Arendt discusses 'constitution7 Russian Zvorikine speaks“Constitution” in both itselements formed the focalpoint of author and politicalscientist Hannah Arendt’sthird lecture “On Revolution,”yesterday evening.Miss Arendt, author of The Or¬igins of Totalitarianism and TheHuman Condition and visiting lec¬turer for the Committee on SocialThought, road her two hour lec¬ture to an audience of nearly 200in Breasted Hall.Miss Arendt discussed the twoim{*ortant ' elements with whichrevolutionary leaders had to con¬cern themselves when coming toconstitution: the act of constitut¬ing freedom and the republic built around it, and the result of thatact.She considered the influenceswhich were exerted upon the legis¬lators by theories of social con¬tract and the events which re¬sulted. She spoke of Montes¬quieu’s insight, borne by JohnAdams, that “i>ower must be op¬posed by power ... as well aseloquence by eloquence.”She mentioned the monumentaldifficulties faced by revolutionaryleaders who lack an absolute bywhich to determine infallibly theirlegislation in forming a govern¬ment. She stated that Jefferson’s“We hold these truths to be self-evident . . was one of the waysby which the problem was success¬fully overcome in the American revolution.The contract of power andauthority formed the final portionof her lecture. “Revolutionarybeginnings,” “constitutions andfoundations in the terms of res¬toration,” and the “constitution-worship” of the American peoplewere all touched upon.The final session of the four-lecture seminar will take placethis Friday at 8 pm in the samelocation. Miss Arendt will thenconsider “The Revolutionary Spiritand Why it Was LostY Anatoli Zvorikine, profes¬sor at the Institute of Historyand Culture in Moscow, gavethe first of a two part lecture-seminar yesterday on the “Socialand Moral Consequences of theScientific and Technical Revolu¬tion.”In his lecture Zvorikine staledthat man must advance spiritu¬ally and morally as he advancestechnologically, and that, aboveall, man must not lose his identity to the machine in this automatedage.Zvorikine spelled the doom ofcatpitalism when he asserted thatin order to establish the necessarysocio-industrial relationship, themeans of production must beowned by “society” rather thanthe individual.Zvorikine concluded that majorpart of his lecture with the pre¬diction that under socialist sys¬tems, “People will be educatedand raised under the finest condi¬tions in man’s history.”Vol. 71 — No. 12 University of Chicago, Wednesday, Oct- 10, 1962Wick to query U realtyDean of Students Warner Wick yesterday promised a thorough investigation of theUniversity Realty Management Company’s (URM) questioning a prospective studenttenant about her roommate’s racial origin.His action was prompted by a letter from a student in the College, which appearedBeforeStudents scrutinizing paintings from Shapiro collectionon first floor of Ida Noyes. Works will be available forrenting on Thursday. Claim numbers, to be honored on afirst come first served basis, will be distributed startingot 8:30 am. The works themselves may be claimed at 3:30pm, upon presentation of 50 cents and an ID card.Peace candidates hereTwo independent “p e a c ecandidates” for Congress willspeak at UC on Thursday, Oc¬tober 11, at a;\ open meetingsponsored by the Student PeaceUnion (SPU). The meeting willtake place at 7:15 pm in BreastedHall.Dr. Robert Cosbey, a RooseveltUniversity professor, Ls runningfor Congress in Illinois’ 13th dis¬trict. Sidney Lens, a member ofthe Advisory Council of the SPU,is campaigning for election in the8th district. The two candidateswill discuss their platform andcampaign plans at the Thursdaymeeting.Cosh j and Lens are running on“peace platforms,” in which theyadvocate cessation of nuclearweapons tests, withdrawal of USsupport for “corrupt” regimessuch as Formosa and Spain, plan¬ning for an economy not based onthe arms race, and the conclusionof agreements on demilitarizedareas in central Europe.Recently, the SPU decided tosupport Lens in his candidacy. TheSPU feels that such “peace cam¬paigns” represent an effective wayof bringing the issue of peace tothe community and of building upa “peace constituency.” The SPU is sponsoring Thursday’s meetingin an effort to encourage interestand participation in both Lens’and Cosbey’s campaigns.UC Professor of PhilosophyRobert Poulter will also speak atthe upcoming meeting. He willdiscuss the idea of building upa “peace constituency” amongvoters. in last Tuesday’s Maroonbeing given an apartment byIJRM, wrote the student, one ofher roommates was “asked if anyot' the occupants of the apartmentwere either Negro or Chinese.”Yesterday afternoon, the stu¬dent who dealt with URM gaveWick a full explanation of the in¬cident. After getting the student’sconfirmation of the ^letter’s con¬tents, Wick said he would contactall the University and URM per¬sonnel involved.Certain University administra¬tors and URM employees had pre¬viously expressed doubts as to theveracity of the letter’s contents.The student explained that sinceher roommates were not in Chi¬cago this summer, she wascharged with finding an apartmentfor the coming year.She was referred by the Hous¬ing Office to the University RealtyCompany, which operates many ofVC’s properties and which an-Frat quad plans shownArchitect Harry VVeese lastnight unveiled his plans forthe University’s proposed fra¬ternity quadrangle.Weese, who designed PierceTower, made his presentation at adinner of the Alumni Inter-Fra¬ternity Council at the QuadrangleClub. In addition to the archi¬tect’s rendering, legal aspects ofbuilding the quadrangle were dis¬cussed.Weese’s sketches, which havenot yet been made public, werebased on recommendations madethis summer by present fraternitymembers.The University last June ex¬pressed a willingness to make landavailable without charge to thefraternities for a new quadrangle, just west of Pierce Tower between55 and 56 Streets, Ellis and Green¬wood Avenues.Fraternities would be givenforty-year renewable leases onthe land and would pay justenough to amortize the federalcollege housing loan that wouldbe required to build the houses.Most of UC’s nine fraternitieshave indicated their desire tomove to the quadrangle. notinced this summer that itwould open some of its commer¬cial buildings to students. Theapartment she has rented is runby URM.After showing the studenl anapartment, the agent, who hadnot met her roommates, asked thestudent if there were anythingabout them that he should know’.After the student answered byextolling her roommates’ scholar¬ship and character, the agent re¬peated his question. Finally, he be¬came more specific; w'ere any ofher roommates Negro or Chinese?Although the building w’as in¬tegrated. the agent explained. Uni¬versity Realty did not w'ant it tobe monopolized by any one ethnicor racial group.The student, who consideredthe question offensive and un¬necessary, emphasized that shedid not feel her getting the apart¬ment depended on her having noNegro or Chinese roommates.Last winter, however, the Uni¬versity of Chicago chapter of theCongress of Racial Equality(CORE) staged tw'o-w’eek sit-indemonstrations in the administra¬tion building to protest the Uni¬versity’s discriminatory rentalpolicies. Among the propertiesabout which CORE complainedwere those URM runs for theUniversity.One of the results of the sit-inswas the University’s publicly de¬claring that it w'ould never dis¬ criminate against any student orfaculty member in the housing itowns in the neighborhood.According to Wick, (he agent’squestion “isn’t in any clear viola¬tion of the rules.” hut “it doesviolate Ihe spirit” of the agree¬ment ending the sit-ins.If a student is referred to theUniversity Realty Corporation hythe Housing Office, URM is houndto rent an apartment to him ifany are available, he said.The student’s account sounded“contrary to all instructions”URM has received, ho said.Wick said he is not sure aboutthe propriety of questions such asthe agent’s, as it did not inter¬fere with the rental of the apart¬ment. He referred to the student'scomplaint as a “complication,”which was not foreseen in en¬acting the University’s policy ofno discrimination against studentsor faculty.Emmett Dedmon namedSun-Times exec, editorMarshall Field Jr., publisher ofthe Chicago Sun-Times, announc¬ed the api>ointment of EmmettDedmon as executive editor. Ded¬mon is a former ’ editor of theMaroon.Dedmon succeeds Lawrence S.Fanning, wrho was made executiveeditor of the Daily News. He wasformerly a managing editor of theSun-Times.32 fewer students enrolledon quadrangles this fallThirty-two fewer studentshave enrolled on the Quad¬rangles this autumn than didlast autumn, announced Regis¬trar William Van Cleve yesterday.This drop, representing one halfof one per cent of last year’s en¬rollment, took place despite thefact that extension studentstaking credit courses have movedto campus from the University’sDowntown Center.Although the exact number ofextension students taking creditcourses on the Quadrangle hasnot yet been released, there were170 extension students takingcredit courses last year.Total Quadrangle enrollmentdropped from 6,199 to 6,167- The170 credit extension students are not included in last year’s countof 6,199 student.The number of non-credit ex¬tension students who do theircourse w’ork in the Loop, hasdropped from 1.500 to an esti¬mated 600. This is primarily dueto the decreased number ofcourses offered at the DowntownCenter this year, said Van Cleve.Enrollment in the Collegedropped 42 students from 2,209 to2,167.In the divisions, enrollment in¬creased by 47 students, from2,425 to 2,472 students, a gain of1.9%.In the University’s professionalsclwols, excluding the school ofmedicine, which w'as tallied withthe division of biological sciences,enrollment decreased by 43 stu¬dents, a loss of 2.8%, SUMMARY OF QUADRANGLES (a) ENROLLMENTACADEMIC UNIT ACADEMIC STATUS (b) Aut 62 Aut 61 Change1 2 3 4-9 Total (c ) Total No. %College 2127 40 2167 2209 -42 -1.9Biological Sci 42 185 21 248 252 -4Medicine, Sch of 257 1 258 264 -6Total: Biological Sd 299 185 22 506 516 -10Humanities 278 261 47 486 467 19Physical Sciences ' T 185 289 27 501 505 -4Social Sciences 9 465 453 61 979 937 42Total: Divisions 1227 1088 157 2472 2425 47 1.9Business, Grad Sch of 319 65 4 388 441 -53Divinity School 125 100 42 267 322 -55Education, Grad Sch of 99 3 102 76 26Law School 422 2 424 404 20Grad Library Sch 78 12 3 93 82 11Social Serv Admin 217 22 9 248 240 8Total: Schools 1260 199 63 1522 1565 -43 -2.8 1Total: Graduates 2487 1287 220 3994 3990 4Others (c) 6(a) 260 6 6260 6Total: Quadrangles 2127 2487 1287 266 6167 6199 -32 -0.5(a) Enrollments in the Downtown and Executive Programsof the Graduate School of Business and enrollment ofnon-degree students registering in the Loop for Ex-' tension-sponsored credit courses on the Quadranglesare not reported here.Degree student registering for Extension courses onthe Quadrangles are tallied in the tab'e above in theAcademic Unit status to which each has been formallyadmitted for a degree.The six (6) "Others” in Academic Status 2 are en¬rolled this Quarter solely for Extension courses takenin partial fulfillment of MBA degree requirements forwhich they are working thru the Downtown or Exe¬cutive Programs of the Graduate School of Business.(b) The codes for Academic Status are as follows: 1-Un¬dergraduates, 2-Graduates working for Masters andprofessional degrees, 3-Graduates working for doctor¬ate degrees, 4-9 Non-degree students. (c) All non-degree students (Studcnts-at-large, Post-doc¬toral students, Laboratory School students, and Spe¬cial students enrolling thru the Divinity School forQuadrangles courses) in the "Others"’ category since,these students could not be viewed as candidates fordegrees in any Academic Unit, and, further, often theirclassification in a given Academic Unit was arbitrary(e.g.,) SAL taking one courses in the College and onein the Humanities Division). In order that total en¬rollments for the Table preceding b- comparable tothose reported at the close of the first week of theAutumn, 1961, Quarter, those non-degree students arecounted - as they were then - in the several AcademicUnits. Future reports will, however, show only studentsin Status “I,” ‘‘2,’’ and “3” as belonging in a specificunit.ClassifiedsProtests consul’s facts All hail twist renewalHI El 11 M , , ■ ... , <••,.. , ,i'( r the < it ■ ■ i, i ■ < • i *' 11 u t t ■ t i' ■« ,-v , i ;•;• ■ > • i ■ t. . p d Ml c ]■ I > ;ii! ;,s| Wedn.-Mi.ix '"'S1” N'" 1 ’lollop , < si' (■<! i!n v, lvl, rv ,,f the' £ . . ^ , . W omen's I"N>i in w.i - - •• '• i, ,..(i w ,i m,> l-.« n nsrlcv andi< P consu ent th< only When , rl u ki says Poland ,, i]loUf .. snul rim firsecurate statement he made was found the; United Slates much less of classes passed without a singlelat "Polish-So\ iet relations have sympathetic to its aspirations thtin student cutling a single class.. bt lit” " | m sh I t si , g0 ’ ft O' j <; i <lent < d\ UOlilti !;onT/<' tl»t I , ^ ai Xvi ?!v o-,' fif»t CliSs t> . -• ,,, in^o atMfteil ;_Vvo' o-yoo-;iremlin puppet despite its anti- on p0]an(j by Stalin. Roosevelt weelc gloomy skies fort old un-■ d. ..t-roed ^ this with the under- ' namabte disast' i- i«> ■ •>'!=. In1 ,; ■ , > ' ’ t,, <f i - * ■!■ nin<'lT) t ’ ! * w' <jf ; 1 * 11 f 1 * - ' r 11 1 s L, ■ampus of a great university woui(j bo oiie of national unity, universe, had been tampered with:onsul Turbanski could get away but attempts by the Peasant party the Wednesday Night Tvist PartyMh Mich statements as that the nmjer Mikolaicz\k to collaborate uas no more .Bnommate (want t d :,r‘to sh.wo laipe-fumivhtd apt. with 2 mfd stutb nts, p;in-r mo. MI 3-7.092..-> >oom apt.r ' unftn n. h andti.i i k 1st if loot. <1111 iiftir 0 pn. I B.nuui i mini i i-v.inu.in- _ _ #i. . , . .chev announced to the Supreme for SO flight leadersVs" 1 ■’Fui trij - to Ft •!-< p.ndaction on Berlin until after the .. ,outcome of ihe Twist Party, stipends will be offered to theI tt 'In i I M I lull'll un- w M j 11.1 \ . I- -lojldot « of ' '' ‘ ' 1.1’ 1 Ipt 11 ' - i■i 11 ■ • ■ 'n !•.'*!*( tins 15itn111m r. ,'tii-V Mans th nl JM&«f^C Ci'yVt.i:^-^ny;. '/‘r!i li ■ [ |g | ■ 1 ’’ ’1 ‘1 *f '<With n ■ 1 h t of these flight leadei|| I • - .y.'ln- . s"-'r I <m te '* ’ I- HI,'V i < 1 I II v ’ ' ‘' ‘: \"n' ,*-'/■ \' fe 1111 .|.f V It h t! (■ Ms|\( KliKI.t ' 4 >* s< i ai angementsItK IIAKI) MANDEL, Interested turn ■ ■ .< naiioi an or. so rs *: \\ hSOC IETY OI rWISTINGSVlMPATIlIZERS) ' Friday at extension 3272.AAVVAA\AAAAW\AAAVtXAAAV\VAAAAVAAWY\AAA\\AAAAt\ SHflRE-fl-RIDE CENTRAL |..../ Offer’s A Unique New SerVice-To Our Mobile Society *Riders to Any City Nationwide.Subscribe NOW! For Your Trip Home on Thanksgiving. or < 'If ; i" a'- - Kit < i• ’< If li fm u al innNEW PAPERBACKS IN PHILOSOPHYChoppfll The Philosophy of MindBurnet: Greek Philosophy: Thales to PlatoNettleship: Lectures on the Republic of PlotoAyer: The Foundations of Empirical KnowledgeTHE UNIVERSITY OF CHICAGO BOOKSTORE5802 ELLISTIi-ui *. Mi.ii .tlnu I ' . . ' TELEPHONE FI 6-7263§'n#Today's EventsHoly Communion: Pond ('linpol, 7:15am, , .. ■. .Lecture: ‘‘Some ObK-rvatitins on theFine Stnivture of tht* Lateral LineOrr'iin of (he Sea Kel.” hy Ur. Kiy-eihi. professor Hiroshima University,Anatomy Piiild'i ny, Room 101, 1:30Pft'J.s,Lecture: ■■Business Policy and BusinessEdueation,” by Dr. Geoi’ite Shultz,Busints-s East InS, 1 ::it) pm.,'‘B#ist@ . Actiyatton in- CinntChromosome i.’* Zoology 29. 3:3n |im,Lecture: “Piplomaey.” by W. L. Bi au-lae. SS 122. 4:00 pm.Lecture: “Inf!uf noe of A ut omation . onIndustrial. Te<-hniral. and Offii>«Worktu's'.** Cobb 110 4:00 pm.Carillon Recital: Daniel Robbins. Uni-vtisity Cai illonnenr, Reie-ke-fellerChattel, 5;00 ]>ni.English Class i i tB. 8:30 pm. ‘ wUn!versity Symphony rehearsal: Maud elH 7:70 pm. rBasketball meeting today.All students interestedin playing: varsity andfreshnum basketball art* in¬vited to a meeting in theTrophy Room of Bartlelt Gymtoday at 4 pm.Those students who cannotattend should contact GoachJoe Stampf or Goach JohnAngelus. Flavor? Full flavor in a filter cigarette.That’s why Winston is America’s best-sellingfilter cigarette! Next time, smoke Winston.PURE WHITE,MODERN FILTERplus FILTER - BLEND UP FRONT1962 RAMBLER $d|QQ!CLASSIC 107<Power Steering, fullyequippedSaving $1,000Bring in Ad tor This PriceGruby’s Rambler4555 S. CottageBO 8-1111 't» aTITS j I /fil VvLUIIaLu. o} % $§f$i'i m Ut ' •- * - *ii . • • 7■'i'V'V - :'f * >- *■* Oct 10, 1962CHICAGO MAROONCordier will speakon necessity of UNAndrew Cordier, former Executive Assistant to theSecretary - General of the United Nations will lecture on“How Necessary is the UN to the US?” at InternationalHouse at 3:30 Sunday afternoon, October 21.Cordier, now Dean of the Schoolof International Affairs at Colum- i „(ikM(iai, b.miiahbi. University, received his MA Lus*bader Realtor won tand PhD from the University of COmploinontsChicago in 1923 and 1926, respec- A representative of the M.!'Vly in«o 1Qi1 h 4 , , Lustbader Company has beenFrom 1928 to 1941 ne traveled , , .extensively, surveying crises in the footed as saying. We neversudetcniand, Danzig, and Para- renew the lease of anyonegiiay, while also serving as Chair- who complains to the Departmentman of the Department of History of Health.”and Political Science at Main-lies- Henry O. Handler, a former stil¬ler College, Indiana, and lecturer dent in the UC medical school,in social sciences for the Indiana said that Lustbader made thisI niversity Extension Division. statement as justification for hisHe represented the US Depart- failure to renew Handler’s leasemen) of State in the 1945 London in 1957.mooting leading to the establish- This information was turned upnicnt of the United Nations. by the Tenants on KimharkMr. Cordier became Assistant to Organization (TKO) who havethe UN Secretary - General in recently been involved in the fight1946. serving under Trygve Lie, to prevent Lustbader from evict-nag Hammarskjold, and U Thant, ing the Nathan Kanlrowitzes. TheDuring this time he was Special The Kantrowitzes’ lease was notRepresentative of the Secretary- renewed October 1 apparently bc-General in Korea (1952), in con- cause the Kantrowitzes had actednection with the Mount Scopus as spokesmen for the tenants ofcrisis (1958), and in the Congo the building in protesting against(I960). building code violations.The lecture is being sponsored Handler lived in the same build-in ihe American Association for ing (5342 S. Kimbark) that thetlie United Nations and the De- Kantrowitzes are currently fight-partments of History and Political ing to stay in. The building hadScience of the Univers-Uy of Chi- the same real estate agent and thecago. same owner as it currently has.All town houses soldAll of the town houses in the 55 Street developmenthave been sold and the great majority of the UniversityApartments have been rented, according to Mr. Charles Mc-Cumber, manager of the apartments.The 60 town houses ranged inprice from $25,000 to $35,000. Allhave been sold, and most are orwill be occupied by their originalpurchasers. Resale value of thetown houses is high — higher thanthe original cost — one UC fac¬ulty member who was transferred1o another position sold his for$50,000.At present ”99,2% per cent”of the 540 apartments are rentedand occupied. A studio rents for$120 and up; a one bedroom apart¬ment for $140 and up; a two bed¬room-two hath apartment rangesfrom $175 to $235. Demand foruniversity-owned housing in allprice ranges has been great. “Icouldn’t even rent you a $235apartment today,” remarked Mr.McCumber.He noted that although few UCundergraduates live in the high-rises, a large per cent are rentedto UC graduate students, facultyand personnel. Mrs. Beadle’smother is among the fortunaterenters.To the east of the town housesis vacant ground. This land willprobably be used for more townhouses in the future, but thereare no official plans regarding thisas yet. Since many of the houses Ch arity drive starts soonThe Crusade of Mercy, a citywide non-profit charity organization, lias opened officeson the UC campus and is working in preparation for the campus drive which startsOctober 15.The Crusade, which opened on a citywide basis October 1, is exclusively a charitydrive for the benefit of the under- .were purchased after seeing onlythe designs, it is most likely thatthe contractors, Webb and Knapp,Inc. will take advantage of thepopularity of their constructionand fill the remaining empty lotson 55 street with miniature ver¬sions of Holiday Inn. privileged.Its method of operation is rel¬atively simple. Letters are mailedout to prospective donors, thenreplies in the forms of cash giftsare distributed to the variousfoundations and other recipientson the Crusade’s list.Last year the Crusade in Chi¬cago netted a total of $15,750,000.UC’s contribution to this sum was$38,626. The total goal for thisyear is $16,115,000, an increaseof $365,000.James M. Sheldon Jr., assistantto President Beadle, who is incharge of the UC Crusade, voicedhis holies in the above mentionedletter to faculty, staff, and stu¬dents that the latter would con¬siderably increase their donationsthis year over last year’s.He pointed out that only 30per cent of the UC communitycontributed last year, and statedthat, with the participation of all,recipients of Crusade money canbe greatly helped.W. Ronald Sims, an aide ofSheldon, indicated in an inter¬view’ that one of the reasons UCis interested in the program isthat Bobs Roberts Hospital andthe Home for Destitute CrippledChildren, both located on campus,get mueh of their operating bud¬get from the Chicago CommunityFund, which in turn is supportedby the Crusade.The Hyde Park and Kenwoodneighborhoods are also helped inthat neighborhood and YMCAclubs are directly aided by thefund.The UC collection program, ac¬cording to Sims, is divided intotwo steps. First, the introductoryletter is mailed, then the depart¬ment chairmen follow it up bysoliciting members of their staffs.In the citywide program, bus¬iness firms are the object of theCrusade. The method is exactlythe same. This year the campaignwill be directed to 25,000 businessThose students graduatingthis year who want jobs inteaching or in business and in¬dustry are urged to registerwith the UC Career Counselingand Placement office in theReynolds Club, room 200. Fellowships announcedInformation about applications for 1953-64 NationalScience Foundation Cooperative Graduate Fellowship and1963 Summer Fellowships for Graduate Teachings Assist¬ants is now available from the Committee on Fellowshipsand Scholarships in the Administration Building, room 201.National Science Foundation Cooperative Graduate Fellowshipseach carry a stipend of $2,400 plus tuition and fees for a twelve monthperiod or $1,800 plus tuition and fees for a nine month period.These fellowships are awarded on the basis of ability to any personwho (a) is a citizen of the United States (or will be by March 1,1963); (b) have demonstrated ability and special aptitude for advancedtraining in the sciences, and (c) have been admitted 1o graduatestatus by the participating institution prior to beginning theirfellowship tenures.Applications are submitted through the institution at which theapplicant proposes to study. The closing date for local x'eceipt ofapplications is November 1, 1962.Award announcements will bo made shortly after March 15, 1963.» * *The deadline for applications to the Foreign Area FellowshipProgram is November 1.They are available to US and Canadian citizens, and permanentUS residents who can give evidence of their intention to becomecitizens.Stipends for study in the US include monthly maintenance allow¬ance of $210 plus allowances for dependents, tuition, required fees andnecessary transportation. Stipends for study abroad vary accordingto country.* * *Mr. Bruce Harrison of the Navy Department will be at the Officeof Career Counseling and Placement on Monday ,October 15 to discussthe Department’s Management Intern Program.Students interested in securing information about the programmay meet with Mr. Harrison at 3:30 pm in room 202, Reynolds Club.Orchestra Hall "Witty, bright, clever folkballads with biting irony" FRI.. OCT. 12. 8:15THE LIMELITERSORCHESTRA HALL SUN. AFT., OCT. 14. 3:30The Modern Jazz Quartetjohn lewis, pianopercy heath, bass milt jackson, vibraharpconnie kay, drums and industrial firms and their1,350,000 employees.Not all the w’ork is done by theoffices of the Crusade. 50,000 per¬sons are expected to work asvolunteers this year in jobs rang¬ing from clerical to door to doorwork.More than 1,000,000 personsdonated to the fund last year,and more than 600,000 people werehelped as a result.The recipients of the program include 142 welfare agencies andfoundations. Among the betterknown are the Chicago branch ofthe Boy Scouts of America, theCampfire Girls, Chicago BoysClubs, the Red Cross, and theSalvation Army.The Crusade’s organizers esti¬mate that whatever they manageto collect will fall short by ap¬proximately $1,000,000 of theneeds of the agencies they intendto help.Qft&npis withMwShulman(Author of “I Was a Teen-age Dwarf,'Dobie GiLoves of, Mis," etc.) 'The ManyWHAT TO WEAR TILL THE DOCTOR COMESNow that you have enrolled and paid your fees and boughtyour books and found your way around campus and learned tohate your roommate, it is time to turn to the most importantaspect of college life. I refer, of course, to clothes.What does Dame Fashion decree for the coming school year?(Incidentally, Dame Fashion is not, as many people believe, afictitious character. She was a real Englishwoman who lived inElizabethan times and, indeed, England is forever in her debt.During the invasion of the Spanish Armada, Dame Fashion—not yet a Dame but a mere, unlettered country lass namedMoll Flanders—during the invasion, I say, of the SpanishArmada, this dauntless girl stood on the white cliffs of Doverand turned the tide of battle by rallying the drooping morale ofthe British fleet with this stirring poem of her own composition:Dott't Ihj gutless,Men of Britain.Swing your cutlass.We ain't quiltin'.Smash the Spanish,Sink their boats,Make 'em vanish,Like a horse makes oats.For Gooel Queen Bess,Dear sirs, you gottaMake a messOf that Armada.You won't fail!Knock 'em flat!Then we'll drink aleAnd stuff like that.\t dieTickets: $2, $3, $4, $5 at box office or by mail orderPlease enclose stamped, self-addressed envelope. As a reward for these inspirational verses Queen Elizabethdubbed her a Dame, made her Poet Laureate, and gave herthe Western Hemisphere except Duluth. But this was not theextent of Dame Fashion’s service to Queen and country. In1589 she invented the laying hen, and she was awarded a life¬time pass to Chavez Ravine. But she was not to end her daysin glory. In 1591, alas, she was arrested for overtime joustingand imprisoned for thirty years in a butt of malmsey. This laterbecame known as Guy Fawkes Day.)But I digress. Let us get back to campus fashions. Certain tobe the rage again this year is tl*e cardigan (which, curiouslyenough, was named after Lord Cardigan, who commanded theEnglish fleet against the Spanish Armada. The sweater is onlyone product of this remarkable Briton’s imagination. He alsoinvented the glottal stop, the gerund, and the eyelid, withoutwhich winking, as we know it today, would not he possible).But I digress. The cardigan, I say, will be back, which is, Ibelieve, cause for rejoicing. Why? Because the.cardigan hasnice big pockets in which to carry your Marlboro Cigarettes—and that, good friends, is ample reason for celebration as all ofyou will agree who have enjoyed Marlboro’s fine, comfortable,mellow flavor and Marlboro’s filter. So why don’t you slip intoyour cardigan and hie yourself to your tobacconist for somegood Marlboros? They come in soft pack or flip-top box. Cardi¬gans come in pink for girls and blue for boys. © io«2 m» sbuimaaCardigans or pullovers—it's a matter of taste ., . And so isMarlboro a matter of taste—the best taste that can possiblybe achieved by experienced growers and blenders—by set-ence, diligence, and tender loving care. Try a pack.do- of >out choice. You will also fm |elective opi>ort unities tin!the do not depend on pierequisites ''other than the obligatory „genet it 5including-h/opport uni t |for&jndiv idual’’' tutorial, arid;p\o- ;oliv <‘i tillg je< t \v • >l k ?J.Wy'are ■a'18inall liberal .arts cut;- Alcgev w ith an "able staff dedicut ,-<|to teaching, existing'on the cam'. ^B|.pus of/a large university dedicate*! tJyBjto research* and scholarship.-' Tim jlBf-■Biology/Section has tried to com- "Ihi ne the advantages of both .,f 1*1U*1 these wdrfds* in a unique progrmithat/enforces a veiv respectahlo /minimum and provides opportmt-,it\ for an' interesting and almost Iunlimited maximum. ? You and - I M X^hijs^|jqf;Syqu^!whb|phay^journals si'em hat into I lie howets ol. (iat es- many*v Make? -Hall >tov investigateforMherpo-^\5unihlings there,will* have/^seon^vveltKwqrkmen'gnioving pi|M*s about iamb coursesmaking ‘"'other, surrealistic^ ImTHeft p'royemehtss, .They - are ■ cten rooms' to project ’laboratories-/that*?wifl\he equipped with a,,yar-.in^..superior; 'iet> of,(faciIities,’ making work-,and* ipossihle^v,jn'','fieldsjw-ra,nging! fromelectron ^mii rosfopi' to 'animal^hehayipr.'f .Somel niemhersa..of 'the?College faculty will - l»ave„ their'ownvjreseari'h' -quarters:,; there,been ***** n,ili"1 objective of converting■ this space is .tb/prqvidelhr^ad^anil?diverse facilities^fornindiv iduul orsmallv group project work on thepart ofy undergraduate students,SYiqii|fa|l^-nqt$:Ha>fQt'o(ftlie|pibio1iif^^®P^^^^|rnkjoi^. to/'take l(»0 or to become ft/Ksiorisskrivolunteer . assistant^ on a * project//*.^to? nv one.timd.udmglh fn;sh.inan: U ,'dViVgs fvv iv s eligible thiought ikon the ci pi i 11 < * n t of t w • * veils ,,m ‘tics.vy.ithm our ptogt mi l/wlpr- ,tlaeseNi'era i h la I e ,i:.isi-;i rch . .pa: Meip.i' mil ..who;, ii-programs fm \\ Inch st ipends <i r* ion.s inore isiona 11\ i\ • c\i : a pm 1othca” s'^Millor » assist am Win vhv-of- these tospdrisibihtlos/wtll "'he^enstudents in t hi div ismn ot Inn 11 i,sieil to \ ■ >u h is In-en \ f i, -m<g'l/aht ‘-in. M‘h*o dW'‘ba'C[oj;'Vk’|S(':i'fices'^T.m ec|’|^,causc./||itXdsd/a*/>T.i'/oT it*Soutn^v.Cll of 'tHio ‘ffsv ehologv gd«k, tnie»s Vs a ‘'biologist^who' h is?pailmen.i Aid gh the-.- do- not i .•..Hiisiliilin m i he' general -edexh'.uist I he nppoi mit ns lot i n . rm ,mdJlI : I. . * IllologV Si'l’t lilteforep inade-d able to continue, to infornuliimsidf;« oneomittjuf through semi-tec lime ilthese rpiu'liijl ana*review artu les The'lirst-stepkandipn. vvh a t X -is t lie i;e f, »r,e t h es a m, -u es another, tenli.il major in4 biology,'Pasof a general 'as for 'the would-be,, humanistj-this point sociologist, or-stoik hrokite skills’tliaft .'.'is. noXone; way, in .which to -aclifevecontinue to this* hrst step Some of vou-have•ortajnt mtel- alreulv a< liieved ,,'itvv ithourdthe secondary school programs'hisrobjectiv,e 'your plaeVment evaminationsiiavelif .^aE/student tohclj us, jthis.-i .m, * 'tlieient basic yy-,. oiii'Hun lino 'div’eigentnow ledge of x ,,.AVs ls i i<ii\idualists within Iheat<^ afr b's no sfngle formula ,foi; achievingducat ion are t he h isics hei e i* the 1’imei sit \. m. (’hie I go We ha . e expeiimente.tP/I;f^b j. do' not 'feel heliev e ,n' w hat tluw vv ei e doingthe* oiti/en” VV^'sHair douhlless''-contihueI,e ob'.jeel i\es' Ol achieving* our objectives, and>f scieiiVe and niav even o|hui several siinuli m-mii'c ate sep- eons pathst sti.m d .not i|»iVigi:anv is. ; :i i i ■ - t • I-t 'mfiivydmil 'interests^^thi offgnl /'as’eliesp'-’ot -o\(^We^Tq|5i s^<|a;ndd{alspb\ -means ;dl sevoiul under gradu¬al e ' l iSi •;11 (• Iv [»a i t irip.111on ,. pi o-grams me hiding'--a, new course,,Riology IbO which is an individual•covenant helween'^anv metnhet' ofthe fapultv and^anv indj\idu<>l orisrriaw! fg’hdu f> of ’$st ti (if n.ts-1 'foYh^tprfad.:'vyVpY;kvtoge.tJj>J,f'Ah|^f?m;a'S''turn out to he labovilbpv^pipjf^^libi airy pi oje'et's.^fierd^projeefs^'or'CombmaTpons* ot-'/tdic’se'-' ’[h'ologvHit) c in he taken toi < t edit lotto II (piai tei s and is eii-’wpf/'';ke;e»vabr.eastjeof<-,X‘TU filurQ, a>u/~.Jhe,‘Xl I V< U %Xl o V, -,'X.i ; y ' 4#^ ' le< 111 a I devadopme.//iu-r h\U jXM'fS\M‘XX ;M«« «‘f a tea-dvr:(d /-/neidi/ v/-’dn v hi th, ‘ i,n pn<y ,h<- servnon un... h‘»s ai’quir ed a. vtoeabularyv andI lia\t‘ liccM asked t<> pre- source.:..materialspair ;t .short statement <>n < out inoe t o' he li, , , , , ' . . | i‘i ' do not. dilTeiontima |oi: I rotn. inv-ins,-’nn! ‘ 'cl 1 qu-i.pn Ol ut-.t kmc th)t a ,M.vn(rd Ot h,-.'g k M.l.,ltO ,, oiyt ■' ‘‘'l 1 1 ",n im xnornV can t ilt.l\ (side ;n education is a means slated ' Ttie Ipsioito ill lid 111 It end s not Olllv 111-' soeiolo-w >1y ?a piotession enahjing one to qual- ai ites disc iplmos 4'- dii-tv’’ t.o.K ,r“certain k.iiicl ol. jobii -its fye use'H;an'.:p!avo ‘o-guifge so the untie Is kind mg ot Il-.-.e ei thev dithedrvfivg woild of which you-aie obieetkvos 'taitdokha pail is mat cessiblr, to v ou vv ’ll- is Im people' whoou' i knowledge., not .onL.ol' ltie stand somi'Pe-g yhout ttiefi.idir _.s <>| luo'.r/v hut ol 'I e wav litie ent. > pi ,se and woiil.ln:a |< >r .onmali/ed "• ;; >jin s/iffeijla.re o'hl.iga I'cXfA .t,c.>i» m«>si -of, \i>ugc^Wj?/ 4;,f|!jp f^Wsi jUthcll' . Bi’5t~nd'v'ni»ified'^nie Ihu.d catt^liie Vneari mum BensonhE'.;tGinsburq f 4.o^Head of|;Callege BiologySection\ * 'h .<4. t * ;Lead-'ts ol' tfie- I'niao Na¬tion, d do- Kstudantes do Hra- ;jsi I ( 1 N KM) ate reassessing- (tin- position (>f their nationalun111n oi stud'enfs m the ilt-'imith .ol r\ ■nei.al sMike eaMed hv 'l \ ! -1tins sum me i I - ir < > m - t h i. ri cl’im a i,p 11 mu in t umv ei sit v adi'm- /Xfik#TkaX^irt, ; /.”* ^AXrnn.s-t.. t.lii-e P'ntaaai dit,U'de;n.t ,pppu- ;tlaja.ifn ot Bta/i-l i emu-mod ,(yn /~s111kcv a11ending ho? c/assVs <thi,ou dic^ut tty> months, ,ot| Ma\,, |June md most ol .lulv. :?s. i“Co-(Iov emov’ 0 “t'o-^Go-Jei n- !meni' hi- txs-n a i dlv u g ei.v |lot 1 H m Ahum i< hi students ,sitrce tju- issiian<o\,0' Xfif Cordoba dmuXufesto at- t-he U’niyeis’itv ot */prestoI>a A l g.otjXrtia - u-i X9-1H S/nee^^^ 4?lXa t -'• - t;h|/dp:</(tet|,!^X. -P:| 'Sift-' v|• yifit’sxky Htftjf)6a#~|ias conic to tfftfisr-^turn m nipst,jd.atin Amei leanCOlinples, ,11 is the i ule. lather than t-he, *ex< efition. tti it the student govern- 'meni s m man v I .atm A met lean■ count ti<‘s eii|oy pi opoi I im-al i e-pi psent a t icxn p,p fhekgc».ot ju-ng bod¬ies ol their, schools: aeXualtv par-lieipaskrpg an adnnnisn.at»ivd de-oi.sions.. % v . ,Ria/tl is fo some e\tenj; ispjajted, ft urn the he's/ oi d/at;m - ()nl-v a lew tacuities -achievedif epic-s- ‘ i it; it n. n • on ad m m i s 11 111 v.'bodtios *<aV ,ej-sj t,^’ rectors'-andpi ol f'ssors lu'ld ! u m.Otsgank/ing the strike was n.oeasy task foi I’.NMOB Bta/il lias|PP- 100 DUO stud-Ml Is 111 llimnsl-t les-* sc at H’ned over thousands ofmiles.-an a-iea^ of;-about t-ho si/eat the .eontijiiehtal IS. Attentipn SENIOR and GRADUATE MEN Studentswho ne(o somc ; FINANCIA L HELP, IN OBOtt TO COMCim THflt^.'":< EOOCAUON OUBl NC, TM IS ACAD I Ml C T t At ANO WIU .' THCN COMMCNCC ''a- WORK ' ’ .V eea Apply to STEVENS BROS: FOUNDATION. INC.v <-<*>' V.Cj»rptJl'_§61 off NO ICO TT BLOG , ST>-PAUL I, Ml hH$^-Hamburgers. Cokes, .Malts, Coffeeand Other itemsgpp(GETTING RID QF DANDRUFF, THAT IS!)ted fiiym the fesf ol'ratm AmeYi-cu dll.' lo ttie taif that I'.i i/ilrii|sSpirals Pm lugese- w hile the rest ofI nm Am mk i imivf-isi-s in S|iin-Istl ■■ ,I • Ji.lv been 111 i-pu v t* ha't . has <rat* p_; erv m Rrazffi u nei.csou 11 ion i ecei-( esj Jdn eot gov ot li¬nk nta^l subsidies m'ci is afti int*p-n i m’ polio it ton-’ in thecount i .rI*he annu d 1’t t/tlt l.n niti<f),nalstudci t con f* h'hfl ::■■•■. !’ • 't --r-Sv • - • '*>‘V-w i 'polls' dm mi .: '"the s.u-.r.ier TOii-PXh.i i I? ■ s',. ! 11 •; - "-a ' I It. • imof'tmg ol th{e iVitional RxecutiveCwnwmU.! 4‘< cotiiifn d of wf ^pj efdi (1d« 1 t i postpone the stifk,''jm %ftl •ted - -1 W tin li VV i- ()<!'( kl .I ,t I 'I - ■ •• ’ Iing t In- 11 iv U1 it s ned t- t i-1 to I i. >. ' - i >fhi- i - -■ ' -A". and •was nVef b* SjtJ^ngC^Tppo/i'honyinv| : -'Vv 'fxy.,;: ""A SHIRT WITH ANBritish inspired, all-American admired . . .Arrow’s -Gordon Dover Club.’VMedium-point^^button down collar is softly-rolled for unstiltedshaping and fit Tadored with .traditional placketfront; plaited back in cool cotton Oxford. All-American trimly tailored to lo$1^1clean-cul;f5ibfeel really comfortable. ‘ Sanforized" labeled-•■. ■' - t!€s'easier 3-minute way fbf;men: FITCHMvii gets'eill ol unb irrassm^ d indrufl e isy as I 2 3 witli^ ^rniMivg) c-cr-v'irate ot tl.indni.it gome, gunimv old liairtonicfgo^s rigtit doAii the dr nil' Your li ulr looks^.hand_^l ■*' sonter.'’healthicri. Your 'scalp:B , LJ. nV-#Bl ' Keniover■; ' A * T k S HA M POb4’evB® et’kl^orLEADING MAN'S/ 7>Wy/W„dandfull, ?c o^ntro I ieUAKIDAA y'n‘/ it'a’ir -'nd scJpOnMlYl rV/V:, acallyjjeanvd uKdain/iee'-t. -ARROW-FOUN DED18BI^^0iMiprw//j U, fo {£<<k-nnutiati*tp QHet^o N*^dct>ioAi96;