The University of Chicago LibranPhy sci Dean Zachariasen quitsWilliam H. Zachariasen, ment for him Or until tlie end of Measurements are then made geometric arrangements of atoms substance chemically reacts,dean of the division of physi- *J*eyear' office revealed of the angles at which the broken necessary to produce the observed Zachariasen has studied hun-ral sciences, has resigned his . , .he would like to be relieved li0am off and th. results. dreds of combinations of metals* ;n order to devote his ^ *,ls adni,n,strat,ve duties by The geometric arrangement is such as plutonium, neptunium,P°S; rVc-arch it wa Jam,ary L strength of the “splinter” beams. known as the crystal st*uclure of actibium, curium, and americum! r\ ’ . ^a°liar*ascn. has been a mem- Working backwards, with pencil the substance. This information with such more ordinary ele-learnea t y. ... ner °f the University of Chicago and paper, he then deduces the provides many clues to how the ments as oxygen and sulfur.He has been dean since March, faculty since 1930, and was chair-1939. In a message sent to mem- man of the department of physicsbers of the physical sciences from 1956 to 1959. He also servedfaculty, he said that he hasn’t as chairman from 1945 to 1949.enough time for both research He has been professor of physicsand the deanship. and that he is since 1945.not willing to give up his re- During World War II, he servedsearch. with the UC Metallurgical labora-Zachariasen is currently work- tory, part of the ‘‘Manhattan Dis¬ing in crystallography, the study trict” atomic effort, which led toof the crystal structure of sub- the splitting of the first atomstances. He has spent much of under Stagg field,his life investigating metals with A native of Norway, Zacharia-x ray beams to determine their sen received his MS and PhD de-atomic composition. grees from the University of OsloHe will continue as dean until in 1926 and 1928. At 22, he wastin* University finds a replace- Norway’s youngest doctorate de-_ gree holder.He spent 1928-30 as a Rocke¬feller foundation fellow at Man¬chester university, England, whileholding an appointment as assist¬ant professor of physics at Oslo.His contribution to the Manliat- Yol. 70 — No. 9 University of Chicago, October 24, 1961 31Hutchins college explainedAaron J. Brumbaugh, dean and work in each of the major twenties, the University undertooktan project was to identify the of the College under Robert fields of knowledge,” he said.chemical nature of pinhead-sizedsamples of man-made radioactivecompounds taken from the heartof tlie world’s first nuclear reac¬tor under the west stands offield.He identified chemical proper¬ties of compounds of radioactivesubstances such as plutonium. Hesucceeded in analyzing less than , . . ,, sored jointly by the College andhundred-thousandth of a gram of „ . , .. , ,, . . Orientation board.Maynard Hutchins, discussedthe history, aims, and scopeof the University of Chicago’sgeneral education program lastnight. ‘‘to study carefully every phase oflife and work in the college witha view to the development of aconstructive program.”“The program it adopted, thatof the ‘new college,’ was similarnew compounds, all that was ini¬tially available. The overall objective of the New He described the history of theUniversity before the new college.“At this point, the College pro¬gram . . . did “not differ greatlyfrom undergraduate programsgenerally found in many of the to the one currently in effect,”He addressed some 150 students better liberal arts colleges. A Brumbough said. “Seven compre-in fho cprnnH nf a eerie* nf lectures large number of departmental hensive examinations, each cover-on the “Aims of Education” spon- courses was offered in the first ing a full year’s work were re-two years. quired.“From these, certain ones were “Five of them — English, hu-selectcd to satisfy basic require- manities, social science, biologicalments, others in anticipation of science and physical science—weredepartmental specialization. prescribed for everyone; two each“The combination of courses representing a year’s sequence oftaken by various students in ful- courses were elective.”duction To the niethods of thought fillme,lt or requirements for the Most students placed out ofsame degree varied so much that foreign language and mathematicsthere was no common foundation requirements when they enteredof basic general education.” the program.Generally, students didn t dis- He vjeWs the New College pro-cuss intellectual matters because gram adopted in 1931 ^ * an im_they didn t have anything in com- ^Hant step forward in highermon to talk about. As a eon- education because it provided asequence, their conversations dealt sound basic education in the artsthe usual exciting campus and scjences; it afforded students. . . trivia. . freedom to learn in their own wayUniversity of Chicago stu- and Congressional elections of Hyde Park and Woodlawn com- “Class attendance required and and tQ progress at a rate corn-dent organizations have been 1962. munity organizations and institu- grade points were ieduced fot un- mensurate vvjth their competence;asked to join in a concerted "Leonard Friedman, president of lions in the voter registration fund ^mTIfnderr^i it placed responsibility on the sta¬tion ^■as'iequnea ana unaei uni- dent for gajning an education . . .rnmilatioiic T U'9C PfilTl-William Zachariasen,dean of physical sciences In analyzing materials, he used College program, introduced inthe technique of X-ray refraction, 1929, was “to give each student ain which a microscopic beam of mastery of the minimum essentialsX-rays is aimed at a pinhead sized of factual knowledge and an intro-sample of the substance. •Students asked to joindrive for Negro votingall-campus effort to raise Student Government [SGI, made drive. versity regulations I was com-money for the Negro voter reg- the appeal for funds, saying, Fricdman announccd a prrfimin- !’elled' t0 de"-v Ration privi- ^ctara'Sistration drives in the South dur- “Fund raking mnv ho the onlv leges to a student who, out of fear .***iwKcepins umidueiing the coming year. real contribution we can make as ary meeting of the heads of stu“ refused to dive into the swimming !stlc of conventional programs-and„. , . . . a tampus to the fight for equal dent organizations to discuss pro- pool, a physical education require- * created a sympathetic eoopera-C.vil rights organizations such ^^ntheSouthl wouidTke gramming and organization. The ment.meeting is sponsored by the Na¬tional Student associationmittee of SG. five relationship between stu-. . Unexcused absence from dents and Acuity members that ischapel automatically resulted in ^be spirit of. a community ofcom- rcductjon Qf academic credit, scholars.Friedman urges Some college teachers, though by “I insist that education is aheads of all organizations, includ- no means all of them, shared the process of continuous growth ining those not yet registered with sentiment of one who said he en- which there is an expansion of theFriedman ah. plans In Involve the student Activities office, to *»'«* ‘caching college students indivjtars perception ot his res-because it gave him an opportunity ponsibility and a reformulationattend the meeting. It will take |0 ‘help the bright ones and razz both in breadth and depth of theplace in he east lounge of Ida the dumb-bells.’ ” ideals and values that determineNoyes hall at 1:30 p.m. on'Satur- At this time, in the middle the quality of life,” he said.day.Rally suggestedOne of the programs thus farsuggested is a concert and rallyin — Mandel hall at “reasonablyhigh” prices which would be pub¬licized all over the city. Alsocontemplated is a week-long col¬lection in the dormitories anda.^ the Congress on racial equality tQ set a tentative goal of $i0,000.ICOREJ and the Student non- This may be an overestimate ofviolent coordinating committee our capabilities. I hope it willISNCC] will suspend virtually all prove to be an underestimate.”other activity in order to concen- .... . .Irate on getting Negroes registered Community foins drive ,to vote in time for the primaryTexts are tax-exemptThe Attorney General of Illinois ruled Friday that text¬books are exempt from the general retail sales tax. Theruling reduces by 4rc the cost of textbooks at the Universityof Chicago bookstore. * 1rr, ... *„•„ , .1. state Legislature is reviewing theEugene Miller, manager of the situation and should present itsbookstore, adjusted the prices decision at some undeterminedyesterday morning five minutes future date.• i Joseph P. Roth in the legal It may l'ule that the new exemp- other campus locations, concludingoilice of the University advised tion is retroactive from July 30 w:th collections in all the neieh-him of the ruling. when the original act was insti- borhood churches..y., , , „ , , tuted. If it does conclude thisthe Attorney General, William possibility the bookstore will be The idea for an all-campus or-, Clark> gave his verbal opinion refUnded‘the total amount of the ganization came from the fourthat textbooks should be exempt taxes collected. In this event, the successive all-campus civil libertiesfrom the tax because such sales bookstore will honor all sales re- committees which were formedtransactions involve schools, which ceipts on textbooks from July 30, here during the early fifties tolike churches and charitable and a 4% refund will be made. At fight the Broyles bills and theorganizations, are not taxed. tllis time, a retroactive decision is textbook censorship bills thenThe exemption ruling counters extermely questionable, according pending in the Illinois legislaturean act passed by the Illinois to Roth, but Miller advises that all'The .Broyles bills, providing a disGeneral Assembly last June w'hich students hang on to their sales claimer affidavit for state emleveicd a state tax of 3V2% and receipts. ployees, came up in several suea citv tax of *3% ” ... , , „„ cessive sessions of the legislaturetax of The opposition to the tax was h(?nce the mulUple all.canipUsLegal questions raised led by Monsignor William E. committees.Theodore J. Isaacs, State Rev- McManus, Chicago archdiocesan raised $3,300enue Director, expects that the school superintendent. The Mon- 1At torney General’s ruling will signor had directed his schools not 1,1 limited drives last year,1 tiisc manv Ipp^rI oupstions con- ,, , . « University of Chics^o student or-cerning the entire act because the to colIect the tax l>ecause ie ganizations raised $2,000 for WorldIllinois Constitution requires any lieved tlie sales and rentals of University service, almost $1,000tax to be applied uniformly. The textbooks to be exempt from such to support disenfranchised Negroesl-egislature will have to determine a tax. Parochial schools are *n Fayette county, Tennessee, andwhether textbooks are a com- especially concerned because, un- several hundred dollars to sup-modity completely distinct from '"’tu":' Port the freedom rides and the"ther books, and whether general llke ^hlcaS° Public schools, their anti-apartheid [anti-segregation]books will continue to be subject textbooks are not usually pro- National Union of Students of10 a sales tax. vided free of charge. South Africa. Aaron Brumbaugh discusses the "Hutchins College'with University students.Editorial LetterMaroon character unchanging tp'“£ rapsFormer Chancellor Lawrence K i m p t o nonce said, “Innovation in itself is worthless;to succeed it must be backed up with solidexcellence.” It is with this idea in mind thatwe approach the start of Maroon daily publica¬tion.It would be a very easy thing for the Maroonstaff to say “We are a good newspaper becausewe appear every day and this has not been donein the recent history of the Maroon.” But, if weare to perform a valid function on this campuswe cannot adopt this attitude.For several years now the Maroon has held analmost unique view of what should be importantto a campus newspaper. Since we serve an aca¬demic community, a community whose primarypurpose is concerned with ideas, the Maroon be¬lieves that its function is to present ideas to theUniversity’s general population.Ideas come from many people. They come fromthe physicist in his lab, from the lecturing human¬ist, from the student demonstrating against in¬justice.Ideas are not confined to a small area on Chi¬cago's South Side. To accept this is to deny theuniversality of truth, and it is on this assumptionthat universities exist.It is for this reason that the Maroon has, andwill continue to, report news from throughoutthe United States and the world. The ideas ofpeople in Cambridge or in Berkely are more theconcern of students here than are the pranks ofa University of Chicago undergraduate.It is for this reason that the Maroon will giveprecedence to the work of the UC faculty overthe easier-to-report and easier-to-read foolishnessof the fraternity system.And it is for this reason that the Maroon hasbeen loudly criticized by many people.We have heard numerous comments from peo¬ple expecting dramatic change in the character of the Maroon with the initiation of daily publica¬tion. This expectation is unwari’anted. We willcontinue to present the news which we considerto be important, and our standards are not af¬fected by a more frequent publication schedule.We do, of course, expect substantial improve¬ment through daily publication. We hope to in¬clude more comprehensive coverage of events,both on and off campus, student and non-student.We will present the news immediately, never lag¬ging behind developments for more than twentyfour hours.More important than daily publication howeveris the maintenance of our freedom. The Maroonwill remain a severe critic of all which we feelworthy of criticism. We have been guaranteedfreedom of the press by UC’s administration. Inreturn, we pledge to the administration and to thecampus at large that without which freedom ismeaningless; we pledge the maintenance of a re¬sponsible press.Toward this end membership on the staff willremain open to all students displaying journalist’'’competence. Our letters to the editor column w.^remain open to any individual with an opinionto express.At this time daily publication is by nature ofan experiment. The experiment is subject toperiodic review, with the possibility of a returnto a weekly schedule. We do, however, have everyexpectation that the experiment will succeed andthat daily publication will remain on a permanentbasis.The first daily Maroons will not be perfect. Thetransition from a weekly to a daily schedule is notan easy one, and there will be many difficult prob¬lems to overcome. But, with the knowledge that“this too shall pass” and that the Maroon will soonbe on solid ground as a daily newspaper, we beginour experiment with great confidence. To the editor:I need not tell you, I am sure,of my disappointment at readingthe gross inaccuracies which oc¬curred in your editorial of Octob¬er 20. I think that if you willcheck with members of yourstaff you will find that my officehas always been open to repre¬sentatives of the Maroon for dis¬cussion of campus facts.Your editorial talks about my“dogmatism.” May I remind youthat when a newspaper insistson its position on the basis ofcompletely erroneous facts, it canhardly point the accusing fingerof dogmatism at anyone else.Your facts about probationaryletters are absolutely wrong. Yourfacts about the “power” which Iexercise over the committee ondiscipline are absolutely wrong.Your facts about the committee’slack of standardizations of pun¬ishment are absolutely wrong.Your facts about my attempts tocommunicate with the studentbody with respect to the possibleactions of the committee on dis¬cipline are absolutely wrong.May I make a gentle sugges¬tion. Instead of sending out re¬porters with obvious axes togrind, I suggest that you send out reporters to gather facts. Forexample, had your staff coveredthe open public meetings of theorientation period, especially theone that took place on September27, your editorial writer couldnever have made some of the ir¬responsible statements that ap.pear in your editorial of October20.I am genuinely sorry that theMaroon saw fit to create sensa¬tionalism in connection with anhonest difference of opinion. Irepeat: my office stands readyto discuss facts — and not theprivate lives of individuals, asthe Maroon so often wants to do—at any time responsible studentgroups want to sit down to talk.It is my fervent hope that futurereports in the Maroon will ex¬hibit a much greater sense of re¬sponsibility to truth. Frankly, ifI were an outsider reading theeditorial referred to above, Iwould be alarmed. And yet Idoubt that an outsider would notbe alarmed had you confinedyourself to something approxi¬mating the truth in the mattersdiscussed.George PlayeDean of undergraduateStudentsWatch theNew “HYDE PARK SHOPPING CENTER” foreign car hospitalsee page 4November 16th Editor-in-chiefJay GreenbergBusiness manager Advertising managerWilliam G. Bauer Raymond MitchellManaging EditorAvima RuderGRANDOPENING!!HALF PRICEDRY CLEANINGON WED., THURS., FRI.OCTORER 25. 26, 27One Load Per FamilyAT THE COIN-OPERATEDDRY CLEANERSIN HYDE PARKIn less than one hour, for only $1.50you can professionally clean10 ladies' dresses or4 men's suits, or20 children’s dresses.Draperies — Uniforms — etc.DO IT YOURSELF AND SAVE AT LEAST75% ON YOUR CLEANING BILLS!!!!AKRON, Inc.1U1 E. 53rd Street DON’T MISS THESE IMPORTANT BEST SELLERS!1. Franny & Zooey by J. D. Salinger (a) $4.502. These Ruins Are Inhabited by Muriel Beadle (a) $4.953. The Rise & Fall of the Third Reich by William Shirer <a) $10.004. Russia and the West l rider Lenin and Stalin by George Kennan (cb $5.75THE UNIVERSITY of CHICA60 BOOKSTORE5802 SOUTH ELLISMODEL CAMERALeica, Rolex, Nikon,Hasselblad Dealer1342 E. 55th HY 3-9259NSA DISCOUNT SCANDINAVIAN IMPORTSHOME OF MULTIFORMNO 7-40401542 EAST 57th STREETOpen Tuesday through Saturday,1 p.m. to 7:30 p.m. TUESDAY NITEAT THEMEDICI1450 E. 57thRCA Victor & ColumbiaDEALER COST SALETwo Weeks OnlyAll 3.98 List ONLY 2.47All 4.98 List ONLY 3.105.98 List ONLY 3.70AllPlus Discount Prices on All LabelsLOWE’S RECORDS1538 East 55th MU 4-1505Located in the New Hyde Park Shopping CenterHours: Mon., Tues., Thurs., Fri....... 9:30 A.M. to 9 P.M.Wed. and Sat 9:30 A M. to 6 P.M.Sun 12:00 A.M. to 5 P.M.2 • CHICAGO MAROON • Oct. 24. INILevi urges protection Sociologist lectures heremeasures for areaA "frank and brutal” dis¬cussion with the superinten¬dent of police, concerninggreater protection for HydePark area residents, will takeplace Thursday, according to Jul¬ian Levi, executive director of theSoutheast Chicago commission.The action was prompted by thecriminal assault on a UC facultywife last week. The discussion isexpected to raise questions aboutthe police beat and personnel as¬signments made by Superintendentof Police Orlando Wilson in theHyde Park area.The woman was attacked androbbed while leaving her HydePark apartment last Thursday, at 10 am. The assailant has not yetbeen caught.In addition, stated Levi, an in¬vestigation by the internal de¬partment of the Chicago police,with regard to “the negligentpolice work which was done,” hasbeen made.The campus security office, un¬der the direction of Captain An¬thony Eidson, has been cooperat¬ing with the Chicago task forceof uniformed and plainclothesmenassigned to the capture of the as¬sailant.Additional Chicago police per¬sonnel have been assigned to thearea and “will be kept here” ac¬cording to Levi. Daniel Bell, head of Columbia university’s sociology department, discussed his “theoryof modernity and mass culture” last Thursday evening.He stated that “the eclipse of social, psychic or aesthetic distance between spectatorand experience is a predominant characteristic of modern society and the final conse¬quence of mass culture and modernity.”The results of narrowing the distance between the spectator and the experience are, hecontinued, “breakdown of social —segmentation ” the absorption of sensibility and the organization is the author of a number of so-the individual into society, and ot experience.” ciological works. The materialthe increase of the individual’s He clarified this point by offer- Presented ,n Thursday’s talk isPower of choice. ing examples of the eclipse of part °f , 1S. currentlyModernity, explained Bell, is an distance in art, music, literature, Preparing, The End of Itleolo»y-aesthetic and cultural doctrine theatre, and film. “Pictures seem Bell’s lecture, entitled “Thewhich involves the repudiation of to push their way out at you . . . eclipse of distance,” initiated athe past and the break-up of tra- the new idea is to paint on the faculty seminar on teaching meth-ditional styles and authorities. shutters, but not to show7, what ods in the social sciences.Novelty, simultaneity, sensa- is in the picture.” Cubism is antion, and impact are the major example of the current strivingcharacteristics of modernity. Con- for immediacy of experience, as Isequently, the developing tenden- it attempts to show in one plane icy is toward the substitution of more than one dimension of ansingular for sequential events, object.The result of this substitution is The present emphasis in arta change in “the dimension of forms is instantaneousness, hesaid. Consequently, the writer isCriminal code is discussedThe newly revised criminal code of the state of Illinois will be discussed in the Univer¬sity of Chicago law school auditorium today at an all-day public conference sponsoredby the law school.One of the architects of the new code, Francis A. Allen, professor of law, explainedthat the code, in addition to clarifying the nature of various crimes, has modified the sys¬tem of punishments to make the penalties more adequately reflect the seriousness of thecrime.‘TThe most controversial sectionof U*e new code,” said Allen, "isthat dealing with the problems ofsentencing. Under the old code, Inthe five most Important feloniestiie jury had the power not onlyto determine the guilt or inno¬cence of the defendant, but alsoto establish the sentence.“Illinois was only one of aboutsix states which had this system.Under the new code, only thejudge can impose a sentence ex¬cept in death penalties, where thejury may impose this sentencebut only with the agreement ofthe judge.”The code has also strengthenedthe gambling law, eliminated allcommon law, and redefined legalinsanity.“The new code provides that aman can be declared legally in¬sane at the time he committedtlie crime for which he is ac¬cused,” said Allen, “if, at the timeof commission, he lacked the ca¬pacity to understand the crimin¬ality of the crime and the effectsof his action.”Speakers at the morning ses¬sion, which begins at 10, will be Allen; Frank J. Remington, pro¬fessor of law, University of Wis¬consin; and Morris J. Wexler,secretary, Joint Bar associationcommittee to revise the Illinoiscriminal code.Herbert Wechsler, professor oflaw, Columbia university, willspeak at the luncheon session at12:45 pm. Speakers at the after¬noon session at 2:30 pm will beJudge Richard B. Austin of theUS district court, and Charles H.Bowman, professor of law, Uni¬versity of Illinois.Questions from the audiencerelating to the code will be dis¬cussed by a panel of persons whoparticipated in the drafting of thecode. They are — besides Allen,Austin, and Bowman — CharlesA. Bellows, a Chicago defense at¬torney; Warren L. Swanson, aChicago lawyer; and James R.Thompson and Marvin E. Aspen,both assistant state’s attorneys ofCook county.The program will conclude with a lecture at 8 pm by Norval Mor¬ris, professor and dean of thefaculty of law, University of Adel¬aide, Australia. faced with the problem of convey¬ing many different levels of soundand action simultaneously, andthe painter strives to create apicture that will envelope theviewer.Emphasizing the increase of theephemeral in art, Bell remarkedthat some artists are now paint¬ing on toilet tissue and that, at¬tempting to capture the immedi¬ate, Picasso is now working withphotographs of moving torches.He added that a machine whoseonly function is to destroy itselfis now considered a work of art.Bell, a former UC staff mem¬ber and labor editor of Fortune,Classified AdsFor RentPave UC ‘circle’A new paved walk throughthe traffic circle in front ofthe Administration building isbeing built as part of Presi¬dent George Beadle’s plan "tomake the campus generally morebeautiful.”Explaining the plans, JamesSheldon, assistant to PresidentBeadle, said that the walk is de¬signed around a central flowerbed. It is expected to includebulbs — either tulip or daffodil —and English ivy, which will bloomlater in the spring.Workmen, now laying the walk,expect to finish the job within• hree weeks.According to Sheldon, the walk"as suggested by Beadle because“it was impossible to keep a man¬made path from going across thecircle.” Now, he said, people cancross "without getting their feetmuddy.”W. R. Zellner, superintendentthe department of building andgrounds, called the walk .a partof the general campus improve¬ments befng made “now that we’vegotten money to do some repav¬ing.”Other Improvements have beenoiade in the Field house and inBartlett gym. These include re¬decorating and repainting in the gym, as well as improved lighting.Faulty masonry in the north¬east and southeast corners of thefieldhouse has been rebuilt, ac¬cording to Zellner. Another im¬provement being considered is bet¬ter lighting in the field house. Your HOME AWAY FROM HOME6040 Ingleside AvenueA well maintained building catering toUniversity students. One and two roomsfurnished from $38.50 monthly. Cleanand comfortable. See resident manager,Mis. Leo Tajiia or Call: BU 8-27 57.Cbatam Park Village Apartment*(1 and 2 bedrooms—3 to a rooms)$103 to $142 per monthApplications being processed for wellqualified prospective tenants. Convenientto U. of Chicago and Skyway. Idealfor graduate students. Modern all-electric kitchens. 24 hour heat. 63 FIRE¬PROOFED BUILDINGS, PRIVATELYPOLICED. Ample street parking or gar¬ages. Close to shopping and transpor¬tation; park-like with suburban atmos¬phere. Model apartment.737 E. 83rd PI. TRiangle 4-7400Creiger Manor1*4 to three room furnished apartmentsnicely appointed. Elevator building.Quick access to university via publictransportation. Mgr. on premises. Call;PL 2-9327.Shoreline Apartments, 5135 KenwoodOffers on to 3J4 efficiency units at¬tractively appointed. Month to monthoccupancy $80 and up. Elevator, fire¬proof building. Manager on premises .Apartment, for sub-lease immediately.314 rooms, $80 a month, unfurnished.See janitor on premises. 5421 S. Wood-lawn.HOME FOR RENT3 bedroom, 1J4 baths, carport, fullycarpeted, fenced yard. Call: Zee, VI1-1461. Automobiles For Sale’53 Chevie, 2 door Bel-Air. R. & H.tcheap. Call: RE 1-0858 after 6 p.m.1961 Triumph station wagon, 4 door,radio, heater and W.W. $1,000 but willhaggle. — Sam King, MI 3-0800, ext.2304 or BU 1-4641. ’58 English Ford Anglia, Tt. & H. Call:OR 6-2915 after 5 p.m.PersonalsSewing, alterations, hems.Call: BU 8-6001.201—How was weekend with 1LL1NI?Today’s EventsTuesday, 24 OctoberConference on the Illinois criminalcode, 10 am, law school • aduitorium.Lecture, "Moral and religious aspectsof Shakespeare’s tragic vision,” 10:30am, Kosenwalfl 2. Mr. Roberts for thehumanities 201 staff.Lutheran communion service, 11:30Bond chapel.“B” team cross country meet, 4 pm,Washington Park.Lecture, "Sanskrit poetics in the lightof Western aesthetics,” 4 pm,Breasted hall.“Faith and thought” seminar, “Theessence of Christian faith,” 4:30 pm,Chapel house.Christian Science testimony meeting,7:15 pm, Thorndike Hilton chapel. Folk dancing, 8 pm, Internationalhouse.Lecture, ".Early Victorian taste,” JohnSteegman, 8:30 pm, social sciences122,Moody lecture, "Writing a story,” andreading from fiction, 8:30 pm, Mandelhall. Eudora Welty, American novel¬ist.foreign car hospitalsee page 4Watch theNew “HYDE PARK SHOPPING CENTER”November 16th(Fhot«| kr Berger)Worlunea dig walk across UCs ’circle’ THE NEW PEUGEOT 404 IS HERE!•New form France is the Peugeot 404 ... a four door sedancombines luxury with high performance. Bigger than a RamblerAmerican and smaller than a Comet the Peugeot 404 seats 6 to6 people, delivers 30 mpg. Won’t you drop in soon for a demon¬stration ride? Our complete, fully-equipped price is S9CQCionly delivered in Hyde ParkOB NELSOMOTORSDivision of Robert Nelson, Jr., Inc.COMPLETE PARTS AND SERVICE FOR ALL IMPORT CARS6038-40 S. Cottage Grove Ave., Chicago Midway 3-4500(“Dace Murray, farmerly at t(nicertity Garage, is new in ear sercice dept.)Oct. 24. 1941 • CHICAGO MAROON • 3Africa faces emergency Eudora Welty will speakby Ken PierceSocial to the MAROON Novelist and short story writer Eudora Welty will de¬liver this season’s first William Vaughan Moody lecturetonight with a discussion on “Writing a Story” and readingsBOSTON—A United Nations official Monday asked for international help in meeting from her own fiction. She will speak at 8:30 in Mandel hallthe “African emergency” in education. . ... Tomorrow night she will meetMalcolm Adiseshiah, assistant director-general of the United Nations educational, sci- with a group of undergraduate The Ponder Heart, was success-entific and cultural organization (UNESCO) told delegates at a conference of the United students in this year's second “My fully staged on Broadway in 1916.States UNESCO commission that “all the resources of the UN” would be mobilized dur- Life and Your” program. She wilt She has received numerous liter-ing the three year emergency period, from 1961 to 1963. address them informally at 8 p.m. ary awards including a 51,000Adiseshiah said that a recent1 * 1— 1 -• in Ida Noyes hall. fiction award from the Americanmeeting of some 30 African na- Nketsia IV, asked the delegates week “Salute to Africa Week” Since her first collection of sto- Academy of Arts and Letters intions had produced a plan for to consider the following ques- in honor of the conference. In a ries, A Curtain of Green, appeared 1944.100% enrollment among those tlon about the US-African student- telegram to conference chairman in 1941, Miss Welty has been re-eligible for African primary edu- exchange program: William S. Dix, President Kenne- cognized as a highly original and “““cation bv 1980. The plan also calls “What is being done in the Unit- dy *»e hoped the conference distinguished contemporary Ameri-for substantial expansion of sec- ed States to encourage African “will result in a meaningful can writer. She has published twoondary and higher educational students to return home (after guidance for action by the Unit- other collections and four novelsprograms. they have finished their studies) ? ed States.’ A dramatization of her novel,Adiseshiah told 1.600 delegates “Should African students be en-attending yesterday’s opening eouraged to study in the Unitedsession the whole world recog- States in spite of the possibilitynizes that “the essential precondi- that they will encounter sometion for both political consolida- form of racial discrimination?”tion and economic and social de- “From a practical standpoint,velopment today in Africa lies in would it be better to send moreeducation. American teachers to teach in *“The-present content of educa- Africa than. to send large num-tion in Africa is not in line with k°rs Africans to study in theexisting African conditions, the Ur!^1od States- . , . ..Nketsia said that he hoped theconference would answer thesequestions, while beginning “aneven greater educational ex¬change program.”This five-day conference is theeighth biennial conference spon- WUCB Guidepostulate of political independ¬ence, or an essentially technologi¬cal age, but is based on a non-African background, allowing noroom for the African child’s . . .powers of observation and cre¬ative imagination to develop free- Tuesday, October 247—Strauss, Hon Qiuxote, SymphonicPoem.Vivaldi. Two sonatas for Cello andHarpsichord.•Contact, an informal hour that willtouch upon comedy, folk music, andanything; else worth touching on,with Janie Whitehill and Marty Ra-binowitz.9—Mozart, Mass in C “Coronation,"K. 317.Schumann, Introduction and Rond**Appassionato in G for Piano andOrchestra, op. 92.ly, and help him find his bearing by the US; commission forin the world.”The African educational plan,developed last May at Addis Ab¬aba, seeks to “Africanize” thetypical African’s education, whichtoday is patterned after Euro¬pean educational programs.In another conference session,the vice-chancellor of the Uni¬versity of Ghana, Nana Kobina UNESCO. The commission wascreated by Congress in 1946 toaid US participation in UNESCO.John A. Volpe, governor ofMassachusetts, declared thisBOB NELSON MOTORSIMPORT SERVICESPECIALISTSHAS’’DAVE” MURRAYSERVICE “The wori.o of jazz has moved on tothe split infinitives of "cool" or “pro-gressice" music, to the horrors of rock-and-roll. and lo the mediocrities of thosewho hold a treat art in poor receiver*ship. The thirties were a kind of GoldenAft in which Jatt was still close to thereal and the true, and not pet cut offfrom its roots In the blues and the dance.It s tone but not ■ pfom current lug*forgotten. I ofNATIONAlHVKW.hand me the dia- ■ ‘for fr»#copy,mondneedle.' | ]50C.33s,.(N.wYerk■■■■■■■■I116, N.Y, for fro# copy.Watch theNew “HYDE PARK SHOPPING CENTER”November 16thDR. A. ZIMBLER, OptometristIN THENEW HYDE PARK SHOPPING CENTER1510 E. 55th St. DO 3-7644EYE EXAMINATIONSPRESCRIPTIONS FILLED CONTACT LENSESNEWEST STYLING IN FRAMESSTUDENT DISCOUNTACASA BOOKSTORE - for ChristmasCarefully selected inmports of Christmas Cards, Giftsand Children's Books.Our customers say we have one of the best collectionsin the city. ,,1322 E. 55th ST. HY 3-9651A SUN LIFE POLICY FOR EVERY NEEDFOR YOUAND YOUR FAMILY...•The Income Endowment plan guarantees life in¬surance protection if you die within a specifiednumber of years. If you live, the endowmentbenefit falls due on the maturity date; you cantake the funds in cash or as income for life.RepresentativeRalph J. Wood Jr., ’481 N. LaSalle Chicago, III.FR 2-2390 • * FA 4 6800SUN LIFE ASSURANCE COMPANY OF CANADA• CHICAGO MAROON • Oct. 24, 1961 Hindemith. Sonata in G fur Violin andPiano (1939).19—Waxman, Sinfoniett* for String-*and Timpani.Weber. Overture to the opera, “DerFreiehtur..”Beethoven, Symphony No. 3 in EA»,op. 55.11:10-—Sweelinrk, Variation# on “Meinpunges I,eben hat ein end.” Quar¬tet for Strings No. 1 in a, “Au»meinem Leben.”Mehul, Overture in E for Orches¬tra, arranged for band by FredericRoberts. ‘ taw w tapitil t dinkdealers in:• mg• morris• austin• riloy• lamhrett*5340 s. lake parkdo 3-0707service clinic: 2306 e. 71stmi 3-3113bob lettermg psychiatrist/Check your opinions against LM's Campus Opinion Poll =8Whafs better-feme or fortune?Would rather have $50,000 $100,000yearly salary-and obscurity© Are studentsconservativeor liberal ? Would rather have world recognition j—and small financial rewards© Do studentsprefer filter ornon-filter cigarettes?□ Conservative| | Middle of the road Q Liberal I"! Filters* □ Non-filters \Here's how 1029 students at 100 colleges voted!StartfrestiStay fresh with L‘MAny way you look atthem — L&M’s taste bet¬ter. Moisturized tobac¬cos make the difference!Yes, your taste staysfresh with LAM — theyalways treat you right! nofi joadisnvaijv natjx•wnHUM HS38J AVIS HiSVi 83J38d•Wfl HUMHS3HJ 1MV1S iSH31HJ 83J3Hd%8 z SJ31IU-U0N%IL%Ek ' lejaqn%62 1° 8IPPIW%iZ 8AJJBAJ8SU03aiuej 9Aei| jamey%r ounpoj3Aeq jaiuey ©©©•Try fresh-tasting.-best* tasting L‘M today, ..in pack or‘box!Student Government names 4 to SFACFour judges were elected tothe Student-Facuity-Adminis¬tration court (SFAC) lastnight in a stormy StudentGovernment meeting featur¬ing frequent recesses for poli¬tical maneuvering.Elected to two year terms onthe court were graduate studentsSieve Sachs and William Good¬man. Chosen to fill one year termswt»re law students Fred Cohn andJohn Brooks. Law student MichaelWolfson, serving his second yearof a two year term, was electedchief justice of the court.Sachs, Goodman and Cohn hadbeen nominated by POLIT,majority party in SG, to fill thelour vacancies on the court. Brooks was backed by the Practi¬cal Reform organization, withCollege student Warren Siegalsupported by the Independent Re¬form party.Election of Sachs and Goodmanwent smoothly, both being chosenunanimously. However, dissentionarose when the one year termswere discussed.Bargain cancelledPOLIT had promised PRO thatit - would back Brooks if PROwould back Cohn. PRO refused,and, after the first ballot, Brookshad received tfie fewest “aye’*votes. Under the SG by-laws hisname was dropped, and the con¬test was between Cohn and Siegel,Although a majority voted forCohn he failed to receive the two- thirds vote required for election.A five minute recess was voted,during which PRO and POLITleaders conferred. After the re¬cess political squabbling continueduntil both Cohn and Brooks wereelected.Wolfson was chosen quicklychief justice by a majority vote.He defeated Sachs, who wasbacked by PRO and IRP. Wolfsonreceived POLIT support.The SFAC is composed of sixstudents, two faculty representa¬tives, and a representative ofthe administration. Current stu¬dent members are Wolfson andPeter Brownstone, a graduatestudent in political science.Donald Meiklejohn, professor ofphilosophy in the College andVol. 70 — No. 10 University of Chicago, October 25, 1961 31Welty analyzes fiction Harry Kalven, professor of law,currently serve as faculty mem¬bers of the court. No administra¬tion member has yet been ap¬pointed to succeed _Ruth O.McCarn, former assistant dean ofstudents, who left the Universitylast summer.The SFAC handles all disputesbetween students and studentorganizations, disputes arising outof the provision of the SG con¬stitution, and disagreements con¬cerning the Student Bill ofRights.The court became enmeshed ina lively controversy-last year whenit ruled that the newly establishedresidence requirement of fouryears for women and two yearsfor men violated the Student Billof Rights. Dean of students JohnP. Netherton at that time ruledthat the court had no jurisdictionin the matter, and refused toaccept the court’s decision asbinding.'Courf influential'Describing the court, ^SG presi¬dent Leonard Friedman stated,“The court is one of the most in¬fluential bodies in the University.Through its decisions it is able toprotect the rights of the student,vis a vis both the administrationand student organizations, asthese rights are guaranteed. Des¬pite the fact that the court’s de¬cisions in particular cases havenot been approved by the adminis¬tration, in several instances it hasbeen able to set a good deal of policy. The court in many in¬stances has been able to affecta cooling of what would otherwisehave been violent emotions, en¬abling those concerned to viewmatters more rationally.”In other SG action, Friedmanlaunched a violent attack on thepolicies of IRP. Handing the chairover to vice-president DavidLevey, he stated, “IRP endeavorsto attain the image which theynow hold of government, that ofirresponsibility and a propensityfor fun and games. The motionswhich they have introduced in. this assembly have been consis¬tently irresponsible, and, had theybeen passed by this body, wouldhave reflected badly on the en¬tire government.”One motion was passed at themeeting, which was attended bysome thirty assembly members.The motion called for an investi¬gation and report, by SG’s campusaction committee, of UC's recentlyannounced $300 raise in tuition.The chairman of the committeeis mandated to meet with the ad¬ministration to attempt to dis¬cover some of the reasoning be¬hind the increase.The motion replaced one spon¬sored by IRP asking for a letterwriting campaign, to be sponsoredby SG, which would encouragestudents to write letters of“abomination and castigation”concerning the increase. Called“another example of IRP'S irres¬ponsibility” by POLIT leaders, themotion failed by a substantialmargain.E u d o r a Welty, distin-g u i s h e d American novelistand short story writer, spokeon “Learning1 to write fiction”last night at Mandel hall.Miss Welty’s talk was this year’sfirst William Vaughn Moody lec¬ture. Some 800 people attended.In her speech, Miss Welty dis¬cussed the various parts of a workof fiction in an effort to pinpointits most essential characteristics.The distinctness of any givenwork is due to its theme, which theauthor “can choose, but not helpchoosing,” its point of view', whichshould transcend the personal, themeans by which the work is friacleobjective,” she said.She also stated that the overallform of the w'ork should suggestsome pattern of life inherent inthe work. “This,” she felt, “cando the greatest thing—it maymove you.”’Learn by doing*From her own experience inwriting, she has concluded that“each story opens up a new pros¬pect, a nowaef of problems.” Sheadded that ("learning by doing isthe only waV~to write.” ^lo—digrMiifcinfl aylfMu JiJTTi n fic¬tion. Miss Welty was critical ofthose who hunt symbols not or¬ganically contained in a work.Adding a humorous note, shesaid “One way of looking at Moby• tick is that the symbol was so bigand strenuous that he had to bea whale.”Stressing the permanence of awork of fiction and the dynamicand changing relationship betweentlie readers and the paths of thewriter, she said, “The presenttense should be used in tellingwhat w'e are doing and nearly allthat wo know about it.”Following her lecture, Miss Wel¬ty read tw'o of her short stories,T he Petrified M a n,” and“Search.”Since her first collection of sto¬ries, A Curtain of Green, ap¬peal c*d in 1941, Miss Welty hasbeen recognized as a highly origi¬nal and distinguished contempo¬rary American writer. She haspublished two other collectionsand four novels.A dramatization of her novel,Tim Ponder Heart, was success-hilly staged on Broadway in 1956.Miss Welty has received numer¬ous literary awards. Among theseare a $1000 fiction award from theAmerican Academy of Arts and[eUers [1944] and the WililamDean Howells medal in American fiction. This last honor, which shereceived in 1955, is given onlyonce a decade.Eudora Welty was born in Jack-son, Mississippi. Appearing herein the 1956 Moody lecture series,she explained the Southern influ¬ence upon her work. Miss Weltystated:“It seems plain that the artthat speaks most clearly, explicit¬ly, directly, and passionately fromits place of origin will remain thelongest understood.”She added, ‘The challenge ofwriters today, I think, is not todisown any part of our heritage.Whatever our place, it has beenvisited by the stranger, it willnever be new again. It is only thevision which can be new1; but thatis enough.”The Moody lecture series was founded in 1917 in honor of Wil¬liam Vaughn Moody, 19th centuryAmerican poet and a member ofthe University of Chicago Englishfaculty from 1895 to 1907.In the past, the series has pre¬sented W, B. Yeats, MarianneMoore, Igor Stravinsky, and RalphVaughn Williams. Last year, An¬gus Wilson, Leon Kirchner, J. P.Donleavy, and Kenneth Burke ap¬peared.Tonight, Miss Welty will meetwith some 100 undergraduates atthis year’s second “My Life andYours” program.[My Life and Yours is a seriesof informal discussions foundedthree years ago by Alan Simpson,dean of the College, at which un¬dergraduates are given the oppor-tuinty to meet with distinguishedmembers of various fields.] Students unite to aidN. Carolina NegroesStudents from the University of Chicago, and North¬western and Roosevelt universities organized a city-widecommittee here Monday night to raise money for Negroes inMonroe County, North Carolina. Myron Brown and RobertaBruce, a Roosevelt student, wereelected its officers.A1 Hunter, a former U.C. stu¬dent representing the nation-wideorganization of which the commit¬tee is a part and which wascreated last August in New YorkCity, familiarized the group withthe committee’s purposes.According to Hunter, the com-Review new criminal codeRecent extensive changesin the criminal code of thestate of Illinois were exploredyesterday at an all-day con¬ference sponsored by the Univer¬sity of Chicago law school.Under the revised criminal code,the power to sentence offendershas been removed from the juryand vested in the judge in all casesexcept those involving the deathpenalty.Formerly the jury could estab¬lish the sentence in the five mostimportant felonies. This revisionbrings Illinois law into agreementwith that of most other states inthis respect.The revised code has also elimi¬nated common law crime andmodified the definition of legal in¬sanity.Punishments equalizedThe law governing gambling hasbeen strengthened and the punish¬ments for all forms of theft havebeen equalized. “In the new code,we have taken into considerationthe fact that deprivation by fraudor deception is just as serious asother forms of theft. All forms oftheft have been brought under onesection and the penalties equal¬ized,” said Francis A. Allen, pro¬fessor of law, a member of thecommittee that drafted the code.Speakers at yesterday’s confer¬ence discussed the various aspectsof the code in detail, as well as itssignificance in the context of ageneral trend toward criminal lawrevision. Allen, who was. in charge of theconference, said that the revisionof the Illinois code was of someimport in the national picture, asevidenced by the attendance at theconference of persons currently in¬volved in revising the criminalcodes of New York and otherstates.Speakers at the morning sessionwere Allen, Frank J. Remington,professor of law, University ofWisconsin; and Morris J. Wexler,secretary, Joint Bar association committee to revise the Illinoiscriminal code.Herbert Wechsler, professoV oflaw, Columbia University, spoke atthe luncheon session.Speakers at the afternoon ses¬sion were Judge Richard B. Austinof the U. S. district court, andCharles H. Bowman, professor oflaw, University of Illinois.The concluding lecture wasgiven by Norva! Morris, professorand dean of the faculty of law,University of Adelaide, Australia., . i • /inBruce Stark left presides over yesterday's meeting ofUC's NAACP meeting. Listening is Bob Brown, a mem¬ber of the group. mittee will raise funds for thedefense of Robert Williams andsend food and clothing to Monroe,North Carolina, Negroes. Thefunds to be collected are to goto Conrad Linn, Williams’ defenselawyer and a prominent civil rightsattorney.Williams, a past civil rightsfighter, has been under indict¬ment in Monroe for attemptedkidnapping in a civil rights dis¬pute, and has fled to Cuba, wherehe is now taking refuge. Soonafter his indictment, Negroes inMonroe county were denied reliefand state aid.The committee’s work involvesthe result of a freedom rider’strip through Monroe last summer. /Upon the arrest of many of thefparticipants, the outraged Negricommunity attempted to attackwhite couple passing through the/area.. iAidswhiteco inp I eThe pair was rushed to Williams’house where he took them insideto protect them. Then, calling theMonroe police, Williams warnedthat the couple’s lives were indanger unless the freedom riderswere released.The police outTcTTVelpthe couple and pick up Williams,but found that he had already fled.Williams was charged with kid¬napping.During the meeting, the involve¬ment of the University of Chi¬cago’s branch of the National as¬sociation for the advancement ofcolored people [NAACP] and pos¬sible future action were discussed.Yesterday the social action com¬mittee of the local chapter of theNAACP decided that it could makeno future plans without furtherinformation about the new group.So far, very little is known of thecommittee’s sponsors.The Social action committee iscontacting the Committee ouracial equality. Student nonviol¬ence coordinating committee, andNAACP headquarters requestingfurther information.Africa faces emergency Eudora Wel,y wil1 sPeak™ Mrtimliof on/1 olinvf ofnrw UL-rltoi* Ti’ikIam WoHir mi'llby Ken PierceSpecial to the MAROON Novelist and short story writer Eudora Welty will de¬liver this season’s first William Vaughan Moody lecturetonight with a discussion on “Writing a Story” and readingsBOSTON—A United Nations official Monday asked for international help in meeting from fier own fiction. She will speak at 8:30 in Mandel hallthe “African emergency” in education. .... Tomorrow night she will meet —-Malcolm Adiseshiah, assistant director-general of the United Nations educational, sci- with a group of undergraduate The Ponder Heart, was success-entific and cultural organization (UNESCO) told delegates at a conference of the United students in this year’s second “My fully staged on Broadway in 1916.States UNESCO commission that “all the resources of the UN” would be mobilized dur- Life and Your” program. She will She has received numerous titer¬ing the three year emergency period, from 1961 to 1963.Adiseshiah said that a recent * ; — ~ —,—* 7— ~—meeting of some 30 African na- Nketsia IV, asked the delegates week “Salute to Africa Week’tions had produced a plan for to consider the following ques- in honor of the conference. In a100% enrollment among those tion about the US-African student- telegram to conference chairman in 1941, Miss Welty has been re-eligible for African primary edu- exchange piogiam. William S. Dix, President Kenne- cognized as a highly original andcation by 1980. The plan also calls “What is being done in the Unit- dy said he hoped the conference distinguished contemporary Ameri-for substantial expansion of sec- ed States to encourage African “"’HI result in a meaningful can writer. She has published twoondary and higher educational students to return home (after ffmdanee for action by the Unit- other collections and four novelsaddress them informally at 8 p.m.in Ida Noyes hall.Since her first collection of sto¬ries, A Curtain of Green, appeared ary awards including a 51,000fiction award from the AmericanAcademy of Arts and Letters in1944.programs. they have finished their studies) ?”Adiseshiah told 1.600 delegates “Should African students be en-attending yesterday’s opening couraged to study in the Unitedsession the whole world recog- States in spite of the possibilitynizes that “the essential precondi- that they will encounter sometion for both political consolida- form of racial discrimination?”tion and economic and social de- “From a practical standpoint,velopment today in Africa lies in would it be better to send moreeducation. American teachers to teach in“The present content of educa- -^r*ca than to send large num-tion in Africa is not in line with ^ ^*T'Ca,rS *° s*uc^ inexisting African conditions, the ed States. A dramatization of her novel,WUCB Guidepostulate of political independ¬ence, or an essentially technologi¬cal age, but is based on a non-African background, allowing noroom for the African child’s . . .powers of observation and cre- United States-’Nketsia said that he hoped theconference would answer thesequestions, while beginning “aneven greater educational ex-'change program.”This five-day conference is the Tuesday, October 247—Strauss, Don Qiuxote, SymphonicPoem.Vivaldi. Two sonata* for Cello andHarpsichord.S—Contact, an informal hour that willtouch upon comedy, folk music, andanything else worth touching on,with Janie Whitehill and Marty Rs-binowitx.9—Mozart, Mass in C “Coronation,”K. 317.Schumann. Introduction and Rond**Appassionato in U for Piano andOrchestra, op. 92.alive imagination to develop free- eighth biennial conference spon-ly, and help him find his bearing nh commls.s,on tor. o UNESCO. The DArmrnccinn timein the world.”The African educational plan,developed last May at Addis Ab¬aba, seeks to “Africanize” thetypical African’s education, whichtoday is patterned after Euro¬pean educational programs.In another conference session,the vice-chancellor of the Uni¬versity of Ghana, Nana Kobina commission wascreated by Congress in 1946 toaid US participation in UNESCO.John A. Volpe, governor ofMassachusetts, declared thisBOB NELSON MOTORSIMPORT SERVICESPECIALISTSHAS’’DAVE" MURRATSERVICE “The world of jazz has moved on tothe split infinitives of "cool" or "pro¬gressive" music, to the horrors of rock-and-roll. and to the mediocrities of thosewho hold a great art in poor receiver¬ship. The thirties were a kind of GoldenAge in which Jatt was still close to thereal and the true, and not pet cut offfrom its roots In the Hues and the dance.I1''*™* tts n0t I from »h* curr#«t !*•#•forgotten. jj «***»> I Bf NATIONAL tg VIEW.hand me the dta- ■ Writ# 'forfroeopf,mond needle. O 150 E.35 Sf.,N#wYork16,N.Y, for frte copy.Watch theNew “HYDE PARK SHOPPING CENTER”November 16thDR. A. ZIMBLER, OptometristIN THENEW HYDE PARK SHOPPING CENTER1510 E. 55th St. DO 3-7644EYE EXAMINATIONSPRESCRIPTIONS FILLED CONTACT LENSESNEWEST STYLING IN FRAMESSTUDENT DISCOUNTACASA BOOKSTORE — for ChristmasCarefully selected inmports of Christmas Cards, Giftsand Children's Books.Our customers say we have one of the best collectionsin the city.1322 E. 55th ST. HY 3-9651A SUN LIFE POLICY FOR EVERY NEEDFOR YOUAND YOUR FAMILY. ..•The Income Endowment plan guarantees life in¬surance protection if you die within a specifiednumber of years. If you live, the endowmentbenefit falls due on the maturity date; you cantake the funds in cash or as income for life.RepresentativeRalph J. Wood Jr„ ’481 N. LaSalle Chicogo, III.FR 2-2390 • FA 4-6800SUN LIFE ASSURANCE COMPANY OF CANADA• CHICAGO MAROON • Oct. 24, 1961 Hindemith. Sonata in C for Violin andPiano (1939*.19—Waxman. Sinfoniett-a for String*and Timpani.Weber, Overture to the opera, “HerFreiehtu*.”Beethoven, Symphony No. 3 in Efo,op. 53.11:10—Sweelinek, Variation* on ’'lleinpunues I,eben hat ein end.” Quar¬tet for String* No. 1 in “Au»meinem Leben.”Mehul. Overture in E for Orehe*-tra, arranged for band by FredericRoberts. hreiti car tnspital l eft*dealers in:• mg• morris• austin• riloy• Ijmbreftj5340 s. lake porkdo 3-0707service clinic: 2306 e. 71stmi 3-3113bob testermg psychiatristtCheck your opinions against LM’s Campus Opinion Poll "8Whafs better-feme or fortune?Would rather have world recognition,-and small financial rewards© Dosfudenfsprefer filter ornon-filter cigarettes?□ Non-filters \Here's how 1029 students at 100 colleges voted!Start freshStay fresh with L‘MAny way you look atthem — LAM’s taste bet¬ter. Moisturized tobac¬cos make the difference!Yes, your taste staysfresh with LAM — theyahroys treat you right! IPlBlJL nonsnoatjv naijx•wtlHUM HS3HJ AVIS f31SVi M3J3dd'MSI HUMHS3HJ 18VIS fsaanu 83J3Hd%9Z Siaim-UON%ZL SJ31IIJ%Ek ' IBJaqil%62 pe°J JO ajppiw%8Z 3AJJBAJ3SU033ujb) 3Aeij jsioey%r dunpojSAeq jaqiey (DTry fresh-tasting. besUtasnng i_M today... m pack .'or"box!4