srs TOncatJames B. Conant, leadingeducator and former presi¬dent of Harvard university,visited the University of Chi¬cago graduate school of edu¬cation yesterday to gatherinformation for his current studyof the education of Americanteachers.Conant and five of his associatesmet with Francis Chase, dean ofthe graduate school of education,and various professors of educa¬tion, discussing primarily the mas¬ter of arts in teaching (MAT pro¬gram)."We are trying to see how teach¬ers are educated in the UnitedStates,” said Conant. ‘‘There havebeen many complaints, but no des¬criptions” of the program here.Conant’s two-year survey, whichbegan in September, is financedby the Carnegie corporation ofNew York city, which previouslysponsored his study of the UnitedStates secondary school system.To visit SO schoolsFor his present study, Conantand his staff will visit from 25to 50 educational institutions, pub¬lic and private, to observe a repre¬sentative cross-section of the dif¬ferent techniques now used to edu¬cate teachers. Tuesday, for exam-tile he visited Northwestern uni¬versity. Thus far, said Conant, “the di¬versity we have'found is so greatfrom state to state and from in¬stitution to institution that it ishard to get a clear picture of theissues” involved now.No results of Conant’s pretentstudy will be published until allinformation has been compiled.Conant estimates this as cominginto two or three years.Two of the men accompanyingConant, John Goodland and RobertCarbone, have been connected withthe University of Chicago. Good-land, a former professor here, isnow at the University of Califor¬nia at Ix>s Angeles.Carbone, who received his Ph.Dhere last spring, is, like Goodland,working with Conant on the fieldof educating elementary schoolteachers.Cartwright on leaveWilliam Cartwright, on leave ofabsence from Duke university,where he is clmirman of the de¬partment of education; JeremiahFinch, dean of Princeton college;and Alden Dunham, an F.nglishprofessor, are also accompanyingConant. Finch is working speci¬fically on the liberal education ofteachers.Dunham is working on the pre¬paration of English teachers, andCartwnght, on social sciences insecondary schools. In discussing post-high schooleducational systems, Conant saidhe is “in favor of a mixed system,such as that .found in California.There are three types of insti¬tutions in California: the univer¬sity, with seven or eight campusesat which only the top 12% ofhigh school classes are accepted;4 year multi-purpose institutions,which don’t give degrees beyondmasters and which accept the tophalf of graduating seniors; andmany local junior colleges.These junior colleges offer botha terminal program in vocationalor business training and programequivalent to the first two years atthe University. A student whodoes well in this latter programmay transfer to the University.Conant feels that educationshould be compulsory through age16 or 17, and that the state shouldprovide free education through anAB degree.He advocates a wider distribu¬tion of scholarships, as “financialproblems limit a free choice ofcareers.” He pointed out that“most students going into the pro¬fessions are from more well-to-dofamilies,” as it is hard for othersto pay their way through mediealtraining, for instance.All students should receive somegeneral education as well as train¬ing in their own field, accordingto Conant. lie approves of the | James B. Conant, former president of Harvard university j“present scheme of medical andlaw schools, which requires threeto four years of broad pre-profes¬sional training,” although he is“not so sure about the value ofthe fourth year.”Engineering schools, which arenow lour year professional schoolsbeginning immediately alter highschool, should add a fifth year toinclude courses of a general na¬ture, he said.Conant had no comment on therecent permanent ban of commu¬nist pai ly speakers from the cam¬ puses of New York’s city-operatedcolleges, as he was not “familiarwith the details” of the case.“Although 1 believe in freedomof inquiry, 1 wouldn’t have ap¬pointed to h staff position at Har¬vard a person of known member¬ship in the Coninmnist party,” hesaid.lie considers the Communistparty a “conspiracy,” whose mcm-bei-s would not be “free agents” ifteaching, regardless of their sub¬ject matter. A Communist faculty(continued on page three)History post assignedVol. 70 — No. 15 University of Chicago, November 2, 1961 3iChicago women demonstrateOver 400 Chicago housewives demonstrated yesterday for nuclear disarmament in ac¬knowledgement of “Women for peace” day.Some University of Chicago students had been asked to organize boycott of classes inprotest against weapons' testing and in honor of the demonstration. However, no suchboycotts occurred.The women, most of whom were Chicago housewives, gathered in the ofiice of MayorRichard Daley and read a state- ' 7 " 7 ~("cut which said in part; “We as an arbitrator in disputes anddustry, with the intention of con-appeal to you today, as we take a preserver of world peace. fronting the Russian women scien-Mayor Daley expressed his tists in charge of the medical ex¬part in a nationwide effort by thewom.en of our country, to lead ourcity in showing America and theworld the way toward peace.”Mrs. Lloyd Engelbrecht of 2123North Bissell presented the state¬ment to the mayor.The statement enumerated what hibition being held there.The doctors were unavailable;however, the demonstrators intheir statement appealed to them“as women, mothers, scientists. . . to protest in your countrypleasure at seeing the women andsakl. “We know we have a stakein the future of mankind and allnations. I shall do everything Iean to assist the cause of peace.”Following the confrontation withDaley, the women joined about as we are protesting in ours.200 others and walked around “We ask you to join us In thiswere considered “essential steps Chicago’s Municipal building is- endeavor to stop the madness oftowards world peace.” Among sujng leaflets and carrying plac- self-destruction.”those steps were; cessation of ar(is which read: “Peace on earth H0th downtown and at themu lear testing; international con- or the earth in pieces;” “End the Museum there were people pickettrol or nuclear wea|H>ns; diversion arms race not the human race;”of spending from “war prepura- aiui “Children like sunshine, nottion” to peace and “world develop- shelters.”ment. ’ The women then proceeded toThe statement also called for the office of United States Sena- Was one of many in the nation’sabolition of civil defense programs tor Paul Douglas and read a state- cities. Women in New' York cityt all government levels, since ment to Douglas B. Anderson, “sat in” at the Atomic Energyivil defense would provide no de- assistant to Senator Douglas. commission; in Washington womenJ,\se in a thermonuclear war.” Similar demonstrations took spoke to government officials and‘he women asked that the press place on the south side of tlie legislators."<>r <>e used for “dissemination of city. About 200 women marched Demonstrations occurred in Los1 "l(Uvar propaganda:” and asked from Fifth Army headquarters to Angeles and-several smaller cities,'I'lvrt for the United Nations the Museum of Science and In- also. Mrs. Hanna Gray lias beenappointed chairman of theCollege history group, DeanAlan Simpson announced yes¬terday.Mrs. Gray is an assistant pro¬fessor of history in the College.She is recognized by many as adistinguished historian of theReinaissance and Reformationwith a special interest in intellec¬tual history.Mrs. Gray was educated'at Rad-cliffe and Bryn Mawr, where shelater became an instructor. Beforeshe came to Chicago, sl>e was anassistant professor of history atHarvard.The College history group hasthe responsibility of over-seeingall history courses for under¬graduates.Christian Mackauer, William Rainey Harper professor of his¬tory, defined additional functionsof the group as deciding “Whatkind of 250 (advanced under¬graduate) courses should begiven” and “what courses a stu¬dent needs to get his degree inthe field of concentration of his¬tory.” According to Mackauer,the group is “absolutely neces¬sary” to the set-up of the Col lege.The group consists of membersof the faculty who are concernedwith history, whether they areteaching courses labeled as suchor related courses. Members ofthe department of history, whichis concerned solely with graduatework in history, are also membersof the group.The College history group isone of a number of similar groupsin the College, each concernedwith one particular field of study.IVI meeting tonighting with signs saying that it wasbetter to be dead than to be sub¬jected to Communist domination.The demonstration in Chicago An open meeting- of the In¬dependent Voters of Illinois(IVI) on Campus will l>e heldtonight at 9:00 in the IdaNoyes lounge. The executiveboard will report on how the groupcan aid Alterman Leon Despres inthe fifth ward.Hal Lieberman, the campuschairman, has staled that “thepurpose of IVI on campus is toprovide students with a meaning¬ful outlet for energies in supportof liberal reform candidates fromany political party.”The IVI executive board has an¬nounced that student volunteer will maintain a “roving gd'ice" forDespres so that he may reachareas of the fifth ward that havebeen added since the recent re-districting.David Wolf, vice-chairman, willreport on the preliminary meetingof the All-Campus Committee forCivil Rights and explain IVI’s rolein fhe Committee's work.Tonight's meeting will also dis¬cuss the possibility of affiliatingwith the Americans for Democra¬tic Action on campus and theexecutive board will report onattempts to bring a series ofspeakers to campus.Dickerson denied FEPC post. * *ie Illinois senate exeeu-tive committee refused toconfirm the appointment ofC hicago attorney and Univer¬sity of Chicago graduate EarlB. Dickerson to the IllinoisJan> en)ployment practices com¬mission [FEPC] Tuesday.Hie vote was 11 to 8 and■dnctly along partly lines. The■democratic members of the com-1 mttee voted to uphold Governortverner’s appointment w'hile the'-epublicans voted against Dicker-son.Dickerson’s qualifications werequestioned by several Republicanmembers of the state legislature on the grounds that he had“knowingly belonged to severalCommunist front organizations.”Senators Paul W. Broyles andDwight Friedrich were most ener¬getic In questioning Dickerson’sloyalty.Questioned about his reasonsfor opposing Dickerson’s appoint¬ment, Broyles suggested that in¬formation might be obtained fromthe House un-American activitiescommittee (HU AC). He sub¬sequently described Dickerson as“a joiner of several organizationswhich might make hiip biased inan FEPC position.”The organizations Broyles wasreferring to are the National council of American-Soviet Friend¬ship, the Emergency Civil Liber¬ties union, and the NationalLawyers guild.Dicker-son supported leniencyfor the Rosenbergs, convicted A-bomb spies, because he opposed thedeath penalty and thought lifeimprisonment would be a moresuitable punisliment.He also expressed his viewthat HUAC and similar groupsviolated legal and personal rights.Mayor Daley wras quoted assaying, “The appointment byKemer was a good appointment.I’ve known him [Dickeisonl fora number of years. If I had beena member of the senate, I would have voted to concur in theappointment.”Douglas Anderson, assistant toUS Senator Paul Douglas, ex¬pressed regret that the committeedid what they did. “I know him[Dickerson] very well, and I suo-ported Kemer’s apointment ofhim,” said Anderson,Several community leaders liavepublicly endorsed Dickerson's ap¬pointment. Among them are:Charles Percy, board chairman ofBell & Howell company; WilliamCaples, president of the ChicagoBoard of education and vice presi¬dent of Inland Steel company. ErratumIn yesterday’s front pagestory of a grant given to UCassistant professor or sociologyIrving Sperge to study Chica¬go’s adult gangs, an importanterror was made. Through atypographical mistake a sen¬tence read. “Spergel is specifi¬cally interested in discoveringwhether different ‘patterns ofanimal behavior’ are exhibitedamong young adults living intwo types of lower class Negroneighborhoods.”The paragraph should havesaid that Spergel is investiga¬ting patterns of criminal be¬havior in these neighborhoods.LettersCivil rights group worthwhileThere can be no disagreement as to 1he abo- Ji\* i liAol* \A IJIvJ ('Ctto l/tLil tominablr conditions existing today in .the South. •*- _ ,These have boon ilie* 'subjects ol numerous edito- Pear Sir, who regret, that the long ;rials, both here and elsewhere. That notion is needed I have had a number or in- counter has not been given nand that Inis aciion must conu- soon ■■■■is-; beyond quiries about, what I. intend to do natural completion by that. (,questioning. now that the Supreme court of bunal.Nor can it hr doubted that voter registration the United States has denied my I make these parting ackn.m.is one of the most pressing problems of the South. Petition for Rehearing. For this ledgments at this time since jIn Fayette and Haywood counties, Tennessee, Negro and other reasons, 1 would do not anticipate any furiixsharecroppers are landless and starving because consider publishing in its entirety attempt, on my own initiative, t<they tried to vote.. In Macomb, Mississippi, a the enclosed letter to the Chief secure admission to the bar ofNegro farm worker is dead and several others Justice of the Supreme court or any state. As is evident fromlu-aten because In dared to register. Illinois. George Anastaplo. Mr. Justice Black’s dissent u,,' ,There is one and -only "one- way in which this The Chief Justice opinion, my qualifications an t,,problem can be overcome. There must he exten- The Supreme court of Illinois. as clearly recorded as they .sive education programs, to show Southern Negroes Springfield, Illinois. will he. An applicant's elm 1 ■ ,that voting is the most basic and important of Dear Sir, lor the bar can have little hk,our rights. rrhcy must bo gotten out to the poles The Supreme court of the to be said for or against it aftcto register and to vote,:/regardless of tlx opposi- United States denied on October litigation which has hemtion of local whites. Oth the Petition for Rehearing in extensive as to require he .campus. While it has been decided that this form committee, and that individuals on l'("s ■ i-ampus past., decade. I wish to acknow- .would .recommend me. only t.is too cumbersome for use now, the basic ‘consti- ■contribute to its funddrive. ledge also the generosity and unreflective,tuoncy’ of ihe new committee will remain..PC’s We have this opportunity t.t help Let u> not thoughtfulness of those who have Wo must all hope ..that tlx- 1various student groups. allow it to go by. supported my application. cision confirmed this -week m.I have . been obliged, in the that Illinois will be able, e\n-Letter! ( ^ "TL ' - v S' ; - ' \ ' ’* * V J 5* ; • course of this controversy, to dis- ally if not immediately, to pro-cuss critical defects in the legal vide itself a bar of the high/9 m • • M M ]f * J- 0 ' 'I profession in the United States, character and fitness. Should« ¥*1 f f W ^4^ w,M dDdf 1 a W the other hand, the virtues of position or temperament c\.^ l/l/H Otfl/I/l/f •'V*'* . ‘America ."are refleeted in the fact recognized as useful to theTo the Editor: beoaus< *1 want to make mux publication connected with tins that a student of law with re- ministration of justice m *fSyln last Wednesday's -issue, of' this you would understand me'.” great university to distort the mnrkably few supporters has state, I trust the Illinois Suprm .editorial -paper the.. Maroon con- What you did not report was truth so'-'as to v ill i fy the; person of been able for so long to-oppose court will not hesitate to c.Hitinued its past policy of misre- that the (Vylomse student IiikI t|K)M. w ho hold dilfei, m views the .power of the state and to me for any futhcr contrihutiorpresentation and irresjionsihility. explained that- he .was a --foreign; from thos< of its editors? (,arry his cause to the,, highest might honorably make to co:Under the heading -Editorial” student a no not u>. <t to \1: Un. . - | ■■ g:, j idma) tribunal m tlx land. That tutional government and the[the place w In n one might ex- ley% < \f > iiiHnig !i- ji'\, ,t u, a t. xt on join i.a- h,‘ has been abb t.. do Ibis is it- of law. Respectfully your-poet to I ind unbiased tactual re- specifically ri'quested William F. Iwti<- et hies. IVrhnn.s at ter icadmg Sl 11 woi tin ol not* < ' en by those - George Anastaploporting - so as to differentiate Hie Huckley i«. “iileast' taik dou n to i; \ on n„-i\ l.«- sU‘i x-x-nt l> moved i 'Maroon’s editorials T r o m its mv lev el." II was standing n. m to io devote a small .sect ion ol the I 11 Iflf •Vl<ll,nniVa“news”] you printed: the Ceylonese student at the time, editorial paper to unbiased NEWS. J O W i Itll UUII“Should anyone doubt the vali- These are his exact words. 1 1 Shocking idea isn’t it ? 1 And, al- bear Mr. Greenberg, : an outstanding student pubhc.i-dity of this, wc merely point to Now does anyone really beli. \e though this is almost too much My congratulations to you and tion, and it is evident that y.oiithe revolting spectacle which that Mr: Buckley’s use of simple to hope for, y ou may someday then to the staff, upon the conversion and your associates are d. V -Buckley made of himself this terms to a foreign student who re- gain the mat urity to present con- of the Maroon to a daily publics- mined to make it even moresummer when he told a Ceylonese quested him to do so is a "revolt- servative as w ell as Liberal think- tion. c -Y ; An alert, aggressive and objectivestudent that he fBuckley 1 was ing spectacle”? Or - isn’t.-it. more ing in .your paper. The editorial declaration of newspaper is always an ass. tspeaking in over-simplistic terms of a revolting spectacle” for a Richard Kinney intentions for the future seems to the community, and we wish you;* n± i mi. ^’.V. j m 11. . tei m,. l : ^ . . ;",j I x - - j - _. _ , me most interesting, and I sin^ all success in your new venture?f - ‘ ™ — - -- -- cerely hope that all of your aims Richard J DaUuwill be brought to fulfillment; Richard J. DaleyThe Maroon has always been V n- mayor, city of ChicagoNO EXTRA COST- : " T— ~ ~ " /LnTT/- - v,For the type style and keyboard that suits you best on any new portable youpurchase.t We also specialize in keyboard changes on your existing typewriter at nominalcost. HOME OF MULTIFORM1542 EAST 57th STREETOpe* Tuesdcy through Saturday, 1 p.m. to 7:30 p.m.UNIVERSITY OF CHICAGO BOOKSTORETYPEWRITER DEPARTMENT5802 ELLIS AYEOld Spice quality in a new hair tonic• Keeps hair handsomely groomed — allday • Fights dandruff • Moisturizes—pre¬vents dryness • Guaranteed non-greasyHAIR TONIC We all make mistakesERASE WITHOUT A TRACEON EATON’S CORRASABLE BONDDon’t meet your Waterloo at the typewriter—perfect)/'I typed papers begin with Corrasablc! You can rub o- ttyping errors with just an ordinary pencil eraser. !t’silwt Mixplc to <rase without a trace on t.’oilime, temper, and money!; », . • : S-Your choice of Corrasahle inlight, medium, heavy weights and / * /Onion Skin in handy 100. / /sheet packets and 500-sheet / Jboxes. Only Eaton makes §Corrasahle.A Berkshire Typewriter Paper *'**'*'>*.EATON PAPER CORPORATION {‘E’vyiTTSiTELD, MASS.Watch theNovember 16th| Early entrants chosen Cow income families given helpSome 54 members of next O’Connell said 90 applications A series of weekend camps dent will be assigned to a family the church of the family withyear’s entering class have were receiyed under the early de- sponsored by the American or occasionally to a bloclf club which they worked, or visit theonalready been accepted under and ^ °£ *?.® aPpli" Friends Service committee (organization of persons livingthe “early decision” plan, notjfjed th^ university thaf thev °^er students and faculty a block) with which he will spendannounced Charles O’Connell, di- wjjj matriculate. y an opportunity to work with the day. Saturday night tne workrector of admissions. O’Connell said the 54 admitted families of low income. which has been done will beThe plan permits students de- have a miniature .<class „ m „ Participants in the program will evaluated and the group will visitsiring to enter the University to not significantly different from the helP families in the Garfield Park some o£ the neighborhood’s en-apply in the summer between their class that entered this Conservation area to paint, plaster tertainment C®nt®rs- °n Sundayjunior and senior years of high He sajd lg jivc Jn jj]inois g in and do other light repairs,school. They are notified ol their New York, 4 in Florida 3 in Mich- Th® American Friends Serviceacceptance on October 15. igan and Indiana and* the others eemmittee is part of the QuakerUnder the plan, students must singly in a number of states. This Church- magistrate court.There is a $4 fee to cover thecost of insurance and administra¬tion, but scholarships are avail¬able. Students interested in theprogram should contact McClureMcCombs at the American Friendsmorning the students will attend - Service committee at HA 7-2533.Rally at Rochesterapply only to UC and must pro¬mise to matriculate if accepted. distribution is close to the averageof the entering class.Half fare plan dropped The aims of the program are“association and aid.” Emphasisis placed on working with thefamilies and not for them. Thisprogram has been offered forsome time now, with students Fee raise foughtStudents at tl\e University According to one student atof Rochester are planning a ^ocKhes£fr’ "tuition ra,sing seemsFive airlines are discontinuing their youth plan, underwhich many college students have been traveling for halfnormal fare. from Illinois and Wisconsin par- niass rally to protest recent to be the latest inter - collegiateticipating. increases in tuition, room andThe weekend camp begins on board payments.. Friday night with a lecture de- Rochester has raised its tuitionNational, Northeast, Northwest and United airlines have voted to orienting students to the $225, to $1500 a year. It has alsonotified the Civil Aeronauticsboard [CAB1 that as of November12, they will no longer grant thespecial rate to travelers of age 12to 21. Eastern airlines has alreadydiscontinued the policy.At a recent meeting of the CAB,chairman Alan Boyd stated thatthere had been agreement that theyouth plan was a disappointment.American airlines, however, hasstated that it is “keeping and pro¬moting” the youth plan.The reduce® fare plan wasintroduced by American airlines ona six month trial basis during thesummer to stimulate travel bycollege students and other youngpeople.Other airlines followed suit. Asookesman for Eastern airlines hasstated it joined the move only toremain in competition.He said there were no propermeans of enforcing the age limit,and “you are probably carryinga person who is going to travelanyway and' you are getting lessmoney for it.”Boyd reported many abuses ofthe plan “by young and not-so-young people,” and cited many dif¬ficulties in determining the age ofticket purchasers.Conant talks here(continued from page one)member might be teaching phy¬sics, he said, but he "would bedoing a lot of other things aswell.”Conant, who was president ofHarvard from 1933 to 1953, beforethe Supreme court outlawed theCommunist party, does not feeldifferently today.Speakers appearing on a campusrest on the relation of students toadministration, said Conant. Hefelt it best to build a “tradition ofresponsible freedom for under¬graduates in organizing their acti¬vities.”ClassifiedsFor Rent- bedroom apartment, family or studenlt,flUO month, newly decorated. 1453 E.4th PI. MU 4-3664.Home for rent.: 3 bedroom, 1 >,j. hath,carport, fully carpeted, fenced yard.Call: Mr. Zee, VI 1-1451.WantedIf you have had experience with secondor third graders and arc interested inhelping to administer a nation-wideuestionnaire during the first five"onths of ly62, contact David Jackson,'*• 3832. Traveling one week at a1‘"e; salary and expenses.m and board offered in exchangevaby sitting throe evenings a week:‘n'! helping with the dinner dishes.Mikva: BU 8-7522.Exchanges" I'1* following do in exchange foryour numpkinx?- Priscilla.PersonalsYou B. tchum Red Rider. BBESRoom), mi 3-0833. (GreenFor SaleREMEMBER:for service,foreign carhospital neighborhood and the program, raised its room rates $64, to $370,Saturday is work day. Each stu- and increased board costs $35. The demonstration is to protest“the higher costs which pay foran education which appears to bedeteriorating [few courses, over¬sized lectures, incompetent in¬structors],” he said.R' registration deadlineTomorrow is the deadline for undergraduate registrationfor the grade R.The mark R is available to most students under certainconditions. The mark signifies that no credit is earned unless thismark is later superseded by a passing mark on an examinationfor which the course marked R provided preparation. No stigmais attached to the mark R.It may not later be changed to any other grade. Usually,arrangements to register for this mark are made with theinstructor. An undergraduate may not, except with permissionof the dean of undergraduate students, register for the mark Rlater than the fifth week of the quarter in a general course pro¬viding preparation for a comprehensive examination. In otherundergraduate courses, the undergraduate should confer with hisadvisor or the administrative assistant to the senior advisor aboutthe mark R at registration or, in any case, before the end of thefifth week of the quarter. - , [ TODAY'S EVENTSEpiscopal holy communion, Bond chapt-l,11:30 am.Elementary Hebrew, Hillel. 3:30 pm.Hug Ivri, Hebrew conversation group,Hillel, 3:30 pm.Lecture, “Urban history,” social sciences122, Richard Wade, professor, depart¬ment of history, Washington univers¬ity. 4 pm.UC rifle club, instruction, practice, com¬petition, 4-6 pm.Intermediate Hebrew, 4:45, Hillel.Lutheran vespers. Bond chapel, 5:05 pm.Lecture, “Prayer - conversation withGod,” 7 pm, Ida Noyes east lounge. sponsored by Inter-varsity Christianfellowship, speaker Rosalind Rinker.“English monetary policy 1958-61.”Richard Sayers, London School ofEconomics, Sperry-Hutchinson lectureto the student-faculty seminar o<f thedepartment of economics, business east103, 7 :4S pm.Lecture, Mrs. Anna Kolheim, “Segrega¬tion in the Chicago schools,” 8:30pm, meeting 7:30 pm, Ida Noyes,sponsored by NAAOP.Meeting, Independent Voters of Illinois,lad Noyes first floor lounge, 9 pm,discussion on aiding Alderman LeonDespres.Watch theNew "HYDE PARK SHOPPING CENTER”November 16thCareer Cues“Hitch your wagon toa ‘growth’ industry—and grow with it!”Douglas Leigh, PresidentDouglas Leigh, inc.“A growth industry is a new industry that is on theway up — moving quickly, expanding fast. When youjoin a company in one of the growth fields you havesomething extra working for you ... you grow up with itTo find out which industry is right for you, try this: Asksomeone in a good investment office to give you a list ofthe industries he considers ‘growth industries’. Data Processing, plastics, and electronics are a few examples.Then pick the one you have a leaning toward, and getthe names of the most progressive companies in thatfield.One thing I’d like to point out from my own career is... a growth industry may also be an old business that’son the verge of new development Shortly after leavingcollege I found this situation in the Outdoor Advertisingfield. What my associates and I did was to employ color,action and motion to dramatically personify the productbrand or services being advertised. In doing so, we de¬veloped the modern type ‘Spectaculars’ that talked, blewsmoke rings, soap bubbles, etc.... signs that changed theface of Broadway and ihe famous Times Square area.This is just one example. The really important thingto remember is this: When you set your sights on a career,aim for an industry that is going to grow, so you can growwith it. It’s the difference between a rocket that blastsoff, and one that just sits there. Good luck!”Have a real cigaretfe-CamelTHE BEST TOBACCO MAKES THE BEST SMOKE. B. J. Reynold*Tobaixo ComiunjWtustoii-Sal. iuNorth CarolinaNov. 2, mi » C H I C A 6)0 MAROON • 3"Never godown therealone, Gladysthat’sFraternityRow7"Sports NewsIM grid star 'de-pantsedPsi Upsilon beat the pantsoff Delta Upsilon star Den De-Keyrel in fraternity flag foot¬ball league action Tuesday.DeKeyrel, the circuit’s scoringleader, was carrying the ball whena Psi Upsilon player reached forthe yellow flag and instead cameup with BeKeyrel’s Bermudashorts. While penalties areassessed for tackling, the rules donot provide for this occurrence.Actually, Delta Upsilon was PsiUpsilon’s toughest opponent of theyear, losing only 34-0. Psi Upsilon[5-0] is firmly entrenched in firstplace.Laughlin house of the divisionalleague also sports a 5-0 slate,and is tied with the Midway Mon¬sters for first place.Swimming prelims start •Swimming preliminaries will beheld this afternoon in Bartlettpool. A large field is entered inthe seven events. Fraternity league standing*Psi Upsilon Wi L0Phi Gamma Delta * tPhi Sigma Delta 2 8Delta Upsilon 2 32 8Phi Delta Theta ........ »> 8Phi Kappa Psi 2Zeta Beta Tau 1 3Fraternity ScoringDen DeKayrel. Delta Upsilon . Pts.40Bill Spady, Psi Upsilon . . . . • 32Larry Kaplan. Psi Upsilon • • • 81Gary Pearson, Psi Upsilon 31James Young, Phi Gamma Delta , -TDivisional league standing*Laughlin house W5 L0Midway Monsters 4 0Chgo. Theol. Seminary . . 8 1Roa Ipsas 3 IJacks 8 1Business #1 2 2Fine Arts Quintet 2 2Academy i 3M udders i 3Mathews l 8Hitchcock 0 4Business — 2 e 5Divisional scoringBob Seiuraoce, Business # l Pts.26Jim Link, Laughlin house 25George Nash, Monsters ... 24John Thompson. Res Ipsas • • . !<>Dick Segal. Jacks IN Soccer team losesThe University of Illinois-Chi-Scage defeated the University ofCliicago 5 to 1 in a soccer matchat Stagg field yesterday. r 5,000 art photos donatedA gift of 5,000 art photographs has been made by theSamuel H. Kress foundation to the University of Chicago artdepartment, to be added to the Max Epstein collection.The Epstein archive, a part of the art department’sresearch facilities for 25 years, is (an museum jn New York Citya collection of 300,000 photographs collection,of works of ar1 —the fourth largestcollection in the country next tothose of Harvard, the Metropoli-Memorial services heldThe fourth annual memorial Arthur G. Boy.x*, assistant pro-• r t u., of,, fessor of romance languages:service for faculty, staff, stu- “dents, and others iifliliatedwith the University of Chica¬go who died during the past yearwas held in Rockefeller Memorialchape! Sunday.W. Barnett Blakcmore, dean ofthe chapel, conducted the service.Jerald C. Brauer, dean ol UC’sdivinity school, pr eached the ser¬mon entitled “Tnr Work of OurHands.” The scnptire readingwas given by President GeorgeBeadle Ernest J. Chave, professor in theDivinity School; Fay-Cooper Cole,professor of Anlhro[>ology; John T.Gross, instructor in Pediatries:Berard Haile, resident associate inAnthropolgy; Jeanette B. Oven-chain, resident associate in An¬atomy; Arthur P. Scott, professorof History; Edith Parker, associ¬ate professor of Geography; andYves R. Simon, professor commit¬tee on Social Thought.Stephen Jetiks and Robert Wolf,students at the University. and the Frick collection.The Kress foundation, institutedin the 1930‘s, is known for its giftsof art works to the National gal¬lery in Washington, and some 20other art museums throughout U\ocountry- In March, 1960, the foun¬dation began a program of collec¬tions for student study, which aredistributed to universities—amongthem, the University of Kansas,the University of Wisconsin, Obor-lin. and Pomona.Edward Maser, new' chairman ofthe art de{>artment. helped beginthis program as director of the artmuseum at Kansas. lie cited the5,000 picture gift as extremelyvaluable and an important, addi¬tion to the present collection. Thegift will comist of photographstaken of the art w'orks currentlybeing distributed by the founda¬tion to art museums; among theseare 3.000 works tor the Nationalgallery.Sanskrit has no tragedyA literature which excluded from India. His concluding talk-tragedy, discontent, strife, or vv*^ ^ delivered in Breasted audi-uneasiness—this is the phi-anwhich torium of the Oriental institute,, 1155 East 58 street, at 4 pmlosophy of Sanskrit, an an- Tuesday.cient Hindu literature, which iscurrently being discussed in aseries of lectures on campus.Professor Sushil Kumar De, pro¬fessor emeritus of Sanskrit at theUniversities of Dacca, Calcutta,and Jadapur has been presentingthe series, entitled ‘‘Sanskrit Po¬etics in the Light of WesternAesthetics.”Considered the world’s foremostinterpreter of Sanskrit aesthetictheory, De is giving the lectureseries as part of a University ob¬servance of the centennial of thebirth of the Indian poet, Rabin¬dranath Tagore, recipient of aNobel Prize.In explaining the theory' of San¬skrit, De said: “Sanskrit providesa tranquillity of the mind. It helpsyou rise above all trouble. It’s acontemplation of the beautiful. Itmakes you forget the ugly thingsof life.”The Sanskrit literature em¬bodies the Rasa theory of philo¬sophy—the “sentimental or emo¬tional” realization w'hich comesfrom the contemplation of beauty,De said. “What is important in theRasa [the word means sentiment]philosophy is emotion — not thenatural emotion but that w'hich ispleasurable. Western aestheticsdo not treat this inner emotion;they are more concerned with ex¬pression.”De. 71, w as educated in Englandand Germany, and arrived at UCREMEMBER:for sales,foreign corsales The memorial sendee was con¬ducted for:John J. McDonough, trusteeMeyer Kestnbaum, member ofboard of directors. Internationalhouse; David B. -Stern, honorarytrustee: ami Lloyd R. Steere, for¬mer treasurer of the University. 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