11:00 a.m.Wednesday:Fellowship supper 6:30 p.m.Church Meeting HYDE PARK BAPTIST CHURCH5600 S. Woodlawn Do 3-6063Rev. Lemuel PetersenRev. James E. Spiceracting ministers -Sunday:Church school 9:45 a.m.Worship 11 :00 a.m.Gilkey Foundation StudentFellowship 6:00 p.m.(Official activity for under-graduate Baptiststudents)First meeting October 12Students Welcome ' -WOODLAWN BAPTIST CHURCH6207 South University , Ml 3-0123Rev. Hampton E. Price, PastorRev. Ralph D. Handen, Church MissionarySunday:Worship services ..11 :00 a.m. and 7:00 p.m.Baptist Youth Fellowships 5:00 p.m.Wednesday Prayer and Bible Study. .7 :00 p.m.Church related weekday programsWide-open opportunity for university students toserve. For further information, call the church of-fcie, Ml 3-0123.An International and Interracial ChurchSOUTH SHORE BIBLE CHURCH“The Church that Cares”7159 S. Cornell PL 2-3778Rev. Bruce Slack, PastorSunday school (for all ages) 9:45 a.m.Sunday morningworship . A 11 :00 a.m. - 7:00 p.m.Midweek prayer service. Wednesday 7:30 p.m.For information concerning youth program callchurch office.UNIVERSITY CHURCH OF THEDISCIPLES OF CHRIST(Christian Church)5655 University Avenue DO 3-8142Reverned David M. Bryan, MinisterAdult classes 9:30 a.m. SundayCommunion service 10:30 a.m. SundayWorship service ] 1 :00 a.m. SundayChurch school 11 :00 a.m. SundayDisciples student fellowship 6:30 p.m. SundayFellowship dinner andprogram 6:30 p.m. FridayTENTH CHURCH OF CHRIST SCIENTIST5640 Blackstone Ave. Ml 3-2969Sunday morning service 10:45 a.m.Sunday School for studentsunder 20 years of age 10:45 a.m.Wednesday Testimony Meeting . . 8:00 p.m.Reading Room, 1448 East 57th Street, open 9 a.m.to 6 p.m. daily, Sunday and holidays 2 to 6 p.m.THE KENWOOD NEW CHURCH5710 Woodlawn Avenue DO 3-7141Reverned Immanuel Tafel, PastorChapel services Sundays at 11:00 a.m. SundaySchool, 11 :00 a.m. Other services as announced.SWEDENBORG PHILOSOPHICAL CENTRE5710 Woodlawn Ave. DOrchester 3-7141"The object of this organization is to establish abetter understanding of the philosophy of ErnanuelSwedenborg . . . nDiscussion Groups Public Reference LibraryFree Lectures Personal ConsultationsOPEN—Mondays-Wednesdays-Fridays-Sundays 1:30 - 5:50 p.m.Other times by appointmentCHICAGO MAROON • Oct. 3, 1958 HYDE PARK METHODIST CHURCH54th fir Blackstone Ml 3-4395Rev. Paul Lambourne Higgins, MinisterSunday:Church School 9:45 a.m.Morning Worship .11 :00 a.m.Wesley Fellowship (Young Adults) — 5 p.m.,2nd and 4th SundayWednesday: Midweek Service 7:45 p.m.THE UhilTED CHURCH OF HYDE PARK(Congregational and Presbyterian)Blackstone Avenue at 53rd St. DO 3-1620Dr. Mitchell T. Ancker, MinisterSunday:Worship 11:00 a m.Breakfast club (young adults) .. 9:30a.m.Church school 9:40 a.m.Infants, toddlers, pre-schoolchildren 11:00 a.m.WOODLAWN SIXTH UNITEDPRESBYTERIAN CHURCH1210 E.* 62nd St DO 3-7483Rev. A. L. Reynolds, Jr., ThD., MinisterSunday service 11:00 a.m.Sunday school 9:45 a.m.Mid-week prayer meeting, Wed. .. 7:30 p.m.Women's Association, 2ndThursday of each month 11 :00 a.m.Women's Guild, 3rd Modayof each month 7:45 p.m.Young adult forum, 2nd ad 4th Sunday nights,7:30, offers an opportunity for University studentsto serve.57th STREET MEETINGRELIGIOUS SOCIETY OF FRIENDS5615 Woodlawn AvenueSecretary, David Mark — BU S-3066Sunday:Sunday school (classes—adult, "family"school age children and parents,and pre-school) 10:00a.m.Meeting for worship 11 :00 a.m.Quaker Student Fellowship,Supper, 6 p.m. Program, 7 p.m.Welcoming Party for old and new students Sunday,October 12, 6:00 p.m. Dinner, 7:00 p.m. Program.FIRST UNITARIAN CHURCH1174 E. 57th FA 4-4100Leslie T. Pennington, MinisterSunday morning service .* 11 ;00 a.m.Channing-Murray Club meetings and social pro¬grams for unviersity students, Sunday evenings at8:00 p.m., Parish House, 57th Street entrance.Orientation series on the liberal point of view inreligion, 7:30 p.m. on five Thursday evenings, be¬ginning October 2, at William Wallace Fenn House,5638 Woodlawn Avenue.SAINT PAUL'S EPISCOPAL CHURCH4945 Dorchester Avenue OA 4-3185Reverned William D. McLean, Jr., RectorReverend Paul S. Hiyama, CurateSunday services:8:00 a.m.—Holy Communion9:00a.m.—Family Eucharist1 1 :00 a.m.—Morning Prayer and SermonHoly Communion (first Sundays)Weekday services:7:00 a.m.—Holy Communion (Mon.-Fri.)9:15 a.m.—Morning Prayer9:30 a.m.—Holy Communion (Wed. & Sat.)5:30 p.m.—Evening PrayerWOODLAWN IMMANUELLUTHERAN CHURCHKenwood Ave. at 64th St. Ml 3-4803C. Kenneth Proefrock, PastorSunday school ., 9:45 a.m.Sunday worship 11:00 a.m.A member congregation of the llinols Synod of theUnited Lutheran Church in America.J Light into that Live Modern flavor! ■ICLASSIFIED ADS Robie now a wonderStudent rote 30c per line Others 60c per line Phone: Ml 3-0800 Ext. 3265For rent For saleSubleaseOnlv $110 mo. for 3 room completelyfurnished apartment, larse kitchen andtile bath. Gas. electricity, and 24 hr.switchboard and receiving service In¬cluded. 2 apartments available untilJuly l.Larger apts. with maid service and lin¬ens from $135.j blocks to Illinois Central and UC Busservice.Madison Pork Hotel1380 E. H.P. Blvd. KE 6-4300 WantedUsed bikes: Ladles.’ & gents’ Phillips De¬luxe lightweight^ with 3-speed gears,carrier, kickstand. Original retail value$65-|75. Now only $30-$38. For furtherdetails call A Y H Bicycle Rentals; WA2-6667 or BU 1-9826.New bicycles, discounts, MI 3-9048.ServicesPiano lessons. Experienced teacher withMaster of Music degree. Children a spe¬cialty. PL 2-2787. Blind law student would appreciatesozne volunteer or monetary assistantsto read law texts orally. This can affordInterested students an opportunity toacquaint themselves with legal mate¬rial. Contact Paul Scher, Mead house224. MI 3-6000.Preparing for October French readingexam? I will tutor you . . . reasonablerates arranged. NO 7-6957.Wanted: a ride to NYC the weekend ofthe 9th. Will share expenses and conver¬sation. Call Maroon office.S rra., nwly. decor., comp. furn. apt. toshare with 2 girls. (Students). Privatebedroom. 55 & Klmbark. $35 monthly.HY 3-8588.Rooms still available at Phi Kappa Psl,$25-$40 mo. 5555 Woodlawn. Full kitchenprlv., dinners served. PL 2-9704.Large spacious rooms for students, near53rd IC sta. A Lake. MU 4-7844 after 4:30pm wkdys.; all day wknds.4-rm. apt. to share. MU 4-5899.li- room furnished apt. for students.Reasonable—near campus. PL 2-9641.Room for rent In private home. RA 3-1264.One large modern furnished room withoooklng privileges. VI 6-4487.4 rooms furn. apt. with private bath—also 2 ms. Clean, near Int hse. UC-IC.BU 8-9424.Sleeping rooms, single and double: a 2room apt., completely furnished. Rea¬sonable rent. 5225 University. Mrs. Parks.Help wantedWanted: Resp. students to call on frat.soro. and res. halls to demon, and selldally used product. Earn $100-$200 ex¬tra a month. Write for details and im¬mediate start. P.O. Box 497, Indpla., Ind.Student Salesmanfor part-time help In neighborhoodmen's clothing and furnishing store,(lncl. Sat.). Excellent Job for welldressed, alert student. Apply Cohn ScStern, Inc.; 1542 E 53rd; MU 4-4266. Still homeless UCer?go to housing officeFor students who are still homeless as the 1958-59 academicyear begins, the student housing office maintains listings ofprivately-owned housing in the neighborhood.Included in the listings are sfurnished and unfurnished apart¬ments, housekeeping rooms,apartments to share, and sleepingrooms. All are located between51st and 63rd streets, CottageGrove and Stony Island avenues.Sleeping room rates range from$7 to $15 weekly, the office said.Apartments rent for $60 to $100per month, with larger apartmentsranging up to $175.Householders must meet Univer¬sity regulations as to cleanliness,service, light, heat, ventilation and fire prevention. Sleeping rooms areprovided with a desk and chair,lounge chair, bed, chest of drawers,reading lights and closet space.Some rooms include linens, cookingprivileges and other special facili¬ties.Information must be obtained inperson from the housing office.Student housing also suggests thetenant referral office of the HydePark-Kenwood Community confer¬ence, 1305 E. 53 st., for listings inthe area 59 to 47 streets, CottageGrove avenue to the lake. In a recent survey of 500 leading American architects,Robie house, the Frank Lloyd Wright - designed structure ofWoodlawn and 58th street, was declared one of the “Sevenwonders of American architecture.”Formerly owned by Chicago Theological seminary, Robiehouse is now the Hyde Park headquarters of Webb & Knapp,developers of Hyde Park “A” and “B” projects. The firm’sowner, William Zackendorf, bought the building from CTS lastspring, after the seminary threatened to destroy it to makeroom for badly needed married student apartments.Jimmy's Ploce is operoted primarily as a con¬vivial meeting place for students and friendsof the University of Chicago. The generalair of friendliness and informality makeJimmy's first choice for those seeking relaxa¬tion or camaraderie in the most auspicioussurroundings. A hearty welcome to all.Ellen Coughlin Beauty Salon5105 Lake Park Ave. Ml 3-2000SPECIALISTS IN HAIR STYLINGAND PERMANENT WAVINGOpen Mon. - Sat. — 9 a.tn. - 11 p.m. JIMMY’S55th and WoodlawnChicago, Illinois NO 7-9584THEY SAID IT COULDN’T BE DONE GO-BOTf/ERE/TtSf“Couldn’t be done." That's what theytold Mr. Bell back in 1876. But wherewould three million college studentsbe without the telephone... especiallyon a Saturday night? Today you canmake a date, or talk to your folks, frompractically anywhere... even from yourown car. PUFF BY PUFFTODAYS L‘MGIVES YOU- tarsore tastePONT SETTLE FOR ONE WITHOUT THE OTHER. CHANGE TO L*M AND GET ’EM BOTH.Such an improved filter and more taste! Yes, today’s DM combines these twoessentials of modem smoking enjoyment — less tars and more taste in one greatcigarette. DM’Fpatented filtering process enables today’s DM to give you, puff bypuff, less tars in the smoke than ever before. And DM gives you more taste, better tastethan any other cigarette.-'w‘ • . ’ /w :: •>. - — ^ - ♦ ...UC's UT was demolished to make way for this, the University's $2.4million undergraduate men's dormitory. When completed in the fall of1959, each tower unit will house 332 students, all in rooms with outsideexposure, arranged in four two-story "college house" units for 83 stu¬dents each. • The future is yours aLocated at 58thnew dormitories. The residence hall, designed by Eero Saarinen, cost $3.5million. The quadrangle, which at present houses both men and women, isa complete community in itself.ments, a modern six-story building located one block away from UC clinics.Designed especially for married students, the building contains 55 one-bedroom units with living room, bath, and pullman kitchen; 5 two-bedroomunits with living room, bath, and pullman kitchen; 10 single units withcombination living room-bedroom and kitchen, and 10 single units withliving room-bedroom, but no kitchen.Now under construction is UC's $3.5 million law school building, locatedon the Midway between Burton-Judson dormitories and the American Barcenter.When completed the new facilities will contain, as pictured from leftto right:* w eliptical shaped, sawtoothed facade auditorium and court roomstructure. The auditorium will accommodate 600 and the court room, 475. Gala display of fireworks on 55th street proclaimed com-mencement of the rebuilding of "Hyde Park A and B" lastThursday. The celebration, heralding a milestone in the shortbut significant history of the whole concept of urban renewal,followed closely on the heels of verbal fireworks which beganexploding in City hall September 22.The term "urban renewal" at once brings up a barrageof issues, passive and active, conflicting and harmonious.Keywords spring up from every Hyde Park-Kenwood rafterand emerge from every smoke-filled conference room alongwith the heated tempers of planners and opponents, moralistsand realists, wealthy land-owners and financial unfortunates,of every race and creed; such words as need for stability*institutional interference, racial tensions, interracial commun¬ity, slum clearance, lack of parks and parking areas, publichousing tug-o'war, multi-million dollar mortgage loans, com-• munity pride, government aid, religious antagonism — tomention only a few of the expressions.Out of the confusing scramble of words came a seeminglysimple statement in a Chicago Sun-Times editorial one weekago today: "The important thing is that the Hyde Park-Ken¬wood project is of the greatest importance to Chicago as awhole, to the concept of urban planning, and to the UC."So the spotlight shines out of the fog — on the history, thecauses and effects, the reasons for controversy (as well asthey can be deduced from the spoken word), and the out¬look for the fledgling urban renewal.It is left to the reader to decide for himself the worth ofthe project to the University community, which constitutesa geographically large and an influential portion of Hyde Park.The City council's housing and planning committee mustweigh the formal testimony for or against an undertakingthat, if effected, would undoubtedly serve as an examplefor the rest of Chicago and all cities in the US with relat¬ed problems.It started several years ago when a gradual change In thedirection of deterioration began to overtake the communitybounded by 47th street and the Midway, Cottage Grove andLake Michigan. This is a community with approximately 70,-000 residents, a city within a city.Growing transiency was blamed for the situation; but,asked others, was this indicator of instability a cause or aresult of some more insidious force? Many blamed the influxof Negroes who had emigrated from the South into this al¬ready interracial community for the deterioration. Makingthis racial group a target, many residents and outsiders coinedand spread an unpleasant slogan, both in whispers and shouts:"When the Negroes come, the neighborhood goes to pieces."Alarm, mistrust, and violent argument rose in every quar¬ter. Not only the National Association for the Advancementof Colored People, whose direct interest in the issue is ap¬parent, rebelled against the accusations, but they were joinedby members of the community and outsiders of all races.Nevertheless, r.o amount of rebellion of this sort couldcause a diminuation in the numbers of "settled residents"leaving the neighborhood and thereby increasing the tran¬siency rate; nor could it stop some landlords from takingfinancial advantage of the frequently lower - income newcomers by conversion of living quarters into smaller unitsand allowing the condition of property to decay because ofinadequate expenditures on upkeep.Here began the University's direct concern with the situ¬ation. In the first place, there was the immediate deflationof UC property values concommittant to the changes takingplace. In addition, parents began to harbor reluctance againstsending their progeny, especially female, to a campus in a"dangerous" location. The steady increase in enrollment be¬ing sought was definitely at stake.UC policy professes strict adherence to non-discrimination.Yet it was (and still is) under severe criticism for its supportof the Hyde Park proposal presently under discussion andother similar or related plans, radical by virtue of their new¬ness. Hardly a single conversation on the subject is freefrom the angry comment, "They're (UC) just trying to builda 'white island' between 55 and 63 streets!"Finally an internal plight of great proportions faced theUniversity: with the tearing down ®f many prefabricateddwellings which formerly housed married students (the newresidence hall was erected on such a site, Dudley field), thedemolitions being necessitated by an assortment of circum¬stances, where were the married students to find livingquarters?This query coupled with a sincere interest in neighborhoodimprovement, resulted in the acquisition of several buildingsbetween 55th and 58th streets, Cottage Grove and Ellis ave¬nues, an acquisition that was first approved by the Chicagoneighborhood redevelopment commission after public hearings.Included were stipulations that the buildings acquired, whichwere usually chosen for their exceptionally poor condition,be torn down and replaced by suitable married student hous¬ing structures; and that the remaining buildings in theacquisition area be compelled to comply with city code or¬dinances pertaining to structures of their general description.Where applicable, the units acquired could merely be broughtup to, or to exceed, code requirements and then used to housestudents.At that stage, then, less than two years ago, urban renewalwas little more than a process of selective slum clearancewith the hope that this action would provide the mainstay ofand incentive for further community-pride and consequentialimprovement, or at least halt further decay in an area. Inthis respect, though, it was still a source of ever-present in¬spiration to idealists and men and women of more practicalbent, at the drawing board, in positions of community lead¬ership.All the while, criticism poured in that UC had not takenproper consideration of the interests of individual propertyowners..Don't- bury yourself in booksThe MaroonCap Cr GownUniversity theaterStudent unionBlackfriar's societyUniversity symphonyorchestraUniversity Glee clubConcert bandApollonian societyJazz workshopSocietas CampanorumFolklore societyRecorder societyOuting clubMountaineering clubChess clubStudent forumWUSGar Griffin clubWAAOrientation boardAlphi Phi OmegaCountry dancersScience Fiction clubThe Scandinavian clubThe Masaryk clubChinese Student club Lithuanian clubNAACPIndependent StudentleagueStudent RepresentativepartyYoung DemocratsYoung RepublicansSocialist clubStudent ZionistorganizationAntinomiesArchaeological societyAteneo HispanicoCommunications clubCollege Law societyGraduate Library schoolclubHumboldt clubItalian clubLe Cercle Francois deI'Universite de ChicagoInternational relationsclubClinical psychology clubGraduate history clubNew Testament clubCommentneed you!Issued every Friday throughout the University of Chicago school year andIntermittently during the summer quarter, by the publisher, the Chicago Maroon,Ida Noyes hall, 1212 East 59th street, Chicago 37, Illinois. Telephones: Ml 3-0800,extensions 3265 and 3266. Distributed without charge on campus, subscriptionsby mail, 53 per year. Office hours: 1 to 5 pm, Monday through Friday. Deadlinefor all material 3 pm, WednesdayEditor-in-chiefRochelle M. DubnowBusiness ManagerLawrence D. KesslerAssociate editorManaging editorGodfly editorNews, neighborhood editorPhotogrophersSports editorLecture editorArtistsEditor emeritusEditorial staff. , Advertising ManagerGordon L. BriggsNeal JohnstonDonna DavisRoger BernhardtMary FinkleBud Bernick, Bob WilsonDan CosgroveH. BernhardtRick Ellis, Ron BurtonGary MokotoffRosemary GalliOn the coverWho am lf an oil sketch by Susan Gould, second yearstudent in the College. Welcome to UC1University contributes togreatness of city': MayorAS MAYOR, on behalf of the people of Chi¬cago, I am happy to have this opportunity toextend greetings to the students who will thisyear enter the University to avail themselves,as you so proudly say, “of one of the finesteducations in the United States.”In a very special way, the University hasreflected the spirit of Chicago since 1892,when its classrooms were first opened. Inmany special ways, it has contributed to thegreatness of our city and to Chicago’s renownas a world center of experiment, of education,and culture.The men and women who founded Chicagoat the continental crossroads had great vision,but they hardly have forseen that the citywould become the mighty colossus that it istoday. But it seems a natural developmentthat the drive and unquenchable pioneeringspirit that motivated the founders should THE UNIVERSITY is indissolubly linkedto the great traditions tha have been built upin Chicago during is comparably short historyand all through the years its students andfaculty have poured into the community thefresh vigor and direction o( its enlightenmentThe new students automatically become apart of this great heritage. They will all playtheir roles in keeping bright and inspiring thepages of Chicago’s history which are yet un¬written. My best wishes for a pleasant andproductive school year.UC builds for students'present and future: LAKThe University of Chicago has been admit¬ting and educating students for sixty-sevenyears, a process that is exciting and challeng¬ing for us as it is foi you who have left hometo come to our neo-Gothic quadrangles. Ourwelcome to the new students and those whoare returning is the more sincere becausefaculty and administration alike are aware ofduty is to get an education; ours is to use ourtheir deep responsibility to you. Your primaryresources and intelligence to the best advan¬tage in helping yo uget it. You will find theprocess rough, interesting and lively, but wellwithin your capacities, the winnowing processof the admissions office being what it is.LAST JUNE we concluded an arduous yearof meeting after meeting, arriving at a clari¬fication of the general and specialized compo¬nents of our program for undergraduates. Atthe very least we have made it possible forstudents and advisers to stake out a programwithout the assistance of a Philadelphia law¬yer. And this, believe me, is a true boon thatonly the upperclassmen can appreciate.You will see construction all around you, all of it for your direct or indirect benefit.Last year we won a race to complete part atthe women’s new residence halls. This year,by just as small a margin, the contractorsfinished the dining and social unit. We haveadded more housing for married students.IN THESE and other ways, particularly inexpanding the possibilities for a fuller andmore varied life outside the classroom, wehave been preparing for you. As one not with¬out experience in the guidance of students,I assure you of my deeply sympathetic inter¬est in and concern for your welfare andprogress in your years at the University ofChicago, and of my hope that when you leavehere it will be with in conviction that youchose wisely. May success and happiness at¬tend you in your years here.Netherton welcomes studentsdescribes role at UniversityOnce again an Autumn quarter will see thearrival of some two thousand new students onthe Quadrangles.Well over half of your number have com¬pleted undergraduate careers elsewhere, andcome to the University for advanced study.New graduate students will find challenge inthe academic work of the Divisions andSchools; and for leisure time—of which it isto be hoped that you will arrange some rea¬sonable amount — an environment rich inopportunities for intellectual and estheticpleasure.There is also the undergraduate. Compar¬able academic challenge and the identicalenvironmental richness are fully available forhim. The honored Chicago tradition by whichwe speak of him at the beginning as a first-year student, later as a second-year student,and so on, successively, is not to my knowl¬edge ever intended to obscure the fact thatthe undergraduate is indeed not a graduate,that through the fault of time and none ofhis own he has not yet had the total educa¬tional experience, curricular and other, im¬plied by the BS or the BS of a leading Ameri¬can college; and that he has come to Chicagoprecisely to acquire that total experience. Bythe time this is read, entering undergraduateswill have heard Dean Streeter’s address onthe curricular experience which awaits them,and talks by members of my staff on variousaspects of the extracurriculum.BEYOND THIS, the elected heads of seven¬teen major student organizations — StudentGovernment (in which undergraduates haveproportional minority representation), the publications and Radio Midway, IFC andInter-club, Burton - Judson and Inter-dormCouncils, Blackfriars, FOTA, and the honor-aries and service groups—are concluding to¬day a three-day conference in which theywill have considered, among many other mat¬ters, the role of the entering student in theirseveral organizations. I suggest that you givecareful consideration to this same subjectfrom the point of view of your own interestsand expectations.It is perhaps not sufficiently known thatabout ten per cent of our total student popu¬lation consists of foreign students. The Uni¬versity is an important center of internationaleducation. I should like to extend particularwelcome to our new students from abroad,and hope that I will be seconded in this, in thedeed as well as the word, by interested Amer¬ican students. In my view, it is not so much amatter of hospitality—which is of course im¬portant—as of educational opportunity for allconcerned.THE STUDENT services which the Uni¬versity provides for all students through myoffice are fully described in the Student Hand¬book; I invite you to make full use of them.A warm welcome to all new students, andbest wishes tor success and enjoyment in theyear ahead.2 • CHICAGO MAROON • Oct. 3, 1958i: kUniversity of Chicago, Friday, October 3, 1958The College—Harper to LAKFrom its very inception tothe present day, no one hasbeen quite sure what to dowith the College of UC. Its foun¬ders would have been happy tosettle for a college without auniversity; William Rainey Har¬per, UCs first president, wouldhave l>een just as pleased to behead of a university without acollege.Indeed, the first nebulous plansof the founders called only for aBaptist college somewhere in theUnited States, with a hoped-forinitial contribution by the coun¬try’s wealthiest and best knownBaptist, John D. Rockefeller.The American Baptist educationsociety w-as persuaded to chooseChicago as the future site, al¬though a Yale professor statedthat “putting it in Chicago wouldbe only the next thing to puttingit in the Fiji islands” and furtherpredicted that eastern graduatestudents [the vast majority ofAmerican scholars at the timelwould not go west.When the Education society’ssecretary, Dr. Fredrick Gates, ex¬tracted a pledge of $600,000 fromRockefeller in the course of astroll down New York’s Fifth ave¬nue one fine morning, the dreamof the founders became reality.HARPER HAD long been covet¬ed by the Baptists. The son of anOhio storekeeper, he exhibitedgreat mental powers early in lifeand won a reputation as a childprodigy in the educational world.He graduated college at 14, andreceived his PhD at 19. At 21 hewas president of a Chicago Bap¬tist school, the Morgan Parkacademy.But Yale university soon luredhim east, or as one member of theEducation society described it,“we let the Congregationalists get him.” When Harper made the re¬turn trip to Chicago at the age of34, he was relinquished as bitterlyby Yale’s president, for he was anextremely popular scholar on theNew Haven campus.When the infant University firstconvened in Cobb hall on October1, 1892, Harper presided over 594students, not including 99 at Mor¬gan Park academy, who were stillwithout a building for the theo¬logical seminary. Slightly morethan one-half of the students werein graduate or theological school,an indication of the importanceof graduate study even then.Furthermore, Harper hadgathered together an imposingarray of scholars. He got offto a flying start by “raiding”two Cornell professors and byopening day in 1892 had collec¬ted nine presidents of higherinstitutions in a faculty of 120.He successfully sought an out¬standing German historian, Ed¬ward von Holst. Harper col¬lected this outstanding facultyalthough some said the univer¬sity was a “bubble” and the sal¬aries would never be paid.Harper had always believed thatthe faculty member should be firstand foremost a scholar. Such aconviction was ultimately to bemore congenial to the graduateschools than the College, wherethe students would be more inneed of instructors acting as such.THE COLLEGE was dividedinto parts—the Academic collegesand the Senior colleges, each con¬sisting of two years. They werealso called the Junior and Seniorcolleges. A student’s first twoyears and last two years differedgreatly in nature. During the firsthalf, the student was held to arather fixed curriculum, while inthe latter part he had virtual free¬ dom to take whatever courses hewished. The adminstrators werereluctant to allow' JCers into Sen¬ior college courses.The Colleges themselves werefour in number, Arts, Literature,Science, and Commerce and Busi¬ness administration. Half of thecourses in the two year Arts pro¬gram of the Junior college con¬sisted of Greek, Latin, and Frenchor German. Another 20-25 percent were courses in Math or Sci¬ence. One-sixth, or three courses,were elective. Harper did not be¬lieve a student could concentrateon a single subject if he had morethan four courses.In Literature, one-half thecourses consisted of Latin, Frenchor German, and English. The samepercentage of Math and Sciencecourses was allotod as in the Artscollege, and also the same pro¬portion for electives. Two coursesin history were required.THE REQUIREMENTS in Sci¬ence consisted of one-half Mathand Science, three units of Frenchor German, three of English, andthe same proportion of electivesas in the other colleges.The President’s Report of 1902by the dean of the Senior collegeindicates he was w'ell satisfiedthat the students were using theirfreedom in choosing course prof¬itably. Senior college studentsfound it easier to get into gradu¬ate courses than Junior collegestudents found it to get into Sen¬ior college classes.Gradually the status of the Jun¬ior college student sunk even low¬er. It became regarded as merelya span between high school andthe Senior college, when the stu¬dent could begin to specialize seri¬ously. Harper felt a student shouldknow' what he wanted to studywhen he came here. ADMISSIONS counselorsw'alked a tightrope between thedangers of over-stringent require¬ments or too lax ones. Chicago didtend to relax the tight require¬ments of many older schools. Morestudents began to enter withoutthe traditional Greek and Latinprep school curriculum behindthem.In those early years the col¬lege students began creatingtheir own institutions while theuniversity around them grewand grew in area and popula¬tion. The first autumn foundthem playing football for AmosAlonzo Stagg in WashingtonPark, since the university didnot have its own field yet. TheUniversity News, later theWeekly, later the Daily Maroon,began publishing in October,1892. Cap and Gown was putout by the junior class in 1895.In October, 1892 Harper “segre¬gated” the Junior colleges byholding classes for men andwomen in different buildings.When Harper died prematurelyin early 1906, acting presidentHarry Pratt Judson was preparedto take over the reins noiselessly.But there was only one Harper,and under Judson, W’ho had beenfirst dean of the College, UC en¬tered a less spectacular, if evenneeded, phase of consolidation.WHEN Harry Pratt Judson as¬sumed the presidency of UC in1906, he inherited a problem whichwas destined to grow during hisadministration, his successor’s, andhis successor’s successor: namely,how to relate the College properlyto the rest of the university.An indication of what Judson’spolicy would be came at his in¬augural when he endorsed the“autonomy of departments.” Thetrend during his administrationsoon manifested itself as tendingaway from an integrated college.Harper had created a facultymade of strong departmentalheads. These men were interestedOct. 3, 1958 • C H I C A In advancing their own depart¬ments, and they did so at the ex¬pense of general education in theCollege. Judson was inclined toagree with them. In 1907-8 he ini¬tiated a system whereby the Jun¬ior College [general education]would consist of only one year,and Senior College [more special¬ized education] would consist ofthree. However, the plan was notput into effect when it proved tobe unfeasible.BRIEFLY the problem whichconfronted Judson in this case washowr to cram enough general andspecialized education into fouryears to satisfy everyone whenmany of the freshmen w'ho en¬tered the university w'ere hope¬lessly backward. The next chan¬cellor, Ernest DeWitt Burton, pro¬posed a radical cure: the Collegev/ould be separated from the restof the university across the Mid¬way, possessing its own faculty,budget, dean, buildings, and equip¬ment. The College, however, in¬stead of consisting of students inthe first four years after highschool graduation, would bo com¬posed of “early entrants" startingin the last tw'o yea”s of whichwould be normally high school,and continuing into the first twoyears of college. In this proposal,Burton anticipated the later earlyentrant program, but it was stale¬mated in debate and never ful¬filled. Under President Max Ma¬son, it was agreed upon that theCollege would be in, as well as at,the University.The lack of an autonomouscollege faculty damaged highstandards of teaching. All threepresidents believed in researehfirst, and department heads as¬signed graduate students toteach undergraduate courses.In 1924, approximately one hun¬dred graduate students wereteaching these courses, and theannual turnover was 40 per cent.Furthermore, department headswere complaining of the heavyteaching demands made on Ahepeople in their departments, andthe graduate students saw theywould not be discouraged from(see “UC,” page 4)CO MAROON • 3UC history a story(from page 3)sacrificing their teaching respon¬sibilities for doing more researchwork.IT WAS even suggested that theCollege be dropped altogether, butsuch a proposal -as clearly im¬practical if only because of the in¬fluence of college alumni. Thisgroup represented much of thewealth the university was count¬ing on. Furthermore, high under¬graduate enrollment was helpingto pay the costs of the graduatedepartments.A turning point was markedwhen President Burton appointedErnest H. Wilkins, dean of theCollege. A few two-quarter gen¬eral survey courses were insti¬tuted, and they proved popularwith the students. His successor,Chauncey Boucher, persuadedPresident Mason three years laterto appoint a committee to proposean overhauling of the College.WORKING with lightning speed,the committee was ready to pre¬sent its conclusions two monthslater, on May 7, 1928. But Masonresigned the presidency the daybefore and the committee reportwas postponed for a week. Whenit wras released, the report es¬poused a radically new programin the Junior College, to consistof five comprehensive examina¬tions: in English, a foreign lan¬guage, natural sciences and math,social sciences, and an electivewhich might include some spe¬cialization. Furthermore, the groupproposed an end to counting cre¬dits toward the award of abachelor’s degree. Under the com¬mittee’s plan a student w'ould beawarded his degree from the Sen¬ior College, when he had passedthree more cornprehensives, onein his major field, and two inminor fields. Thus, in the SeniorCollege a student would be able toproceed at his owm pace.No decision could be made onBoucher’s plan as long as the uni¬versity was without a president.But the appointment of Robert M.Hutchins, dean of the Yale lawschool, in April, 1929, was des¬tined to usher in a new era at theUniversity of Chicago.When Robert M. Hutchins as¬sumed the presidency of UC in1930, advocates of fundamentalrevision of the College were hope¬ful of sympathetic support.They were not disappointed.Soon afterwards, the UC's unique“New Plan” was adopted, andthroughout the thirties the cur¬riculum was revised in ways un¬heard of ten years before. Indeed,it should not be thought thatHutchins left the UC with theidentical program of general edu¬cation which he advanced in 1931.Throughout the thirties, speciallyappointed committees examinedand overhauled the college curric¬ulum.IT WAS Hutchins’ thesis thatthe American universities hadmodeled themselves after thegreat German universities whichhad produced an impressiveamount of scholarship. But theGerman student entering the uni¬versity had gone through thehumanistic gymnasium, whereashis American counterpart had at¬tended a high school system whichhad decayed and now was totallyinadequate to give him the generaleducation which he needed sobadly. Hutchins proposed that theCollege of the UC assume thisfunction.The first reform, adopted in1930, was essentially administra¬tive in nature. It instituted a col¬lege, ending in the second year,with the graduate schools to becomposed of four division: bio¬logical sciences, physical sciences,social sciences, and humanities. Acollege faculty was created whichwas in large part autonomousfrom the divisions. By reducingduplication, this reorganizationsaved the university large sumsof money.THE SECOND REFORM,adopted on March 5, 1931, was ofgreater importance and becameknown as the “New Plan.” Itsmajor components were: [1] atwo year college, devoted to gen¬eral education wrould be created;[2] the credit system would be4 • CHICAGO M i abolished, to be replaced by aseries of seven comprehensive ex¬aminations, leading to the degreeof Associate of Arts.Students would take a comp forone-year courses in biological sci¬ences, physical sciences, socialsciences, and humanities. A fifthcomp would be devoted to writtenEnglish, and two more to divisionalsequences to be chosen by thestudent. Foreign language andmath requirements would be basedon high school credits. In principle,the placement test system was in¬stituted, but used only for Eng¬lish. College attendance was madevoluntary.Change made in 1933 appliedonly to some students but was ofgreat importance. Students havingcompleted the tenth grade of Uni¬versity high school were enrolledin a four year college. AlthoughHutchins felt these students shouldreceive Bachelor’s degrees, it vascorrectly anticipated that othereducational institutions would stillregard the graduates as havingcompleted only the enuivalent oftwo years in college. The BA orBS in the university thus becamea meaningless degree, and follow¬ing the award of an Associate ofArts degree, the student remainedin the divisions three years beforegetting a Master’s degree. The in¬novation was so great that th?plan was not put into practiceuntil 1937.IN NOVEMBER, 1932, the Col¬lege faculty became completelyautonomous and a previous rulerequiring faculty members toteach in the divisions also wasabolished.Even the advocates of the NewrPlan were not particularly pleasedwith the first year of its opera¬tion. Freshmen frequently cutclasses. Sophomores, who werenot participating, assumed an airof skepticism, possibly a “sourgrapes” attitude. However, withina few years the program had be¬come an institution and the plan’sproponents, in advancing the ideafor other American colleges an 1universities, were able to presentan impressive amount of facts andLawrence A. Kimptonstatistics designed to show tiesuperiority of the new system.Not only did the Collegechange, the college studentchanged also. Fraternities wereconfronted with the fact that ptwo-year college allowed a manonly one year in a fraternitybefore he entered a graduatedivision, since the U-High earlyentrants were too young. There¬fore, the fraternities had to ad¬just in order to survive. Mostof them did neither. Similarly,student activities suffered a de¬cline, particularly some of themore time-consuming ones.Hutchins’ attitude was not oneof great sympathy. He felt muchtime spent on student activitieswas usually a sign that the stu¬dent was substituting it for themore intellectual pastimes thecollege offered him.BUT IF the New Plan waschanging the college student, thedepression changed him evenmore. No longer did a studentcomplacently enter college withthe expectation of four years offree-spending fun, to be followedby a lucrative and successful ca¬reer as a bond-salesman. The fra¬ternities found that depressionstudents had no money, while theactivities found he had not time,since he was working his waythrough school.In March, 1937, the curriculum^ R 0 0 N • Oct. 3. 1958 was again reorganized, the mostimportant new feature being acourse in philosophy, similar tothe present OMP. A physical edu¬cation requirement for the firsttwo years was also established.However, the reorganization didnothing to institute a badly need¬ed placement system in foreignlanguages and math. Furthermore,other proposals were not actedupon, including extending collegegeneral education to four years forall students and the award of ameaningful Bachelor’s degree uponcompletion of the college curric¬ulum.THESE EVENTS were to followduring the latter half of Hutchins’presidency, a period marked bynow in the American university—-the war years, and the post-warones which followed, with a largeinflux of veterans.Not until 1942 did the Collegeof UC take, even in general way,the form in which Robert M.Hutchins left it in 1951. In thatall-important year, the two-yearand four-year colleges were com¬bined and the controversial“Hutchins BA” adopted. Both aspresident, and after 1945, aschancellor, Hutchins continued topress vigorously for further cur¬riculum changes, most of whichwere adopted by very narrowmargins in the council of tl efaculty senate.THE YEAR 1941 was markedby a counter-attack on the part ofthose who opposed the “NewPlan” in one way or another. Theopposition decided to concentrateits fire on the comprehensivegrading system. It w:as arguedthat comps allowed the studentsto “loaf” through much of theyear, and that some courses werenot suitable for such a system ofexamination. Nevertheless, theopposition was in the minorityand the comps stayed.The year 1942 was as eritiea!a one for American edncatioras it was for the nation as awhole. UC could not help butfeel the reverberations of a na¬tion at war as sailors bunked inBartlett gymnasium and in partof the Burton-Judson courts. Inthe West Stand of Stagg field,scientists were working furiouslyon experiments which were tolead to the first controlled nu¬clear chain-reaction on Decem¬ber 2, 1942.President Hutchins had long ad¬vocated that a bachelor’s degreebe awarded to the student whenhe had completed the requirementsof the College, regardless of thelength of time needed. Since underthe New Plan the student mightcomplete his college requirementsafter the “sophomore” year, thisappeared to be the reasonablepoint at which to award him abachelor’s degree, Hutchins felt.THE EXAMPLE of other in¬stitutions of higher education,which were allowing students toaccelerate their programs duringthe war, gave Hutchins anotheropportunity to press for new de¬gree requirements.In addition, the bill proposedto end the division between thetwo-year and four-year colleges.Placement tests of wide scopewould, under this proposal, de¬termine each student’s require¬ments. Although placement exam¬inations had been used in thepast, the committee had beenconservative. But war tests hadmade the faculty and administra¬tion more examination-conscious,and experience had further shownthat secondary schools variedgreatly in quality, eevn if theyall offered the same courses.A GREAT DEBATE over theseproposed changes occupied theematics requirements, was sweptunder the rug again. No collegecourses were given in these twosubjects and placement was madeaccording to high school creditsrather than examination.The new reorganization did notgo into effect until 1945, since theexaminers office needed the inter¬val to draw up placement tests forthe College courses. In the sameyear a course in mathematics anda foreign language course, par¬tially devoted to a considerationof general language problems, of changewere added to the College curricu¬lum. Room w’as found by lower¬ing the English requirements.IN FEBRUARY, 1946, Hutchinsand his supporters finally had thesatisfaction of abolishing the PhBdegree after a difficult fight. Theproposal passed the college fac¬ulty, but had to go before thecouncil of the University Senate,since it affected the divisions aswell.In March the council askedthe College to “reconsider,” butunder bis now powers as Chan¬cellor, Hutchins vetoed the de¬cision of the council, calling theaction "an attack on the autono¬my of the College.”When the Council proceeded tooverride Hutchins’ veto, the meas¬ure would have passed to theboard of trustees had not the Col¬lege and the council agreed topostpone the proposal until a seriesof meetings were held. As a resultof the meetings a compromise asadopted, the PhB was abolishedas of 1947, but joint residency in1he College and divisions was tobe allowed in certain cases.History oi Western Civilizationwas added to the College curricu¬lum, and students taking Humani¬ties 3 were allowed to combine itwith work in a foreign language.Thus by 1947 all the collegecourses now in existence had beenstarted.DURING THE past seven yearsChancellor Lawrence A. Kimptonhas occupied the unenviable posi¬tion of the "man in the middle.”On one hand Kimpton was heirto throe major problems from theHutchins era neighborhood slumconditions, declining enrollmentand University finance. His pre¬occupation with these problemsand avowed new philosonhy con¬cerning the College brought downcriticism.“Undergraduate life at Harvardis better rounded,” Kimpton is re¬ported 1o have said shortly afterbecoming chancellor. And the his¬tory of the Kimpton administra¬tion is a history of change -ofmeeting the three old problemsand of dealing with the one newone of creating a “well-rounded”university.The University’s finances madethe most urgent demand on thenew chancellor’s attention. A pe¬riod of consolidation was neededto counterbalance the dynamismof Hutchins, who had once said:“The money does not have to bein hand. A university that waitsuntil it has the money in hand isunlikely ever to do anything, be¬cause the value of some of themost important things a univer¬sity can do can be demonstratedonly by doing them.”KIMPTON wished to set thefinancial house in order by insti¬tuting a new undergraduate pro¬gram. More specifically, his rea¬sons for changing the "Hutchinsplan” were:The BA, which was supposed totake only two years, was actuallytaking three, because the studentswere not placing out of as manycourses as had been expected.Thus, six years were needed toget a master’s instead of five.Other colleges were not accept¬ing the Hutchins BA. Students with the BA were being placed inthe junior year at other colleges.Furthermore, high schools werediscouraging students from enter¬ing UC as early entrants.The result was lower college en¬rollment.Hutchins’ educational plan hadproposed that the College assumethe role that the high schools hadfailed to assume themselves. Butover the years, the idea had notspread. The high schools resentedthe Hutchins plan and other col¬leges failed to adopt it in any.thing resembling a similar form.Thus the College found ilself iso¬lated and steadily losing collegestudents once the post-war Moodhand ended.Kimpton wished to keep fourfeatures of the old College plan:the comprehensive system, gen¬eral education courses, a collegefaculty devoted to teaching, andthe early entrant system.The remainder of the formerprogram began its evolution.In late 1952 it was suggestedthat the College add a year ofspecialized studies, creating in ef¬fect a four-year program. TheCollege's first reaction was to re¬ject the proposal as one whichwould have a bad effect on theCollege morale, which would con¬fuse outsiders, which would di-mimish the College’s autonomyand which would result in awk¬ward student programs.NEVERTHELESS, during theearly months of 1953 a joint Col¬lege-biological sciences programwas ratified, and the maximumnumber of required eomprehen-sives was lowered to 12.Bv April 17. the College facultyhad agreed to accept a fourth yearin “spirit.”The physical science and hu¬manities divisions followed suitby calling for joint BA’s with theirrespective faculties. And laterthat spring the Faculty Senatepassed, by a 29-16 vote, a reportrequiring at least half of the con¬tent of a college curriculum to beacceptable to both the College andthe divisions.MIIEN THE various programswere announced the followingy ear, it was found that the changeshad been far-reaching. The Col¬lege programs held jointly withthe physical science, biologicalsciences, and humanities divisionsinvolving single areas of concen¬tration now seldom required thata student take more than eightcornprehensives.The joint degree with social sci¬ences and the professional schoolsstill required three years of gen¬eral education. A tutorial studiesprogram was instituted, allowinga student to take four years ofgeneral education.The program adopted at thattime is essentially the program oftoday, except that students receiv¬ing the joint social sciences BAwere later held for few’er collegecourses by virtue of changesadopted in 1956. Also in 1956, arule was passed by the College re¬quiring students to pass one quar¬terly in order to take the compre¬hensive examination.Still more changes were in themaking for 1958. For a sum¬mary of the new rulings see the“Summer Review” on page 24.^^ >^fa?*-afe^ «<^%^*wv*tv «>■***&& 0* 0JH % U _ MFish new C&G editorSG president welcomesWalter Fish, student in the College, has been chosen thenew editor-in-chief of Cap & Gown. He is a member of PhiDelta Theta.Cap & Gown has also announced a new pre-publication priceof $4. Students may place a $1.50 deposit for the 1959 editionof the yearbook and pay the balance at publication.Entering students will also be offered a special on the 1958edition, Fish said. At activities night tomorrow, they maypurchase it for only $3 if they place a deposit for the 1959edition.■which you can scramble withoutbenefit of a higher degree or adictaphone. By virtue of being onthis second pinnacle I find myselfhere before you; not, as you havegather by this time, by virtue ofand personal graces or charms.I do wish to extend a seriouswelcome to you on behalf of theStudent Government of the UC,on behalf again of those whomwe represent, the student body,and to remind you that you arenow members of this body. Withit go great responsibilities, ines¬timable privileges, and what most Park neighborhood, of which youSG set-up reviewedby Gary MokotoffA unique feature of UC’s Student Government is its two-party political system. Rather than a quasi-political fraternityvs. independent orientation, party membership transcendssocial affiliation and tends to represent a cross-section of the campus.Independent Student League (ISL) and Student Representativeparty (SRP) have been battling for the students’ votes since 1952when the latter party was formed. ISL was formed as the first politi¬cal party in 1948, just one year after SG was founded. The partytrounced an independent faction laking 75 of the 85 seats in theGovernment.ISL defeated all opponents from 1949 to 1952. battling such partiesas the Student Assembly Reform Coalition (SARC), Non-PartisanStudents league <NPSL) and the Independent Coalition (IC).Inevitable defeat caught up with the party. In 1952, running underdie slogan “a free university in a free society,” the newly formedStudent Representative party took control of SG by a slim majority.What is the difference between the parties? Not even its memberscan agree. SRP says that they are concerned with “students as citi¬zens” as well as “students as students;” that students and their repre¬sentatives in SG should take an active part in national affairs asmembers of our society. They accuse ISL of only concerning itselfwith campus affairs. The majority of the legislation brought beforethe SG assembly concerning such national issues as integration, fed¬eral aid to education and academic freedom is done by SRP members.ISL states that Student Government should mainly concern itselfwith “students as students” and should assist the National Studentassociation in its concern of “students as citizens.” ISL feels thatNS A is far more effective in voicing student opinion on national issues.If this is truly the difference between the parties, then the studentvoter cannot make up his mind. Since the inception of SRP, thisparty has won control of four assemblies 1952, 55, 57 and 58. ISL wonin 1953, 54 and 56.A student once quipped that the only difference between the partiesis that SRP is for the true, the good and the beautiful and ISL is forGod, mother and countrv.Foreign student O-weekexplained by Vera LaskaUC has a long tradition in educating students from other countries. As a matter of interestlet us point out that the very first Ph D ever awarded by the University went to a foreignstudent from Japan. Doctors Lee and Yang, last year’s Nobel prize winners, received theirPhD’s from UC a few years ago; they are still remembered as the two modest Chinese boysfrom International house.As the Autumn quarter opens, new foreign students representing 37 countries are arrivingto join our Univei sity commu- belief; through personal con- students. Talk to the man fromnity, Mrs. Vera Laska, lor- tact, bonds of friendships are born, Kabul, Afghanistan; you will findeign student counselor of the an(j misunderstandings between him in the business school al-University disclosed. All together natjons cleared. Help implement though he is a medical doctor;PC plays host to “academic am- (bjs belief by assuming the roles find out why. Talk to the youngbassadors” from over 50 countries. ()f informal hosts and hostesses lady from the Hebrew universityThe most numerically represented toward our visitors from all over of Israel, and ask her how she de¬group are the Canadians (only the world. Make the first step, cided to become the first Araband the second one will be made to enroll there; you will find hereasier for you by willing foreign in our Social Service program.”new class for UC'ersWhile you are still new and highly impressionable, and before first impressions becomepermanent ones, I would like to clarify a few points. It is not true that at the UC there isone dean for every 2.74 students. Some of them are assistant deans and associate deans.Ail this will be fully explained by the 1958-59 version of “Who’s Who in Deans,” scheduledto hit the news-stands any week now.Also, that while you will not be eligible for the august ranks of deanship for many years,all is not hopeless. There is the ——: — — r—75only slightly less august pin- ££ Wnacle of student-leadership, to What it is, before it destroys usinternally. And, if it is true, thenwe and our fellow men have needof it now.Therefore SG seeks to representnot only the students, but the con¬cept that students are a particulargroup, with particular problems,interests, and contributions. Wecannot, I hope we shall not, seekto represent you as individuals toyour faculty, advisors, and deans.(There are just too many deans.)What we can strive to do is torepresent you as an interest groupto the University, to the Hydehigh school principals would referto as a “golden opportunity.”A University student body with¬out a student government is con¬ceivable. Possibly, one with abetter SG than that of the UC isconceivable. The latter studentbody would be fortunate, if notunique. The former, that withouta SG, would not be so fortunate.The students at such school wouldbe as men who spend their timesharpening fine-edged blades onlyto see how long such blades tookto rust by disuse, and as the toolsto which I refer are intellectualones, so the more deadly and ir¬removable the rust.We do not believe that educa¬tion, and its most precious fruit,wisdom, can be stored awayagainst future use. It must beused as it is acquired. If it is are probably the newest members,and eventually to those who havea say on matters of national andinternational concern.We live in a democracy. Groupswith vested interests, to avoid theindelicate word, pressure groups,are expected to have a say. I neednot remind you of how you arethe elite, the “leaders of tomor¬row.” You all know this. If you Joel Rosenthalwere not convinced of that youwould probably be at Ohio State.I will remind the members of theClass of ’62 that by the time they(see “Rosenthal,” page 6)Service centernext week at open11 amSC's form explainedsemi-forgeign students, comment¬ed Mrs. Laska) and the Indians.Of the European group the Ger¬man students are the most num¬erous. Last year the Universityhad 475 regularly registered for¬eign students, not counting for¬eign visitors who are post-doctoralfellows, research assistants, and Student Government’s func- zation (CORSO), National Student'he forgotten men of the stacks, . . , , dear- association (NSA) committee, stu-who are laboring on their theses *°n.dt £^™,oimdine board dent rights, election and rulesor dissertation, but are not regis- mg house andI . funding a community relationstered. for student opinion and legis- and the student.faculty reiationsMost foreign students at UC are lation. committee (SFRC).in the division of social sciences SG follows the parliamentary q-here are also two executiveand the department of education, form. An “assembly” of 49 mem- branches. the student service cen-0f 'he professional schools the bers is elected every spring by ter and the charter flight toschool of business attracts most students in both the College ana Europe Their chief officers arestudents. A large percentage of the divisions. The majority of the not members of the executive"ur foreign students receive schol- candidates align t emse ves committee nor necessarily mem-arships from the University, one of the two campus^ pohtical bers of the Government.Those foreign students, who are parties, Independent Student ** nnot only recent arrivals on our league (ISL) and Student Repre- Pcampus but also recent arrivals to sedative party (SRP). Occas- This committee concerns itselithe US will meet with Mrs. Laska sionally, independent candidates with student conditions on cam-for several orientation sessions run, but the Government has al- pus It has inquired into suchnext week in order 1o be “indoc- ways been controlled by one of matters as better library hoursthe two parties. the parking situation and studentThe majority party forms the health.Government, nominates and elects Community relationsthe executive officers and commit- Hyde Park redevelopment andtee chairman. These persons com- bow ^ will affect UC students isprise the executive council of SG. a subject which would come underThe current assembly has a coali- die jurisdiction of the communitytion executive council although reiations committee. Problems ofhundreds of applicants, because SRP, as the majority party, main- discrjmination in neighborhoodof their high intellectual capabili- tains the greater number of execu- bou.sing is also its concern,ties and personal attributes. Go five and committee seats,and talk to them; you will find To effectively carry out its func-thom in your classes or at Inter- tions in representing the studentnational house. The idea and ideal body, SG has formed seven corn-underlining the policy of interna- mittees: campus action, commit-tional student exchange is a sim- tee on recognized student 01 gam- Student service center will again offer its multitude ofservices when it opens next week. Located in the basementof the Reynolds club, the center will be open from 11 am to1 pm and 4 pm to 5 pm.Returning students inter¬ested in selling last year’stextbooks and other books nolonger needed and all students in¬terested in purchasing books usedin class at a savings should comeduring these hours.Student loan service is anotherfunction of the service center.Students may borrow up to $10for a period of two weeks uponpresentation of a validated IDcard. If the loan is paid on timethere is only a 10 cent servicecharge.The dry cleaning service offershigh quality work through awholesale cleaner at a consider¬able savingestablishments. Students interested in purchas¬ing tickets for downtown andcampus concerts, plays and other-events can get them through thecenter. If ordered before 4:20 pm,tickets may be obtained for Or¬chestra hall and the Opera housethe same day. For other places inthe downtown area, the agencypicks up tickets every Wednesdayafter the close of the morninghours. Tickets for the same week¬end should be requested before 1pm on Wednesday. Students maypick up their tickets at the centeron Thursday or Friday, or on re¬quest, they may be left at the box-over neighborhood office to be picked up the night ofthe performance.Irinated” into the mysterious ways°f our alma mater, including themaze (or haze?) of registration.“We would like to call these for¬eign students to the attention of'he natives, Mrs. Laska comment¬ed. these are selected individuals,who were chosen from amongNSAUC students, through its Stu¬dent Government, are affiliatedwith the National Student associ¬ation. NSA is the most represent¬ ative student organization in theUS with over 300 affiliated schoolscomprising nearly a million stu¬dents.On campus, the NSA committeecooperates with the national of¬fice in administering NSA legisla¬tion. Federal aid to education wasone of NSA’s big projects lastyear and the UC delegation to the1957 NSA congress was instru¬mental in effecting the legislation.This SG committee runs the twocurrent student exchanges, withthe University of Frankfort andwith various Russian universities.SFRCStudent-faculty relations com¬mittee’s chief interest in recentyears has been the curriculumchanges in the College. Two yearsago, this committee formed thestudent-faculty advisory board(SFAB) which met with membersof the faculty to discuss the antici¬pated changes in the College cur¬riculum made by the faculty’sgraduate education (ECUE);SFAB reported to ECUE in thespring of 1957, its opinions onwhat was lacking in the Collegecurriculum and what was worthsaving. Last quarter, SFRC held a series of lectures on the cur¬riculum highlighted by a discus¬sion with the chancellor.Student- rightsThis newly-formed committee,formerly a part of the NSA com¬mittee, discusses problems of aca¬demic freedom and civil liberties.CORSORecognizing student groups andinvestigating their rights comesunder the jurisdiction of the com¬mittee on recognized student or¬ganization. CORSO investigatesinfractions of the student code,warns violators of the code pro¬visions and has the power to indictand prosecute such violators be¬fore the student-faculty-adminis¬tration court. In the past, violatorshave included the administrationas well as student organizations,E (j RThis committee oversees theelection of the assembly membersand delegates to the NSA congressin the spring. It investigates allinfractions of the election laws.Executive councilThe executive council coordi¬nates and reviews pending legis¬lation in the assembly.Oct. 3, 1958 • CHICAGO MAROON • 5by Martin KainInter-fraternity council presidentUT a tradition“Now that the West Stands are gone ...” you can find“Securely located at one of the round earth’s imagined cor¬ners ...” that place where the “Ingroup and Outgroup re¬group for liquid joy . . .” You, too, can find “The old dispen¬sation, ever new, at. .. UT.”UT in this case stands for University tavern, and is not to beconfused by external evidence with the UT that stands forUniversity theater. The former organization is the one, andthe only one which offers “Continuous programming, un¬broken by commercials ... ”, “The simple pleasures of thepoor ... ”, “Indoor sports ... ”, “Proof against the weather...” and “The sweetest music this side of Ellis Avenue . . . ”all under one roof. They also claim that “Meaningful ambigui¬ties our specialty ...”University Tap also runs a series of advertisements in theMaroon which are nothing short of strange.This is where “Nature imitates Art; Art apes George;George chides Sam; Sam harries Harry; and the trouble withHarry is . . . UT.” This is where “You, too, can call spiritsfrom the vasty deep ...”This is where you can find true intellectual stimulation:“Pint Counterpint”; “Symposia, Platonic and not so Platonic,”“See you Pilot face to face . . .” and “Catch the latest issueof ‘The American Hamster Breeder’s gazette’ in our readingnook ...”If you’re 21, or thereabouts, Sam and George lovinglyinvite you to come and “Observe the International Geo¬physical Year by reaching for the moon at . . . UT” wherethe pass words are “See w hat the Illuminati in the back roomwall have ...” and “We also serve who only stand and draw.”Sam and George wall also willingly concede that “At the bot¬tom of the pot, a certain dignity ...”One final quotation from an old UT ad: “Orientation: Themysterious East. Also North, West, South, Down, Up, and . ..UT” At first glance the concepts “fraternity” and “University of Chicago” may seem alien toeach other. This opinion, however, is current only among the “uninitiated,” in the broadestsense of the word. A close look at the fraternity system here at Chicago show's that thefraternities play a significant part in campus life.Fraternities at Chicago differ in large measure from the generally accepted stereotype.For example, they generally show a high degree of maturity in manging their own affairs.As a result, the University ad- 'ministration has traditionally other aspects of University life fraternities, a not infrequent oe-, , . , , before being faced with the ques- currence. It must be stressed thatround it unnecessary to maxe tion j0injng a fraternity. There- these smokers in no way obligateregulations concerning fraterni- fore( the autumn rushing season, a student to any fraternity; theyties, but has delegated that duty during which fraternities pledge merely provide an opportunity forto the Interfraternity council. The new members, is open only to interested (or even merely curi-those men who have already com¬pleted at least one quarter’s resi¬dence.Early in January, the winterrushing season begins. At thattime, the details of the processare publicized; only brief com¬ments will be made here. Themost characteristic rushing insti- more about fraternities at a pro-tutions are the fraternity ‘smok- gram to be held in Mandel hall oners.’ These are scheduled infor- Friday, October 17. Starting timenities on campus, each a chapter mal evening affairs held at the is 3:30. This will be virtually thex >. , r- i various houses. Students are en- only chance for entering studentsof a national Greek-letter society. courai,cd attend as many smok. ,carn abou, lratemtties duringSome 300 men are now active ers as carii so that they may the Autumn Quarter. Every newmembers of these groups. Of this make an educated choice in the student owes it to himself to learnnumber, about fifteen per cent are event that they receive bids (in- exactly what fraternities have toCouncil is composed of the presi¬dents and one other representa¬tive from each house. In additionto its legislative function, thisbody acts as the official represen¬tative of the fraternity system indealings with the administrationand the public.At present there are ten frater ous) students to see the fraternityhouse, learn of its particular ad¬vantages, and meet most of themembers of the group.This article has been able onlyto give a brief description of fra¬ternities. New students will havean opportunity to learn muchgraduate students.One of the most frequent ques¬tions asked about fraternities isthe cost of membership. Thegroups differ somewhat in thismatter, but it is safe to say that,not counting the original initia¬tion fee, which is not exorbitant,the total of room, boai'd, and duesin a fraternity house is usuallynot much more than room andboard alone in the dormitories.Many commuters are to be foundamong fraternity members; livingin the house is not compulsory.The fraternity system adheresto a policy of deferred rushing forentering students. ‘Rushing’ re¬fers to all the various activitiesby which fraternity members getto know those interested in join¬ing, and vice versa; deferred rush¬ing means that during a student’sfirst quarter at the University, noattempt is made to acquaint himwith individual fraternities. Fra¬ternity houses are off limits fornew students during their firstquarter, with the exception of all -campus open houses. The feelingis that students should adjust to vitations to pledge) from several offer.Lift your steins and...fraternities, UC mix?head gives his viewEins, zwei, drei, veir... Dol-FNSA series outlines structureUnited States National Stu¬dent association is a federationcomposed of the student gov¬ernments of the member schools.The UC is a charter member ofthe ten-year-old organization, andhas had delegates at every sum¬mer congress.These summer congresses arewhere the delegates meet to for¬mulate the organization’s policyfor the coming year, elect officers,review the reports of out goingofficials, and to establish personal(This is the first of sev¬eral articles on the Nationalstudent association. This ar¬ticle attempts to discussbriefly that organization.Future articles will dealmore specifically with the1958 summer congress andwith NSA’s plans for thecoming year.)contacts with each other. Thissummer’s congress was held atOhio Wesleyan in Delaware, Ohio.Along with the actual congressthere is a meeting for the presi¬dents of student bodies and theeditors of school papers.NSA, as the most widely recog¬nized and largest US student or¬ganization, divides its work intovarious sectors. There is an inter¬national affairs officer, concerned with student exchanges, interna¬tional student contacts, and gen¬erally acting as the overseasspokesman for US students. Theeducational affairs officer dealswith integration and discrimina¬tion, student curriculum matters,and academic freedom (both thesubject and the week dedicated toits preservation).A student government affairsvice president concerns himselfwith the internal political struc¬tures of members, seeking tospread new innovations and tokeep members informed of eachother’s activities. The studentgovernment infor mation service isconsulted by the UC SG on therare occasions when UC problemsare not absolutely unique.The delegates to the nationalcongress from most campuses areappointed. Here, however, thedelegates are elected at large bythe campus in the spring election.Five people are elected as na¬tional delegates, and five as na¬tional alternates (a distinctionwhich is rarely clear to the dele¬gates themselves).As well as the summer congressthere is the Ulinois-Wisconsin re¬gion, of which we are membersand through which most of theschools’ contributions supposedlyare to be made. The regions ofNSA have always fallen down,between difficulties of communi¬cation and the absence of cohesiveissues. Even the most jaundicedof observers would have to admitthat the UC has always played a major part in any work done bythe region. This year the regionaleducational-affairs vice presidentis a UC’er (and will contribute alater article to this series).In its decade of existence the USNSA has made some progress,has taken some forceful stands,but has at the same time disap¬pointed many who backed it withhigh hopes. The association hastaken a strong stand in favor offederal aid to education, with sev¬eral national officers testifyingbefore Congressional committeesto this effect. For the last five years, sinceacademic freedom has come undersuch hot attack, NSA has spon¬sored a national academic free¬dom week. Largely taking theircue from the UC, a reasonablyforthright position was adopted asthe organization’s definition ofacademic freedom.Integration has posed thornyproblems to NSA, since a largeproportion of the association’smembers (and financial support)come from the South. The NSA’sofficial positions have been infavor of integration and brother¬Rosenthal greets(from page 5)graduate most of them will be oflegal age, capable of voting. Bythe time they graduate this coun¬try will have a different president,and I hope I am not jeopardizingthe University’s tax-exempt statusto say that I hope he is an im¬provement over the present occu¬pant of Newport. To cut all thisshort, when you leave this Uni¬versity you will legally be adults,and if you expect to contributesomething then to a world thatwill sorely need all that can becontributed to it, then I don’t seehow waiting until 1962 will help.SG believes that by virtue oftheir fledgling wisdom and be¬cause they can often present aunique viewpoint, students should make themselves heard in thelarger community while still inschool. The student view on local,national, and international issuesis perhaps often naive. Naivete,however, like the sword of thearchangel Michael which you willsee above the doors of Rockefellerchapel, has two edges, and oppo¬site youthful experience is oftento be found an uncynical liberal¬ism which is deaf only to the ad¬monitions of the bigots and thehaters.Therefore as you enter the Uni¬versity, to fully realize the pleas¬ures of an educated man you mustfully accept the responsibilities ofone. You will become conversantwith the University’s motto, andyou must remember that in the6 • CHICAGO MAROON • Oct. 3, 1958 hood, but where some from theNorth have been disappointed isin their failure to take concretesteps to publicize and to furtherthese ends.NSA has been quite successful,and of considerable service to itsmembers, by acting as a clearinghouse for student governmentsand by putting out numerous publications keeping members awareof various events throughout thecountry of interest to students.Tours of Europe and other conti¬nents may be arranged throughthe travel office.UC'erscultivation of life which it beseeches education will not be com¬plete if you endeavor to end theprocess with yourself. There willalways be the Philistines, social,political, cultural — some withinthe ivory tower, many without—and if you wait until tomorrow,i.e., 1963, to combat them you willfrequently not be able to findthem, because by that time youmay well have joined them.Thus Student Governmentstands as a voice for you to use.It can only be part of a process of“becoming,” not of “being,” likeall the rest of your formal educa¬tion. Nevertheless, we hope thatit will be of use, and that youryears here will be enjoyable, informative, and effective.■mnamUC student organizations> University honor societiesNu Pi Sigma—is the honor society for third andfourth year women students. Eligibility is based onscholastic and extracurricular achievement Newmembers are chosen by the group each spring.•Owl and Serpent—is the senior men’s honorary. Menentering their last undergraduate year are eligible forelection to the group. It was founded in 1896 by the mem¬bers of the first graduation class and many of UC’s mostdistinguished alumni are among its membership.1 •Iron Mask—an honor society for men, elects its mem¬bers who are in their third undergraduate year on thebasis of participation in student activities and contribu¬tion to the University community.•Student Aides - are the honorary group of men andwomen that assist the University marshal at officialfunctions of the University. In this capacity they serve atconvocations and similar functions.The Maroon Key—is a group of second, third andfourth year students that serve as official hosts and host¬esses to the University.Information desk“IIow many snowflakes fell on the quadranglelast winter?”“When they invented the atomic bomb here, is ittrue that they tested it in Stagg field?”Not all of the questions asked at the Uiversity’s in¬formation desk are as interesting as these, but BobPavitt, the student manager, does get a few laughs.Inquiries on campus events and requests for telephonenumbers and addresses of faculty and students are thestandard questions asked, but the most interesting calls,Pavitt relates, are those from persons seeking an answerto academic or technical questions. He can’t answer mostof these questions but tries to find someone who can."This isn’t always easy,'* states Pavitt, “but we usuallyare able to refer the call to the appropriate individualor department. Sometimes we can’t do this because theinquiry is too vague, or is in no way related to theUniversity.”The lost and found department is also handled by theinformation desk. This portion of the job proves exasper¬ating sometimes, as few people ever claim the articlesfound. All found Items should be turned in at the deskor at the campus police office.Pavitt states that his office welcomes all questions,"even ones like those quoted above. New students areespecially welcome at the desk. Maybe we can’t tell youexactly how many snowflakes fell on the quadrangleslast winter, but we can make a pretty good try.”Folklore ing, educational supplies, health and emergency individ¬ual aid. Both through the material aid it provides forstudents and through its international co-operative na¬ture, WUS contributes toward international understand¬ing and the realization of a world community.Alpha Phi OmegaAlpha Phi Omega national service fraternity isplanned a “Scout census” during registration, ac¬cording to Frank Kennan, campus chapter presi¬dent.Cards at the end of the registration procedure willask male students filling them out whether they havebeen previously affiliated with the Boy Scouts of Amer¬ica and are willing to render service to others. These arethe only two requirements for membership in APO.APO has almost 300 chapters throughout the UnitedStates and Hawaii. The Chicago chapter, Gamma Sigma,was founded in 1939 and consists of such honorary char¬ter members as Robert M. Hutchins, Arthur Comptonand Anton J. Carlson.In the past, the campus chapter has aided World Uni¬versity service and the Frankfurt exchange in their funddrives. The members have also served as nonpartial pollwatchers during the Student Government elections.Being a service fraternity, APO crosses all lines ofhonorary, social and professional fraternities, and mem¬bers of other campus fraternities can and do becomeactive in APO.Chapters do not have houses but instead they holdmeetings on campus. Last year, the chapter held meet¬ings in Ida Noyes hall.Festival of the ArtsFOTA steering committee will meet soon to dis¬cuss plans for the 1959 Spring Festival of the Arts.Michael Kindred was elected 1958-59 chairmanduring the summer.The Festival of the Arts is a week long program latein April in which student artistic talent is sought out andgiven opportunity for expression. The festival is spon¬sored and attended jointly by students and faculty.The 1958 program combines such events as a studentart show, a poetry contest, and various student concertswith nightly outside speakers representing several fieldsof art only recently developed. FOTA attempts to com¬bine some of the more serious areas of art with a grandBeaux Arts ball.Beaux Arts ball comes at the close of the FOTA week.It is a costume ball in which prizes are awarded duringa Grand March for the most original, humorous, andclever costumes.In 1958 the judges of this prize competition were thestars of the "My Fair Lady” musical.FOTA seeks to give students opportunities for selfexpression through scheduled competitive events andthrough FOTA organizational work as well.Students interested in helping plan the festival shouldcontact Michael Kindred, PL 2-9874, or any other mem¬ber of the committee. zine will seek out student hangouts to rid itself of thecopies.BlackfriarsIn the spring of 1902 this campus witnessed theworld’s first production of the now world famousoperetta “The Academic Alchemist.” Both theUniversity and the world have, obviously, survived theshock. However, Blackfriars, the organization whichpresented this original musical comedy, never did. In*fatulated by the lure of the musical stage, this all malegroup continued its annual productions until 1942.The group changed its complexion greatly in its firstforty years. Growing increasingly professional and in¬creasingly exacting it soon realized the value of profes¬sional directors, professional conductors, professionalchoreographers and money. The Blackfriar shows of the’20s were orgies of extraneous expenditure.But World War II forced the disbandment of the groupin 1942 and the idea lay dormant until two years agowlien some irrepressible would be Blackfriars musteredforces and presented the floor show for the Beaux Artsball.The following spring saw the first full length, fullscale Blackfriars production in well over a decade. Andlast spring’s production of Alpha Centuri proved thatthe organization is well on its way to total recovery.With the problem of highly limited funds which beset*all extracurricular groups on campus, Blackfriars hashad to unlearn the value of professional directors, coivductors and choreographers, not to mention hoards ofmoney, but they seem to be doing alright anyway. Onethings the group has not been forced to forget is the in¬trinsic good found only in females and a girl can nowbe as legitimate a Blackfriar as the next fellow (if alegitimate Blackfriar be conceivable).Unlike most campus organizations which try as youwill you can never see anywhere, Blackfriars is highlyvisible to the naked eye at certain times of the year.To be more precise, their next official appearance willbe shortly before Festival of the Arts week in the spring.If you can’t contain your curosity, watch for try-out an¬nouncements, or just stand around, plainly visible, look¬ing useful.Women's clubsUC’s women’s clubs are not affiliated with na¬tional sororities and do not maintain residencehouses; they meet each Monday at Ida Noyes hall.Inter-club council is the co-ordinating group for thesix women’s clubs on campus. Representatives from eachof the clubs serve on the council, whose activities include,Interclub ball, an annual affair; Mother’s day tea andInterclub sing.Rushing for entering students is scheduled for Octo¬ber 22-November 7. Rushing regulations and informationregarding rushing parties will be published in theMaroon,UC’s clubs include Delta Sigma, Esoteric, MortarBoard, Quadranglers, Sigma and Wyvern.I“UC's largest student organization” is devotedto the “collection, propagation and enjoyment offolkmusic,” according to Sam Silver, the group’spresident. To this purpose, it sponsors “wing-dings,”get togethers of members and outsiders who like to singand play folksongs, “Hootnannies,” amateur and semi-professional concerts of artists from within and withoutthe organization and parties.In addition, the Folklore society has organized work¬shops and classes in folkmusic, vocal and instrumentaltechnique, and has been discussing the publication of anoriginal song book of the folksongs most popular withits members.Founded in 1953 by a small group of enthusiasts, theFolklore society was one of many small special interestgroups. In the spring of 1956, however, said Miss Silver,’’there was a sudden upsurge of interest and participa¬tion, and it has been growing ever since. The member¬ship last year was over 300, and the calendar containedabout five events each quarter.”WUCBWUCB, the student radio voice of the Univer¬sity, has already begun broadcasting for thetwelfth consecutive year. This year’s first pro¬gramming was heard last Sunday evening from theWUCB studio in Mitchell tower. This marks the firstyear that the station has broadcast during Orientation-week.The station broadcasts to Burton-Judson Courts,C-Group, International house, and the New University^ ! residence hall. The broadcast signal originates in Mitch¬ell tower and is carried over telephone lines to individualtransmitters in each one of the residence areas. The sig¬nal is transmitted at a frequency of 640 kilocycles, andit is available on any standard AM radio in the fourtransmitting areas.WUCB offers the student training in program produc-i tJon, control engineering, announcing, electronics work,advertising and business work, news reporting, andI many other fields.The WUCB office is located in Room 302, Reynoldsrlub and the studio in Mitchell tower, which is attachedto the Club at the corner of 57th and University.wusCampus World University service committeeI (WUS) will hold its educational and fund cam-I Paign this November.I WUS is an international organization for student aid.I t unds raised at colleges and universities of 38 nations■ help fulfill the basic material needs for students: lodg¬ Student1 UnionUC’s Student Union is an organization for thepromotion of social actiivties on campus. StudentUnion sponsors most of the social affairs of anall-campus nature, and stimulates other extra-curricularsocial activities. With its offices in Ida Noyes hall, itdirects many of the functions of the building with regardto students’ social life.Last year, Student Union sponsored informal dancesand parties during the year, bringing in bands and pro¬viding refreshments, for a small admission per person.These affairs are usually budgeted to lose money, andare primarily for the convenience of the students. TheUniversity’s Student activities office subsidizes the loss,feeling that students should be offered pleasant enter¬tainment at fairly frequent intervals at a price they canwell afford, stated Greg Hodgson, SU president.Besides these informal affairs, Student Union spon¬sored several of a more gaudy nature, such as Washing¬ton promenade, a traditional UC formal dance, Night ofSin, an evening of riverboat-cum-Riviera-style “gam¬bling,” the Wassail party at Christmas and a Springformal.Washington promenade has been, for some fifty-sevenyears, the major all-campus formal, attended by hun¬dreds of students in filmy formals and soup-and-fish. Atmidnight there is the crowning of Miss University ofChicago, amid not-quite-Atlantic-City regal splendor.Besides all these dances and parties, the Student Unionlast year sponsored a sort of a late-night spot in IdaNoyes hall. This was the Hangout, where students couldcome and have a coke and dance and talk after studying.The Hangout, too, was subsidized for the enjoyment ofthe students, and was kept open until 11:45 each nightPlans are afoot for the enlargement and expansion ofthe Hangout’s facilities.And this, in a nutshell, is your Student Union: a groupdevoted to the development of the social side of the col¬legiate personality.Meyer.Phoenix“Phoenix will be published,” reiterated SelmaMeyer, publisher of the campus humor-featuremagazine which has been having a rough time aris¬ing out of its own ashes.Despite the lack of an editor-in-chief or a staff, thebird publication plans to publish its first issue “withinthe next two weks,” according to Miss Meyer.The issue will sell for 25 cents. The yet unannouncedbusiness staff has not announced where Phoenix willbe sold, but Miss Meyer said confidently that the maga- Polirics clubThe Politics club explores ideas concerned withthe issues of the days. Its first business meetingand discussion on Wednesday, October 8, in room201 of the Social Science building. Those interested inbecoming members should enroll before the businessmeeting which will begin promptly at 7:00 pm. The dia^cussion on—“What has become of the liberal movementin America?” will be lead by Michael Harrington, edi¬torial board member of Dissent, Anvil, and Liberationmagazines.CommentComment, the undergraduate creative writingmagazine, will publish an issue during Orientationweek, according to editors Sue Fisher and GeraldKorshak.In its fourth year of publication, Comment printsa range of subjects that extends from creativewriting to the discussion of political party issueson campus.Intromurol sportsIntramural department attempts to provideevery male student with the opportunity to parti¬cipate in both organized and informal sports activi¬ties as regularly as his time and interest permit. Atfuletic activities are organized on both a team and an in¬dividual basis thereby enabling all to participate. Teamsare divided into academic fraternity, college house, anddivisional league, with the various winners meeting forthe All-University championship in many of the activi¬ties.This year the department is offering 14 activities dur¬ing the year; badminton, basketball, free throw contest,golf, handball, horseshoes, softball, squash, swimming,table-tennis, touch football, track, volleyball, and a new¬comer this year, wrestling.College House division this year is adding the fourteams from the East House in the new dorms but willdrop Chamberlin, Linn, and Mathews houses, which willbecome graduate houses and therefore be placed in thedivisional league.With the addition of the three houses which werepreviously College plus a completely new house, thedivisional league will be the beefiest in years. This leaguewill consist of Chamberlin, Kelly, Linn, Mathews, NortliHouse, Snell, and Hitchcock.Three sports will be added to the fall calendar: golf,tennis, and wrestling.Oct. 3, 1958 • CHICACO MAROON • 7Words byEDWIN H. LEWIS Alma Mater Music Arr. byMACK EVANSSing' the time exactly as writteny i k. — HC K-~ k —i—N— K - 1 - rVi I.VL u I 1 "T II- 1 m • ^ m ^ w ^ vniif " =— = 1 h—To - day we glad-ly sing the praise Of her who owns us as her sons;Her might - y learn-ing we would tell ,Tho’ life is something moretlian lore;The Cit - y White hath fled the earth,But where the az - ure wa-ters lie,0 ikk-rr-—i-l 4—T-j— -4 nFH-.rv k i.v i * . m 3 mfn v i) t _j M p 4 . m X m X flP. X m IT mVy , •+ 0 J 2 X 2 « C — X .... 2... X job•J • i j $ ¥—rr.—L' r— ! 1 1—. .. m • u ■ ■^ u i v e r—Ub—3: j J- -J L 5 i -3 ■J- -J-With a steady rhythm,t like a march—rrh rfc— .T-- h— k' — t—i ■ i rl 1 K— K— — >■ fl 2=—■—i——j —0— — m 'm 1 y~■ —#-!—J —Of all fair moth-ers, fair-est she, Most wise of all that wis - est be,We praise her breadth of char-i - ty, Her faith that truth shall make men free,For dec - ades and for cen-iu-ries, Its bat - tle-ment-ed tow’rs shall rise,0.U-. °1 £—F—0—r- « — J J- f—r—l |-f p Jrf— ■* m t w x x m 7 0- : E ... t % -U J ■ -T E■» • -X £ r ■ la> f > f r> P»- 1w — pr r r-1 ■ . -.. - m —j 11z: -0 j «XT If H * F ■WReligious activitiesby Mary FinkieReligious organizations on theUC campus sponsor a very wideand flexible range of facilitiesand activities which all studentsare welcome to utilize for theirenjoyment and benefit.Many religions and their asso¬ciated cultural aspects are exploredthrough programs of worship, stim¬ulating intellectual discussions andlectures, community fellowship, andsocial functions of informal nature.The spirit and individuality of eachfaith is captured and conveyed inthese religion-cultural activities andthe atmosphere of their settings,as well as in the specifically re¬ligious functions.Chapel HouseChapel house, 5810 Woodlawn, isthe Protestant center for UC stu¬dent activities. All its facilities arefor students' use; clergical andother leadership and guidance arealso at their disposal.BaptistThe Baptist graduate studentcenter, 4901 Ellis, and the CharlesW. Gilkey foundation of the HydePark Baptist church, 5600 Wood-lawn, provide seminars and courses,social activity, retreats, and inter¬group meetings. A weekly supperand program meeting is held at6 pm in homes of church members,or at the church. Christian Scientist“To enlighten the Universitycommunity concerning ChristianScience and to provide opportuni¬ties for fellowship and activityamong members of the Universitywho are interested in Christian Sci¬ence,” is the goal of the ChristianScience organization. Activity inline with this purpose centersaround weekly services at Thorn¬dike Hilton memorial chapel, 1150E. 58th, at 7:15 pm Tuesdays, andtwice-yearly lectures.United ChristianUnited Christian fellowship is anew group replacing and succeed¬ing the Porter fellowship, now in¬cluding the Methodist denominationin the fellowship of Congrega-tional-Christian, Evangelical andReformed, and Presbyterian. Joint¬ly sponsored by the Porter founda¬tion and the Methodist foundation,the fellowship will hold the tradi¬tional Sunday evening suppers inSwift hall commons, followed bylectures, panels, and discussions.Coffee hours for informal visitswith noted persons and specialluncheon programs for commuterswill occur regularly.A number of interest groups willstill function through the Porterfoundation, varying in scope fromthe graduate fellowship to a jour¬nal published quarterly by studentsand faculty, entitled Counterpoint.Disciples of ChristWranglers club, associated with8 • MAROON • Oct. 3. 1958 the University church of Disciplesof Christ at 5655 University, ex¬presses as its purpose, “to enablethe student to develop a creativeand experientially held conceptionof the Christian faith. . . .” To¬ward fulfilling this purpose, thereis a group meeting Sunday eve¬nings at 6:30, from October tillJune.EpiscopalianBrent house, 5540 Woodlawn, isthe Episcopal students’ center,equipped with a library, and livingand dining rooms. Canterbury clubmeets there for discussions and so¬cial activities. Holy Communion isoffered in Bond chapel Sundaymornings at 8:30, beginning Octo¬ber 12. Afterwards, a breakfast isserved in Swift hall commons.Evensong takes place Wednesdaysat 5:05 pm and Holy Communionis celebrated at 11:30 on Thursdaymornings.Quaker StudentfellowshipDiscussions, activity in the Amer¬ican Friends service committeeworkroom, a weekly meeting forworship at 11 am Sundays (“a highventure of faith”), and various par¬ties constitute the basic programof the Quaker Student fellowship.Quaker house is located at 5615Woodlawn.Hillel foundationThe B’nai B’rith Hillel Founda¬tion yearly presents a highly de¬ How to form clubDespite the 100-odd studentorganizations currently regis¬tered at the activities office,UCers have always found a needto organize student activity num¬ber 101.To facilitate expansion of theextracurriculum, Student Govern¬ment, who recognizes new organ¬izations, has made the require¬ments liberal. Just nine other stu¬dents and a faculty advisor is allthat is needed to fill the “badlyneeded” gap in your extracurri¬cular education.While the latter requirementmay seem an obstacle to a poten¬tial organization, it actually isnot. Witness such organizationsas the Pre-Raphaelite Pigeon andSquirrel Feeding society, Sheenafan club and the Society for theCollection and Preservation ofRare Beer Cans, all with facultyadvisors. Their names are with¬held for fear of libel suits.Faculty advisors take an activeGive profileA profile of the Downtowncenter student body is re¬vealed in the compilation ofstatistics from 1,571 question¬naires filled out in the Springquarter.The survey was part of a cur¬rent research project studyingmany aspects of the Downtowncenter's curriculum and activities.In terms of where they live,Downtown Center students showa close resemblance to the totalChicago pattern —- that is, tw’o-thirds live in the city and one-third in the suburbs.The heaviest concentration ofstudents is in two areas—alongthe lake on the north side fromNear North to Rogers park and inthe Hyde Park - Kenwood - Wood-lawn-South Shore area of theSouth side. Greatest suburbangrowth is from the west.In most other respects, Down¬town center students differ invarying degrees from the commu¬nity at large. The differences aremost pronounced in educationallevel and income. The median in¬come is about $6,(XX). A third ofthe students hold the BA degreeand 12 per cent the Master’s de¬gree. Two in every hundred didnot finish high school and twice asmany have the PhD or compara¬ble degree.Ages range from 17 to 71 years, or inactive part m the organiza¬tions they sponsor depending onthe whim of the student members.Questioned whether their facultyadvisor takes an active part intheir program, members of theRare Beer Cans society refusedto comment.Applications are available at thestudent activities office, Ida Noyeshall. They should be returned tothe same office complete with thenames of the ten students and thesignature of the faculty advisor.The committee on recognized stu¬dent organizations (CORSO) ofStudent Government then goesthrough the formality of recog¬nizing the group and the finalapproval is given by the SG as¬sembly. No organization has beendisapproved by the SG assemblyin recent years, but the purposeof ISL and SRP, the two campuspolitical parties which compriseSG, has occasionally been chal¬lenged.of U Collegewith half the students between 21and 35 and a third between 36 and50. Nine per cent are over 50 and9 per cent are under 21. Half thestudents are married and a thirdhave children. A quarter owntheir own homes.In politics, they divide evenlyamong Republicans, Democratsand “independents.” Forty - twoper cent are Protestants, 24 percent are Catholics and 15 per centare Jewish.Only a fifth of the students havenot moved their homes at leastonce in the past ten years. Halfwere born and raised in the Chi¬cago area, 80 per cent watch tele¬vision, two-thirds listen to FMradio, and half read a communitynewspaper.A third of the students intend towork toward a degree, but of thisfraction only one-third have beenadmitted to degree candidacy atthe University, another third in¬tend to apply, and the others in¬tend to use the credits earnedDown-town at another institution.Practical goals are cited as rea¬sons for taking evening courses atthe Downtown center. Two rea¬sons—to obtain a college degreeand to improve job performance—each received about a fourth ofthe votes. But a fifth of the stu¬dents said their reason for goingto school as adults is for “intel¬lectual stimulation.”on campusveloped schedule of activities cen¬tering on the Jewish religion andculture. The program, designed tomeet the needs and interests ofJewish students and faculty, at¬tracts a large cross-section of non-Jews as well.Sabbath service at 7:45 pm, fol¬lowed by fireside conversation andOneg Shabbat, is held every Friday.Three public lectures on “Guilt:sin or sickness?” will be presentedduring autumn quarter. Discus¬sions about “Varieties of Jewish re¬ligion,” and coffee hours, wherebooks of general interest are re¬viewed, are also on the agenda.Jewish holiday services, studyand interest groups, the CombinedJewish appeal annual fund-raisingcampaign are regular activities. Apersonal counseling service is avail¬able. The many facilities at theHillel foundation, 5715 Woodlawn,are open to all students and fac¬ulty.LutheranAlpha Iota chapter of GammaDelta, sponsored by the MissouriSynod, and the Lutheian studentassociation, sponsored by the Na¬tional Lutheran council, are theLutheran organizations on campusand are characterized by close co¬operation. The Lutheran studenttraining parish meets for Sundaymorning worship at 10 am in Hil¬ton chapel. A social and intellectualprogram of speakers and studentpanels follow the 6 pm suppers onFriday nights, Lutheran meetingnights on campus. Methodist foundationThe Methodist foundation spon¬sors a program “designed for per¬sons of various interests.” Besidesthe programs of religious worship,the Methodist Graduate fellowship,the Methodist Couples club, theMethodist Theological faculty, theInterchurch committee for intei’-national students, inter-denomina¬tional study and fellowship groups,and conferences for faculty withvisiting church leaders are featuredprojects.Calvert clubThe Calvert club, the RomanCatholic student center, holds Masson Sunday mornings at 8:30, 10:00,and 11:00, and on weekday morn¬ings at 7:00 and 7:45 at DeSaleshouse, 5735 University. The purposeof the club is "the formation anddevelopment of well-rounded Chris¬tian personalities and capable stu¬dent leaders whose Christian influ¬ence will be felt by the wholecampus community and will inpost-collegiate years be at the serv¬ice of the '.hurch and of society.”Channing-MurrayfoundationA goal to create "a new integrityof spirit in personal life and so¬ciety” symbolizes the Channing-Murray foundation, the Unitarianstudent fellowship. Its student-gov¬erned activities include weeklymeetings for discussions and socialprograms and the annual Chan¬ning-Murray lectures. 4Jl;£1H I C ANjtJrMtililf.jcjrjMjra ciM *.»•UC's UT was demolished to make way tor this, the University's $2.4million undergraduate men's dormitory. When completed in the fall of1959, each tower unit will house 332 students, all in rooms with outsideexposure, arranged in four two-story "college house" units for 83 stu¬dents each. • The future is yours a!Located atnew dormitories. The residence hall, designed by Eero Saarinen, cost $3.5million. The quadrangle, which at present houses both men and women, isa complete community in itself.ments, a modern six-story building located one block away from UC clinics.Designed especially for married students, the building contains 55 one-bedroom units with living room, bath, and pullman kitchen; 5 two-bedroomunits with living room, bath, and pullman kitchen; 10 single units withcombination living room-bedroom and kitchen, and 10 single units withliving room-bedroom, but no kitchen.Now under construction is UC's $3.5 million law school building, locatedon the Midway between Burton-Judson dormitories and the American Barcenter.When completed the new facilities will contain, as pictured from leftto right:" * *n eliptical shaped, sawtoothed facade auditorium and court roomstructure. The auditorium will accommodate 600 and the court room, 475. Gala display of fireworks on 55th street proclaimed com¬mencement of the rebuilding of "Hyde Park A and B" lastThursday. The celebration, heralding a milestone in the shortbut significant history of the whole concept of urban renewal,followed closely on the heels of verbal fireworks which beganexploding in City hall September 22.The term "urban renewal" at once brings up a barrageof issues, passive and active, conflicting and harmonious.Keywords spring up from every Hyde Park-Kenwood rafterand emerge from every smoke-filled conference room alongwith the heated tempers of planners and opponents, moralistsand realists, wealthy land-owners and financial unfortunates,,of every race and creed; such words as need for stability,institutional interference, racial tensions, interracial commun¬ity, slum clearance, lack of parks and parking areas, publichousing tug-o'war, multi-million dollar mortgage loans, com¬munity pride, government aid, religious antagonism — tomention only a few of the expressions.Out of the confusing scramble of words came a seeminglysimple statement in a Chicago Sun-Times editorial one weekago today: "The important thing is that the Hyde Park-Ken¬wood project is of the greatest importance to Chicago as awhole, to the concept of urban planning, and to the UC."So the spotlight shines out of the fog — on the history, thecauses and effects, the reasons for controversy (as well asthey can be deduced from the spoken word), and the out¬look for the fledgling urban renewal.It is left to the reader to decide for himself the worth of>the project to the University community, which constitutea geographically large and an influential portion of Hvde Park.The City council's housing and planning committee mustweigh the formal testimony for or against an undertakingthat, if effected, would undoubtedly serve as an examplefor the rest of Chicago and all cities in the US with relat¬ed problems.It started several years ago when a gradual change In thedirection of deterioration began to overtake the communitybounded by 47th street and the Midway, Cottage Grove andLake Michigan. This is a community with approximately 70,-000 residents, a city within a city.Crowing transiency was blamed for the situation; but,asked others, was this indicator of instability a cause or aresult of some more insidious force? Many blamed the influxof Negroes who had emigrated from the South into this al¬ready interracial community for the deterioration. Makingthis racial group a target, many residents and outsiders coinedand spread an unpleasant sloqan, both in whispers and shouts:"When the Negroes come, the neighborhood goes to pieces."Alarm, mistrust, and violent argument rose in every quar¬ter. Not only the National Association for the Advancementof Colored People, whose direct interest in the issue is ap¬parent, rebelled against the accusations, but they were joinedby members of the community and outsiders of all races.Nevertheless, ro amount of rebellion of this sort couldcause a diminuation in the numbers of "settled residents"leaving the neighborhood and thereby increasing the tran¬siency rate; nor could it stop some landlords from takingfinancial advantage of the frequently lower - income newcomers by conversion of living quarters into smaller unitsand allowing the condition of property to decay because ofinadequate expenditures on upkeep.Here began the University's direct concern with the situ¬ation. In the first place, there was the immediate deflationof UC property values concommittant to the changes takingplace. In addition, parents began to harbor reluctance againstsending their progeny, especially female, to a campus in a"dangerous" location. The steady increase in enrollment be¬ing sought was definitely at stake.UC policy professes strict adherence to non-discrimination.Yet it was (and still is) under severe criticism for its supportof the Hyde Park proposal presently under discussion andother similar or related plans, radical by virtue of their new¬ness. Hardly a single conversation on the subject is freefrom the angry comment, "They're (UC) just trying to builda 'white island' between 55 and 63 streets!"Finally an internal plight of great proportions faced theUniversity: with the tearing down ®f many prefabricateddwellings which formerly housed married students (the newresidence hall was erected on such a site, Dudley field), thedemolitions being necessitated by an assortment of circum¬stances, where were the married students to find livingquarters?This query coupled with a sincere interest in neighborhoodimprovement, resulted in the acquisition of several buildingsbetween 55th and 58th streets, Cottage Grove and Ellis ave¬nues, an acquisition that was first approved by the Chicagoneighborhood redevelopment commission after public hearings.Included were stipulations that the buildings acquired, whichwere usually chosen for their exceptionally poor condition,be torn down and replaced by suitable married student hous¬ing structures; and that the remaining buildings in theacquisition area be compelled to comply with city code or¬dinances pertaining to structures of their general description.Where applicable, the units acquired could merely be broughtup to, or to exceed, code requirements and then used to housestudents.At that stage, then, less than two years ago, urban renewalwas little more than a process of selective slum clearancewith the hope that this action would provide the mainstay ofand incentive for further community-pride and consequentialimprovement, or at least halt further decay in an area. Inthis respect, though, it was still a source of ever-present in¬spiration to idealists and men and women of more practicalbent, at the drawing board, in positions of community lead¬ership.All the while, criticism poured in that UC had not takenproper consideration of the Interests of individual propertyowners.CHICAGO MAROON • Oct. 3, 1958fi\NEW HYDE-PARKSHOPPING CENTERA V»tfab & Kmpi» S& \pxp iffl&teA'rtm t umvir *%£!&$AHl»w flabkiff t< Co,A&lovr-<4;$4$fUnits of Hyde Park homes "residential square" in site "A" flank acentral recreation area and children's playground. Central plaza is sur¬rounded on four sides by garden patios of each home. About 200 of theselarger homes will be constructed.UC and in Hyde Park •The "inspired drawing boards" indeed redoubled their ef¬forts, for they had already been activated and had conceiveda plan, "Hyde Park A and B". The section bearing this title,where preparations were now culminating, is an irregularly•area generally hugging 55 street from University avenue eastto Lake Park. Over-density of population, lack of recreationaland consumer facilities, and the use of the dirty main streetas a small-business-industrial thoroughfare all contributed tothe obsolescence and deterioration which now faced the en¬tire neighborhood.Hastening our story on to the year 1957-8, when plans for"Hyde Park A and B" were already signed, sealed, and fi-Inanced, 55th street looked as though it had received the worstof a world war battle. New government statutes and grants-in-aid, private backing, and careful efforts on the part of allcommissions involved to relocated the individuals and familiesdisplaced by the acquisitions made possible the kaleidescopictransformation from a section of old and sub-standard build¬ings, to one of brick and frame rubble created by the master-mild bull-dozers, to one of empty space ready for modernconstruction.. .The September 25 fireworks thus marked the close of thelast era and the entrance into a new, characterized by brick¬layers, cement-mixers, and highway engineers. All this wasacknowledged by Mayor Richard Daley and other dignitarieswho attended the ceremonies.The following era will see up-to-date apartment buildings,\Jklor the most part high-rise structures, with a grass-lined mallto please the eye and accomodate traffic more efficiently, con¬venient off-street parking, open space, and a shopping centerthat will be proclaimed the most advanced in the midwest.Now we must again ask, "How far along in the concept ofurban renewal has this plan taken us?" We can see that weare still at the slum-clearing and rebuilding stage attained bythe Lake Meadows project a few years ago. But a new elementhas been introduced: sectional planning. No longer are resi¬dential units allowed to spring up in haphazard fashion, bear¬ing perhaps no relationship to one another, no considerationto the surrounding sections, no conveniently-placed shoppingunits, unrealistic parking arrangements, no place for childrento play and adults to take relaxation.How did this come about? It had not escaped the attentionof planners that in the vicious circle of neighborhood deteri¬oration, there were strong implications in the direction of poorplanning and crowded-together residences, without near-byfacilities for any but strictly residential needs, as the maincauses. It was likely that this, combined to some extent withthe natural tendency toward obsolescence of existing struc¬tures built around the turn of the century, created the diffi¬culties — not the sudden large increase in the advent of newracial elements, nor in the increasingly rapid turn-over ofresidents, nor a sudden laxness about improvements on thepart of property owners.But racial and eminent domain issues again sprung up rightand left. The majority of displaced individuals were Negro.The new residential buildings could not be constructed, unlessat a tremendous financial deficit which no faction was quitewilling to absorb, for less than high-middle income rentals —thus excluding many of those displaced from returning afterthe section would be rebuilt, without huge government sub¬sidies. So again the NAACP had reason to be bellicose. Cer¬tainly, the old residents were established in new set-ups inother neighborhoods. But is it fair to thin out one area at thecost of crowding other sections — the very problem which theplan attempted to uproot?The plan was approved regardless of these unansweredobjections; and so it provided the final link in the build-upto urban renewal and the birth of the Hyde Park-Kenwoodredevelopment plan. And incidentally, the University's expan¬sion and its vigilance for the welfare of its students will beaided by these benefits.To maintain the $400,000,000 value of Hyde Park-Ken-wood's 900 urban acres will require an expenditure of about$40 million for clearance of dilapidated structures and thebuilding of new private residences, public housing, parkingareas, parks and playgrounds, schools, institutions, improvedroads, and religious facilities on the cleared sites to accommo¬date the whole neighborhood.Federal and city government aid, private donations, andoffers of mortgage loans will make the financing possible.Most of all, it is hoped by the planners (many of whom arefrom the Southeast Chicago commission, an agency affiliatedwith the University), that private home-owners, abetted byloans and favorable new city ordinances, will be stimulated toimprove their own property when it is not directly affectedby the plan,For it has been proved over and over by sociologists thatthe "natural" trend for American cities is building, decline,and decadence. Urban renewal, a revolutionary new tool,seeks to determine the cause for this inevitable course ofevents and erase it.Expressed in another way, urban renewal seeks (1) to haltdecline in a neighborhood; (2) to provide the type of facili¬ties that encourage residents to continue living here; and*3) to encourage private individuals to invest capital in the^.community.The court controversy referred to earlier centers around anobjection that insufficient public housing has been built intothe plan and that the long-term tearinq-down-rebuilding pro¬gram is too indefinite in its "rebuilding" aspects. These objec¬tions are not new. They were expressed many times at publichearings last March. The reason the testimony is receiving/ such attention is that it was expressed by the Roman Catholic^'archdiocese of Chicago, a very powerful organization. It doesnot necessarily follow that the plan can be interpreted as incit¬ing a religious controversy.The answers to all questions rest on the long-awaited offi¬cial decision. Mary Finkle Two high-rise apartment buildings stand in park-like "island." Centralplaza contains fountain, play and recreation space at each end, automobileparking underground. The two eight-story buildings will contain 274 unitseach and will sit astride 55th street between Harper and Kenwood avenues.The landscaped mall between the two structure will be 110 feet wide.The new Co-op super mart (above), the midwest's largest, will be lo¬cated at 55th street and Lake Park avenue. When the Co-op was estab¬lished in 1932, it had 100 members and an annual sales volume of $15thousand. At present, the organization has 3,000 members and an annualsales totaling $2.5 million.Tomorrow, where this sign now stands, will be Hyde Park's shopping cen¬ter, covering 115,000 square feet and containing 20 stores. Parking spacewill be available for 500 cars. Also in the shopping center will be a majordrug store, a variety store and various other retail businesses. Occupancyis scheduled for the late spring or early summer of next year.V? — ’ Anyone for polio??It was announced today by the Director of Student healthservice, Dr. Henrietta Herbolsheimer, that there is no urgencyabout getting polio shots at this time, because the polio sea¬son for this year in this climate is almost over.Studnts who wish polio boosters may get them in the spring,which is the best time to boost the resistance—that is, just before thepolio season begins. Student health will announce dates for boosterimmunization clinics when the time nears.Students who have had no immunization for polio should begintheir series of shots in Winter quarter. Again, the schedule will beannounced later.Flu ShotsSince there is no indication of an epidemic of flu in the offing, it isnot necessary for students to have these shots. SHS will keep thestudents posted through future articles in the Maroon, should thesituation change. 27 educators investigateAmericans, high schoolsChicago—Twenty-seven educators from 16 countries came to UC Tuesday, Sept. 23,to spend three months learning about Americans and their high school systems,Harold A, Anderson, assistant professor of education and project coordinator said,“It is not visionary or sentimental to say that their visit is fundamentally related to worldThe educators, who willOnCannme withMocShulman(By the Author of "Rally Round the Flay, Boys! "and,",Barefoot Boy with Cheek.")ONCE MORE UNTO THE BREACHToday begins my fifth year of writing this column, and what aneventful five years it has been! What things have these old eyesnot seen! What great discoveries have rocked the world—theanti-proton, for instance, and the anti-neutron, and high-lowsplit, and Brigitte Bardot!In these five years it has also been discovered that Americansmokers like two kinds of cigarettes—filter and non-filter. ThePhilip Morris Company makes both kinds. I mention thePhilip Morris Company because they pay me to mention thePhilip Morris Company. They sponsor this column. I write itand then they give me money. Then I take the money and paymy grocer, my butcher, my gardener, and my four madrigalsingers. In this way full employment is maintained and weavoid a repetition of the Panic of 1873 when bread riots killedover 98 million people in Muncie, Indiana, and millions of otherswere reduced to ghost-writing Th. D. theses to keep body andsoul together.But enough of gloom. Let us get back to cheerful subjects,like the products of the Philip Morris Company. For those ofyou who wish filter cigarettes there is Marlboro, which now,more than ever, gives you a lot to like—a brand new improvedfilter and a wonderful flavor that comes breezing right through.For those of you who wish non-filter cigarettes, there is PhilipMorris, a mild natural blend, flavorful, fresh, and thoroughlyagreeable. For those of you who can’t decide between filters ornon-filters but have an affinity for packages, I should like topoint out that both Marlboro and Philip Morris come in boththe crushproof Flip-Top Box and the good old-fashioned SoftPack, and you will surely want several of each for your collection.Speaking for myself, I smoke both Marlboro and PhilipMorris in both packs. What I do is make kind of a fun thingout of it. In my bedroom I have four signs, one on each wall,which say in turn: “PHILIP MORRIS-SOFT PACK”,“PHILIP MORRIS-FLIP-TOP,” “MARLBORO-SOFTPACK” and “MARLBORO-FLIP-TOP”. When, I get up inthe morning I put on a blindfold and then my faithful cat Roverspins me around six times and then, with many a laugh andcheer, I walk forward with my finger outstretched and the firstsign I touch is the cigarette I smoke that day 1reftdmcofttetfimt-As you can imagine, this little game has been a great sourceof merriment to Rover and me, except for one untoward in¬cident one morning. I was stumbling around in my blindfoldand fell out the window right on top of a man named Fred R.Timken, a census taker, and broke all his lead pencils. He wascross as a bear, and though I offered him both Philip Morrisand Marlboro in both the Flip-Top Box and Soft Pack, herefused to be mollified. In fact, he refused to put my namedown in the census, so when you read population figures of theUnited States, will you please add one?But I digress. We were speaking of Philip Morris andMarlboro who will bring you this column throughout the schoolyear. In this space I will take up vital aspects of undergraduatelife, like high-low split and Brigitte Bardot, and it is my fondesthope that the column will be half as much fun for you as it isfor me. c i»se. m*i shuim*• • •The makers of Marlboro and Philip Morris welcome you toanother year of fun and games from Old Max, and anotheryear of good smoking from us. Filter or non-filter, pick whatyou please—and what you pick wilt please you.U • CHICAGO MAROON • Oct. 3, 195B spend a total of six monthsin this country, arrive aftera three-week briefing in Washing¬ton, D.C. They will spend theautumn quarter on the Midwaycampus.Anderson said that this is thesecond year that UC has beenselected to participate in the “In¬ternational teacher developmentprogram” sponsored by the USState department and the USoffice of Education.“This is no short one-day ef¬fort,” Anderson said. “The edu¬cators will stay long enough tolearn something basic about theAmerican way of life.”“Over a period of years,” hesaid, “these leaders are going tomake a great deal of differenceto the United States, and in turn,by coming here, they make ?nimmeasurable contribution to ourculture.”Countries represented includePakistan, India, Malaya, Burma,Italy, Germany, the Netherlands,Greece, Iran, Sierra Leone, TheWest Indies, Honduras, Panama.Trinidad, British Guiana, andPeru.Nine of the visitors are women.The group’s work at the Uni¬versity of Chicago will centeraround a special seminar on secon¬dary education. The visitors alsowill audit courses of the Uni¬versity’s regular curriculum andtour Chicago area high schools.They will live on campus at In¬ternational House, 1414 East 59th.A systematic program of intro¬ducing the educators to Americanlife has been organized, Andersonsaid,peace/'Recommended forPortrait GiftCertificatesIf Husband just never "findstime" to have his portrait made... if Mother is reluctant, too... if that grandchild's parentsseem to be short of cash ... youcan solve the whole problem bypresenting them with one of ourPortrait Gift Certificates.With each Certificate you geta fine Pocket Portrait Wallet,free of extra charge. Come inand see them today.photographerBU 8-08761457-9 E. 57th St. UC administrator stickswith US state departmentOn Sunday, September 28th, UPI released the followingnews story: “Six Russian scientists, in Chicago on a two-week tour of the United States, have been barred fromvisiting a zoo or attending a barbecue, it was learned Saturday."The Russians were to have visited the sprawling zoo in suburbanBrookfield and attended a barbecue in their honor in suburban DesPlaines. But the State department declared both were off limits tothe Russians."The scientists can visit no industrial plants and have to staywithin the Chicago city limits, the State department has decreed-said one of the hosts, David M. Boyd, Jr. of Universial oil productscompany.“ 'The Russians are being polite about it,’ he added, *but theyobviously know what’s going on.'"Boyd said he couldn’t figure ‘the purpose of such an arbitraryorder’.”But University of Chicago administrator, Theodore Switz, whohosted the Russians on the school campus, felt the State department“is right.”“ ‘We were suckers too long1 he said. ‘We’d show the Russianvisitors whatever they wanted to see, and then our guys over therewouldn’t be permitted to see anything. Now we’ve put things ona reciprocal basis. . . ”Switz denied the quotation.Policy group meetsUC will be host to an adultdiscussion group on Americanforeign policy, beginning to¬morrow. The group, sponsoredby the Chicago World Politics pro¬gram in cooperation with the Chi¬cago council on foreign relationsand University college, will meetfrom 3:30 to 5:30 pm Saturdaysin Social Sciences 108.Foreign policy discussion willcenter on the writings of Washing¬ton, deTocoquevftle, Acheson, Dul¬les and Morgenthau. The theoryand practice of policy will be ex¬amined, with particular attentionto policy directed toward the SovietUnion, China, Europe and LatinAmerica as well as the overallproblems of strategy in the nuclearage and the struggle for the un¬committed nations of the world.John Ohliger will lead discus¬sion. Ohliger is studying for adoctorate at UC. At one time aneducation representative with theMichigan CIO council and admin¬istrator with the University ofCalifornia extension division, he isnow on the staff of the Americanp„f.ct fo, fallJcontemporarypendants. individuallydesigned andhand made byRosemary Zwickavailable at theUNIVERSITY BOOKSTORE5802 ellis avenue foundation for political educa¬tion. He is a member of the localNAACP and American Civil Liber¬ties union.To register for the group or forfurther information persons maycall ST 2-9224 or write the ChicagoWorld Politics program, 19 S. IaSalle street. Registration fee is $15per person or $22 per marriedcouple.Two fraternitiesmake move tonew residencesTwo fraternities now havenew chapter houses by virtueof a transaction which willallow the Chicago Theological sem¬inary to build its new married stu¬dent housing.Zet Beta Tau has moved to Fiskhouse, 5554 Wood lawn, formerlyowned by CTS. Phil Delta Thetanow owns the Winslow house at5652 University.According to Paul Schreiber, amember of ZBT, the fraternity iaredecorating their new home.5 pizzas forprice of 4NICKYS1235 E. 55 NO 7-9063KGDL ANSWERSwitch -from Mots•to Snow Fresh KGDLPROGRESSIVE PAINT & HARDWARE CO.“Hyde Park's Most Complete Paint Gr Hardware Store"Wallpaper — Gifts —- Tools Rented -— HousewaresHY 3 Y,-3840-1 UC Discount1154-58 E. 55thScience newsUC will launch largest balloonDC physicists vplan to launchthe largest balloon in the worldnext winter to take pictures ofcosmic rays 130,000 feet abovethe earth.They also seek clue* to the mys¬terious "anti-matter” of the sub¬atomic world.A 250-foot unmanned balloon,buoyed by twice the volume ofhelium gas ever used before, is outto capture cosmic rays in their"natural state” before they hitmoat of the earth’s atmosphere.The effort will mark the begin¬ning of a three-year project by acooperation with the Office ofNaval research, made possible bya $450,000 grant from the NationalScience foundation.UC physics professor MarcelSchein, who will be in charge ofthe explorations, said that cosmicrays at the heights set for the bal¬loon move with energies a thou¬sand times greater than yet pro¬duced by man.An international group of scien¬tists will participate in the project.Schein said that objectives of theflights to the upper limits of theearth’s atmosphere include infor¬mation on:• where cosmic rays come from• how much energy they have• the possible existence of anti¬matter, the opposite of materialsubstance as we now know it.The balloon should stay aloft for24 to 48 hours, if all goes well,Schein said, and such a span wouldset a record for unmanned bal¬loons in these experiments.The initial launching will bemade at the magnetic equator.Schein explained that only the mostpowerful cosmic rays can getthrough that invisible barrier.He seeks records of the splitsecond explosions of cosmic rayswith energies of 10,000-billion elec¬tron volts (BEV).This winter’s balloon launching will be made with this equipment: plates will make permanent records• a huge plastic sack with a skin of cosmic rays that pierce themthinner than paper—a thousandth and leave their marks upon theof an inch thick. film emulsion.• seven million cubic feet of he¬lium gas, compared with four mil¬lion used in the largest previousballoons.• a sealed aluminum gondola en¬cased in foam plastic and carryinga stack of 600 photographic plateseach a foot and a half by twofeet for a total weight of half aton.The stacks of photographic Schein’s group will be lookingfor heavy nuclei, such as oxygen,iron, whose proportions in manystars and galaxies are well known.These nuclei will be identified bythe patterns of exploding nuclearparticles they leave on the film.These explosions also reveal theenergy with which each cosmic rayenters the emulsion as determinedby the length and strength of theWaves bent by cloudsHigh frequency radio waves, such as are used in radar, arebent by the edges of low cumulus clouds, a UC meteorologist re¬ported recently. -Edward L. Harrington, associ- feet altitude, at the edges of cloudsate meteorologist at the Univer- where the moist cloud air and the£ui Phj'3R\ “P”40™ relatively dry surrounding air in-said his finding was based on theanalysis of data gathered with an teract-instrument called a microwave This refraction of microwaves Isrefractometer in two flights over similar to that of light by a prism,the Bahama islands by the US air That the waves are bent towardforce. the denser medium, here the cloud.The data show, Harrington re- Harrington’s report was present-ported, that the smallest amount ed to the American Meteorologicalof refraction occurs in clear air society’s second national conferenceor inside a cloud. The greatest re- on applied meteorology at the Uni¬fraction occurs at 8,000 to 10,000 versity of Michigan.R. Moore named UC ProfDr. Robert D. Moore, has been named associate professor oforthopedic surgery at UC.Announcement of the appointment was made by Dr. LowellT. Coggeshall, dean of the division of biological sciences.A 1935 graduate of the University of California, Dr. Moorereceived his MD degree from the University of Rochester in 1939,and interned at the University of Chicago.Dr. Moore was on the staff of the University as researchassistant, instructor, and then assistant professor, from 1941 to1948. •For the past 10 years, Dr. Moore has been in private practicein Kankakee, Illinois, and South Bend, Indiana. jet of particles in a W'hole chain ofexplosions of released nuclear par¬ticles.This stack of photo emulsions isa foot thick, the largest ever takenaloftExperiments with ultra-high en¬ergy cyclotrons have provided cluesto the existence in the universe ofa new form of matter, the antithe¬sis of matter as we now know it,called anti-matter. Physicists be¬lieve that when matter and anti¬matter meet, the result is theircomplete conversion to energy.Sush mutual annihilation wouldappear on the balloon’s films asthe collision of two nuclei in anexplosion that would be giganticin comparison to that of ordinarymatter. -UC is now constructing a newplant with funds from the NSFgrant to process the photographicfilm used in this type of experi¬ment.After processing, the film will bestudied under microscopes at UCand at other laboratories in theUnited States and in Europe. Theobservations will then be assembledby Schein for correlations and an¬alysis. Each stack will require sev¬eral months to process and study.Earlier this wreek, David Haskinand Erich Lohrmann, research as¬sistants to Schein, left for Brown-wood, Texas, to launch a two mil¬lion cubic foot balloon in anotherphase of their group’s investiga¬tions.Ex-UC'er at ArgonneSamuel Golden Former UC student SamuelD. Golden has been named headof the legal department at Ar¬gonne National laboratory.Golden's appointment was an¬nounced recently by Argohne busi¬ness manager John H. McKinley,who said that he would be responsi¬ble for coordinating the work ofthe legal department and will con¬tinue to report to George H. Dick¬erson, Jr., assistant business man¬ager.A 1945 UC graduate, Golden re¬ceived his JD degree from theUniversity law school in 1949. Inthat same year he became alicensed attorney. Prior to his ap¬pointment he was in private lawpractice.Golden is a member of the Chi¬cago Bar associatibn and the Deca¬logue society of lawyers. He is co¬author of an article "The Duty toBargain”, published in the Univer¬sity of Illinois Law Forum ofspring, 1955.Listen to WFMT for the MEN'S BOYS'finest in classical music. . . and for information Universal Army Store, about the 1144 East 55th st. NO 7-1555Headquarters for sport and work wearPeterson Moving • Hooded parka jackets• Hooded sweatshirtsand Storage Co. • Ivy league corduroy trousers• Wosh & wear 1. 1. trousers1011^ East 55th Street • Luggage & trunksBUtterfield 8-6711 10% redHclioH with this couponThe two fastest deodorants in the world!Old Spice Stick Deodorant it bnilt for speed. Plasticeaae la applicator. Nothing to take eat, no push up,pash-beck. Jast remove cap and apply. Prefer a spray?Old Spice Spray Deodorant dries twice at fast as othersprays! Cbooae stick or spaa?...if tfa Old Spice,k’s Am faateat* ekeueat, otoioat.doodo—utyea can ase.f Bach ]00 ky SHU LIONpfoetSK A.M.Pstands forAUTOMATIC MONTHL MlA new and convenient method of paying your lifeinsurance premiums is now offered for your consider¬ation by the Sun Xife of Canada. Every month thepremium due is, by arrangement between yourself,your bank and the Sun Life, automatically paid fromyour regular bank account. It’s as simple as that.Besides the convenience, the plan’s automatic featuressave the Company expense, and the saving is passedalong to you. For full particulars, mail the couponbelow.Ralph J. Wood Jr., '481 N. LA SALLE STREETCHICAGO 2, ILLINOISFR 2-2390 • RE 1-0855SUN LIFE ASSURANCE COMPANY OF AMERICARepresentativePLEASE SEND INFORMATION ONSUN LIFE'S AUTOMATIC MONTHLY PAYMENT PLANNameAddrest-Daie of Birth.Oct. 3, 1958 • CHICAGO MAROON • 17Urban renewal dead ]Q UC'ers awarded grantsAfter a long, painful struggle, Urban Renewal died inChicago this summer. And although Urban Renewal lies inan unmarked grave, it was not a lonely passing from thisworld to the next.Of course, Urban Renewal was the pet turtle of Test Administra¬tion, and his brief life was presided over maternally [and paternally]by Mrs. Sallie Skyles, Mrs. Isabel Pating, and Phil Murphy. Urbie—ashe was known to his friends—was about the size of a fifty-cent pieceand twice as mean.The delights of his life were biting the hand that fed him, andcareening about his bowl like an out-of-control Volkswagen. He alsospent considerable time banging his head against the side of the bowl•—not unlike humans. All in all, it was a cheerfully vicious life.But as most idylls must, this one came to an end. Urbie fell ill.Even the doctors at Billings were baffled. Finally the cause was dis¬covered. The prognosis was not encouraging. Urbie was water-logged.In fact, he soon became a soft-shelled turtle. Shortly his little spiritwent to turtle heaven.Meanwhile, there were his mortal remains to be considered. Afuneral was arranged. The body of Urban Renewal was gently placedin a Royal typewriter ribbon box. It was interred under a bush justoutside the Administration building. Mrs. Irvin Lawrence and MissDonna Tanzer were honorary pallbearers. Mrs. Mildred Lamoreauxsoftly intoned “Nearer My God to Thee.”P.S.—Anyone desiring to purchase a large turtle bowl, completewith various colored rocks [very cheap], please see Want Ads, thisissue.1958-59 contests openStudent life and education in America will be thetheme of the Intercollegian contest for college photographyPhotographs should catch any aspect of the meaning ofcollege life as it comes to a focus in persons: the joy of new dis¬covery, dating, leisure, sports, the spark of an idea, the challengeof the unknown, friendship and group life, solitude or loneliness.Students of any college or university listed in the US educationdirectory are eligible to enter this contest which closes on November1, 1958.Each contestant is limited to six entries, each of which maytake the form of a single picture or a series erf pictures whichdevelop a theme, Oi compromise a photographic essay. Entries shallbe black and white prints unmounted, each at least 5x7 inches andnot larger than 11 x 14. Each print shall bear on back the con¬testants name and address, the camera and exposure used, and titleof the picture if the contestant desires to name it.One entry blank completed and signed must accompany entries.Additional entry blanks are available on request. Only entriesaccompanied by return postage will be returned. Prize winningpictures will be published in the Intercollegian and may be usedin contest publicity. They will be exhibited at the YMCA-YWCA,National Student assembly in Urbana, Illinois, December 28, 1958to January 3, 1959.The judges will be: Jacob Deschin, Photography editor of theNew York Times; David Linton, president of the American societyof Vlagazine photographers and Grace M. Mayer, curator of theMuseum of the city of New York.First prize in this contest is $150 and a choice of varied photo¬graphic equipment.Entry blanks are available at Intercollegian Photography contest,291 Broadway, New York 7, New York.National Poetry association is sponsoring two contests — forcollege students and teachers.The annual competition for the College Students' Poetry an¬thology will close November 5. Any student attending either junioror senior college is eligible to enter. There is no limitation as to formor theme of the manuscript, the association said. Shorter works arepreferred by the board of judges, however, because of space'limita¬tions.Each poem must be typed or printed on a separate sheet and mustbear the name and home address of the student as well as the nameof his college.Teachers and Librarians may submit poetry for inclusion in theAnnual National Teachers anthology. Closing date for the com¬petition is January 1, 1959.No fees or charges will be imposed for acceptance of verse.All manuscripts should be sent to the National Poetry association,3210 Selby avenue, Los Angeles 34, California. Ten grants, totaling $605,505 have been awarded to UC by the National science foundation.Among the work supported by these grants are investigations of high energy cosmic raysby Marcel Schein. His studies with photographic emulsions flown to the top of the atmos¬phere by balloons will be continued under a $450,000 grant. Schein is professor of phys¬ics and of the Enrico Fermi Institute for nuclear studies.A grant of $10,000 will be used by Beverly Duncan, research associate with the Univer¬sity’s population research andtraining center, for a study Of different regions of the United Henry Taube, professor and chair-the influence of industry on States adapt technological chang- man of chemistry, to investigatethe structure of residential areas es in agriculture more readily the rearrangement of silicate mol-in Metropolitan Chicago during than others. This follows earlier ecules in water and the reactionsthe last census year, 1950. work by Theodore Schultz, pro- of rhenium compounds, using asGriliches, assistant professor fessor and chairman of econonU«, a tra«r the nonradioactive oxy.toward a better definition of capl- gen-17 isotope.Molecular complexes will be in¬vestigated under a $19,400 granttial. by Robert S. Mulliken, Ernest De-of economics, will use a $16,800 ,. , . , , . ,grant for a study of the reasons tal> one wf|lch 1>n<\1 d. *tural as well as industrial poten-Laboratory synthesis of simple Witt Burton distinguished serviceorganic molecules that in some professor of physics, and Weldonways act like complex enzymes G. Brown, professor of chemistry,will be attempted under a $25,500 These complexes are loose asso-grant to Kenneth D. Kopple, as¬sistant professor of chemistry.His immediate interest is in hy- ciations of atoms, such as occurin solutions. Mulliken and Brownseek to define the role of these, "Chap from Remington. . . says I've just won $50,-000 in the electric shaver"Share of America" contest.Some student can be $50,-000 richer by next quarter,and, with a bit of skill, canwork his way through gradu¬ate school by playing thestock market.The Remington Rand elec¬tric shaver “Shave of Amer¬ica" contest’s first prize withbonus is $50,000 worth ofstocks and bonds of the win¬ner’s choice from all the is¬sues traded on the Americanor New York stock exchanges.The contest starts October13 and lasts until November26. The contest simply callsfor the completion in 25words or less of the state¬ment : “A Remington elec¬tric shaver is an ideal giftbecause ...” Entry blanksare available everywhereRemington shavers are sold.If any winner has bought aRemington electric shaverduring the contest period, abonus will double the amountof his winnings. drolytic enzymes, those that break complexes as intermediates inup other molecules by catalyzing chemical reactions, which alwaystheir reactions with water. culminate in the formation ofA $44,200 grant will be used by tight associations of atoms.Begin competitionsVogue magazine has announced its 24th annual Prix de Pariscareer contest for college seniors. The competition is open to seniorsworking toward a bachelor’s degree In colleges and universitiesthroughout the United States.The Prix de Paris is Vogue’s annual search for pe ten tial editorialtalent . . . and for young women interested in fashion, decorating,writing, advertising, merchandising or publishing.First prize in the contest will bring the winner two weeks inParis, flying both ways, all expenses paid, or $1,000 cash [winner’schoice]. Second prize will be $500 cash, third place through twelfthplace, $25 cash. These top winners will receive first considerationfor jobs on ogue, Glamour, House and Garden, Vogue pattern book,Vogue knitting book. , -Other leading contestants get Vogue’s recommendation to stores,advertising agencies and other magazines.Deadline for entrance in this contest is October 20, 1958. Addressfor further information is Prix de Paris director, Vogue magazine,420 Lexington Avenue, New York 17, New York.• • •Four prizes, three in writing and one in art, will be awardedby Mademoiselle magazine.The editorial prizes include an award of $125 for the beststudent-written article to appear in an alumni magazine or collegenewspaper during 1958. Of this $50 will go to the magazine in whichthe winning entry was published and $75 will go to the author.The best faculty or alumni-written article to appear in a similarmagazine will receive $150, with $50 going to the magazine and $100to the author.Any editorial, column, feature story or letter to the editor toappear in a college newspaper may be worth $100. The magazinewill give $50 to the winning newspaper and $50 to the author.Entries must be submitted in tear sheet form by the editor ofthe publication. They must be accompanied by the name and addressof the editor and the name and address of the author of each article.The material must have been published in 1958 to be eligible andshould be postmarked no later than January 1, 1959. Winners willbe announced by April 1, 1959.The two winners will interpret the tw<^ winning stories in themagazine’s 1959 College Fiction contest and will receive $500 each.Closest runncrs-\ip will receive honorable mention and their entrieswill be kept on file for possible future commissions by the magazine.Winners will be announced in the August 1959 issue.• • •Any woman in college or art school and who is under 26 is eligibleto enter the Mademoiselle Art contest, which will be in progressuntil March 15, 1959.No work need be done especially for this contest, according tothe magazine. Any samples—at least five—that show ability in oneor more media will do. Photographs of originals, either color trans¬parencies or black and white glossies will be accepted.Entries should be addressed to Art contest Mademoiselle, 575Madison avenue, New York 22.f►►►►►►►►►►►►►►►La RUDY'Swatches fir jewelrydiscount rates onjewelry fir repairsAUTHORIZED AGENTFOR UC CLASS RINGS1523 E. 53d St.UNIVERSITYBARBER SHOP1453 E. 57thFine haircuttingThree barbers workingLadies' haircuttingFloyd C. ArnoldProprietor*rsScholarship competition beginsThe British government iscalling for applications for its2959 Marshall scholarshipawards. Students are asked toonter their applications beforeOctober 31, when the lists close.Requirements for these two-year study grants, twelve of which'are awarded each year, are liberal.Any American student [includinginhabitants of Hawaii, Alaska andPuerto Ricol of either sex, mar-ried or single, may apply—pro¬vided he or she has earned a firstdegree at a recognized university,and is under the age of 26 onOctober 1, 1959.Attention is given both to char¬acter and scholastic ability, in thejudging.This is done in the first in-itance by one of four regionalcommittees, on each of which fourAmericans, distinguished in publiclife or education, sit under thechairmanhip of the local BritishConsul-General. Applications aresifted—then the names of finalistsare forwarded to the British Em¬bassy in Washington, and then toLondon where a final review ismade by a commission of leadingBritish educators and businessmenheaded by Lord Coleraine.Winners are announced the fol¬lowing April.Each award is worth apprixo- mately $1,400 a year, for two [andoccasionally three] years, plus tui¬tion at a United Kingdom univer¬sity, if possible of the applicant’schoice. This is estimated to besufficient for student life in Bri¬tain. Passage to and from theUnited Kingdom is paid. Marriedmen get an extra allowance.Applications should be made tothe British Consul-General in oneof the following cities:Chicago [Mid-Western Region]New York [Eastern Region]Newr Orleans [Southern Region]San Francisco [Pacific Region]The Marshall ScholarshipScheme was begun in 1953. It isintended to express Britain’s grati¬tude for Marshall Aid.Whitney fellowshipsAwards ranging from $1,-000 to $3,000 will be awardedby the John Hay Whitneyfoundation under the name ofOpportunity fellowships.The fellowship competition isopen to citizens of the UnitedStates who "have given evidenceof special ability and who havenot had full opportunity to developtheir talents because of arbitrarybarriers, such as racial or culturalbackground or region of resi¬dence.”In the past the foundation has given awards to the followinggroups: Negroes, Spanish-Ameri-cans, Chinese- and Japanese-Ameri¬cans, American Indians, residentsof the Virgin Islands, Puerto Rico,Hawaii, Guam, Alaska, Samoa andthe Appalachian mountain area.Candidates in music, creativewriting, photography, painting andsculpture, will be asked to submitrepresentative samples of theirwork. Also available are appren¬ticeships in journalism, businessand industrial management, exten¬sion work, and labor education.Awards will be made on thebasis of applications by candidatesto the John Whitney foundation,630 Fifth avenue, New York 20.Deadline for applications is No¬vember 30. Announcement ofawards will be made in April.HE scholarshipsCompetitions for more than1,000 scholarships for grad¬uate study abroad were open¬ed by the Institute of interna¬tional education.The scholarships offer Ameri¬cans international travel expensesin most cases and partial or com¬plete tuition and maintenance forstudy in 46 foreign countries dur¬ing 1959-60.The Institute of internationaleducation is administering the awards for the US governmentunder the Fulbright act and theinter-American cultural conven¬tion, and for various foreign gov¬ernments and universities.The Fulbright awards for studyand ‘research in Europe, LatinAmerica, and the Asia-Pacific areacover international travel, tuition,books, and maintenance for oneacademic year.The Inter-American culturalconvention grants provide fortransportation from the US Gov¬ernment and tuition and mainte¬nance from the government of thehost country.The other 200 scholarships, fi¬nanced by foreign governments,universities, and private organi¬zations, offer free tuition and sti¬pends of varying amounts formanitenance and study on the con¬tinents of Asia and Africa as wellas in Austria, Brazil, Cuba, Den¬mark, France, Germany, Iran,Israel, Italy, Mexico, the Nether¬lands, Sweden, Switzerland,. andthe United Kingdom. Persons ap¬plying for Austrian, Danish,French, German, Italian, andDutch awards may also apply forFulbright travel grant to supple¬ment the scholarship.General eligibility requirementsfor the awards are US citizenship,a Bachelors’ degree or its equiva¬lent before departure, languageENGLISH: highway for ENGLISH: writingInstrument for plagiary* ENGLISH; ta(WngmulesTHWKUSt: SWIPEWB'^ m m WLucky presentsTHINKLISH-the funniest, easiest way yet to make money!make$25!PUT IN A GOOD WORD ANDSpeak English all your life and what doesit get you? Nothing! But start speakingThinklish and you may make $25! Justput two words together to form a new (andmuch funnier) one. Example: precisionflight of bumblebees: Swarmation. (Note:the two original words form the newone: swarm-f-formation.) Well pay $25each for the hundreds and hundreds of new Thinklish words judged best—andwe’ll feature many of them in our collegeads. Send your Thinklish words (withEnglish translations) to Lucky Strike,Box 67A, Mt. Vernon, N. Y. Enclosename, address, college or university, andclass. And while you’re at it, light up aLucky. Get the full, rich taste of fine to¬bacco—the honest taste of a Lucky Strike.Get the genuine articleGet the honest tasteof a LUCKY STRIKE FREE DELIVERY-tNICKYSPIZZERIAftodudtf — c%&ux&is our middle name j| 7-9065Oct. 3, 1958 • CHICAGO MAROON • Ifability sufficient to carry on theproposed study, and good health.A good academic record and_dem-onstrated capacity for independ¬ent study are also necessary. Pref¬erence is riven to applicants un¬der 35 years of age.Applicants will be required tosubmit a plan of proposed study,Kodak grantsUC will receive part of $600,000to be awarded in direct grants andfellowships by Eastman Kodakcompany.The direct grants, of which theUniversity is one of the recipients,total $295,000. Under the grantplan, payments of $500 are pro¬vided for each year of normal aca¬demic work completed by a Kodakemployee at the institution fromwhich he graduated. His workmust have been in a regular de¬gree program, either undergradu¬ate or graduate.In order to qualify for a grant,a number of its graduates musthave been employed by Kodak formore than five years.Sixty other American collegesand universities will receive simi¬lar direct grants.Writer's conferenceCash prizes totaling $100 willbe offered to writers of fiction andnon-fiction at the fifth annual ses¬sion of the Chicago Writer’s con¬ference. The conference is in ses¬sion through October 4 in theSherman hotel.Teachers, editors, and writerswill participate in workshop sec¬tions as well as hear such speak¬ers as James M. Liston, editor,Today’s Health; Bud Blume, tele¬vision script writer, J. WalterThompson company; Ben Kart-man, editor Family Weekly; Den¬ise Cass Brookman, author of thenovel "Tender Time,’’ publishedby Maorae-Smith; and BernardAsbel, writing instructor, Univer¬sity of Chicago.Further information on entryof manuscripts and the programmay be obtained from IrvingLeiberman, national director, 565Hipp Annex, Cleveland 15, Ohio,or from Dona Z. Meilach, areachairman, 9735 S. Vanderpoel ave¬nue, Chicago 43.Guide to awardsInformation on graduatestudy awards not listed inthis article may be obtainedfrom the second volume of theWorld-Wide Graduate Award di¬rectory.Over 250 American and 100 for¬eign schools have contributed in¬formation on grants ranging from$200 to $10,000. This informationabout fellowships, assistantships,scholarships, loans, prizes, andself-help programs includes candi¬dates’ pre-requisites, place of ap¬plication and descriptions of thestudy programs.Copies of both volumes of thedirectory may be examined atgraduate schools, university place¬ment or dean’s offices, libraries, ormay be ordered from the Advance¬ment and Placement institute, Box99H, Greenpoint station, Brook¬lyn 22, New York. The price is $3for each volume or $5 for bothvolumes.Newell lectureson October 5Dr. Frank W. Newell, chair¬man of the department ofopthalmology at the UC medi¬cal school will deliver a lectureon "Eye injuries in the home.”The lecture, on October 5, is oneof a series being presented by theMuseum of Science and Industryon Sunday afternoons at 3.The museum is located at 57tlistreet and Michigan Avenue. Ad¬mission Is free. mT8, 4f|'y■OUR UNIVERSITY SHOPoffrattlv*! oxeluslvo suit* and sportwoarfor collogo men and prop schoolersOur interesting Fall selection of clothing for under¬graduates wearing sizes 35 to 42 is now ready. Includ¬ed arc good-looking new worsted suits in distinctivecolorings, new designs in sport jackets and ruggednew outerwear... as well as traditional favorites. Allreflect our quality, styling and taste, and are as moder¬ately priced as we can make them. Our ”346” fur¬nishings are also designed for undergraduates.We invite you to come in and enjoy the expert serv¬ice and expanded facilities of our University Shop.Fall catalogue sent upon request.Suitst $60 to $70 • Worsted Flannel Trousers, $19.50Tweed Sfort Jackets, $45 * Tweed Topcoats, $75Our Own Make "$46” Cotton Oxford Skirts, $5.50 and $6•stAsustMD me|ftm* Jtonishtnga. Kate74 I. MADISON ST., NEAR MICHIGAN AVE., CHICAGO 2, ILL* KIW YORK ’ CHICAGO • LOS ANGELES • SAN FRANCISCO ARISTOCRATSHOE REPAIRProfessional Dyeingand Retlnlshlng otShoea and Handhaga• Colors matched • Toes «*l out• Vamps lowered • PlatformsremovedVEQUIPPED TO REPAIR LADIES'NARROW HEELSHeals stylechanged — AnyAny colorBackstraps Removed and Springa-lators inserted — Shoes stretched— Zippers repaired — Orthope¬dic work.O'Sullivan'sRubber ProductsFAirfax 4-96221749 East 55th St. 5 at science centerFive members of the UC faculty are beginning this week ayear of residence at the .Center for advanced study in thebehavioral sciences, Stanford, California.The five Chicago representatives in the total of 39 who re¬ceived fellowships from the center are: David E. Apter, assist¬ant professor of political science; Fred Fggan, professor ofanthropology; Morton Grodzins, chairman and professor ofpolitical science; Joseph J. Schwab, William Rainey Harperprofessor of the natural sciences and professor of philosophy;and Edward A. Shils, professor in the committee on socialthought.Opening in 1954, with funds provided by the Ford founda¬tion, the center gives scholars a year of freedom from the dutiesand demands of normal residence in their colleges and univer¬sities, bringing the fellowship holders together for individualstudy and providing the opportunity for cooperative work oncommon problems.Ralph W. Tyler, former dean of the division of the socialsciences, hassbeen president and executive director of thecenter since its organization in 1953.Recreational OpportunitiesSponsored by the Men’s and Women’s Division of physical educationAutumn Quarter1958SwimmingMen 12:30-1:30 M-F Bartlett pool5:00-6:00 M-F Bartlett poolWomen 4:30-6:00 M,Tu,Th Ida Noyes poolMen & Women 7:30-9:00 W.F Ida Noyes poolBowlingMen & Women 7:00-9:00 W,F(Pin setters provided) Ida Noyes alleysBadmintonMen & Women 6:45-9:45 W Ida Noyes gymnasium(Aluminum racquets available — provide own birds)TrampolineWomen only 3:30-5:30 Tu,Th Ida Noyes gymnasiumTamils, Handball andgymnasium, Ext. 1090. Squash courts may ba reserved. Call BartlettFor farther information call Bartlett gymnasium, Ext. 1890 orWomen’s Division of physical education, Ida Noyea, hall, Ext. 1000.No feet for student*.S A PURE WHITE MODERN FILTERI /S ONLY THE BEGINNING OF A WINSTON 1Its what's up front that countsWinston puts ItsFILTER-BLENDup front...fine, flavorfultobaccos, specially processedfor filter smokingR. h REraoiMTOMCCO CO. “WIMSTON-SAKM, i.Q.WINSTON TASTESGOOD LIKE A CIGARETTE SHOULD J20 • CHICAGO MAROON • Oct. 3, 1958Coach Hay don relatestrip behind Iron CurtainLast July 21, the United States track and field team boarded Russian and Finnishairliners m Helsinki bound for Moscow. Edward “Ted” Haydon, mentor of the UC trackand cross-country squads and the University of Chicago track club, was aboard as one ofthe four coaches selected by a national committee.The team arrived in Moscow on July 21, at 3 p.m. and were met by 300 people carryingbouquets of flowers. After the passports had been collected, the team was whisked throughcustoms and placed on busses —which took the athletes intothe city and the Leningradhotel.The hotel looked like the Wrig-]ey building and reminded theathletes of something out of Im¬perial Russia according to Haydon.All the rooms had chandeliers,This is the first in a seriesof articles about UC trackcoach Edward "Ted" Hay-don's trip behind the Ironcurtain with the US trackand field team last summer.twelve foot ceilings, and orientalrugs. Had the athletes been pay¬ing customers instead of guests ofthe State they would have hadto pay $30 a day for room andmeals.The next six days the teamspent training and sightseeingwith the help of student inter¬preters from the Institute ofForeign Languages.Among the places visited byHaydon were:The subway — "The Russianshave reason to be proud of them.The subway platforms look likethe lobby of the Drake hotel;paintings, chandeleirs, and whitemarble. The tubes are so far un¬derground that the elevators toand from the platforms are a ne¬cessity. They are as steep as thesteps on Chicago’s north stands.However, the doors on the trainsare just as narrow as those hereat home. The Moscow rush hoursprove that.”Red Square — "Enormous areathat looks rather bleak. The tombof Lenin and Stalin had a longqueues leading to it. As for themen inside the tomb, they ap¬peared to have just lain down fora rest. They were very well pre¬served.”G. U. M. | Room | department■tore — "Row after row of smallshops in tiers of four; all underone roof and all owned by thesame outfit. Except for these dif¬ferences it was just like one ofour large department stores, youcould buy anything you wanted —or could afford.”Churches — “I knew of onlyone small undernourished Catholicchurch in Moscow. A sneak masswas held for the athletes in ahotel room by a touring Frenchpriest. Bud Held, the javelinthrower from California held Pro¬testant services in a room off thelobby. A few curious interpretersattended the Protestant services.”There had been some appre¬hension about the attitude of theRussian people toward the Amer¬icans since the demonstrationsagainst the American embassy hadtaken just a few days before.The faculties at the stadiumwere excellent. The track wasvery well surfaced and the showerrooms had the chandeliers and oriental rugs that seemed to beeverywhere in Moscow. One of themost striking parts of the stadiumwas the scoreboard that flashedthe name, number, and time ofthe first six places in each event;on the field was a rotating drumwhich flashed the distance thrownin the weight events and distancejumped in the broad jump. Ofcourse, the Russians should havefine facilities; they have approxi¬ mately three million people intheir track programs. As for themuch publicized scoring system;the Russians have always scoredthe mens’ and womens’ points to¬gether. It would be just as strangefor them to score the meets separ¬ately as it was for us to scorethem together.Said Haydon, ‘I believe that thefact that the score was combinedwas a great stimulus to thewomen.”After all the shouting had dieddow'n and American team had lost172 to 170, the team wras fetedby the Russian government in anofficial reception complete withorchestra. The athletes were pre¬sented with a book on the historyof athletics and autographed byRussian athletes.In general commenting on theMoscow leg of the trip Haydonexclaimed, "The people have tl’esame distorted view of Americansas most of us have of them. Theyhave so many domestic problemsto solve that a major war is notof the first importance to them.In spite of recent scientific ad¬vances they are still only fortyyears removed from a peasantsociety.”[Next week — Warsaw,Budapest, and Athens],Intramurals plannedhold three programsThis year athletic managers will take a more activerole in intramural activities as Chet McGraw’s modernizedprogram swings into action.Every fraternity, college house, and divisional unittaking part in intramuralsmust elect or appoint an ath- Graw said that managers shouldletic manager at the beginning of visit the intramural office, fre-the school year. He must be in- quently and become acquaintedterested in athletics, but above all with its personnel and methods ofshould be a man who, when he operation. An intramural hand-accepts a responsibility, carries it hook will be provided to assistthrough with fidelity and loyalty them in carrying out their man-to his organization according to agerial duties.McGraw. The name, addre :, and A team entered for competitiontelephone number of this manager assumes a contract with the intra-should be sent immediately to the mural office, which will meet itsintramural office in Bartlett gym- part of the contract by drawingup schedules, arranging playingnasium.Athletic managers are the con¬necting link between the teamand the Intramural department, areas and providing officials andnecessary equipment.There will be three athleticMcGraw stated. All schedules and manager Councils:pertinent information relating totheir groups are sent to them, andthey assume respon ibility for see¬ing that all team members arenotified. The Academic fraternitycouncil• The College house council• The Divisional councilThe organization meeting forResponsible managers mean a each will be as follows:.good intramural program. Theywill have teams entered in allsports, arrange practice games,and see that*their team is on handfor all of their scheduled contests.He will work in close cooperationwith the Intramural office. Mc- Academic fraternities—October 16; 4:30 p.m.Trophy room—Bartlett gymOctober 17; 4:30 p.m.Trophy room—Bartlett gymDivisional league—October 20; 4:30 p.m.GoVcUnv’aFINE * FOOD132l Last 57th Street REYNOLDS CLUBBARBER SHOPHours: 8 - 5, Monday - Friday • 8 - 1, SaturdayShoe Shine Service6 Registered BarbersOnly Barber Shop on Campus-V.- .Basemen, Reynolds Club 4691113151617182022242529 lTW Sports calendar _OCTOBERCross country; DePaul at Washington Park 11 am.General motor ability test.1st Football class.Swimming test.Cross country; Eastern Michigan and Norther Illinois atWashington Park'll am.Physical education classes meet.Entries close for touch football and table tennis.Entries close for swimming meet.Cross country; Valparaiso at Valparaiso 4 pm.Athletic managers meeting — Fraternity — 4:30 pm.Athletic managers meeting — College — 4:30 pm.Soccer; Lake Forest at Lake Forest.University of Chicago track club vs. Kansas State.Athletic Managers meeting — Divisional — 4:30 pm.Touch football and table tennis begins.Soccer; Wheaton at Wheaton.Fall golf tourney. Double eliminations.Soccer; Purdue at Purdue.Cross country; Albion at Albion.University of Chicago track club vs. .Iowa at Iowa City.Cross country; Western Illinois at Macomb.MODEL CAMERAAuthorized LeicaDealerNSA Discount1342 E. 55th HY 3-9259 Get Them Hot atNICKYSPIZZERIA1235 E. 55thNew! Headlight Duo-Flap Ivys!You’re Always rightIN GENUINEHEADLIGHTSftJttPftOOFIVYSIvy Duo-Flap slacks. Pleatless. Noother fabric has the smooth pol¬ished look . . . the strength ... thelong wear of exclusive HeadlightSnag Proof. Sanforized. Best lock¬ing slacks made.in polished cottonin corduroy $5.95 & $6.95$8.95Moke our store your shopping headquarters for oil yourclothing ond furnishing needs.Ivy suits from $55.00Ivy trousers from $10.95Tremendous selections of sportcoots, outerwear, roinwore, buttondown shirts, striped ond chollis neckwear, etc.Cohn & Stern, INC"THE STORE FOR MEN n1542 E. 53rd St. MU 4-4266«. Daily 9 tc 6. Mondays and Thursdays 9 to 9FREE PARKING m our Lot Around the Corner at 5225 Loke PorkOct. 3, 1958 • CHICACO MAROON • 21♦fflwwtwwwitmiimmwH^HmwwttHtiiiw.imttinmimmtttwmtfittBHimiiiiiiiiiiiiiwiwiiwwiiiiiiiwiiiwiObserve first service centerat Rockefeller Sunday at 64 East Lake StreetRockefeller Memorial chapel will observe Orientation week,Sunday, at 11 a.m., with a special University religious servicefor the entering class.For this worship program the Rev. Joseph Sitter, professor oftheology, Federated Theological Faculty, will speak on “Chapel andUniversity: relation and difference." The sermon's title, Rev. Sittlerobserved, points to the distinctive contribution religion must make toeducation.“The University chapel and the religion it symbolizes cannot beidentified with the educational task of the University, but the task ofthe Unversity is incomplete unless it listens to the voice of religion,”lie said.Born in Upper Sandusky, Ohio, Rev. Sittler attended Wittenbergcollege, Hamma Divinity school, and Wagner college. He did graduatestudy at Oberlin college, UC, Western Reserve university and the Uni¬versity of Heidelberg before serving for 13 years as the pastor of Mes¬siah Lutheran church in Cleveland Heights, Ohio. Rev. Sittler becameprofessor of systematic theology at Chicago Lutheran Theological sem¬inary in 1943 and a member of the Federated Theological Faculty in1957.He has served as a delegate to the 1952 Lutheran World federa¬tion, the 1952 Ecumenical Conference on Faith and Order, the 1954World Council of Churches, and the 1957 Lutheran World federation.Rev. Sittler is also a former president of the American Theological so¬ciety, and chairman of the North American commission on worship ofthe World Council of Churches.Among those who will hear him speak this Sunday will be his ownson, a member of the entering class.llllf1lllllllllltlllllillllllllllll11HllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllMltttltl1!l|1lltllliniltlllllHHIIH(fl1im!(HHIIttlllllltlllyilllllllllllllllllllHIilllillllltllllllllllilllllllllllllllllllllillllllllllllllllllllllllllllllilllllllllllllllllllllllUillllUlltllllllllli: Eight floors at 64 East Lake Street — the new home of the University of Chicago’s Down¬town Center — have been readied for an expected record enrollment in the fall quarter.More than 300 credit and non-credit courses are scheduled for the fall. The move to the newbuilding, accomplished last June, was the ninth move since University College was established inthe Loop in 1900.Registration will take place on the comple tely remodeled second floor. The date is October 4from 9 am to noon. All credit ~~7 T~. .u..^ 4v. ... ~.the second floor will be used for situated between the Michigan andcourses d n d m o s t non-credit . wohoohcourses hold first class meetings large-scale affairs such as regis- Wabash avenue CTA lines, neardunn. the week of October 6 ,ration’ and the bulk °‘ ,b' 118 ''L” S“bway' °"'y «during the week ot October 6. )ectures Mheduled for the fall in block from the Randolph atreetBecause the building has been the 0wntown center’s public lec- Illinois Central station. There areused for educational purposes for tures program. numerous commercial parking lots30 years, most of the preparatory in the immediate neighborhood.work during the summer months The bookstore on the 11th floorworn auring me summer monms ._ Classrooms generally are largehas been of a cleanup and painting promises to be a browsers para- ^ well-lighted with large win-variety. The former occupant, De- dise. It has a commodious walk- — ..Paul university, is now relocated *n lay°ut» occupying about fourTerry’sPizza in new quarters at 25 East Jack-son boulevard.Major modernizing has beenconfined to the second floor, ad-ministratiive offices and bookstoreon the 11th floor, the library, deanof students office and student andfaculty lounges on the 15th floorand a new science laboratory onthe 17th floor. Classroom floors arethe second, 12th, 13th, 14th, 16th,and 17th.The second floor, which hadbeen used by DePaul for its li¬brary, has been converted intothree lecture halls. Because of itseasy access from the street levelby both stairway and elevators, times the space of the old book¬store in the previous quarters at19 South La Salle street.The new Downtown Center is areas. Despite the consider¬able expansion in the DowntownCenter’s curriculum this year,there will be no anticipated needto schedule any classes outside ofthe building.| ' FREE UC DELIVERY1 small 1.00H medium 1.451 — large 1.95= x-large 2.95= giant 3.95Chicken — Shrimp — Sandwiches TAhSAM-YfcNCHINESE - AMERICANRESTAURANTSpecializing inCANTONESE ANDAMERICAN DISHESOpen Dkilj11 A.M. to 10:30 P.M.ORDERS TO TAKE OUT1318 East 63rd St. BU 8-9018| 1518 E. 63rd Ml 3-4045 |= • 25c discount on all pizzas with this as a coupon £oiiiiiiiiiiiiimimimmmiiimmiimmiiiimiiiimiiiiiiiiiiimiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiimimiimiimiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii;!WELCOMEStudents — FacultyWt'vi been serving the University of Chicagofor many years and will continue to do so.BE PREPARED FOR WRITER DRIVINGHeadquarters for Winter Needs• ANTI-FREEZE• SNOW TIRES• ROAD SERVICEWINTER TUNE-UPSPECIAL $6. 50 upHeavy Duty Battery $15.95Harper ServiceDealer In Sinclair Products * ,5556 HARPER * PL 2-9654Across from H. P. Co-op Dr. KURT ROSENBAUMOptometristEyes ExaminedGlasses FittedContact LensesVisual Training1132 E. 55th St.HY 3-8372 This /#r«re species" of want-ad tree on 57th street is oneway of advertising . . . but for clear, concise and effectiveadvertising that brings results, call the Maroon businessoffice, Ml 3-0800, ext. 3265-3266.You’re ready for thebig entrance...withOxfordMiniaturesArrow's newest stripes and checksput you quietly, but firmly, in the“best-dressed” spotlight. They're socrisply and colorfully right withyour Fall clothes.And this rich, new oxford weaveis also available in wash and wear ITry an Arrow and you’ll discoverwhy college men buy Arrow 4 to 1over any other brand. $5.00 up.Cluett, Peabody & Co., Inc,,-ARROW first in fashion22 • CHICAGO MAROON • Oct. 3, 19518University's class oflives mainly on campus(from page 3)admissions remains focused onthe individual students and anall-around assessment of his po¬tential.**“The best criterion of an ef¬fective admissions policy is notthe number of students who areadmitted,** O’Connell said, "butthe number who graduate fouryears later.**“We have every reason to be¬lieve that the Class of 1962will meet that final and mostvalid test of all,** he said.O’Connell made these observa¬tions on the characteristics ofthis class:'Their activities show a widedegree of participation and lead¬ership in high-school extra-cur¬ricular organisations.“The diversity of their originsmaintains the tradition of a na¬tional student body at the Uni¬versity.UC reduced ratefor nat'l magsTime, Life and Sports Il¬lustrated offer special reduc¬ed rates to all college stu¬dents including those in night andgraduate school.UC students may receive Timeat $1 for 13 weeks or $4 for oneyear fa savings of $3]^ Life at, $3.50 for eight months and $5 forone year [a savings of $2,751;and Sports Illustrated at $2.50 forsix months and $4 for <me year [asavings of $3.50].In Chicago special rates may beobtained by writing to Time-Life-Sports Illustrated, College studentsubscriptions, 5 4 0 N. MichiganAvenue, Chicago 11, Illinois. "The number of scholarshipsto a remarkable tribute to theincreasing role of both privateand public funds in the nationaleffort to educate America’stalented youth."It may well be that the two-to-one ratio of men to womenshould attract a substantiallygreater number of applicationsfrom women next year.’* With a program for buildingmore residence halls still inprogress, the University studenthousing office reports that uni¬versity housing is being pro¬vided this quarter for 1,400single students and 500 familiesof married students.The completion of the dormi¬tory at Woodlawn and 58th thisfall made 494 accomodationsavailable.A PROFILEOF THE UNIVERSITY OF CHICAGOCLASS OF 1962Where do they come fromtHawaiiAlaska 1Other countries 5The freshman class entering the University of Chicago in the autumn of 1958comes from thirty-seven states, the District of Columbia, Alaska, Hawaii, andfiv* foreign countries.Used Bikes for SaleLadies &Cents'PhillipsDeluxelightweightswith 3-speed”V*gears, carrierCr kickstandOriginalretail value$65 - $70Now only$30 - $38AYN Bicycle Rentalstor fmrthrr drtvMs emliha 2-4447 or MI 1.4414 a SwinglineStapler nobigger than apack of gum!98*(Including1000 stupid)SWINGLINE “TOT"Millions now in use. Uncondi¬tionally guaranteed. Makes bookcovers, fastens papers, arts andcrafts, mends, tacks, etc. Avail¬able at your college bookstore.SWINGLINE•*CtA" StepHf U.toINC.IONO ISLAND CUV, NSW VOH. M. V., Simple, fastimprovement ofyour typing skills:speed and accuracy, letters,puuctuation, spelling, proof,reading, complete keyboard,and electric typing. $2.95REFRESHER TYPINGIN 24 HOURSBy Philip S. Pep*By the same author: p«r-aeeel Typing In 14 Hours.Simple, fast introduction tothe touch system $2.95"MtCMMUYOUR NEIGHBORHOODLINCOLN • CONTINENTAL • MERCURYDEALERA fin* selection *f good u*«d carsLAKE PARK MOTORS, INC6035 So. Cottage GroveSale*, Service, Pmrts, Accessaries I William C. Bradbury diesWilliam C. Bradbury, associate professor in the Col¬lege and department of sociology died September 3 ofinjuries suffered in an automobile accident in Montanathat killed his wife and injured two of their children.The 43 year old faculty member was considered an authority onrace relations and had conducted several projects for the federalgovernment.The crash occurred as the family was returning from vacation.Mrs. Bradbury was driving when their car hit an abutment in arainstorm. The injured children are Kathy, 12, and William II, 9.Their eldest daughter Joan, 16, was returning from a summertour of Europe aboard a plane with fellow University high schoolstudents and was unaware of the deaths.Bradbury was a member of the board of directors of the HydePark-Kenwood community conference. In 1956, he received a grantfrom the Fund for the Republic to study race practices in governmentagencies. He had been a race consultant for the Chicago police de¬partment. In addition, Brabury was a member of the executivecommittee on undergraduate education [ECUE].Eat AtNICKYSPIZZERIA1235 E. 55th The CollegeLAUNDERETTE1449 Eatt 57th St.MU 4-9236^in4«fA«ftmtimtitttiiiitttiimiiftiiiiiitiiitiitttiiitiiiiiiiiiniiiifiiHiHiiiiiiiiiimiiitt»Nitiitttfiiii»iiittttiititiiiitiiiiiii!^(TRowmDELIGHTFULATMOSPHERE |POPULARPRICES 1SldNdMIllUPIIHIHIttlHIHIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIilllllHIHIIIItlllltlllllllllllllttlllllllllltililiHlllillllltllllilllltllllllltiilitiiiililSERVICEis our businessWe oim to please.Your confidence in usmeans we will have theprivilege of serving youmany times. We haveChicago's most modernDry Cleaning Plant . . .plus the service staff offine, friendly people whohave the spirit to serveyou well.TRUCKS ON CAMPUSDAILYmmmmmsmmmmmmmmmm MAX BROOKCOMPANYMiracle ServicesSince 19171013-17 E. 61st STREET\Phones - - -Midway 3-7447HYde Pork 3-6868CALL US NOW!Watch us thank youwith service.*^**>f'*>**rm%»;*$x % , - v; W&f-you areWELCOMEat1507 east 53rd streetmi 3-9898DRESSES and SPORTSWEARSKIRTSBLOUSESCOORDINATESSWEATERSOct. 3, 1958 # ssmmsmmmmmBstmmmmmssBssmssBmmmmmmmCHICAGO MAROON • 23 i■ * V'( :Summer news reviewedFor the benefit of thosestudents who were not oncampus this summer, theMaroon presents this reviewof summer quarter news.Academic performance ofstudents in the general edu¬cation courses of the Collegewere revised by the College facul¬ty in July.Beginning this quarter, an ad¬visory grade of “F” at the end ofthe first or second quarter willmean a student has not met theminimum requirement for pro¬ceeding to the next quarter of thecourse and he must earn a passinggrade for the quarter’s work be¬fore continuing to the next quar¬ter or to the comprehensive ex¬amination.If a student receives an incom¬plete during the first quarter hemust remove the deficiency with¬in a specified period not exceed¬ing one quarter or repeat an ex¬amination at some specified datein the next quarter.Such a grade will not bar a stu¬dent from the second quarter’swork, but if it is not convertedto a passing grade, the studentmust repeal the first quarter ofthe course.If a student wishes to work in¬dependently, he may register foran “R” provided he has com¬pleted at least three quarters of registration in the College courseswith an average grade of “C” inall comprehensive examinations;achieved a passing grade in anyprevious quarter of the course inwhich he has not registered for“R”; and registered with his ad¬viser for the mark “R” within thefirst five weeks of the quarter.These new rulings supercede the“double ‘F’ ’’ ruling which requireda student to have a passing gradein at least one quarterly.Redefine probationThe meaning of “academicprobation” has also been re¬defined by the College faculty.A student is on probation if hereceive an “F” in a comprehensiveexamination or does not take thecomp in a course in which he hashad two or three quarter registra¬tion. A student is also on proba¬tion if his grade average is nearera “D” than “C”.A student on probation musthave a “clearly stated and realisticplan’’ to remove his academic de¬ficiency within the next threequarters of registration as partof his normal load under the newrules. Students who fail to re¬move such deficiency within thenext three quarters of registra¬tion may not register for furthercourses in the UniversityIn addition, the faculty formu¬lated a set of rules governingacademic process. A student mustWRIGHTLAUNDRYCOMPLETELAUNDRY AND DRYCLEANINC SERVICE1315 EAST 57TH STREETMl 3-2073 complete a sufficient amount ofwork and must attain a certainstandard of quality.In general, a student is ex¬pected to complete all require¬ments for a bachelor’s degree inno more than three quarters ofresidence beyond the time normal¬ly required for completion of theprogram in which he has beenregistered.The minimum quantitative aca¬demic requirement for continua¬tion in the University is comple¬tion with a passing grade of atleast two-thirds of the Collegegeneral studies courses for whichthe student has either a two quar¬ter or three quarter registration.The minimum qualitative aca¬demic requirement is a grade av¬erage nearer to “C” than “D’’ inall comps and in divisional coursesa “C” average. These two gradeaverages are calculated separatelyand a student must meet the mini¬mum grade average requirementin both categories to qualify fora degree.Admin-faculty shiftsA wave of administration-faculty shifts and appoint¬ments occurred last quarter.William V. Morgenstern, direc¬tor of public relations, became sec¬retary of the University. He wassucceeded by Carl W. Larsen, UCalumnus, with experience on Life,Sports Illustrated, United PressInternational, and the ChicagoSun-Times.Kate Turabian, dissertation sec¬retary and editor of official Uni¬versity publication retired in July.She is succeeded by Jeff Plampin.Former director of student ac¬tivities, Mary Alice Newman, isnow assistant dean of students inthe College. James E. Newman,her husband, replaces her as ac¬tivities director. He will also bedirector of housing.Assistants to Newman in thestudent activities office are JohnCalahan, Jr., a Darmouth graduatewho is studying in the UC depart-,ment of education, and FlorenceGoold, former activities secretary.Assistant directors of housing areMarjorie Ravitts and James Dal¬ton for women’s and men’s hous¬ing respectively.Max Putzel, assistant professor The southern portion of the west stands of Stagg fieldwas demolished just one year after the northern part wastorn down. The historical building was the site of man's firstself-sustaining nuclear reaction on December 2, 1942.Dedication of the plaque that commemorated the historicevent is shown above.On the extreme right is Robert M. Hutchins. To the left ofHutchins is the late Enrico Fermi.of German and advisor in theCollege, replaces Stephen Woodas assistant dean of students inthe College. Wood resigned fromhis post to continue work for hisPhD. degree.Marjorie Burkhard^ former di¬rector of alumni student enroll¬ment, has been named editor ofthe University of Chicago Maga¬zine. ,Dr. Dwight E. Clark has beenappointed chairman of the depart¬ment of surgery succeeding Dr.Lester R. Dragstedt who becomesemeritus next year.Dr. John Doull, pharmacology,and Lloyd M. K o z 1 o f f, bio¬chemistry, are now associate pro¬fessors. Easly Blackwood, 25-yearold Indianapolis composer, ap¬pointed instructor, department ofmusic. Alex Ordeh, recruited fromthe outside to become director ofOperations Analysis laboratorysucceeding Edward Wallace whoaccepted an appointment at theUniversity of Buffalo.Dr. Robert D. Moseley Jr., hasbeen appointed professor andchairman of the department ofradiology replacing Dr. Paul C.Hodges who retired. William L. Doyle, professor ofanatomy, appointed associate deanof the division of biological sci¬ence.Russian exchange realityRussian exchange became areality this summer when theUniversity announced that RobertM. Taaffe, graduate student in thegeography department will be theUC representative to the studentexchange.Two Russian students are ex¬pected to register on campus thisautumn.Miss Denton diesDorothy A. Denton, officemanager and auditor of stu¬dent organizations died in Julyafter a lingering illness. She was64.Miss Denton began working forthe University during her own stu¬dent days when she was a part-time secretary for former dramadirector Frank C’Hara. Upon re¬ceiving her degree from the schoolof business in 1927, she was em¬ployed part-time in the dean ofstudents office. She became audi¬tor and office manager in 1935.Do You Think for Yourself ? (zzz zet*)Do you believe you could fool a lie-detector machine if you putyour mind to it?Do you believe society should adoptnew ideas at the expense ofold traditions?. YESYES onAre you completely at ease when, yES I I NOI Ipeople watch you at work? I I 1 IDo you judge your parents asyou do other people? Do your emotions ever lead you to dosomething that seems unreasonable,even to yourself?Do you try to plan ahead rather thanmake snap judgment decisions?If your roommate suddenly inherited amillion dollars, are you sure yourrelationship would remain the same?Can you honestly say you pay moreattention to political issues than tothe personalities of the candidates? YESYESYES onononYES onThe Man Who Thinks for HimselfKnows...ibisks \ \ • ’« \fill >'ml..V,: -m ONLY VICEROY HAS ATHINKING MAN’S FILTER..A SMOKING MAN’S TASTE!One more question: Do you think about the filtercigarette you choose or just smoke any brand?If you’re the kind of person who thinks for himself.. ’. you use judgment in your choice ofcigarettes, as in everything else.Men and women who think for themselves usuallysmoke VICEROY. Their reasons? Best in the world.They know the difference between fact and fancy.They know that only VICEROY has athinking man’s filter and a smoking man’s taste.*IF YOU HAVE ANSWERED YES TO 6 OF THESEQUESTIONS, YOU ARE A PERSON WHO THINKS FOR HIMSEUFJ.€> 1038, Biown A Williamson Tobacco Corp. Familiarpack orcrush-proofbox.24 • CHICAGO MAROON • Oct 3, 1958review restaurantsby Joel Rosenthal and Eve LeoffBig cities are not known as being notoriously safe places for nocturnal strolls. One of the reasons for this,„ least m the vicimty of the UC, is because one might be tempted to go into a neighborhood restaurant.HJEdc Woodlawn restaurants vary in quality, price, type of cooking, and the warmth of welcomeoffered students.This article, written by two students who believe that a school reads on its stomach, is intended to be abrief guide to the neighborhood eateries. The comments are strictly those of the authors, and reflect neitherthe policy of the Maroon nor an enlightened sense of good cookingHutchinson commons: pleas- Yon or Bing’s. Inexpensive, but an occasional meal, but don’t ing seafood. Quality is o.k., butant room (modeled after ddt distinguished. x come here if you are out to have nothing to write home to mamaThrist church, Oxford, dining Alexanders: . rd> .near UniversI- a grand Chinese spread. about.hall), food much like dorm cook- nii/^ifn^’re Starv' Campus-snack shop: opposite Valois cafeteria: Lake Park, op¬ing. Open only at mealtimes, but g SSmua dren* * F1 ?ne ^e’s‘ Not Primarily a stu- posite Hyde Park theater. Goodon Sunday nights. Not par- * El; dent restaurant, it has cheap food food, largenot on bunaay mgms. gj (calied Reader’s hv f restaurant, it nas cheap food food, large servings, reasonablyticularly inexpensive. der sSidenta_S ntat cheap prices- Fine for the Priced. Small place, and youInternational house cafeteria: - Menu in? hardy and hngry- Plenty to eat, usually share tables with strang¬est cafeteria food on campus, yeaf .or. 50 ago)* Menu has not go0d counter service,and the most expensive. If you varied since Harper s day; though Nickv’« ers.anu »«= V„ not really good students are wel- £f,cky’s Pizzeria: 55th & Kimbark. B & G: 53rd and Lake Park. Cof-e1- “,£!£ vOT a?" one in a tho^ come, location is convenient, and °P?n Sunday nights, and with late fee and sandwiches. Very ordi-«5g^'^r^d0aveSn„‘er U « not made into a habit loid is apt ™‘ “ything but aSSL.°^e“^n^n^ edible. Prices moderate-a1 stand- •£-«- P-* Wishes better «St? .To^averkee Dri^oSen ^ Sunday night dinner spot. *h™ .«“=* wh,ch » or^lna,r?: »«: 53rd, at IC tracks. Bar, MudiJg Su'ntos Miramar hotel: Woodlawn, in the 'Sf 0n?b f' wl,h eood food. No minors, orr « of a student atmosphere than 6200 block. Good, homo cooking, P aca [u l of nc'Rh- course, as they check. Prices rea-a^her^ampus eaSrQui“ ‘hough you will be the only one berimed teenagers but always con- sonable: plzza.Service large seating capacity; m the dining room under 70. Sun- *, K(U1 .T , „ , ^ LaRusso’s: 53rd and Cornell. Onemore likely to meet mod students day dinner spot, with very rea- ^,adi.s j,^5tiand Park. 0pen of the neighborhood’s better res-bere0than foreign students at Int ““M# Prices. a 1 night. She must have an in taurants. Italian cuisine varied,, ' Gordon’s: 57th, between Kimbark *)oard health. Food with lasagna very good. Prices\ nnon wwk. and Kenw°od- A usual Sunday dreadful- reasonable, considering that its aBilungs sna< p. P night dinner spot. Food is ordi- Jackson Park Inn: 55th and Cor- restaurant, not a snack shop,days until 4:00. Good sa nary, prices likewise. Invariably ncll. Hyde Park’s gaudiest cheap Pane’s* 53rd east of IC tracksilTu^portThf entire division run out of things most desired on restaurant. Worth the walk just Pizza: delivery. Pizza fairly good^ RLloS sciences Best quick S,unday nlghts' Service can bp see the interior decorating, and a bit different from the usuallek p?.£ on campus. *^£0*enu is adel)ua,e' but mCXpen' Hfde Par,k.Style' Prices fair-I^found^JTIts'foori""standard TroP,cal hut: right across from The Hobby House: 53rd and Ken- Blv^High priced* snack SopLhTand the ^fee drinking Gordon’s- In spite of Sea w.°?d/ ^bout tJe *** of the a11 with very ordinary food. Unlesslunches and the coffee dnnKing atmosphere, food is American, night places—they can torture a you’re taking a walk to the lakecenter of campus. Ctosest thing to Food £ ?ood b t prices commen- hamburger 11 different ways. On it’s not worth the trip,a hangout we can boast(.) or. surate with quality. Cheap snacks the whole the food is acceptable ,Bookstore: sandwiches for your hard to find. Though not com- for light meals and prices moder- Morton s: 56th and Lake Shoreconvenience. Their cold sand- parable to downtown places, a ate« A favorite with students be- Pnye* This 1S the neighborhood swiches are better than their hot first class neighborhood restau- Enrico’s Italian restaurant: 53rd restaurant, on a par withsandwiches. Good for between- rant. Sandwiches better than the cause of its hours. most of those downtown. Pricesclass snacks. The limited supply ordinary. by Dorchester. Best nizza in the l.OIl dinners ore in the $3-5 range,qUiCkly at “,^eria 8tyle: on^Tv^G^d^h4 6iTnntS hours, anlT pliant’deco? Notlunch time. 57th & Kenwood. Wide selection, on delivery. Good hors d ouvre a student restaurant so dress asBing’s Chinese restaurant, 63rd & not inexpensive, good fountain, table, dinners fall off sharply. you wou]d to go outHarper, opposite the old Tower y0u haven’t really arrived until Food moderately expensive. Open _ ..... * .-theater. Huge servings of good you have sat in the window for Sunday nights. ThmJw SSi'JL3®* ££!food at low prices. Won ton soup hours looking out at those look- Thomas’: 53rd and Blackstone. d ™ UT h m*a specialty; other food varies and ingin. Snacks and meals. Open Very ordinary food, reasonableif you eat here often you’ll soon Sunday nights. prices, in a big drugstore,find your favorites. Mrs. Bing Wb 55th, opposite Frolic The Unique Delicatessen: 53rdwell worth the walk. f Theater, west of Ellis. An inex- and Harper. Good delicatessenTerry’s pizzeria. 63rd, right across pensive place and a generally and one or two substantial dinnerfrom Bing’s. Good pizza, excel- cheap restaurant, but excellent items. Prices reasonable and openlent sausage sandwiches, late de- ribs (better than the T-Hut’s). An Sundays. (Convenient to Hydelivery service, low prices. Atmos- off-beat place. Park theatre.)phere is "beat’’ but originally so. jane Lee’s Chinese restaurant: LeMeck’s: 53rd and Lake Park.I al Nani-Yon: 53rd, near Ken- 55th & Woodlawn. Less than aver- Open all night. Attempts to be awood. Good Chinese food, almost age fo^ for average prices. Con- better grade restaurant and is notcomparable to the better China venient, open Sundays; fine for inexpensive. Large menu, featur-Town places. Prices reasonable. burgers.(Leoff and Rosenthal arenot known to the proprietors•f the restaurants in whichthey eat.) A kiss and a flower greet¬ed Jean Louis Vigier, Mayorof Paris when he visited UCin September. Extending the"cordial" welcome was CarolSaposnik, fourth year stu¬dent in the college.A true Frenchman, MayorVigier reciprocated immedi¬ately (photo above).The Mayor inspected theUniversity's Institutes forBasic research and ArgonneCancer research hospital.COKl" I* A RMlITfAlt TAAOt-MAHK. CARVAKHT O 1*M tHt COCA-COLA CCHCANV.Fairly crowded Sunday evenings.Wah-Mee-Lo: 63rd, west of Kim¬bark. Not as good as Tai Sam“Adventurele Russia — 1958”an outstanding collection ofcolor movies and slides andtape recordings of class¬rooms, church services, dis¬cussion with students, nar¬rated byREV. VIRGIL A. KRAFTAssoc iote Pastor, Peoples ChurchFriday, October 108:15 p.m. — Hall B-332 W. Randolph St.Adm. 90c mm608 n. michiganwhitehcll 3-2410Discerning tostes will instantlywelcome this favoured fob collarshirt. In character, in comfort, incorrectness, it typifies the uniqueskills and craftsmanship ofNew England's finest shirtmakers.Tailored of superb broadcloth . . .in whitj with french cuffs, andpreferred soft-tone stripings withbutton cuffs.THE TRADITIONAL TAB $5.95TAKES ON ADDED APPEAL by BeUCOtlIt ffwu erne ting, play, clap, shoutstamp pour feet or listen ... Icome to a HOOTfeaturingELLA JenkinsSunday — net. S2 - S p.m.h banks studios5315 take parkrefreshments os long os they lost, fun os long os you stay. Gosh fix)sh!bow’d you catch on so quick? Catchon to the fact that Coca-Cola is thehep drink on campus, I mean. Alwaysdrink it, you say? Well—how aboutdropping over to the dorm anddowning a sparkling Coke or two withthe boys. The man who’s for Cokeis the man for us. SIGN OF GOOD TASTErBottled under authority of The Coca-Cola Company byThe Coca-Cola Bottling Company of Chicago, Inc.Oct. 3, 1958 • CHICAGO MAROON • 251MI.r,Jk. To Register:1. Receive packet of numbered IBM cards at Mandelhall.2. When number is called, proceed to Bartlett gym¬nasium, receiving additional cards and appointment withadviser upon entrance. 3. Consult with adviser and then go to south end ofsecond floor to obtain course registration cards and dasatickets.4. Have cards checked before having fees assessed.5. Pay, or make arrangements to pay, tuition at bursar'swindow.UC students must clearStudent health serviceAll students entering the University for the first time, and former students who are re¬entering after a lapse of three years from campus, must clear with the Student Health servicebefore registration is considered final, Student Health service announced.Entering college students and transfer students have been given appointments for theirvisit to Student Health. The appointment slips were distributed on September 29 in theorientation packets. Entering college students who have not received an appointment slipshould call Student Health ——— —(ext. 2656) and ask for an to Student Health on Wednesday at registration at Bartlett gym onappointment. morning, October 8, for about five Saturday, October 4, or Monday,The axamination is set for minutes in order to learn of his October 6. The examination forMonday October 6 at the Student o£ the need £or anY fur* the graduates will be held onUC students may apply for reserved parking space to: Health center in Billinas hosnital ther tests or complete physical Tuesday, October 7, 8 am to 5 pm.M. C. Eckerstrom first floor. ' examination and to have the tu- and on Wednesday and Thursdaj. berculin skin test read. afternoons.- Office manager of Building and Grounds ev^1ueati:f^stta^pa^utth'neheh^ Entering graduate students are Students who tail to report torand is done on an assembly-line required to have the same kind of the entrance examination as sched-health evaluation. They should uled run the risk of being asne^'dmake appointments for this exam a “late fee” of $3.Free parking offeredFree parking facilities are now available on a first comefirst served basis at Ingleside at 58th and Ingleside at 56th.These will accomodate 100 and 200 cars respectively.Assigned parking spaces may be obtained at $10 perquarter. The paid lots are at the following locations:• North of Jones on Ellis—22 cars.• South of Snell house on Ellis—25 cars.• South of Lexington hallon University—41 cars.• South of the Low temperature labs—28 cars.• South of the New Dormitory onWoodlawn—86 cars.basis. Each student must returnNEW HEY, PAISANI& USED We've got 'em good, we deliver 'em hotPizza pie for your bull-session or get-togetherTEXT AND Phones Give us o RingREFERENCE J MU 4-1014 and We'll Deliver!J% MU 4-1015 5 to 3 a mMU 4-9022 7Pday$ „ weekBOOKSFORALL COURSES ITALIAN FIESTA PIZZERIASchool supplies 1427 Host 67th Streetfor everywhere•Cosh for discontinuedand surplus texts UNIVERSITY• NATIONALAttention!New students!We are well stocked BANK.withcase books for "A Strong Bank"most of yourcourses ***'Faulkners 1354 East 55th Street MUseum 4-1200314 S. WABASH Member of Federal Deposit Insurance CorporationWA 2-6385 - 6 - 7 Cassidy is SH unit chiefDr. James E. Cassidy has been named assitant director andchief of the medical unit of student health service. Dr. Cassidyalso will be assistant professor of medicine.Bom in Gary, Indiana, Dr. Cas- *sidy received his medical degree in cine, Loyola university, Chicago. H<>1948 from Stritch college of medi-Wide selection ofBicycles, Partsand AccessoriesACE CYCLE SHOP1621 e. 55th st.(formerly at 819 e. 55)Special offer toStudents uponrequest served as intern (1948-49) and resi¬dent (1950-51) at Milwaukee coun¬ty general hospital and remainedon the staff there until 1954.Between 1954 and 1958, he servedwith the US air force. Dr. Cassidyis married to the former Janeann*-O’Brien. They have five children.Dr. N. J. DeFrancoOPTOMETRIST113* E. 63 HY 3-5352SAVE MONEY onYOUR LAUNDRY— Do it yourself—use our equipment, oursoft water.20c Wash 15c DryorLeave your bundles — clothes washed anddried and folded. 2-hour service.Shirts 18c reg. or sport with bundleswashed and dried.CHICAGO’S FIRSTSELF SERVICE LAUNDRY912 east 55th streetMU 4-9519r —26 • CHICAGO MAROON • Oct. 3, 1958■ i - ■■ i)■ ' ■- x. 1 hf ./ ' :'v “•' • -At ' ' ' Vj-'-;, ■ ■ • ''r Coi» • J—.. - Q Ortnhar ming events on qischool, 8 pm, University Col- Christian Science organization. ia< Ira ngles / :I 1;bw*t conference, 5 pen, Billingshospital P-117.tecord dance, 8-10 pen, Interna¬tional house assembly hall. Ad¬mission 50 cents.ladlo program, “French press re¬view ” following 10 pm newscast©ver’wFMT, 98.7 meg.Saturday, 4 Octobertral registration, 8:30 to 11:30ixn and 1:30 to 4:30 pm, Bartlettgymnasium.©logical sciences discussion group,"Diseases of the nervous system,”9 am, Billings hospital M-137.Dr. Douglas N. Buchanan,speaker.Registration, Downtown center, 9am to noon, 15th floor 64 E. Lakestreet.Pediatrics clinical conference, 10:30am, Billings hospital M-137.English class, 10 am to noon, roomB, International house.Radio program, “Swedish pressreview,” 6:30 pm, WFMT, 98.7meg.Radio program, “Impetus,” 7:45pm, WBBM. Joseph J. Schwab,William Rainey Harper professorof natural sciences In the Collegeand professor of education, andguest experts, discussing themost influential books of ourtime.Radio program, "The Sacred note,”WBBM, 10:15 pm. Program ©fchoral music by UC choir.Sunday, 5 OctoberRoman Catholic Mass, 8:30, 10 and11 am, sponsored by Calvert clubin DeSales house, 5735 Univer¬sity avenue.Radio program, “This week at theUN,” 11:45 am, WFMT, 98.7meg. Program includes tapedsegments from UN sessions andreports by short wave fromaround the world.Social dance, 7 to 8 pm, Interna¬tional house. Instruction provid¬ed. Admission 50 cents for non¬residents.Lecture series, “Eye injuries in thehome,” 3 pm, Museum of Scienceand Industry, 57th street andl^ke Michigan. Speaker, FrankW. Newell, MD, professor of oph¬thalmology: chairman, section ofophthalmology, UC school ofmedicine.Monday, 6 OctoberCentral registration for studentsentering the first two years ofundergraduate study, 8:30 to, H:30 am and 1:30 to 4:30 pm,Bartlett gymnasium .Admission and registration, pro¬gram of professional studies Inpublic administration, UniversityCollege, 4 pm, room 1110, 64 E.Lake street.(lass, “How to read faster,” Uni¬versity College, 4:30, 5:30, 6:30and 7:30 pm, 22 E. Van Burenstreet.lecture series, "Executive develop¬ment: its nature and aspira¬tions,” 6 pm, Downtown centerauditorium, second floor, 64 E.Lake street. Speaker: William E.Bright, chairman, committee onemployee development, Pure Oilcompany.Classes begin, “Advanced studyskills,” 6:30 pm, University Col¬lege, 22 E. Van Euren street.English elass, 6:30 pm, Interna¬tional house.Movie, 8 pm, International houseassembly hall. Admission 50 cents.Opening class, “The Community Lake street.Radio program, “Review of theBritish weeklies,” following 10pm newscast over WFMT, 98.7meg.Lecture series, “Psychotherapy andpersonal adjustment”: 'The psy¬chotherapist and his patient,” 7pm, Downtown center, 64 E.Lake street. Speaker, Ralph W.Heine, associate professor of psy¬chology UC department of psy-ciatry. Admission $2.Lecture series, “Censorship of cre¬ative expression”: “Censorshipand the work of art,” 8:15 pm,Downtown center, 64 E. Lakestreet. Edward W. Rosenheim,Jr., associate professor of hu¬manities in the College, speaker.Admission $2.25.Tuesday, 7 OctoberGeneral education testsRegistration for students enteringthe first two years of undergrad¬uate study, 8:30 to 11:30 am,and 1:30 to 4:30 pm, Bartlettgymnasium.Classes 'begin, “How to read fast¬er,” 12:10, 5:30, 7:30 pm, Univer¬sity College, 22 E. Van Burenstreet.Admission and registration, pro¬gram of professional studies inpublic administration, UniversityCollege, 4 to 6 pm, room 111064 E. Lake street.Classes begin, “Education for Edu¬cators” program of UniversityCollege. “Structure of modernEnglish,” 6:30 pm; “Introductionto educational psychology,” 6:30pm; “Educational sociology,”4:30 pm; “Cultural factors intests, reading, and the curricu¬lum,” 4:30 pm; “Theory of groupwork,” 4:30 pm; “Organizationand administration of the Ameri¬can educational enterprise,” 6:15pm; “Basic principles of curricu¬lum and instruction,” 4 pm. Con¬sult guide for place of meeting.Classes begin, “Science for special¬ists” program of the Downtowncenter, “Quantum mechanics,”7:15 pm, 64 E. Lake street.Lecture, Dallas B. Phemister lec¬ture; “Surgery and science,” 8pm, Billings hospital P-117.Speaker, Dr. Frederick A. Coller,emeritus professor of surgery,University of Michigan school ofmedicine.Record concert, 8 to 10 pm, Inter¬national house home room.Folk dancing, 8 to 10 pm, Inter¬national house assembly hall. Ad¬mission 50 cents.Television series, “Children grow¬ing”: “Grandparents and baby¬sitters,” 9:30 pm, channel 11.Maria Piers, Phd, faculty mem¬ber, child care program, Institutefor Psychoanalysis; Lee Wilcox,associate director of educationalbroadcasting.Lecture series, “Patterns of cul¬ture”: “Themes in contemporaryFrench painting,” 6 pm, Loyolauniversity school of law, 41 E.Pearson street. Bernard W. Cul¬len, artist and critic, speaker.Lecture series, ..“Psychiatry forteachers”: “Educational and emo¬tional integration,” 7 pm, Down¬town center, 64 E. Lake street.Harry Trosman, MD, speaker.Admission $3.Lecture series, “Baroque palacesand their gardens”: “Schon-brunn,” 8 pm, Downtown center,64 E. Lake street. Speaker, Mrs.Ruth Philbrick, assistant curator,Max Epstein archives, depart¬ment of art. Admission $2.50.STERN'S CAMPUS DRUGS61st & EllisBut Feed . . . Visit Our Hew College Reem . . , Lowest PricesHollywood Selsil BowlFreeh Garden Greens, Tomete,Herd Cooked Eyg, Julienne Stripeof Horn, Chicken, Cheese. .$1.00 Sters's Speriel SteakwithGrilled Onions, Large Soled Bowl,French Friee, Roll & Butter. $1.00DRUG DEPT. SPECIALS50% reduction on all standard brands watch bands,stretch or leatherLanvin Arpege Cologne fir Perfume Comb. ..$5.50 + taxLanvin My Sin Cologne fir Perfume Comb. . . . $5.50 + tax60c Prell Shampoo .2 bottles for 99cTte have a complete line at Evyan - Lanvin - ChanelGisserleiin - Caron - Dana - Revlon - D'OrsayMax Factor - Matehahelli - SchiaparelliPeau Sec he Colognes, Perfume* and Cosmetics meeting, 7:10 pm, Hilton chapel.Wednesday, 8 OctoberRegistration for students enteringfirst two years of undergraduatestudy, 8:30 to 11:30 am, and 1:30to 4:30 pm, Bartlett gymnasium.Registration, program of profes¬sional studies in public adminis¬tration, University College, 4 to6 pm, room 1110, 64 E. Lakestreet.Episcopal Evensong, 5:05 pm, Bondchapel.Classes begin, “Frontiers in Geog¬raphy” program, "World pat¬terns,” 6:15 pm, Downtown cen¬ter, 64 E. Lake street.English elass, 6:30 pm, Interna¬tional house room B.Television series, “Atomic prim¬er”; ‘The Great secret,” 6:30pm, channel 11. Harold C. Urey,Martin A. Ryerson distin¬guished service professor eme¬ritus of chemistry; Herbert L.Anderson, professor of physicsand director, Enrico Fermi in¬stitute.Classes begin, “Education for Edu¬cators” program, “Educationalpsychology,” 6:30 pm; “Researchdesign,” 4:30 pm; "The Ele¬mentary school,” 6:15 pm; andseminar in adult education, 4pm. Consult guide for place ofmeeting.Classes begin, "Science for Special¬ists” program, University Col¬lege, 7:30 pm, Downtown center,64 E. Lake street.Classes begin, “Building a bettervocabulary,” 6:30 pm, Downtowncenter, 22 E. Van Buren street.Politics club, first membershipmeeting—elections, 7 pm, SocialSciences 201. At 7:45 pm, pres¬entation by Michael Harringtonof the editorial board of Dissent,Anvil and Liberation magazines,"What has become of the Amer¬ican liberal movement?” Re¬freshments to follow.Country dancers, 8 pm, Ida Noyeshall dance room.Classes begin, ‘The Gifted child,”7:30 pm, Downtown center, 64 E.Lake street.Lecture series, “The Civilization ofIndia”: 'The Languages and lit¬eratures of India,” 8 pm, Down¬town center, 64 E. Lake street.Speaker, George V. Bobrinskoy,professor of Sanskrit and chair¬man of the department of lin¬guistics. Admission $2.25.Thursday, 9 OctoberClasses begin in the college.Placement test, Biology 201-202-203.Episcopal Communion service,11:30 am, Bond chapel.Classes begin, “Frontier in Geog¬raphy” program, "New frontiersin geographical research,” 6:15pm, Downtown center, 64 E.Lake street.Classes begin, “Education for Edu¬cators” program, “Teaching ofsocial studies in high schools andjunior colleges,” 6:45 pm, Down¬town center; and “Basic prin¬ciples of psychological counse1ing,” 6 pm, Downtown center.Record concert, 8 to 10 pm, Inter¬national house home room. Deadline for calendar and Official bulletin insertionswill be 1 pm each Wednesday. Organizations and depart¬ments on campus may send announcements to theMaroon office, Calendar editor, Ida Noyes hall, 1212 E.59th street. Please specify whether the item is to appearin the Coming events on quadrangeles or the Officialbulletin section.The Calendar announcement form printed belowshows the information required and may be used to sendinsertions to the Maroon.Calendar Announcement FormDate of event Day of event.Time of event Place.......Sponsoring organizationAdmission or donation (if any)Remarks:Classes begin, "Indians and non-Indians in Chicago,” 8 pm, Amer¬ican Indian center, 411 N. LaSalle street.Lecture series, “Japanese prints”:The Ukioyo-E school,” 6 pm,Oriental study room of the Artinstitute, Michigan avenue andAdams street. Speaker, MargaretGentles, associate curator ofOriental art, Art institute of Chi¬cago. Admission $3.50.Lecture series, "Selecting your in¬vestments”: “Investment funda¬mentals,” 6:30 pm, Downtowncenter, 64 E. Lake street. Speak¬er, Robert Mason, underwritingexecutive, Merrill Lynch, Pierce,Fenner, and Smith. Admission$10.Lecture series, “Propaganda andrealpolitik”: “Americans in thewar of words,” 8 pm, Downtowncenter, 64 E. Lake st r e e t.Speaker, Walter Yondorf, in¬ structor of communication. Ad¬mission $2.Friday, 10 OctoberClasses begin, “‘Education for Edu¬cators” program, “Adult educa¬tion,” 4 pm, Downtown center, 64E. Lake street.Classes begin, ‘Theories of person¬ality,” 7:30 pm, Downtown cen¬ter, 64 E. Lake street.Record dance, 8 to 10 pm, Interna¬tional house assembly hall. Ad¬mission 50 cents.Film, “The Marriage of Figaro,”8 pm, Downtown center, 64 E.Lake street.Film study, “Cinematic integrity,”7 pm, Downtown center, 64 E.Lake street. Speaker, HenryBbeitrose, instructor, departmentof radio-TV-film, Northwesternuniversity. Admission by seriesticket only.ACASA bookstoreGood Used BooksCarefully selected Imports of cards, giftschildren's booksreliable typewriter service1322 E. 55th HY 3-9651XXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXMidwestArmyStoreIVY KHAKISpost graduate model2 back pocket flapsblue, noturol, black, bark— wash & wearIVY SHIRTS $1.99842 e. 63d st. DO 3-5881Follett'sBooksUsed & NewText BooksSave 20% — 50%on used books\ •Chicago's largest stock of books covering all fieldsCash for books year round324 So. Wabash Ave. zHA 7-2614Oct. 3, 1958 • CHICACO MAROON • 27Sir Leslie Munro speaks Bus route* T)Vp Irnllev bus lino on ;>;■>■ i Leslie Kimx Munro. retiring president of the UN General A son • )ly, \\ill speakin breasted hall on Monday. Ootobor Id, under the auspices of the Norman Wait HandsMemorial foundation in International relations. The speech, to begin at 8:30, will be on-How Effective is the Security Council.” and will be followed by a question period.’■ureas n. 1 dV_> Sir Le.-die >r\ ed. si mult aneousL is New Z.-alatid's Aiid-.a—Uilor te « h m<i K.mw.><v! will N*to the United States and permanent representative to the UN. Tie served for his country the last st°P on th,‘ r’;,th streeton the Trusteeship council ~—**— * ; J a - : - Iand was its President for theyear beginning June, 1953"He has served three terms on Hyde Park sites “A" and the turnaround has been made“B” is causing the removal of the to the CTA, without charge, onelectric lines and trolleys east of the southeast corner of 55th andKenwood on 55th; and in a short Kenwood.. “ Plans for the temporary road,way and electrical distribution,1 .. , nrfiiwi-aiT facilities are now being drawn upExperience as a lawyer a idio md the diplomatic corps in Wash- Surveys 1 ive b < made by the and figures on cost of the ; ,..n'commentator, and a journalist, as ington at the height Of his fame Chicago T r a n s i t authority, to- around will lx* supplied to q1eeditor of The New ZenlaiMfciPiwldi and usefulness ‘ ~ * “,,,4.^,...... » a.s provided Sir Leslie with the back- of servpresident of the Security council ground for his distinguished serv- was noand was chairman of the First ice to hjs country and the world, to Sir[Political] committee of the Tenth His presidency of the General As- votion■ '• • >' ' a .......After being elected president of Df tributes by his own and other . .the Twelfth General Assembly on countries. ~ AamSeptember 17, 1957, Sir Lesl-; The New York Times said: °Pen 1pointed out in his inaugural speech “[He] leaves the United Nations charge. Same Faces Same SerrioCleaner FloorNOW LOCATED AT1003 EAST 55th STREETOrientation: The Mysterious East. AlsoNorth, West, South, Down, Up and . .Watch for ourWeekend Specialson Liquors 'Retirement InsuranceAnnuitiesConnecticut Mutual LifcJoseph H. Aaron, '275524 S. Everett Are.6-1060 Ml 3-5986If -SPECIAL TO U. C. STUDENTS & PERSONNELON ALL SERVICEFLATW0RKSheets, Pillowcases, Handkerchiefs,Dish Towels, Other Flat Pieces,Beautifully Washed fir Ironed. BathTowels fir Wearing Apparel Washed,Fluff Dried, Folded fir Wrapped10 Lbs. $13< Net.1 Adi. Lbs. I.It* La.This Is Our Most PopularConvenient fir Economical FamilyService.SHIRTS & WASH TROUSERSFor that bright, clean, fresh look, letus do your shirts and trousers exactly toYOUR liking. Beautifully washed andironed — starched as desired.Shirts 2l2«C ea* Net\o Extra Charge for Sport ShirtsTrousers 45‘ ea- NctFast, Dependable, Quality Service LAUNDROMATAll Items Carefully Washedfir Fluff Dried. Your Bundle HandledINDIVIDUALLY —Washed & DriedSeparately from Any Other. U.C.Students fir Personnel Have FoundThis Service To Be Easy, Efficient firEconomical. No Time or Troubleon Your Part — We Take Care ofIt from Start to Finish at NOExtra Charge!59 NetEach Machine Load (8 Lbs.)individually Washed, /fried *V ServicedTRY IT! YOU’LL LIKE IT! QUALITY DRY CLEANINGTry our excellent dry cleaning service.All garments carefully spotted and handpretstd.Tuxedos, formols, ball gowns givenspecial attention. Suede, leather and furgarments processed by experts^All garments packaged in our special"see through" plastic baqs.Men's fir Ladies' Suits fir Plain Dresses$1.13 NetTrousers, Skirts, Sweaters — 59c NetLet Us Put That NEW Fresh Look Boc^Into Your GarmentsSHAG RUGSWe have special equipment to procc ,•>these rugs. We con handle all larqe sizesAll rugs carefully washed and dried.18c Lb. NetFREE PICKUP lx DELIVERYWe maintain a FREE pickup and dclivery service for your convenience on atotal of $1.26 or more. Service is on aregular weekly basis if desired.Personalized Laundry and Dry Cleaningfor Particular People1024 E. 55th Street23 • CHICAGO MAROON • Oct. 3, 1958. . ..Chicago Open houses at IdaStudent organizations will hold “post orientation” openhouses this week and next to ‘‘acquaint entering students withofficers, members and programs of campus organizations.”All open houses will be held at 3’30 pm in Ida Noyes hall,1212 E. 59th street.Open house schedule is:MondayT October IS.31Yol. 67, No. 6 University of Chicago, Friday, October 10, 1958Campus groups registeractivities & reservationsAll student organizations must be registered with the student activities office. Registra¬tion forms may be obtained in the student activities office second floor Ida Noyes hall fromMrs. Florence Goold, assistant to the director of student activities The forms must be re¬turned to the same office. -In order to form a student organization a group must have ten or more members.Student groups wishing to reserve Mandel hall also must register by obtaining specialforms at least 72 hours prior —: — —— tt— —., cphprinipfi pvont following regulations: 72 hours advance notice to make0 ‘ !f>s ’ 1. Approval must be obtained arrangements for the use of Man-The forms, available from from the director of student activi- del hall. Fees must be paid at theHie department of buildings and ties as to the kind of entertain- 3. Only persons having specificgrounds, contain blanks for list- ment, the time, the admission fees, authorization may be permitted ining the type of entertainment, the and the beneficiary of any pro- time the reservation is made,sponsoring organization, the ad- ceeds in advance of making the backstage area,mission fee and use of proceeds, reservation. 4. When any backstage area isStudent organizations using 2. The department of buildings used, one or more members of theMandel hall must subscribe to the and grounds should have at least organization must be present atall times in each area to be re¬sponsible for the proper conductof all individuals in that area.5. Smoking or drinking in orabout Mandel hall by persons en¬gaged in the activity can result intheir expulsion from the Uni¬versity. Student GovernmentStudent publication*MaroonCap and GownPhoenixTuesday, October 14.Wednesday, October 15Modern dance on campus Service groups'Orientation boardStudent UnionAlpha Phi OmegaDrama, debate, radio, andmusical organizationsFriday, October 17 Explanation of fraternitysystem sponsored by Inter¬fraternity councilWednesday, October 22 Inter-club rush teaAt the latter two open houses, fraternities, club and rush¬ing rules will be explained.LAK's reception tonightChancellor and Mrs. Lawrence A. Kimpton will greet allstudents at the annual Chancellor's reception to be held thisevening at 8:30 in Ida Noyes hall.Dean of' Students and Mrs. John P. Netherton; RobertStreeter, dean of the College, and Mrs. Streeter, and HaroldHaydon, dean of students in the College, and Mrs. Haydon, willpreside with the Kimptons at the reception.The marshal of the University, Harold Anderson, and thestudent aides will assist the Chancellor. The reception will befollowed by dancing until midnight.Petterssen first scientistto win trade board awardStudent tickets to theNeville Black modern dancerecital are still available fornext Friday and Saturdaynight. Initiates, neophytesand novices will be affordeda full program of new works.Black and nine associateswill present nine differentnumbers, ranging from theabstract to the highly sym¬bolic. Students wishing tosee a stage abounding withbounding dancers shouldpick up tickets at the Reyn¬olds club desk. Sverre Petterssen, the sci¬entist who put mathematicsinto weather forecasting, lastnight joined the ranks of Presi¬dent Eisenhower, Sir WinstonChurchill, and Bernard M. Baruchas a recipient of the New Yorkboard of trade’s annual Goldaward.Petterssen is the first scientistnamed to the honor in the twelveyears the award has been given.He is professor of meteorology atUC and director of the Universityweather forecasting research cen¬ter. He is president of the AmericanMeteorological society.He received the award at a din¬ner in the grand ballroom of theWaldorf-Astoria hotel.A second Gold award was madeto the Travelers Insurance com¬pany.Previous Gold award winnersinclude President Eisenhower(1948), former President HerbertHoover (1949), Baruch (1952),Thomas E. Dewey (1953), Church¬ill (1955), Lewis L. Strauss (1956),and John D. Rockefeller III andA. Whitney Griswold, president ofYale university (1957). Theme of this twelfth annualGold awards dinner will be“Weather: the challenge to busi¬ness.’’Petterssen’s award was givenfor his contributions to the analy¬sis of atmospheric weather condi¬tions.He became expert in atmos¬pheric science in Oslo, Norway,and first achieved fam j in 1933with his “Petterssen computa¬tion,” a series of formula thatrevolutionized forecasting meth¬ods by replacing “guesstimates’*with numerical calculations.Censorship series begins■ by Rosemary Galli“No one today has the gutsto talk about art for art’ssake,” Edward Rosenheim, Jr.,charged Monday night.Rosenheim, associate professorof College humanities, deliveredthe first lecture in the series “Cen¬sorship and creative expression,”jMNMjjUC offices relocateOffice of the Business manager has recently authorizedseveral changes in the location of Administration building of¬fices. All but one of the bureaus effected remain inside thebuilding while the Office of vocational guidance and placement hasbeen transferred to second floor Reynolds club.The alterations are designed to provide additional space and in¬crease the efficiency of departments previously hampered by crowdedor scattered facilities. *Careful consideration was given to the choice of Reynolds club,originally intended to accommodate 'only student organizations, foran administrative office site. But since the Maroon and other stu¬dent activities were moved to Ida Noyes during the academic year1955-56, “the second floor of the club has received minimal use,”observed dean of students John P. Netherton.The divisional deans moved into the section on the third floor ofthe administration building vacated by the vocational guidance de¬partment. The adjustment gave more space to these deans and tothe college advisers, who remained in 201 where they were formerlycrowded into makeshift arrangements.The Office of test administration was moved from 305 and con¬nected to the Office of the examiner. Better coordination of theiractivities and additional space for the Office of financial aid, con¬fined to 304 prior to this move, result from these adjustments. Theoffice of Ruth O. McCam, Assistant dean of students, was trans¬ferred to 305, sponsored by the UC Downtowncenter, 64 E. Lake street.A propos to his topic, "Censor¬ship and the work of art,” Rosen¬heim has recently completed awork on Jonathon Swift, an au¬thor whose work suffered politicalcensorship.Rosenheim, limited his subjectmatter to the aesthetic realm —to imaginative art rather thanrhetoric. Thus bp considered ques¬tions of aesthetic criticism beforelegal questions.Us^ng illustrations of bannedworks, Rosenheim demonstratedthat an object once censored isno longer considered a work ofart, only a communication.“A Farewell to Arms” was onesuch case, he pointed out. It wasbanned in Italy for the historicalincidents which it related. TheIrish found that it displayed dis¬turbing religious scepticism:Americans objected to its “im¬moral” episodes and profane lan¬guage. The German objection wasto its pacifist message. In eachcase, he said, these allegationswere obviously factual. Yet, nonehave asked if “Arms” is reallyart.When aesthetic judgments aredebated, Rosenheim continued,the controversy Aroused off-timesseems confusing.The speaker cited examples ofcourt opinions on censored worksto support this statement:* In the debate on James Joyce’s“Ulysses,” Judge Wolsey tried toestimate what the author was seeking to accomplish. He called“Ulysses” an “experiment,” thuserasing all questions of obscenityin the discussion of the true char¬acter of the book.Dissenting, Judge Maddon didnot think that art should pene¬trate those things often concealedin the minds of literary charac¬ters. Literature, in Maddon’sopinion, was for the people. It wasan important element of life in theservice of the people — to cheer,ennoble, console.“The confusion of such purists,”said Rosenheim, “is not unlikethat of the literati. Such dissent¬ing opinions can be seen in regardto the 1949 awarding of the Bollin¬ger prize.”-In summary, Rosenheim foundthat there were two frames ofreference in discussions of art.One, he said, judges accordingto a work’s effect on the audienceaccording to the author’s charac¬ter, or according to subject mat¬ter. The other considers the workas a construction — as a “madeobject.”What have been the results inour time?, Rosenheim queried. Hereplied to his question by notingthat there were three prevailingopinions: art 'for ai’t’s sake, artfor others’ sake, and “no art, forPete’s sake!”Today, he observed, productioncodes never mention artistic excel¬lence. “The danger is that Holly¬wood and TV producers will de¬fine my children’s notion of what is beautiful. . . . We are fast be¬coming a nation of boobs, notidiots of rapists.”Arguments have been madethat are should aid this nation’sattempts to survive in such atime of crisis. Severely criticizingthis viewpoint, Rosenheim con¬tended that these “great humanachievements which are createdas sources of delight, indeed, fur¬nish the motives for man’s sur¬vival.”(Editor’s note: Rosenheim’s leo-ture is the first in a series on cen¬sorship. The MAROON will coverthe second lecture “Censorshipand the Law” by Philip B. Kur¬land, UC professor of law, nextweek.)Shapiro art showstill on exhibitionJoseph Randall Shapiro’s“Art for Living” exhibitionwill be shown at Ida Noyeshall until October 19 of thisquarter. The collection is beingmade available for rental to un¬dergraduate UC students livingin the dormitory system.A drawing for first choice onrental of the pictures will be heldin Ida Noyes at 2 pm, October 20.A minimal charge of 50c aquarter will be charged to coverinsurance costs. The works of aitwill be re-exhibited each quarterfor re-rental.Sir Leslie Munro speaks .at Breasted on October 13Sir Leslie Knox Munro, retiring president of the UN General Assembly, will speakin Breasted hall on Monday, October 13, under the auspices of the Norman Wait HarrisMemorial foundation in International relations. The speech, to begin at 8:30, will be on“How Effective is the Security Council,” and will be followed by a question period.Since early in 1952 Sir Leslie served simultaneously as New Zealand’s Ambassadorto the United States and permanent representative to the UN. He served for his countryon the Trusteeship counciland was its President for the Experience as a lawyer, a radio and the diplomatic corps in Wash-.... _ -loro commentator, and a journalist, as ington at the height Of his fameveai beginning June, 1953. editor of The New Zealand Herald, and usefulness . . . such a recordHe nas served three terms as provided Sir Leslie with the back- of service to the United Nationsr. 1 ground for his distinguished serv- was no accident; it was a tributepresident of the Security counciland was chairman of the First ^ce to his country and the world.[Political] committee of the Tenth His presidency of the General As-Gencral Assembly. sembly is the latest in a seriesAfter being elected president of Gf tributes by his own and otherthe Twelfth General Assembly on countries.September 17, 1957, Sir Lesl';pointed out in his inaugural speechthat the quest for an internationalorder based on justice “must bepursued with unflagging deter¬mination. In that quest, our or¬ganization has made and will con¬tinue to make essential contribu¬tions in all the diverse fields ofinternational activity.” The New York Times said;“[He] leaves the United Nations charge.to Sir Leslie’s capacities and de¬votion and it shows how much heis going to be missed.Admission to Sir Leslie’s talk isopen to the public and without Bus route changedThe trolley bus line on 55th street, which now makes itsturnaround in a loop on Harper, Cable Court, Lake Park andback on 55th, will soon have a new turnaround at 55th andKenwood.Construction taking placeon Hyde Park sites “A” and the turnaround has been made“B” is causing the removal of the to the CTA, without charge, onelectric lines and trolleys east of the southeast corner of 55th andKenwood on 55th; and in a short Kenwood.time, 55th and Kenwood will be Plans for the temporary road-the last stop on the 55th street Way and electrical distributionbus. facilities are now being drawn up,Surveys have been made by the and figures on cost of the turn’Chicago Transit authority, to- around will be supplied to thegether with Webb & Knapp, the Chicago Land Clearance commis-project developer; and land for sion.piiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiimiiiiiiiiiiimiiimtiiiimiiiiiiiiiiHitmiitmiiitniNititiitiiHiitmiHniimiiiimiiiiiitiiitiiuiUT HAS MOVEDRetirement InsuranceAnnuitiesConnecticut Mutual LifeJoseph H. 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