Applied science lab to close 1,043 degrees to be givenThe University s Laboratory for Applied Sciences branch at the Museum of Science The University will award or notably great service in the pro*and Industry will be closing at the end of the summer, it was learned yesterday. The deci- 1,043 degrees today and to- mation f>f human affairs,sion was made at the recommendation of Lucien Biberman, Associate Director of the morrow in two sessions of itsLaboratory for Applied Sciences. 302nd Convocation. PresidentBiberman said he was resigning said yesterday that faculty mem- orientation towards basic research Beadle will preside and speak atfrom his position and had recom- bers have not been involved in the as opposed to applied research” both sessions,mended that the laboratory be labs research in the past, and were untrue. At today’s session 495 advancedclosed because the University ap- there is no reason for this policy- Albert also explained that in agrees that will be’ awarded ^patently doesn t want this type of to change now. The faculty is just general, faculty members are free Major Lenox R Lohr President of grees and PhD s the BiologicalfTnof th'rXt-for it ” FaST*'* * *** *** thi"g’ to choose their P"**. as long as the Museum of'Science and Indu" aftd f,Scieaces wiU„ £fore not t e p ce . he said. they are wjt,hjn the physical capac- try will receive the Rosenberger awarded- All other degrees will boThe lab for applied sciences is a Biberman had been offered the ities of the University MedJ tho h^ t awarded today,separate part of the University, job of heading the labs at the mu- However, with non-faculty mem- awtrd given by the UriveSty Beadle’s Convocation address willoperating programs of space sci- seum m May. Biberman refused, bers, this policy is sometimes Lohr wiU be the 16th recipient be entitled “On the Importance ofence.f applied physics, ^ and the saying he felt the job should be aItered. The members of the Mu- of the Rosenberger MedaT since Diversity.”y a acu y member who seum lab are not faculty mem- the award was established in 1917 Both sessions are scheduled tobers, he continued. It is expected that a distinguishedscientist will be awarded an honor*ary degree at one of the two ses¬sions of the Convocation.Tomorrow, all undergraduate de¬grees, Humanities degrees, Educa*tion degrees, Social Science De¬classified work at the Museum of held by aScience and Industry. It is the could draw other faculty memberswork at the Museum which will be into the program,discontinued. Shortly afterward, Biberman rec-Biberman complained that he ommended that the laboratory behad been discouraged from under- closed, since the University ob-taking a certain research project viously was not interested in thisbecause of its controversial nature, type of research.Further-, he said the University Biberman had also told theasked him not to ask faculty mem- United Press yesterday that 25 per-bers to work with him on the sons were resigning with him. Al-classified government projects, bert said he had not received any(Biberman is not on the faculty), resignations. The University hasThe University’s general policy said that it wiU try to find jobsregarding classified research is for the persons displaced by thethat because persons working on closing of the lab.such projects are unable to disclose Biberman said that a number ofthe nature of their work, the re- the persons will be going to an-search is not within the realm of other, undisclosed midwestern uni- for “the advancement of learning begin at 2:50 pm.Vol. 71 — No. 109 University of Chicago, Friday, Jane 7, 1963the University. In general, the Uni¬versity prefers to have professorsworking on free and open research,stated UC President George WellsBeadle recently. Although theUniversity does not prohibit per- theversity, along with much ofdata from the lab.According to rumor, this Uni¬versity would be the University ofMichigan. Albert denied knowing UC may soon have footballthat 40 students willl turn out.If the anticipated 40 studentsRoss Ardreysons from working on projects, it of such a Pjan. although the Uni- ^ dropped Varsity foot- i*1™ ^ foob.a1.1 would become thedoes try to discourage persons versity of Michigan does have re- w,"cii uiuppeu vtUbiiy loot- iargest non-intramural sport at next year, and signs were postedin the dormitories.Since the meeting, 17 more sto-from working on classified proj* sear°h groups similar to ours. Any ball in 1939 will soon have a UC. This year the Varsity basket- dents have agreed to play nextects, said Beadle. data from fche ialc>s* he continued, team again if enough students ball team had 15 men, while the year on football class-team.This is in line with the policies would have ** returned to its are willing to play. But the Uni- track team, which was the largest, Bringing the total to 45.of most other University’s, he con- source’ because it is classified. versity will go all out to keep com- had about 30 active members. . .Sidney Stein, assistant professortinued In wartime we mieht Biberman also complained that petition on a small scale. At a May 22 meeting called by ^ physical education and coachchange this ™.Icy b«t * £aee the University had not wanted him UC President George Wells the athletic department for poten- * £ f##|W| class.team, als#time we prefer a free interchange t» work with the Defense Depart- Beadle, Dean of Students Warner tial members of next year s class-of ideas, he added. ment in decisions about the award- Arms Wick, and Athletic Director team, Hass, professor of physical ™ “ ana snggesiea a su mernik..!.. i,. i.u ing of grants. He said that in both Walter (Wally) Hass have all education said, “I personally have practice routine. Films were showathe instance of advice and of con- stressed the University’s determ- no intention of bringing back big pf the two scrimmages which thetracts, the discouragement had ination to prevent the return of time football to this campus, how- class played this year againstcome from Vice President of the big time football. ever, I’d like to see football here. North Central College,University for Special Projects, I^eadle said he would have no “I’d like to see a whole football Stein came to UC this year fromWilliam B. Harrell, and Vice objection to students playing on a schedule. But until we have that, the University of Bridgeport wherePresident for special scientific football team but that it was “out we are going to continue to give he had served as line coach. Prev-programs Warren Johnson.UC president George Wells Bea-yesterday, but rather because the d^e denied knowledge of suoh com*University had different ideas from ments regarding giving advice tohis legarding the place of the Uni- the state department. Harrell andversity in research. Johnson were unavailable.Biberman stated that he felt theUniversity had an obligation to thecommunity and nation, and that aspart of this obligation, it shouldwork on the government defenseprograms at issue.Biberman said that he had notquit in bitterness, as implied inan article in the Chicago American of the question thattime football wouldback.“My view.” said Wick, “is thatwe should recognize activities ifthey spontaneously occur ... Ifthey have 40 people next year,serious big those students who want to play iously, he had been the assistantever come a chance to participate in the football coach for Michigan State’sclass. Big Ten team, and had ooaohed“My own opinion,” Hass added, ^ foobball team at Chicago’s“is that foobball, as a game, should S°udl Shore high school,not interfere with any academic ^ secretary in the athletic de*institution,”Hass spoke to 25 students inBartlett gymnasium’s trophy room.Biberman’s proposed project Albert said comments in today swould have involved faculty mem- Sun Times that the University was who play throughout the season,bers from the division of social closing the labs because of a that would be fairly impressive.sciences as well as the physical “growing irritation with military. This year 28 men participated Eighty letters had been sent outsciences. Dean of the Division of a lessening of interest in gadget in UC’s football class-team. Next by the athletic department to sbu-Physical Sciences Adrian Albert development, and an increasing year the athletic department hopes dents bhey thought would playTuition may qo up in *64UC caught in nationwide tuition raceby Laura Godofskyla 1959, former UC Chan¬cellor Lawrence Kimpton pre¬dicted that tuition would reach“the neighborhood of $2000"by 1967. Now, in 1963, UC and anumber of other universities arewell on the way to beating Kimp-bon’s deadline.Tuition increases, including a$300 hike at UC to $1475, went intoeffect this year at 50 of the na¬tion’s 100 most expensive collegesand universities. The recent startof a new round of tuition boosts inthe Ivy League, to as much as$1800, may well lead “rival” insti¬tutions like UC to follow suit.When UC’s most recent tuitionrise was announced in October,1901, it was generally admittedthat a major consideration was bhedisparity between tuition at UCand at other institutions consideredits equal academically.Said UC President GeorgeBeadle, “This Increase puts us inline with other universities and col¬leges which are comparable.“It is difficult to predict futureincreases, but I hope there willSecretly we long ta out HarvardHarvard . . .John A. WiUon, not (on* t(«have to be no tuition raises in thenext several years at least. .. thatwe’ve reached a level of stability,'*he added. __The Ivy League increases andnationwide -tuition figures providelittle reason to expeofc Beadle'ahopes to be fulfilled. UC is 42nd in USAccording to the Life InsuranceAgency Management Association(LIAMA). UC was the nation's102nd most expensive private insti¬tution before its tuition hike in196L-1962. This year, with its tuition$300 higher, it has jumped to 42ndplace. The entire Ivy League, how¬ever, is in the top 31.(LI AM A figures are based ontuition, special fees, and room andboard. They do not include ex¬penses such as books, dothing,transportation, and entertainment,which may add $400 to $800 ormore a year to these “fixed costs.”LIAMA lists room and board costsat UC as $867 a year.)Another tuition hike?If UC is even to remain in thenation’s top 50, another tuition in¬crease will be necessary in 1964.Should such an increase be forth¬coming, it would undoubtedly beannounced next year. $45-90 in¬creases in room and board rateswill go into effect this fall.On May 21, Harvard announceda $240 tuition increase from $1520to $1760, effective autumn, 1964.Seven days later, Yale announceda $150 increase from $1650 to$1800, also effective, autumn, 1964.According to LIAMA, Harvard iscurrently the eighth most expen¬sive school in the US and Yale is17th. The new increases wouldmake Harvard fourth and Yalefifth, trailing only Finch ($3360),Sarah Lawrence ($2961), and Ben¬nington (42950). Nationwide increases setNext year, tuition will go up ata ‘number ’ of other institutions,headed by Cornell ($450 increase),Columbia ($125), and Dartmouth($120). With tuitions of $1700, Cor¬nell and Columbia will briefly leadthe Ivy League, to be overtaken in1964 by Harvard, Yale, and Dart¬mouth. Dartmouth will charge$1675 next year and $18000 in 1964-65. Of 22 schools polled last summerby the Maroon, all but one thatcared to commit themselves antici¬pated a tuition increase in the“near future.” The one dissenterqualified a no increase pledgewith the word “hopefully!”Asked last week whether these in¬creases would affect UC’s tuition.Beadle said that there has been“no decision at the present time”(Continued on page 5)Institution Tuit’n Fees Room &Board Total1. Finch ** $2050 $100 $1230 $33802. Sarah Lawrence * -j- 2020 31 930 29813. Bennington 1900 50 1000 29504. M.I.T. * 1700 75 1020 27975. Sweet Briar ** 1800 40 900 27406. Cornell -+- 13*9 260 1085 26857. Bard 1780 123 770 26738. Harvard -f* 1520 0 1145 26659. Wheaton (Mass.) * 1700 10 950 266010. Radcliffe -f- 1520 0 1120 264011. Hollins * 2600 30 0 263012. U. of Penn * 1450 180 1000 263013. Columbia * 1575 10 1000 258514. Princeton 1600 — 960 256015. Brandeis * 1450 108 1000 255816. Cal Tech * + 1575 52 • 925 255242. U. OF CHICAGO ♦ 4- 1410 45 867 2322The remaining colleges and universities with costs higher thanUC’s, in order, are Yale, Vassar, Skidmore **, Pembroke * -f,Mills (cal) * +, Brown * +, NYU * +, Mannhattanville •, Mt.Holyoke, Goucher *, Rennselaer Polytech * -f, Bryn Mawr, Mills(NY), Dartmouth +, Rochester * +, Elmira *, Wesleyan (Conn.)* -f, Swarfchmore *, Tufts ♦, Bowdoin ♦ -f, Union * Wm.Smith *, Trinity (Conn.) *, and Syracuse * 4-,* Tuition or fees rose this year.•f Room and hoard rose this year.** Total rose, but information does not explain whether tuitionand fees or room and board increased.Sourcvi COLLEGE COSTS 1M2-3, PubUsJbed Majr, IMSLife Insurance Agey. Mgmat. Assn, partment told a Maroon reporterwho impersonated ah alumnus,that ’‘Mr, Stein is trying to bringback football.”This year the football classscrimmaged twice against NorthCentral College. “Scrimmages’*unlike games, require no recordsof attendance, or officials. Theyare completely unofficial. Nextyear, Hass said, the team-olas*will play at least bhree “scrim¬mages” against different colleges.If enough students are interested,more will be scheduled.One of the ideas Stein is current¬ly thinking about involves a leaguewith Caltec and MIT. In an inter¬view last week, Beadle said hedoubted that UC would play ortravel to Caltec in the “forseeablefuture.” He had no objections tosmall games with low travel ex¬penses.Due to a print-shop error, theMaroon on May 17 attributedStein’s opinion that “there is agreat need for foobball on thiscampus” to Wick. When askedlast week if indeed he thoughtthere was suoh a need, Wick said,“I don’t think there is, but I be¬lieve we should recognize thing*(Continued on page 5)SCHOLAR ATHLETICThe price of excellence' The year’s events indicate that UC is caught in a trap into whichmany other universities in the nation have fallen, and like them, itisn’t willing or able to put up the hard fight necessary to extricateitself.In the past year, we have watched the University pursue “excel¬lence,” and to some extent achieve its goal. The faculty is stronger,the surrounding community is better (i.e. “stabler”), enrollment islarger, income is greater, and prestige is higher. Ami yet, in spite ofthese advances, our standards seem lower.One area in which UC has lowered its standards has been that ofchoosing between living up to its principles or accepting large sumsof money. .UC this year re-entered the National Defense Education Act loanprogram, from which it withdrew in 1960 to protest the political stringsattached to the loan funds. This autumn, the particular “string” itobjected to—a disclaimer affidavit—was removed, but another, equallybad, was .substituted for it. Yet, although only the method but not theprinciple of political screening of students was changed, UC rushedback into the program. Obviously the hundreds of thousands of dollarsit was losing was the price of its principles in this case.The price many students and faculty put on their principles issomewhat less, generally only $5,000 or $10,000. The number of UCpersonnel, who have signed loyalty oaths this year, even though theypersonally object to them, is alarmingly high.UC and the nation’s other “excellent” universities get. the over¬whelming share of government contracts. Some 70% of UC's budgetcame from the federal government last year. This is typical of an“excellent” university. The result? Lower standards. “The humanitiesare hungry,” said Time. Overhead expenses on science contracts de¬tract funds from other key areas. Projects are sometimes distorted toappeal to the National Institutes of Health, or NASA, or the AEC.Because the need for money is enormous and continual, inadequatediscretion is used in accepting and soliciting funds. We seem to havelandscape, grass and tulip funds. We have Stagg scholarship funds.And we lack adequate unrestricted funds for faculty salaries andbuilding maintenance. For fear of discouraging potential bequeathers,UC seems lax in educating its alumni, especially while they are stu¬dents, in the problems of supporting and running a private institution.Perhaps proper alumni donations could have prevented the tuition risethat seems tJteomed to hit UC students in 1964. Will today’s studentsremember this when they become alumni who want to set up a fundfor blue-eyed women from Alaska whose uncles fought in Korea?UC has also felt a need to lower its standards of academic excel¬lence when presenting itself to the “public.” It has sought “scholar-athletes.” It has pushed or tolerated encouragement of fraternitiesand football when they are declining all over the country. It haschosen to enforce rather than question the fa' se morality of society,and primarily to placate parents. The result unfortunately has beenthat UC’s image is merging with all the other colleges in the US andits students too are becoming more and more like all the other stu¬dents: generally mediocre and apathetic, but “well-rounded.” Thestudents UC ought, but fails to attract, are those seeking an experi¬ence that will challenge their capacities of independent thought andaction. They are not looking for a residential, paternalistic collegewith no well-defined and actively supported philosophy of education.The pressure upon members of the academic profession to publishor perish has lowered UC’s teaching standards drastically. Facultyresent being asked to do anything not directly related to their spe¬cialty, particularly teaching general education courses. The Quantrellwinners are often not men who have inspired their students by theirteaching, but are men who have taken on administrative tasks in theCollege. The original press releases describing the Willett fellowshipssaid they were designed to encourage superior undergraduate teachingby releasing the recipient from his teaching duties to do research.Taking an interest in sfudent affairs is considered detrimental to pro¬fessional advancement.Finally, we would suggest that the students and faculty of theUniversity of Chicago, and of universities throughout the land, havelowered their own standards by abdicating a very important responsi¬bility. A student is not just someone who renounces the “real world”for four, or five, or eight, or twelve years and reads Plato. A professorcannot be someone who does not in any circumstance venture outsidehis own narrow field. These people are the intellectual leaders of theircommunities. They must, as good citizens, donate at least a small partof their time to the problems surrounding them. They must be willingto speak out, for if they do not, no one will. They must not tolerate anatmosphere, such as that at UC, where a supposedly free and liberalinstitution is dominated in an authoritarian manner by deans and ad¬ministrators whose real job it is only to aid the activities of studentsand faculty.Our general impression, then, at the end of a year of observing,investigating, and questioning the activities of the UC community is afear that the greatness of UC is very gradually approaching a pointwhere it may soon be nothing more than mediocrity on a high plane.»######**#*#*#**#*######«+**##« Hats off to courtWe were particularly pleased to^ 'IrfwMr.c note that Court Theatre has low-£ ‘yTjwt ered its prices and initiated a stu-K \ Wcw„r- dent discount for the summer’sperformances, for one of the veryfirst editorial in this year’s Ma¬roon advocated such a step.Courts production have beengenerally well done and make formany pleasant summer evenings.\S tfiiA- VVI We certainly hope that more peo-' pie, particularly students, will now Letters to the editor. AC flMT'' K S fin, Farrell praises MaroonTO THE EDITOR:May I offer you congratulations,and state that l think you arepublishing an ably edited, andpretty-well written college paper,and that you impress me as be¬ing far superior to some regularand even long-established news¬papers.Not only do I think that yourpaper is vastly above the DailyMaroon of 1929, but also, the sameapplies, in my judgment, concern¬ing a large number of college pa¬pers of that time, which werespread out over a wide geographi¬cal slice of this country. 1 madea collection of college papers, andwent through them, planning towrite an article on them. I neverwrote the article, because 1 de¬cided that it would be a waste oftime to berate such badness andjunky Joe Collegeism as I foundin so many of the college papersI examined.As a widely experienced journa¬list of thirty-four years, as wellas an artist, let me say, please —you are doing one damned fine job.JAMES T. FARRELLRockwell in retrospectThe following letter was writtenearly lost month by Dean of Stu-dents Warner Wick in response to oninquiry from Carol Fineberg of theAmerican Jewish Committee Instituteof Human Relations. We print it be¬low because it shows how the Uni¬versity. in retrospect, feels it weath¬ered the campus appearance ofAmerican Nazi Forty Leader GeorgeLincoln Rockwell last quarter.Dear Miss Fineberg:Your letter and questionnaireaddressed to former Dean of Stu¬dents John Netherton has come tome as his successor and as the mandirectly in charge of George'Lin¬coln Rockwell’s appearance oncampus. I enclose your question¬naire about the affair, plus theofficial statement about it that Iissued in behalf of the Universityand copies of the principal arti¬cles, editorials and letters thatappeared in the Chicago Maroon.If you follow them in sequence,you will get a good idea of howthe affair developed within theUniversity family.It is important that you realizethat the student group which ex¬tended the invitation was pre¬dominantly Jewish in composition.There was never any sign of anti-Semitism in the University nor,would I say, was there any evi¬dence that our students were lessthan acutely conscious of whatyour letter refers to as “the histor¬ical realities of the Nazi period.”In the second place, we did notauthorize the appearance out ofrespect for a supposed right ofMr. Rockwell to speak at a privateuniversity. He, of course, has nosuch right, although his right tospeak to the public at large isprotected by law subject to therules against creating disturbances.We were, rather, respecting theright of a University to investi¬gate whatever topics it wishes toinvestigate and, furthermore, theright of students to expect thepublished regulations of the Uni¬versity to be honored in all casesand not just in the easy ones. Todisregard a rule of long standingIV5* teif ~i°~rN£ , take advantage of the Theatre’s because of. pressure is not a goodUTS- 8y OSftOVJfon.yt';'"’--. **mV CtrteS^ * ***-C Ltiro.3*<t< *T«X ytusr ot-iU0S OFlS#\ p«l»TWfrfrom Hi* UCLA Doily Borin generosity (pragmatism, if youprefer) and that once again thearea behind Mandel Hall will befilled to overflowing.Something to keep in mindStatistics released by the UnitedStates Office of Education indi¬cate the following rates of increasein the number of academic per¬sonnel from 1957-1958 to 1959-1960, the most recent year forwhich comparable data are avail¬able:Professional staff for general ad¬ministration 18.9%Professional staff for student per-sopnel services 18.9%Faculty for resident instructionin degree-credit courses 8.7% respect forway of inculcatingthe rule of law.As I look back on the wholeaffair I think we would not doit differently if we were facedwith the same problem gain. Theonly change we might make wouldbe to try to persuade the invitinggroup to hear the offensive speak¬er in private rather than in ameeting open to all members ofthe University, but I am not serewe would make even that change.I think you will find that theMaroon’* first editorial on Feb¬ruary 6, before most of the com¬motion boiled up, survives thetest of experience extremely well.We were, if we are to believe^ , our correspondehts, cut out of aFull time faculty, mstructor rank *0o<l many wills> and quite a fewF.hi ' i * V ‘ V ’ * a,umni promised to reduce or elim-gull time equivalent of part timefaculty 11.3% inate their annual gifts. I sus¬pect, however, that the effectswill hardly be noticed, for theemotions that were aroused inthis case will* probably die downalmost as fast as they arose. Onefriend of the University who hadgiven very substantial sums in thepast resigned from an importantadvisory board, but within amonth had asked to be re¬instated. I hope his behavior turnsout to be typical.A really wild Trotskyite ap¬peared on our campus last month.He was hardly noticed and had noinfluence, but if conservative ele¬ments had made a hue and cry, itmight have been a big occasion. 1think the same principles, applyto the Rockwells of the world:they feed on the publicity givenby the opposition.WARNER A. WICKDean of StudentsPraises parting teacherTO THE EDITOR:I am a Humanities major, whohas been not infrequently knownto make the sweeping statement,“I HATE science.” Yef during thisacademic year, the enthusiasmand skill of one instructor madethe College Phy. Sci. course anenlightening, an exciting experi¬ence. I only repeat what 1 haveheard said by countless studentswhen I assert that James McClel¬land is the sort of instructor everytrue student dreams of. Delt han¬dling of their subject matter is ex¬pected of all instructors, and isfound in many. Mr. McClellandsucceeds where many others failbecause his irresistable enthusi¬asm, and passionate concern forthe individual student, pervade allof his dealings with his students.How rare it is to find in this col¬lege an instructor who cannot restuntil he has made his studentsshare his excitement about a sub¬ject, until he has imparted genu¬ine understanding! A thousandthanks to him, from all the stu¬dents to whom he gave new in¬sight, new enthusiasm, and a newconfidence in themselves. The col¬lege loses one of its finest peoplewhen James McClelland leaves atthe end of this year.SUE YAEGERCap & Gown sets paceTO THE EDITOR:The quality of the 1933 Cap andGown is excellent. This is reflectedin the fact that the 800 copies ofthe book were sold out within 10hours of distribution. In past years,not as many books have beenprinted, yet large numbers haveremained unsold.Unfortunately, many peoplewanting the book had to be re¬fused, and multitudes never evengot a chance to see the book.The quality of the book is di¬rectly attributable to Danny Lyon,for he made the book. It is notclear in the book’s credits thatDanny not only edited the photo¬graphs, most of which he createdhimself, but that he also did allthe layouts and assembled them.He fought hard against conven¬tionality to produce this dynamicbook, instead of a standard “year¬book,” and now he deserves therecognition of his efforts.Admittedly, certain aspects ofthe book can be validly criticized,and petty minds are quick to do so.However, the generally highlevel of quality and artistry heav¬ily overshadows any deficienciesthe book might have. I hope thisbook sets a new standard for com¬parison in the making of futureissues of the Cap and Gown.STAN KARTERMr. Karter is photo editor of next year’*Cap and Gown — Editor.Men protest women’s nameAN OPEN LETTER TO THE BOARDOF TRUSTEES:The East House Comil wishesto register its objections to thenew names recently suggested for our dormitory complex. We feelthat the name Edith Foster FlintHouse is impractical and inappro¬priate as a name for East House.Hundreds of library books,plaques at Bartlett Gym, and manymailing lists permanently containthe name of East House. We feelthat the name is inappropriate be¬cause men just don’t appreciateliving in a dormitry named aftera woman, and because it destroysihe traditions and feelings whichhave grown up around our house.Whatever each resident’s reasonmay be, whether originating fromrational or irrational couses, themen of East House stand unitedin opposition to this valueless andobjectionable renaming of theirhouse.We feel that East, North, andWest are appropriate names fora dormitory complex such as ours.However, New Women’s ResidenceHalls, we feel, is not a very suit¬able name for dormitories whichare neither new, nor solely in¬habited by women. Thus, we doconsider the name of WoodwardCourt to be completely appropriatefor our complex, and wish tothank you for this timely and use¬ful change.WILLIAM KLECKACorresponding SecretaryEast House CouncilTheft laws are unrealisticTO THE EDITOR:Let’s abolish the law which pro¬hibits stealing.Despite the fact that this sta¬tute has been in effect since ourearliest laws were formulated,stealing has never been eliminated.If the identities of all thethieves were now known to us. westill wonldn’t have enough police¬men to arrest them all. Not onlythat, but often we ^re not ableto make the charge stick.In a recent Congerssional in¬vestigation, one statesman men¬tioned that it costs as much moneyto keep a man in Alcatraz as itwould to board him at the Wal¬dorf Astoria. With all that money,it would be more practical to offerto buy the thieves that which theysought to steal, than to run theexpense of convicting and confin¬ing them. Besides, often the victimis unwilling to testify.In addition, de.spite the factthat the laws against theft havebeen strictly enforced, the crimerate has not decreased. There areas many thieves now as there everwere. Surely this shows that thestatute has had no effect.More of your Gadfly in the fu¬ture.D. VESEYChicago MaroonEditor-in-chief ....... Laura Godofskybusiness Manager .. Stephen H. KleinNeu]s Editor Robin KaufmanCity News Editor John T. WilliamsAsst. City News Editor. . .Gary FeldmaniFeatur* Editor Ross ArdreyCulture Editor. ....... .Vicky ShiefmanRewrite Editor Sharon GoldmanAsst. Rewrite Editor. ....... .Bob LeveyPhoto Coordinators .... Let GourwitzStan KarterNight Editors ...... Mike SilvermanMaryann TaranowskiExecutive Secretary Marvella AltheimerCirculation Manager ...... Bill BennettEditors Emeriti ...... Jay GreenbergNeal JohnstonKen PierceSt aft: Barry Bayer, Sue Goldberg, JackieFriedman, Samye Fuqua, Robert Wil¬liams, Dave Richter, Sue Guggenheim,Earl Choldin, Kathy Fritz, Dave Aiken,Tom Heagy, Jim Byer, Deirdre Holloway,Arthur Kaufman, Michael Kaufman, PeteRabinowitz, Carl Erickson, Ron Dorfman,Murry Batt, Steve Sharnoff, RichardBushong, Eleanor Kniebler, Paula Hiza,Tom Stanton, Gail Kirnbauer, Jean Kap¬lan, Kathy Dusak, Bud Horowitz, KenCohen, Bob Ackerman, Bill Caffrey, JeffKaplan, Steve Kupitz.Rescue squad — Tom DeVries, H.Neil Bergson, Lynn Cole, Steve Bcck>Chester, Richard Claus.Issued free of charge on the Quad¬rangles every Tuesday through Fridayduring the academic year by studentsof the University of Chicago.Address all correspondence to: ChicagoMaroon, 1212 East 59 Street, Chicago37, Illinois. Telephones: MI 3-0600;exts. 3265 & 3266. Subscription by mailis $4 per year.Opinions in editorials officially representa constitutional consensus of the Marooneditorial board. The Maroon makes nopretense of representing student or Uni¬versity opinion.The Maroon is a charter member ofthe United States Student Press Asso¬ciation and subscribes to its news serv¬ice, the Collegiate Press Service (CPS),AAUP Bulletig 2 • CHICAGO MAROON • June 7, 1963»L.Tw1' Grass roots have spread afar Havighurst finally OK'dDespite corny efforts atsabotage, UC’s grass rootsmovement spread to Washing¬ton this week.Stuart L. Udall, a noted out-doorsman and Secretary of the In¬terior, sent UC President GeorgeBeadle a telegram commendingthe University's seedy efforts tobeautify the Quadrangles.“Congratulations from one grasslover to another,” read the tele¬gram. “Your ingenious approach tosaving the baby blades is a tri¬umph of mind over feet and showswhat a higher education can do.“There are few more exaltedachievements to which the intellectcan be bent than saving nature inher unequal urban struggle. Thefeat of producing a recognizablelawn on the Quadrangle of theUniversity of Chicago required wit,wisdom, and a certain amount ofanimal cunning.”Not to be outdone by a meregovernment official. Beadle re¬plied in a handwritten note:“Thanks. If and when you are inChicago come seek our our grassWe’ll let you stroll, roll, sit. lie orloll on it, but not make cow pas¬tures across it.”Running, jumping,and standing stillThe implications of Beadle’s re¬ply are clear. Grass-strolling, roll¬ing, sitting, lying, and lolling mayprovide a much-needed reasonablealternative to the administration’sembarrassing policy of 50-milehikes.Marines and Boy Scouts through¬out the nation are reportedly eagerto take up the challenge.Corn in the grass, alas!In other grass developments,Paul Voth, professor of botany andsecretary of the botany depart-RENT-A-CARPER DAYPER MILEATOMIC CARRENTALS. INC.7057 Stony IslandMl 3-5155 ment, discovered about 50 plants quack grass, a few sprigs of crab Robert J. Havighurst, pro- One of the Board members whoof corn three to five inches high grass, and millions of elm seed- fessor of education, will serve advooated the survey policy changein recently^ re-seeded grass areas, lings.” , as chairman of a three-man saif h® fea{edtJn rinierP?ued the corn’s pat' He said'h? tbe quack and crab committee established to sur-tern of growth as an indication grass could be brought under con- .. rh; . ,,. .tmKnMv * t.r«i tuot vey the Chicago public schools.that it probably originated from trol, and that the elm seedlingsgrain fed to squirrels. would disappear after the lawnReliable observers, however, has been cut a few times,commented, “Shucks. Students A committee of the Board ofEducation recommended severalplanted the corn.” Some thoughtthe students’ motive was a desireto emulate the endeavors ofBeadle, who planted corn in hisfirst Chicago garden two yearsago. i Progress reportInstallation of an undergroundsprinkler system for the main mittee recommendation.Willis had criticized the lack of“openness” between Board mem-education recommenaea several ^ „e also saldweeks ago that Havighurst be ap- “ats ,.clrcumstances.. were "up-setting and disturbing” and that“divisions have arisen which car:have a lasting effect on the work-pointed sole director of the sur¬vey. But the Board, in its meet¬ing of last week, responded tosevere criticisms by the Superin-Quadrangle, begun at the end of tenant of Sd^ls Benj‘^nin“wiliis ing ™latton*hiP Ind WhsApril has been completed The by appointing Willis to a three- and ^tween the Board and Willis.resurfacing and reseeding of the man survey committee. The Board„ * ii man sui vcj' uuuiimiiee. J-iic x>uctrudiinvpr^ ^ .^e corn. Voth Quadrangles Quadrants’ is now a]so mandated Willis and Havig- rAVA|e «A|li^htdiscovered occasional sprouts of nearing completion. hurst to the third member. ■ leVCIS lUlllglUAlonzo G. Grace, dean of the Chicago Faculty Revels, the350 UC students supportad hoc federal aid petitionAbout 350 UC students have signed a petition urgingpassage of a $2 billion academic facilities construction bill.The petition was sent last week to the bill’s sponsor, Repre¬sentative Edith Green (Dem.-Oregon).The signatures were collected intwo evenings in the New Dormcafeteria. Almost every student towhom it was shown signed It, re¬ported Michelle Patterson, one ofthe petition’s originators.If examinations had not been soclose and there had been time fora more organized and extensive Alonzo G. Grace, dean of theUniversity of Illinois College of annual sllOW of the UC fac-Education, was named Wednes- npv-day as the third member of the ulty, will give a repeat pelcommittee. He was chairman of form&nce of its Mai Cn prUC’s department of education tion, “Impatience,” tonight inthirteen years ago. Mandel Hall at 8:30.The show transforms Gilbert andDiscuss education at suiitvan-s “Patience”u». ««-temporary musical comedy aboutAncona open house the foibles of professors and theThe Ancona School, which Power of secreUnes in adminis-ii ,, •, , tering the University. Writers Rob-facilities in colleges and univer- USeS the M<>nt<®sori educa- ertpgoUak and Professor Robert L.sities. It was amended in commit- tional system will hold an Ashe„hurst of the Graduate School, . .... . , . , , open house from 2-5 pm Of Business drew up a plot roughlytee b, deletion of student loan s,'mday P paralleling the original Gilbertprovisions, which will be sought The School at 1545 E. 53rd st., script and a set of contemporarythrough separate NDEA legislation, is cooperatively owned by parents lyrics for Sullivan’s music.In a letter to the Maroon, Mrs. and was opened last year. Tickets for “Impatience,” $2.20Green said she expects House ac- Demonstrations of equipment and each, can be bought during the day.. . tion on the bill sometime this discussions of the Montessori con- at the Alumni Association buildingso ici ation campaign, far more month and is “cautiously optimis- cepts will be conducted by their and will be on sale in Mandel Hallsignatures could certainly have tic" about its chances for passage, staff. tonight,been obtained, said Miss Patter-A letter sent along with the peti¬tion to Mrs. Green said that thepetition was designed to show thatUC students favor aid to highereducation in general and her billin particular. The petition also-en¬dorsed the loan program of theNational Defense Education Act.The petition was distributed inresponse to Mrs. Green’s com¬plaint, reported in the Maroon,that federal education legislationhas evoked almost no reactionfrom students.In addition to Miss Patterson,the originators of the petition wereArt Robins. Kitsie Carroll, andNeil Beck.Mrs. Green’s bill provides $2billion in grants and loans forinstruction, research, or library I MR. PIZZAWE DELIVER — CARRY-OUTSHY 3-8282FOR THE FIRST TIME IN HYDE PARKDELICIOUS BROASTED CHICKENFor Inventoryas follows:Main Store 5802 Ellisclosed Sat., June 22Downtown Center Branch64 E. Lakeclosed Fri., June 21Education Branch5821 Kimbarkclosed Fri., June 21Please anticipateyour needsThe Universityof ChicagoBookstores TUXEDO RENTALnow availableatCOHN & STERNin theHyde Park Shopping CenterSpecial Discounts to fraternitygroups, wedding parties, etc. PIZZA- For 2 For 3 For 4 For 4 PartySausage 2.00 3.00 4.00 5.00Mushroom 1.50 2.00 3.00 4.00 5.00Green Pepper 1.50 *.00 3.00 4.00 5.00Anchovie 1.50 2.00 - 3.00 4.00 5.00Onion or Garlic 1.50 2.00 3.00 4.00 5.00Tuna Fish or Olive 1.50 2.00 3.00 4.00 5.00Cheese 1.25 2.00 2.50 3.50 4.50Vj and Vi 1.50 2.00 3.00 4.00 5.00Extra Ingredients 50 .50 1.00 1.00 1.00Pepperoni Pixxa 2.00 2.50 4.00 5.00 6.00Shrimp 2.50 4.00 5.00 6.00Bacon 2.00 2.50 4.00 5.00 6.00Coney Island Pizza 2.50 3.00 5.00 6.00 7.00(Sausage, Mushrooms and Peppers) Box of Broasted Chicken20 Pieces, Golden Brown10 Pieces, Golden BrownBAR B-Q RIBSSHRIMP. PERCHSPAGHETTIMOSTACCOLIRAVIOLISandwiches:BEEF, SAUSAGE,MEAT BALL1465 HYDE PARK BLVD.Open 7 Days a Week — 4:00 p.m. to 2:00 a.m. — Fri. to 3:00 a.m.Sat. to 3:00 a.m. — Open 2 p.m. SundaysFlowers AreFor QivingTell 'em Nell an Steve sent yaMl 3-4226 -Bova FloristMl 3-4226‘Where Your Dollar Has Blooming SenseOff the Corner but on the Square” FINALCLEARANCE SALEALL NEW '63 CHEVYSMUST GOWe want your business, we need your business.Immediate pick-up and delivery on new models.Large selection of quality used cars to choosefrom.HYDE PARKCHEVROLET5506 S. Lake Park 003-8600Jun« 7, 1963 • CHICAGO MAROON 3Over 200 UC students honored for achievementMore than 200 studentshave been honored this quar¬ter for their academic andextra - curricular achieve¬ments. At the University’s 7thAnnual Honors Awards Assemblyon May 23, many of them wereaccorded formal recognition.Perhaps the highest academichonor a student can earn is mem¬bership in Phi Beta Kappa. 15graduating students and threemembers of next year’s class havebeen chosen for membership thisyear.The new graduating membersare Murray Batt, Robert Cordek,Virginia Davis, Lawrence Dom-ash, Jay Flocks, Martin Gorovsky,Sue Guggenheim, Ellen Krantz,Daniel Levine, Sheldon Lewis,Jane Morse, Michael Ormond,Carol Simp&on, Karen Teneate,and William Weber.The three members from nextyear’s class are Ralph Meerbote,Martha Pyle, and Sylvia Woodby.The eighteen new Phi BetaKappa members were initiated onWednesday at a Quadrangle Clubdinner.Grosvenor Cooper, professor ofmusic and humanities, gave themain address. He spoke on “TheMusic of the Right Spheres.”Phi Beta Kappa follows no quotasystem. To be eligible for mem¬bership, the student must have agood B-plus average, which isabout 3.5, and must have been inresidence at the University for atleast two years.College and departmental facul¬ty members recommend studentsfrom the eligible group for mem¬bership.In addition to Phi Beta Kappamembers, several other studentswere honored for academicachievement.Graduate researchHoward Nash and Barry Kahanwere given prizes for their workin physiology. Nash received theE. Gellhorn Prize for excellence instudy and research in neurophysio¬logy. Kahan was given the HenryGinsburg Memorial Prize in thedepartment of physiology.Chung Yi Chen received the Eliz¬abeth Norton Prize for excellencein research in chemistry.John W. C. Johnstone receivedthe Susan Colver Rosenberg Prizefor constructive study and originalresearch in the department ofsociology. The prize was awardedfor his PhD dissertation, submittedin March, 1961, entitled “SocialStructure and Patterns of massmedia consumption.”M. Esther Hermitte was giventhe Roy D. Albert Prize for theoutstanding master’s level anthro¬pology paper. She received the$50 prize for her MA thesis on“Social Mobility in a Chiapas Bi-cultural Town.” The thesis was astudy of relations between Indiansand Ladinas, a Spanish-speakingSpanish cultural group.The Albert Prize is given annu¬ally in memory of the son of A.Adrian Albert, dean of the divi¬sion of physical sciences.Humanities and fine artsRobert Applebaum and MarthaKarp were given the Millard P.Binyon Memorial Fund Prizes fordistinction in humanistic pursuitsin and out of the classroom.Marilyn Hammersley, CynthiaBarton, and Wendy Kindred werehonored for their work in the finearts. Miss Hammersley received.the Joseph Randall Shapiro Prizefor excellence in the fine arts.Miss Barton and Miss Kindred re¬ceived the Bonnie Harris Prizesfor excellence in fine art for en¬couragement of students in thefine arts.SSA honorsMaxine Penn and George Schier-ing of the School of Social ServiceAdministration were honored foroutstanding work in their first yearand for promise of future achieve¬ment in social work. Miss Pennwas given the Elizabeth Susan Dix¬on Honor Award, and Schiering,the Elsa Reinhardt Honor Award.Language prizesMartha Baechle, James P. Cot-tingham, and Anita Manuel re¬ceived Goethe ^Prizes, awarded to undergraduates for excellence inthe study of German.Carla Federici and Wendy Port-nuff received prizes for their workin French. Miss Portnuff wasawarded the French GovernmentPrize for excellence in French stu¬dies in the College. The prize ismade possible through the coopera¬tion of the French consulate inChicago. Miss Federici receivedthe Theodore Lee Neff cash prizefor excellence in the study ofFrench language and literature.Contest winnersA number of other prizes wentto students who won competitions.Florence James Adams Prizesfor excellence in artistic readingwere awarded to the first fourwinners of the Festival of the Artspoetry reading contest. The $125first place went to Norman Day-run; $100 second place to JaneWhitehill; $75 third place to JoeJShapiro; and $50 fourth place toHenry Hardy.Milo P. Jewett Prizes wereawarded to three divinity studentsfor excellence in Bible reading.Thomas Mikelson won the $150first place. John Buchanin andHenry Hardy tied for second place.Hal Opperman won the BaroqueStudies Prize, awarded for an out¬standing essay by a student in theart department.Opperman’s essay was on “TheLandscapes of Josse de Momper.”John Billings Fiske Poetry Priz¬es for original poems or cycles ofpoems went to Phyllis Reimann,Eyvind Ronquist, and Donald La-teiner. Reimann won first place;Ronquist, second; and Lateiner,third.A seoorid place prize, but no firstplace was awarded in the HaroldE. Goettler Political Institutionsessay contest. James Hood won theprize.Hood's topic was “Saint Boni¬face—His Exploitation of the TwoGreat Political Forces of his time,Papal and Frankish Authority.James Rauch won the Noyes-Cutter Greek Prize, awarded tothe author of the best essay onthe Common-Dialect Greek.Hamilton watch prizePatricia Burnham Linck wasgiven the Hamilton Watch Awardfor being the graduating studentwho has “most successfully com¬bined proficiency in his majorfield of study with achievements—whether academic, extra-curric,-ular, or combinatioris of both — inthe social sciences or humanities.Extra-curricular awardsThe Dean of Students’ office andthe Alumni association honored tengraduating College students fortheir contributions to extra-curric¬ular activities. The ten studentswere given Howell Murray - Alum¬ni Association Awards, which con¬sists of $100 and a student achieve¬ment medal.The eight men and two womenwho received the awards and theircitations follow:Mark Coburn. In the three shortyears of its existence, ShoreyHouse has been a campus pheno¬menon. By the excellence of itsown cultural program and by itsinfluence on other Houses, it hasraised the tone of residential life.Among the movers and shakers inShorey, Mark Coburn has stoodout both for his commitment to ahigh ideal of House life and hiszeal in bringing that ideal tofruition.Jay Greenberg. As editor of theMaroon in 1961-62, his was the dis¬tinction of bringing the paper backto daily publication after a lapseof twenty years; and he continuedbeing a creative observer and crit¬ic of campus life as a retired sageand full-time student.Sidney Iluttner. In his time, theDocumentary Film group hasmade the University a center ofactivity for those interested in thecinema as an art form. He isprominent among the founders ofthe Midwest Film Festival andamong the producers of a filmabount the University, soon to bereleased. He and his fellows wereindeed favorable to bold begin¬nings.Eugene Kadisb. In his earlyyears, he convulsed the campus asa comedian in Blackfriars shows.He moved on to serious roles with* • CHICAGO MAROON • June 7. m3 University Theatre and then to theeditorship of an excellent Cap andGown. In his final year, he servedas president ot a campus politicalparty. In all that he has done, hehas endeared himself to his fellowsby his warmth, his humor, and hisfundamental decency.Robert Lamb. He took over adying humor magazine, and itrose, phoenix-like, as a first-ratejournal of discussion. Few stu¬dents have transformed and re¬invigorated a campus institution ashe has Phoenix. To have done itat all was noteworthy; to havedone it so well is deserving of highpraise.Arthur MacEwan. President ofthe Student Government in a per-Our kids are sensitive, auare,vital, terribly anxious to learn. Andindependent? Good God, are theyindependent.Dean of the College, Alan Simpson,Time, May 31iod of tension, he pursued the truthas he saw it with integrity andgood humor. He brought to theGovernment fine qualities of en¬thusiasm, idealism, and commonsense. He may well be remem¬bered best in history as the Presi¬dent who kept his seat when allabout him were losing theirs.Ken Pierce. Editor of the Maroonin 1960-61, conductor of orchestrasfor Blackfriars and student dances,and talented actor in theatricalproductions as well, he has movedthe campus in various ways. HisMaroon was especially notable forhis series of substantial and in¬formed articles on the Urban Re¬newal Program.Roberta Reeder. Chairman ofthe Festival of the Arts in 1962,she staged a Festival that will belong remembered for its varietyand richness. She conceived of aFestival broader in scope thanthose of her predecessors, andthrough perseverance and endlessenergy brought it through to brilli¬ant success.Dorothy Sharpless. The smooth¬ness and high quality of this year'sBlackfriars’ show were the productof her charm, intelligence, andgeneral competence. Through her,we salute a distinguished line ofAbbots of Blackfriars who havebrought that organization's produc¬tions to a nigh standard of excel¬lence.Joel Zemans. A sportsman withprofessional standards and anamateur spirit, he has battled aca¬demic and athletic obstacles withequal determination and loyalty tothe University’s values.Athletic awardsEugene Ericksen and Cecil Woo-ley were honored for their partici¬pation in athletics. Ericksen wonthe Amos Alonzo Stagg Medal, giv¬en to the senior athlete with thebest all-around record for athletics,scholarship, and character. Wooleywon the William B. Bond Medalfor the varsity track athlete scor¬ing the greatest number of pointsduring the season.HonorariesIron Mask, Owl and Serpent, andNu Pi Sigma, UC’s undergraduatehonorary societies elected a totalof 64 new members. Present mem¬bers of Jte “secret” societieschoose incoming members eachspring.New members are selected be¬cause of their academic and extra¬curricular achievements and con¬tributions and their personal quali¬ties.In general, the societies sponsorfew activities aside from the initia¬tion of their new1 members. Deanof Students Warner Wick has thispast year, however, indicated hisdesire to see the societies take amore active role in leading thecampus and discussing campusissues.The new members of Iron Maskare Bob Axelrod, Arnold Brier,George Calef, Edward Custer,Morris Dyner, Stephen Ege, BurrEichelman, David Gaus, WayneGradman, Gerald Hyman* DickJacobson, Rich Lannon, KennethNealson, John R. North, BarryPhillips, Rod Phillips, Terry Platt,Larry Rockwood, Robert Schulen-erg, Gordon Stoltzner, Donald Wil¬ liams, Kent Wooldrige, and CecilWooley.The new members of Owl andSerpent are Robert Appel baum,Larry Bowman, Michael Canes,Cliff Cox, Michael Edelstein, CarlFeinstein, Stephen Fortgang, Bor-uch Glasgow, Richard Mandel, Mi¬chael McKeon, Peter Nacourney,Bruce Rappaport, Howard Rutten-berg, David Smigelskis, RichardSwafford, Stephen Westheimer,Michael Wolfson, Michael Wollan,and Joel Zemans.The new members of Nu Pi Sig¬ma are Eve Bell, Ina Dvorkin,Laura Godofsky, Stephanie Gor¬don. Susan Guggenheim, ElizabethHurtig, Kathy Janus, BelleruthKrepon, Paula Larson, JoanMeans, Mom Movshin, Sandy Nie-man, Susan Platt, Wendy Port¬nuff, Pamela Procuniar, TerriRay, Jane Rosenberg, Linda Salo¬mon, Dotty Schlotthauer, AprilSchwartz, Pam Smith, Hene Tam-arkin, and Sylvia Woodby.Service honorariesMembers of the faculty and ad¬ministration choose a number ofundergraduate students each yearto belong to the University’s serv¬ice honoraries, Maroon Key Socie¬ty and the Student Aides.Members of Maroon Key act asofficial hosts for the University.Student Aides assist Harold Ilay-don, marshal of the University, atUniversity functions such as as¬semblies and convocations. Stu¬dents are chosen for both organi¬zations for their leadership in aca¬demic and extracurricular activi¬ties.The new members of MaroonKey are Katherine Bailey, MyrnaBell, Lester Brown, Clifford Cox,Katherine Dusak, Burr Eichelman,Jr., Joe T. Ford, Richard Gold-stone, Stephanie Gordon, WayneGroves, Margaret Horowitz, MarkJosei>h, Paula Larson, Glenn Loaf-mann, Mary Mayhew, John Mc¬Connell, Kenneth Nealson, Chris¬tine Osterhus, Mary Parmer, Ken¬neth Taylor, Linda Thoren, andMarilyn Wishard.Current members of the MaroonKey Society are Jerry Bathke,George Calef, Vicky Chaet, Wil¬liam Cruce, Val Dalwin, Ken Da¬vidson, Betsy Ellenbogen, EugeneEricksen, Janifer Gerl, VirginiaGriffin, Robert Hauser, GeorgiaHelmer, Sid Huttner, Merle Lahti,Larry Liss, Jean MacLean, JohnMiller, Barbara Morton, Jane Orr,Richard Persha, Jane Saxe, DottySharpless, William Shew, CarolSimpson, Pam Smith, Bill Weber,and Douglas White.The new students aides are Myr¬na Bell. Bill Braithwaite, ArnoldBrier, Stephen Brown, John Croth*-ers, Bill Cruce, Hannah Frisch,Penny Gordon, Daniel Gross, Su¬san Hellmann, Karen Honeycutt,Mary King Richard Mandel, BruceMcKellips, Frederick Meins, Jr.,Ellen Ross, Dinah Solomon, KenTaylor, David Tillitson, and SylviaWoodby.Foreign studyThirteen students have receivedfellowships to study abroad.Virginia Davis, Alan Gibbons, Joseph Pickle, Jr„ Susan Guggen¬heim, John Crothers, MarthaCrowe, and Donald Thomas, Jr.,and Chauncey Meilor III will studyin Germany.Gibbons, Pickle, and Miss Davisreceived Fullbright grants. MissGuggenheim received a Danksti-pendium of the federal Republicof Germany.Crothers and Miss Crowe re¬ceived German Academic Ex¬change Service Summer Fellow¬ships. Thomas will represent UCin the German Academic Ex¬change Service Reciprocal Ex¬change. and Meilor will representUC in the University of Frank for t-University of Chicago Exchange.Lawrence Grow and Robert Pin-cus - Witten have received FrenchGovernment fellowships.Richard Hellie will study in theSoviet Union on an Inter-UniversityCommittee on Travel Grants Fel¬lowship.US fellowshipsFor study in the US, Guy Oakesand James Ilood have receivedDanforth fellowships, 86 studentshave been awarded National sci¬ence foundation graduate coopera¬tive, summer, and graduate studyfellowships, and 19 students re¬ceived Wooorow Wilson fellow¬ships. The NSF and Wilson fellowswere announced at the start of thisquarter.Nancy Shand, a PhD candidatefn anthropology, received an 1,800fellowship from the New YorkChapter of the American Scandi¬navian Foundation to study theLapps.The Lapps are a group of peopleliving in Scandinavia.In 1955 Miss Shand worked withthe American University in Bierut,Lebanon and did research on Arabvillage develoj>ment prog rail vs.Since then she has directed adulteducation projects in the LowerNorth Community Center in Chi¬cago.James A. Goss, a PhD candidatein anthropology, has received oneof twenty-four fellowships awardedthis spring for graduate linguisticstudy by the American Council ofJ*earned Societies.Goss will use his grant for fur¬ther study of the Ute language ata Ute reservation in Colorado inconjunction with the University ofColorado’s anthropology depart¬ment. His grant is for $5,000.Summerfield scholarRobert Joseph Emslie has beenselected by his brothers in PhiKappa Psi as the SummerfieldScholar of the Year.This award is made annually ineach of the 63 chapters of thefraternity to a member who, inthe opinion of his fellows, hasachieved an excellent record ofscholarship combined with dem¬onstrated leadership qualities andworthwhile contributions to hisuniversity and to the fraternity.Along with a Summerfield certi¬ficate goes a cash award of$100,00.Students seeking Rhodesshould see Playe nowStudents interested in ap¬plying for Rhodes scholar¬ships should contact Deanof Undergraduate StudentsGeorge Playe before the end ofthis quarter.Unmarried male citizens of theUnited States who are between18 and 24 years of age eligible.Rhodes Scholarships which areused at the University of Oxford,are awarded for two years andmay be extended for a third year.The Rhodes stipened should besufficient to meet term-time andvacation expensese, but does notcover transportation to and fromOxford.Thirty-two scholarships are as¬signed annually to the US stu¬dents. An applicant must gothrough rough screening on cam¬pus, followed by official scieeningby the UC Rhodes Scholarship committee. Final decisions resultfrom Regional competition.Students who wish to be con¬sidered for the scholarships shouldspeak with Playe, in Gates-Blake116.Paula Fozzy and William Libby,graduate students, shared a $500prize for the best research prizein “Reorganizations in Bureaucra¬cies” in a competition establishedby the University. Prize moneywas provided by the Fors Founda¬tion to promote interdisciplinarystudy of organizations.The title of Libby’s paper was“The End of the Trip to Work.”Miss Fozzy’s paper was entitled“Reorganization of the UnitedStates Space Program.”Miss f ozzy is a student in thedepartment of philosophy. Libbyis enrolled in the Business school.*r*< t''*1/ v Tuition squeeze hits universities(continued Trom page 1)|o raise tuition. “But that doesn'tniean it won’t be thought about,”he added.“There is a tendency for similaruniversities” to stay within thesame tuition range, he noted.The University of Chicago, al¬though its tuition is 42nd, is “tryingto be the number one university inthe country,” he said. “And thenumber one university needs theresources to be number one.”Beadle does not, however, thinkthat UC has to have the nation’shighest tuition to be its top univer¬sity.More revenue neededNevertheless, “a university hasa responsibility to be strong andnot to overlook sources of incomethat would make it stronger,” hesaid.A lot of tuition funds, especiallyat the graduate level, come fromoutside sources, such as the Na¬tional Science Foundation. Increas¬ing tuition, then, would largelymean increasing this outside in-Return of football(continued from page 1)as they spontaneously occur.”Chicago bolted the ranks of BigTen football on December 21, 1939,and dropped intercollegiate foot¬ball shortly afterwards.In 1946, the University, whichhad been one of the founders ofthe Big Ten, severed all athleticties with the organization, becauseit no longer felt capable of provid¬ing equal competition. Chicago’steams, once the most feared inAmerica, had declined steadilysince the end of the first WorldWar.In 1955 an attempt was made tobring back intercollegiate .footballto the University. A class formed,and 2 faculty committee was setup to examine the football question.The committee, headed by then-Chancellor Lawrence Kimpton andincluding among its members Deanof Students Warner Wick, unani¬mously recommended in a reportthat football be returned to UCon a non conference, “free-lance”basis. Their report was submittedto the Council of the Universityof Senate, the Academic governingbody of the University, where itwas rejected.Camping suppliesavailableThe Outing Club will rent camp¬ing equipment to any UC student,faculty member, alumnus, and tomembers of outdoor organizationsin the Chicago area. ContactHarold Lucas, ext. 2381 for moreinformation.^ 1 t^ear Contact at ease Aby Dr. Kurt RosenbaumOptometrist1207 E. 55th St. HY 3-8372•t WoodUwanewshop addressu** ' foreign car hospital & dini?5424 KimbarkMl 3-3113Bob Lestermg psychiatrist come.A UC tuition increase would al¬ways be accompanied by expandedscholarship funds, said Beadle.Students with established financialneed would not be made to sufferby a tuition increase.In 1957-58, the most expensivecolleges in the nation, Finch andRadcliffe, charged about' $2500 fortuition, fees, room and board. Atthat time, these “fixed costs’’ ofgetting a college education ex¬ceeded $2000 in only about 15 col¬leges. This number has sinceleaped to about 120UC tuition $690 in 1957-58In 1957-58, UC’s tuition was $690,less than half of what it is now.In 1957-58 and the five proceedingyears, when this low tuition was ineffect, students also paid a mere$13 in fees. Since 1957, there hasbeen an annual tuition or fee in¬crease at UC. Attending the Uni¬versity now costs some $90 a week.Tuition increases, both at UC andelsewhere, have greatly out¬stripped the general rise in the costof living during the past decade.Spiraling costsUC’s enrollment has not changedgreatly since 1957, but expend¬ itures, primarily for teaching andresearch, have risen by about 50%.In 1957-58, the University spent$30,292,226, or 64.2% of its $47,164,-714 budget on instruction and re¬search. Last year, a similar per¬centage of its budget came to$45,782,010.In -1957-58, student fees andtuition accounted for $5,862,985, or12.4% of the University’s $47,315,-382 income. Last year, student feesof $9,684,719 represented 14.3% ofthe University’s income.Tuition in general is designed ta-take care of increased costs tobalance increased expenditures,said Beadle. He pointed out thatmuch of the University’s revenuefrom tuition goes back into studentaid and student activities funds.Student aid and services repre¬sented 5.6% of the University’sexpenditures last year, and 6.5% in1957-8. In 1957-58, the Universityspent $1,972,365 on student aid;last year it spent $2,539,158.Although tuition has doubled, theamount of student aid has not.Last year’s expenditure repre¬sented .4% less of the University’stotal budget than the 1957-58 ex¬penditure on Student aid.Marc Cogan to edit literary supplementMarc Cogan, a second-yearstudent in the College, willedit the Maroon literary sup¬plement which will begin pub¬lishing in the fall.The appointment was announcedyesterday by John T. Williams,Maroon editor-elect.The literary supplement will bea bi-weekly insert in the news¬paper which will contain reviewsof significant books, comments ongeneral trends in publishing andliterature, and news of campusevents centering around literature.Cogan announced that he willbegin working on the supplementthis summer. He pointed out that a great deal of advance planningmust go into each issue; bookreviews, for- example, must besolicited from faculty members andstudents several weeks in advanceof publication.Williams expressed “completeconfidence” in Cogan’s capabili¬ties. According to Williams, Coganpossesses the imagination, dili¬gence and breadth of interestsrequisite for the position.Cogan, an English major, hasworked in University Theatre andfor the campus radio station,WUCB.Other staff appointments will beannounced during the summerquarter, according to Williams.London... late summer... lovely!September 3-26 Group Flight, Chicago to London<395Via Pan Am Jets, round tripFor more information, Call 667-8284, or Ext. 3272WHY WILT THIS SUMMER?SLEEP AND STUDY IN ACOOL REFRESHING ROOMSPECIAL FORREGISTERED STUDENTSAND FACULTY MEMBERSPICK UP AND INSTALL A V' *#6$#Cl fiJtoon-,ROOM AIR CONDITIONERRETURN AT END$4k ) OF SEASONFits' sfjndard windows as narrow asM54" wida. Also casamant windows.J.500 BTU certified • Automatic Thermostat• Permanent Washable| Filter• 2-Speed Fan• Tilt-Out Magnetic Front• 2 Rotary No-DraftGrilles ^„■V.Rent may ba applied-aainst purchase price_ of $159.50■ A I ’ <&&'- *»**u*~■ PHONE—-RESERVE YOUR AIR CONDITIONER; BRING IN YOUR ID CARDAND WINDOW MEASUREMENTS- -■ ■ • >: ■ iiiinilnj'inniiTi'"r'i1 1 "in . -940 W. CHICAGO AVE. a, a aqaa'-“-‘GO 22, ILLINOIS SE 3-3900COOLER SERVICE, he.ri~ AA..™|sE349do|§ HOURS; Mon. « Tlmo. 9-7; Tugs.. Wed.. Frl. Sat. 9-5... .,j HALLETT& SONSEXPERT MOVERS, INC.LOCAL - INTERSTATE • WORLDWIDESTORAGEWhen You Have a Moving ProblemLarge or SmallCALLTOM HALLETTUA|I FTT b,llhallett■ ■ ■ JACK HALLETTPHONE VI 6-1015AGENT FOROffice & Warehouse10 E. 70lh NATIONALVAN LINES. INC.Mills*TELEPHONE FAirfax 4-9713BROWN'S BARBER SHOPAIR CONDITIONED FOR YOUR COMFORTHENRY K. BROWN, Prop.1011 EAST 53rd STREETCHICAGO IS, ILL.Students, Faculty, AlumniThe place for your suits,it’s Cohn & SternThe place for your^sportcoat,it’s Cohn & SternThe place for your shirts & ties,it’s Cohn & SternThe place for your shoes & socks,it’s Cohn & SternThe place for your chinos & walkshorts,it’s Cohn & Stern ^The Place For All YourWearing Apparel-.1it sCohn & Stern/Thank you for your patronage. We were overwhelmedby, the response of the students and faculty to our new“Town 8C Campus Shop” and are very grateful.We look forward to seeing our friends at the U of Cduring the summer months and next fall.Herman CohenEric Sternand Mitch ShapiroLaw School ’64THE STORE FOR MEN©man anil ©amjrnaIn the New Hyde Park Shopping Center1502-06 E. 55th St. Phone 752-8100me,June 7, 1963 • CHICAGO MAROON •Lashof, Marriott, Rosenthal, Sinaiko honoredThree get College WillettsThey include grants of up to $3,500,v?ach- lf§S8 M - ISP Mrs. .Webber', ,a member of* the'.y^faculty since,. 1958. will work on a;book analyzing stylistic leatures of'Spanish traditional poetry . Her,/.field of special, academic interest:•bis Spanish Medieval and %Renais-§sance literature.^?'" dkY, sj||ll§llr, Bromberger, who joined the>*stliftj■ . . in 1961, will do a paper on eroteticVtment-of logic—the loglc of Questions. HeMs^l•iences? particularly interested in ,'the' )>hi- .professor Ios°Phy of science Yand logic and,I the Rus4 in’the philosophy of language.'Hiha, a faculty member --.rue the department ofan led an- 1960, will collect inatei ial toy a-y nually,fallowing--younger faculty' political biographycot*Paul Milm-‘ members "to be released from their kov—an important Russian politi/l teaching duties* for arf academic cal figure in the early paK ofvthef quarter in order'.to • do research. ‘ twentieth century. ’ - *College.Threei.members of^tlie Col-*. • . * ■ • . .Siege faculty haye|been 'chosenbiships,4* Dean of ; the CollegeV’Alan Snnpsoir announced «today.‘ ■” 1 The'awards will go to:T*$ "(i‘1y? Ruth H. Webber, assistant pro-; f.fessor ofTman* oF;staff:* Sylvain^professor !':<■ h cl<* .>•. f«-n «-Mtl at 1 'C . m« < 1954 has been con-;‘—I ned with comparingjersonnl charm. his and c< . ng ihe philosophical;(knowledge hhnd (his devotion: to traditions of China ( and the West-■mathematics,- Mr. Lashof draws. ern world.v i'f, students^from all levels 'towardsf-£Said his .citation: “Mr. Sinaikb’s(- a clearer view of - the unity of learning" as , remarkable for itspresen ted ~; at? in at he m a tics'- and (a more; inventive depthCandYits diversity . . s Herelation ;to mathematics,”’' said his has acquired a professional mas-;c-it.«tion , , : tery of the Chinese language;-and:jd,4*:*Because of (him students an^ ‘ classical Cliinese philosophy. Hisstaff alike have a sharper sense °f( knowledge of Greek philosophy—the mutual excitement and satis- in particular the dialogues of Platofaction iu tiieccommoq .enterprise y_js profound. ■ - -v”learning mathematics,v a a ^ ‘-He has shed important light onifRichard4rLash6fl 1McKim , HI HMarriott, Orson Rosenthal, ''ul '";|ly'(and ^Herman * Sinaiko' havebeen given $1000/,Quantrellawards^ lor ^excellence in ? under¬graduate teaching„ . gggjfp|The awards ewered ]the University's 7th annuaAwards Assembly!.on Maj 23.V Lashof is associate professor ofmathematics in the College andmathematics.Marriot is associate professor inthe department of anthropology °,* . , , . .. , ;and in the social sciences section through this a larger^ appreciationyphilbsdphic texts; yet, at the" * 1 - - - . * . of the values of the University.' rjt( time; has been interested in1 .ashol has conducted . and di-- critical •! problems1 as >they -.arrcted;, mathcmatical dreseareh 'on' in the Utertaure of various;;id*f,ferential vgeometry, ,an<L; differ^ pies and periods. ‘It ; is. signi(,'ential topology.A'that-one of hispublished^]..MorrioH— India *\ Jdeuls with the educational uM irriott. who tirst taught at UC nPS-, l>t Anna Karenina.(<V4 V'S'-I QCA 5*r\ /l;,<y t z-v nr5C;ffe'L' i *iefc«&'•?%•»¥*■» Ik M :i-''.Dl— _ 11. ;.'2■ J •«..languages and civilizatsince .1954 ? ■ 1 Indinn ciyili'■ - -X-''KaS'rf’.ll’afe Ships' ^7^rn‘ll”5•*»**•* -ms vntoul, Rccentlvyhc established a new . ..* . '*he brings togeth'Wdrse ^'seauenc-eyin .modern ..geoi^meK-. ' -t, ®. “ ■ ,1 a ' - • ceptions from' tl, me try for rxith adv a need . under- ,r.... . a 3 m < and an understauraduate' and graduate -students. . - - . ,. . ... • • humanistic tradiC C U P 3 n C y 1,|s colleagues aiBromberger, Webber, Riba, Simpson-*'o pen... i -; ._ ’ ’ '■ ,Marriott has carri.d out field Valuer to which the Huma.uU.cs-rareh in Iii ii.in villages and has are ultimatelv a<l<lressed.’'imy^ti^rUinn'y' -•?=' . ! ll ICl- J Malcolm sharp longtime occubaricy countering .-wliat he Sharp\dis£ussed'-J-m sb'mo detail^ontnl in- the coS^uefibes^f a theoreticalI Civil liberation renewal. » ^ V ^ ^ ‘ ^artyf-* in which Mr tS^arp dis-.:,;^^taoyem^h^S|fll!asp^cbm%|i^siifi|;.®!^de#^tSrh!hh'};iriehcwah(;W;egrc^s5^aii^i^tbi! • irist^&%i^fifesre-t’- v ■ ■ Ky:-( • ■ y.. * -■Utr The nationaUy-knowriyUC'profes-’ area to another, generally against hberateh not inviting !rherhbers of -■ RosenthalHouse Coffee ^lus ,wi ^May^ zt, -de- * would permit ^freedom of choice he/ holds^ ! ^ C ?cl a red that m recent months dhe-tor the Negroes. Ah-.inherent iauit -^If/'some'l-law enforcement mech-- ,(:((■■(,/: ■■■" ' ■ ^ ^ ■ ( a, -;;■ titiyyr■ ' ' ' "ght if he' were m th^ Illinois Pjofit from the price fluctuation prevent membe. s of that ©montyi’ Legislature he would» not of property which attends the'mass from attending the party,. Sharp is.(speak "strongly* in favor of it( .hb\ an etlinic.group-frqrn* sued m court-/ AccordingsTtf" him,'would certainly vote'for it. ’ ’ Pne part of-oaicity^tb (anoiier; ’’ - he tloses .under a p^gg’edent in'V Sharp explained .that .many, years < Sharp agreed? with theUview that which the Supreme Court ruled lin-ago he ,a<iv<X'ated open occupancy the advantages of open ocean,mey der the 14th cnenrlment that d(ryJ but'reventually changed his'mind will be properly directed if the crimination - is unconstitutional: \after av study of arguments by, UG Negroes-* M professor of economics, - Milton occupan*-Friedman, relative to state inter- removal;, , <<V - , s, 1 @ JmsTerence-tinprivate- property; man-I - -d - ,i y . oRec'ently,. however, he was im- active 1 racers In addition to his‘scientilic publications, lie* is work-ing on a textbook of-general bio-,i lArfu* j^rV.ovc? 0/4 rw# r\- lc^n v»vo non r* a orM?Recently,, however,- he\' 1Lashof money to? "Richard La^llOf, associate natioii VU, ‘‘appropriate;1, because^,prol cssor ot: mat hematics, Qu>n*fel1 •fl'v‘tli a‘ trU4t«® of **v-, , ; , . c., eral N®^'° and wa» verylias (lonab'd ll 1 S .-pi, ' HI interested in bettering the lot ofQuantf’cll awai'd to th(‘ Stu- the Negro m America.”dent '.Non-Violent < u<>i dinatimr I^a.-huf b< I ie\,eh that tlie |>* ojile., . . /ovtr>r>\ ' at universities . should serve as•; -t . .. leaders in th^ issue of civil rights,SNCC is ari oiganization of Ne- but8 that '‘not- enough are eoif-g.o and white students and for- ((.rn(.d w.th this problem.” Them.*r -t udents t ui k ntly t onduct- stu<le.rt.s at UC, he * said, haveing votejr\ registration -drives* in jjeen active and are doing Mgni-,various portions ofvthe South. . fltant things.8 1La.-hof donated the award mb- Concerning open occupancy innoy to SN( (. so that the organiz-a- the* University community and inlion ran continue its work on civ- ,.jty of Chicago, Lashof said11 nehts. “Civil rights is the basic that the University’s stand shouldproblem in America today,” he be clarified. Nobody really knowsexplained in an interview. “SNCC, what tiie University’s position; isin my opinion is doing fundamen- because the University las nevertal work through its participation ,nade a public statement,in voter registration.” Lashof feel, that increased ef-Lashof commented that his do- forts by student, faculty to bringMUseum 4-4420 Free Estimates,REASONABLE RATESA-l Express MoversSHIPPING, CRATING; PACKING6760 S. STONY' ISLAND AVENUE^^*:j!K/5t«dehi;MoviRg " CFRANK ALOV^/ *. FRANK ROMACK voted on'the “issue.,, %■- *.,;.yr/4-::s;: Does a man really take unfair advantage of womenwhen he uses Mennen Skin Bracer?'$■ V"-s Wm9sM $ ' ab-nyw- -- fl a •'r45 - - All depends on why hb uses it. Ipf * FvmzJ I ?L, -’4 t n en simply think M l-fced S B er is t best fe. I!otion arou f I big, rather !;-v ' Because' it, helps (heal shaving nicks and scrapes. Because ithelps prevent blemishes. (m ~WepX*r’wb° can blame them if Bracer’s crisp, long-lasting aroma °4‘||V|skinbracwI fl| |ii|^ just happens to affect women so remarkably? * * fp | L " . 3-(((Y'PMU 4-1014,1015 1427 East 67th Si« r*--44. Court Theatreheads UC summer Alumni return to UCAn inter - university pro¬gram in South Asian studiesand Court Theatre’s outdoorplays and concerts will high¬light activities at UC this summer.An estimated 4,000 students willbe on campus this summer.The College, the divisions, andthe professional schools will alloffer full-quarter courses. In addi¬tion, there are scheduled threespecial three-week terms for teach¬ers and school administrators andmany conferences, workshops, andseminars.The Inter-university ' SummerProgram in South Asian Studiesis a cooperative venture sponsoredby the University of California atBerkeley, and the Universities ofChicago, Wisconsin, Minnesota andMichigan. The program will be of¬fered on UC from June 17-August30 this year, with a staff from 11colleges and universities.The program includes coursesin the Hindi, Bengali, Tamil, Kan¬nada, and Telegu languages, andin the history, politics, culture,geography, philosophy, and eco¬nomics of Southern Asia, particu¬larly of India.Court Theatre, University's Thea¬tre’s outdoor summer extensionwill present three {days and threeconcerts in Hutchinson Court.After two years of experimentingwith modern drama, Court thisyear returns to Shakespeare andMoliere.The season will open on July 5with Shakespeare’s MidsummerNight’s Dream. On July 26, Mo-liere’s The Confounded Husbandtakes over, and on August 16Shakespeare's King Lear closes outthe season.The plays are presented Friday,Saturday, and Sunday Nights in-the-round. Members of the au¬dience may sit on blankets or lawn chairs. In case of rain Courtmoves indoors to nearby MandelHall.In addition to the three plays,Court will present three Thursdayconcerts. On July 11, “twentiethcentury troubador,” Richard DyerBennet will sing in the Court. OnAugust 1, Woody Herman and his1963 Band will play, and on August22 Flamenco guitarist Carol Mon¬toya, perennial favorite, returns.The department of education’s26th Annual Conference on Read¬ing, will be June 25-28. The themeof this year’s conference is “read¬ing and the language arts.”In addition, the Department ofEducation will conduct sevenworkshops: “Nursery School andKindergarten Education” (July1-19); “Administrators of Univer¬sity Adult Education” (June 24-July 13); “The 11th Annual Work¬shop in Reading” (July 1-26);“Problems of Education in De¬veloped and Developing Countries”(July 15-August 3); “Elementaryand Secondary School Principals”(June 24-July 13); “Evaluation andMeasurement in Modern ForeignLanguages” (June 24-July 13); and“History of Science and theScience Curriculum” (June 24-July 13).The Graduate Library School willhold its 28th annual conference onAugust 5, 6, and 7. This year theconference will deal with changes,needs, and experiments in librarycatalogues.The School of Social ServiceAdministration will offer 22 insti¬tutes for practicing social workers’"from June 17-28 and July 15-26.Topics of the institutes includecharacter problems, foster homes,community organization, childrenwith school problems, administra¬tion of social welfare agencies,public welfare, supervision, juve¬nile delinquents, and casework(Continued on Page 25)Mr. "TVDISCOUNT RECORD MARTLISTEN... YOU JAZZ LOVERSIF ... You Haven't Visited Our StoreWe Have Both Lost Money!HUNDREDS OF LP'SBy Getz, Mulligan, Canonball, Taylor, Lateef, Etc.$*198Regular Price — $4.98 & $5.98(Mono or Stereo)Mr. “T’s” Discount Record Mart(It's Mr. "TV For Jon LP’s)Corner 47th St. & Ingleside Are. All Phones: 624-4666FREEH! Present This Ad and Receive $1.00 Cloth orBrush with LP Purchase! Alumni have taken over theUC campus this weekend to, attend activities including lec¬tures and seminars, class re¬unions, luncheons, receptions andopen-houses.The annual Alumni reunion willbe highlighted by an address byGeneral John K. Gerhart, com¬mander-in-chief of the NorthAmerican Air Defense Command,Air Defense Command, at theat the all-alumni luncheon tomor¬row afternoon in Hutchinson Com-cons.Gerhart, who received his bach¬elor of philosophy degree,from UCin 1928. is one of the four menchosen to receive the UC AlumniAssociation’s highest award, theAlumni Medal, awarded for “dis¬tinction in one’s field of special¬ization or for service to societyor both.”Other recipients of the award,which will be given at the lunch¬eon, include Dr. Walter LincolnPalmer, Richard T. Crane, profes¬sor of medicine emeritus, ThomasCharles Poulter, senior scientificadvisor at the Stanford ResearchInstitute, and Walter VincentSchaefer, justice of the SupremeCourt of Illinois.In addition to the four Alumnimedals, eighteen “Alumni Cita¬tions of Useful Citizen” will begiven.Today at 10 am, a seminar on“Academic-Prediction Tests” willbe given at the Center for Con¬tinuing Education. Panelists willinclude John M. Stalnaker, presi¬dent of the National Merit Schol¬arship corporation, Lyle M. Spen¬cer, president of Science Researchassociate director of admissionsand George L. Playe, dean of un¬dergraduate students.Concurrently, a seminar on“Who’s Responsible for TV Pro¬gramming?” will be held at theCenter for Continuing Education.Panelists will be John F. Dille,Jr., president of the Truth Pub¬lishing Company, and Gary A.Steiner, associate professor of be¬havioral science, Graduate Schoolof Business.“The Making of a Criminal” willbe discussed by Harold W. Solo¬mon, visiting associate professorof criminal law, the ReverendJames Jones, St. Leonard's House,Frank Morrissey, Bureau of Voca¬tional Rehabilitation, and a guestwho will tell about the undersideof society, at the Center for Con¬tinuing Education tomorrow at 10am.“Fact and Fancy in Animal Be¬havior” will be discussed by Ben¬son E. Ginsberg, William RaineyHarper professor in the College at2:45 tomorrow afternoon in CobbREADMORE,RETAINHOBBY HOUSERESTAURANTOpen Dawn to DawnBREAKFAST DINNERLUNCH SNACKS1342 E. 53rd St. ** AD 17 Learn read 3MUKL, 10. times fast-er — with under-ULl standing and en-nrTTCn joyment im-BETltiK possible inGRADES al readingmethods. This new wayto read will help you do bet-‘ter on exams, cut your hoursof study to give you moretime for extracurricularactivities. Taught with per¬sonal attention by skilledteachers.Summer classes now formingCall For Free BrochureEVELYN WOODReading Dynamics Instituteof Chicago, Inc.180 West Adams St., Suite 300Chicago 6, IllinoisSTate 2-7014CEntral 0-8600 110. After the lecture, Ginsbergwill conduct a tour of new Collegebiology staff research laboratories.Philip M. Hauser, professor andchairman of the department ofsociology and director of the Popu¬lation Research and Training Cen¬ter, will speak on “The PopulationDilemma” in Eckhart Hall 133 at2:45 pm.Two new films about Universityactivities will be. shown tomorrowat the Center for Continuing Edu¬cation, “The Idea,” and 18-minutepresentation about William RaineyHarper’s establishment of a re¬search-oriented university, will beshown at 9:30 am. “The ManyFaces of Argonne,” an hour-longpicture of the multi-faceted Ar¬gonne National Laboratory, op¬erated by UC for the Atomic En¬ergy Commission, will be shownat 9:30 and 10:45 am.More thait 50 alumni from theClass of 1913 will celebrate their50th reunion tonight at the Quad¬rangle Club. Among those return¬ing for the dinner will be Jiuji G.Kasai, president of the Japan-American Cultural Society, whowill present the University with apainting of Abraham Lincoln doneon silk lined with gold leaves.Other classes holding reunionsare those of 1903, 1908. 1918, 1928,1933, 1938, 1943, 1948, 1953, and1958. In addition, there will be anEmeritus Club reception in NorthLounge of Reynolds Club.The 1963 Faculty Revels, an an¬nual spoof of University life, willbe held at 8:30 tonight in Mandel Hall. The production “Impatienc©-or, True to Type,” features per¬formances by President Beadleand many professors.Alumni will be able to watchpreliminaries for the National Col¬legiate Athletic Association Na¬tional Track and Field Champion¬ships, college division, at StaggField at 4 pm today at 11:30 amtomorrow. At 3:45 tomorrow finalswill be held.About 80 colleges will send en¬tries, making the meet one of thelargest ever held in Chicago. TomO’Hara, Loyola University’s stardistance runner will try for hisfirst sub-4 minute mile outdoors.Amos Alonzo Stagg, who will be101 years old in August, is themeet’s honorary chairman.The reunion will close with thefifty-third annual InterfraternitySing in Hutchinson court tomor¬row night, followed by the ring¬ing of the Alma Mater on theMitchell Tower Chimes.Events of alumni week heldWednesday and Thursday includedan address by Dr. Frances O.Kelsey, former UC faculty mem¬ber and chief medical officer ofthe Investigational Drug Branchof the Federal Food and DrugAdministration on “The Univer¬sity of Chicago and New DrugLegislation,” an address by Fair¬fax M. Cone, chairman of the ex¬ecutive committee of Foote, Cone,and Belding on “ Government:Friend or Foe,” and a carillonrecital by Daniel Robins, Univer¬sity carillonneur.-FEATURING’.BooksD. H. Russ-ll: CHILDREN LEARN TO READWas 5.50. Now 4.40Background and phase developments for children’s reading programs.A. Richards: HUNGER AND WORK IN A SAVAGE COMMUNITYWas 2.75. Now 1.32Nutrition studied in its economic and symbolic primitive roles.AVICENNA ON THEOLOGYWas 1.50. Now 1.07Presents the profund reason of a Muslim who influenced Western thought.INTERNATIONAL CLOUD ATLAS, VOL. IWas 3.25. Now 2.51The classification, description, and coding of clouds and meteors.Wrage and Baskerville: AMERICAN FORUMWas 7.50. Now 4.50The great debates which helped to shape our history.THE ILLUSTRATED ENCYCLOPEDIAWas 6.95. Now 3.34One thousand pictures. Thousands of subjects in sciences, history, generalknowledge arranged for reading as well as for reference.Moosbrugger Si Weigner: U.S.A.Was 15.00. Now 9.00A picture tour of America /es: MODERN FRENCH INTERIORSWas 15.00. Now 7.20200 illustrations. 24 plates in color.Liberman: THE ARTIST IN HIS STUDIOWas 17.50. Now 9.00Photographs and paintings of 39 modern masters presented by AlexanderLiberman.Eudes:Stationery Dept. ItemsList Finders $1.95List Finders 2.29List FindersLady Cartridge Sets 10.00Lady Cartridge Sets 15.00Black Wing Pencils 1.80 dot.Photographic Dept. ItemsSale PriceFully Automatic Mansfield Skylark Camera with Case $21.50Regular Price Sale PriceSI.251.503.95 2.7510.00 6.0015.00 8.00.90 dasAgfa Glass Mounts. Box of 20300 ft. reels, 8 mmG.E. flash bulbs M-25Prepaid Photo Finishing Envelopes at Reduced PricesGift Dept. ItemsMen's Short Sleeve Sport Shirts S3.95Women's Blouses 3.95Women's Hosiery (Discontinued Styles) 1.35Costume Jewelry j.ooWomen's Lingerie 4.00See Special Sale TableThe University of Chicago Bookstore5802 Ellis Ave.8-5 Man., Thur.. Fri.; 8-12 Sat. .45.351.15Were Now$2.502.50.792 502.50*> C K I € A G * 7Levi and UC set USr by Laura GodofskyTlie University of Chicago’s pio¬neering work in urban renewal hasresolved a financial conflict betweencities and universities so that for thefirst time both now view institutional ex¬pansion as mutually beneficial and desir¬able.As the result of federal legislation ob¬tained for the University in 1959, by pro¬fessor of urban studies Julian Levi, thenation’s cities will receive over $1 billionwithin the next five years as a by-productof university growth.Through matching federal grants, thislegislation represents the first attempt tocompensate cities for the funds they losewhen tax exempt universities take overwhat was taxable property.For every dollar spent by a universityin or near an urban renewal project onacquisition, clearance, and tenant reloca¬tion, the federal government will grant thecity in which the university is locatedeither 2 or 3 dollars, depending on the ar¬rangements made for the planning andadministration of the project.This provision is known as section 112of the Federal Housing law. It was firstsuggested by Levi in a speech he madein 1957.In Chicago, UC’s $11 million urban re¬newal expenditures could bring the city some$33 million from the federal government tospend as it sees fit on its various urbanrenewal projects. Since Chicago voters lastspring defeated a bond issue that wouldhave financed many urban renewal pro¬jects, the UC-sparked money now con¬stitutes a major portion of the city’s fundsfor immediate renewal activities.Section 112 and almost all other existingcity, state, and national legislation dealingwith universities and urban renewal repre¬sent solutions — largely Levi’s — to theproblems encountered by the University ofChicago in its attempts to expand itsfacilities.In obtaining legislation, said Levi, UChas had to carry “onerous national re¬sponsibilities.’’ It has been necessary forUC to discuss its problems publicly, whilemany other campuses in the US, althoughfar worse off th'an UC, have hid theirs,he said.Because of the legal tools and techniquesdeveloped by UC, more than 90 institutionsare currently finding it possible to developthe physical facilities to successfully meetthe 1960s’ challenge of rapidly increasingenrollments, and many others have plansto initiate expansion programs.The need for land upon which to buildnew facilities is crucial to a University ex¬pansion program. Yet this need had beensubstantially unsatisfied before the pas¬sage of section 112, which relates speci¬fically to land acquisition.Federal aid to universities for the con¬struction of academic facilities would be•f little value if the universities did nothave the help of section 112 in getting land•n which to build these facilities.With the prospect of adequate replace¬ment of lost tax revenues, cities havebecome willing to help universities obtainland and use it for institutional expansion.On the other hand, with dubious prospectsof adequate replacement of lost housingfacilities, residents of university communi¬ties have in some cases bitterly protesteduniversity expansion.In Woodlawn they have caused delay,and in Pittsburgh modification of universityplans; while in other places, such as theHarrison-Halsted area surrounding the pro¬posed Chicago branch of the University ofIllinois, their immediate interests havebeen sacrificed to the broader interests ofthe community and university plans havegone ahead, albeit after much delay.At the same time, in other communitiesthere is often general agreement, suchas among current residents of Hyde Parkrenewal areas, that university expansionactivities have contributed to an improvedneighborhood environment.Haphazard expansionBefore Section 112 was passed, the threator promise of institutional expansion uni¬versally cast a dark shadow over the areasurrounding the growing institution.Fear of where the university would nexttry to purchase its land led to instabilityand the development of slum conditions.Landlords, afraid they would soon be forcedto sell out, let the maintenance of theirproperty slide. Apartments were subdividedto provide cheap housing for transient stu¬dents. The many cars of university em¬ployees who did not live in the immediateneighborhood created parking and trafficproblems. Often there was no land the universitycould buy, and new projects, particularlyresearch in rapidly expanding scientificfields, were stifled for lack of adequatefacilities. Faculty members were not eagerto join a university with second-rate re¬search, office, and housing facilities.When universities were able to acquireland, it was in a haphazard rather thancarefully planned fashion. Buildings andcampuses were not, and could not be,planned as carefully as they might havebeen because the next step was a matterof chance.Furthermore, when universities-acquiredland, it became tax exempt, as do all landsand facilities of non-profit institutions.Nevertheless, a decrease in tax revenuefrom the university neighborhood did notmean that a corresponding decrease incity services could be initiated. In fact,cities were called upon to increase theirservices to tax-exempt universities.Was it fair to let the burden of pay¬ments for university services fall entirelyupon the city and its taxpayers and ex¬pect them to be eager to help tax-free in¬stitutions? And, on the other hand, wasit fair to expect non-profit institutions toraise funds with which to pay taxes? Wereuniversities and cities incompatible?University—city interactionAccording to Levi, the urban universityis an unavoidable phenomenon. The greatuniversities and colleges in the US aregenerally located in urban centers, henoted, pointing out that it is “character¬istic” of a great university to encouragebuilding up and development around it.If a great university were put in an un¬developed rural area, and if it were reallya great university, said Levi, the resultwould inevitably be a surrounding urbandevelopment.Universities are important to cities in avariety of ways. UC is Chicago’s 11thlargest employer. Yale is New Haven’ssecond largest employer. The Universityof Pittsburgh is Pittsburgh's second larg¬est employer.In addition to creating jobs, universitiesadd culture, and, yes, prestige, to a city.And, as the midwest’s recent Space Monthdemonstrates, universities can attract in¬dustry to their environments. They canalso attract other institutions to their en-viroments, as UC did a Lutheran Seminary.But university-city interaction is re¬ciprocal. The cosmopolitan life and cultureof a city, its advantage as a laboratory forfield work, the proximity of other insti¬tutions, and access to mass transportationand communication in a city are all draw¬ing points in attracting students and facul¬ty to an urban university.There was no doubt, then, that urbanuniversities could not expect to solve theirexpansion problems by leaving the city.As UC President George Beadle said inhis May, 1961, inaugural address, it was theduty of a great university to remain in acity:“Certainly the University of Chicago wouldbe a far less interesting place and a far lesssignificent institution if it were (isolated inthe country). The problems it faces in help¬ing to rebuild a section of a great city are notonly challenging in themselves, but they arealso of the greatest national importance.“Until we Americans have learned to re¬build and prevent slums, restore beautyto our cities, and provide education andsocial opportunities to people who have nothad them — largely because of the color oftheir skins — we will not have justifiedthe faith of those who laid the foundationsof our nation. We cannot do it by runningaway or burying our heads in the sand.“If a great university will not stay anduse its knowledge, wisdom, and power tohe>p soive a critical problem, who will doit? ... We should not forget that wemust somehow learn to cure the sickness ofpoverty, unemployment, and racial discrim¬ination that blights the hearts of our greatcities.’’Must stay in cityThe task facing urban universities, andcities, was finding a way for universities toexist and develop in urban environments.The choice, according to Levi, lay betweenletting institutions continue to expand un-controlledly to the detriment of their sur¬rounding areas and subsequently of them¬selves, or constructively channelling andcontrolling university growth.Maintaining the urban university as aninstitution also included finding a way tocompensate cities for the revenue they lostbecause land acquired by institutions wasentitled to tax-free status.Concern about the plight of urban uni¬versities was actively aroused as early (orlate) as the 1940’s.In 1947, New York City’s Columbia Uni¬versity led 16 other organizations in form¬ing the Morningside Heights corporationto work in a variety of ways for neigh¬borhood improvement, redevelopment, andadvancement “as an attractive residentialand educational and cultural area.”CHICAGO MAROON • June 7, 19A3 renewal precedentsShortly thereafter, the University-of Penn¬sylvania in Philadelphia took an interest;and under Lawrence Kimpton, who suc¬ceeded Robert Hutchins as chancellor, theUniversity of Chicago committed itself toneighborhood improvement activities.Demolition onlyThe 1949 Federal Housing Act, whichcontained the nation’s first provisions forslum clearance and redevelopment, some¬what broadened the plans of these uni¬versities.The act did not really enthuse eithercities or universities, however, primarilybecause it specified that areas designatedfor redevelopment had to be totally cleared.Universities wanted to clear only portionsof redevelopment areas that were specifi¬cally intended for building new campusfacilities.And cities were not anxious to help uni¬versities become land redevelopers becauseland acquired by universities would becometax-exempt.In 1952, the University took the lead infounding a community organization calledthe South East Chicago Commission(SECC). and since then has helped sup¬port it by large annual contributions toits budget. Levi became the SECC’s exe¬cutive director, a post he still holds. .The University carried on much of itsneighborhood activity through the SECC.This activity included code enforcement,law enforcement, community contact, plan¬ning and redevelopment aid.Conservation brought inIn those early days of urban renewal,the concepts of community conservationand spot clearance had not yet won popu¬lar acceptance. ' It was not until 1953 thatIllinois State law, largely because of Levi,was changed to include conservation alongwith clearance in urban renewal activities.In 1954, the federal law was similarlyamended.These amendments made urban renewalactivity more palatable to universities, butthey still lacked a special impetus to getinvolved.The demolish-all-or-nothing urban re¬newal legislation was shown to be unsatis¬factory in a 1953 study of community con¬servation problems performed by the Chi¬cago Metropolitan Housing and PlanningCouncil. The three volume study, on whichUC professor of sociology Philip. Hauserserved as a consultant, laid the foundationfor state legislation allowing for con¬servation.In order to carry out conservation plans,municipal conservation boards could becreated to acquire properties by right ofeminent domain, relocate the persons liv¬ing on the properties, demolish the struc¬tures on the properties, and sell the clearedland at a write-down in cost (fair reusevalue) to a redeveloper. Hyde Park be¬came Chicago’s first conservation area.Another way of carrying out conserva¬tion projects was through privately financedneighborhood corporations. Since Levi’s1953 legislation strengthened the position ofprivate corporations, the SECC under thenew law helped set up such corporations totake advantage of it.Among these cprporations was the SouthWest Hyde Park Neighborhood Redevelop¬ment Corporation (SWHPNRC), which wasowned by the University.Through the SWHPNRC, the Universityis carrying out two projects.The two SWHPNRC projects are acquisi¬tion and demolition in a four block areabetween Ellis and Cottage Grove, 55 to 56Streets; and conservation and redevelop¬ment in an area South of 56 Street, Westof Woodlawn.In each case, said Levi, additional legis¬lation had to be enacted so that the Uni¬versity’s expenditures in each area couldcount towards matching grants for the city.Again, it was primarily Levi who got thenecessary state and city legislation passed.In the summer of 1953, the University,the SECC, and the Hyde Park NeighborhoodCommunity Conference jointly requestedthe Chicago Land Clearance Commission tosurvey the area east of the campus be¬tween 53 and 57 Streets to determine whereslum-clearance powers could be exercisedto improve the university community.In his November, 1953 “State of theUniversity Address,” Chancellor Kimptonexplained the benefits to UC of the newstate legislation and the survey of HydePark lands:“New state legislation has been procuredwhereby neighborhood corporations can or¬ganize and through control of 60% of theproperty of an area can obtain eminentdomain rights over the remaining 40%.“For the first time, we have a tool withwhich we can force the improvement ofrun-down structures, or the demolition of properties that' have become slums.“Of equal importance is the interest ofthe'Land Clearance Commission in our area.The Commission, operating with Federal,state, and city funds, is empowered to con¬demn as slum a part or the whole of anyselected urban area. After condemnation, itproceeds to demolish the buildings at publicexpense and to sell the cleared land at a 'fair use value or convert it to some publicpurpose. The Commission is now in the pro¬cess of surveying our area and selectivedemolition will shortly follow that will eradi¬cate the pockets of blight and decay.”In addition to working through the LandClearance Commission's Survey and thestate conservation and corporation legisla¬tion, the University appointed Jack Meltzerto direct its “planning unit.” Meltzer'sstaff included Harry Weese, designer ofPierce Tower and many of Hyde Park'stownhouses, as architectural consultant.In March, 1954, Chicago’s Mayor MartinKennedy announced the inauguration ofthe nation’s “first real demonstration ofa program intended to reverse the trendstowards deterioration which characterizedolder communities in US cities.” The UCcampus and surroundings were included inthe area of the demonstration.With a $100,000 grant from the FieldFoundation, the UC Planning Unit underMeltzer and working with the SECC andLevi helped work out the ideas that haveshaped the renewed Hyde Park of today.These ideas all involved subsequent fed¬eral aid.The University spent nearly $6 millionby 1957 in acquiring and demolishing build¬ings and was “preparing to spend manymore millions,” said Kimpton, but “still theproblem of urban decay” has remained asa “threat to our faculty, our students, andindeed our future.”Universities uniteIn 1957, at Kimpton's initiative, severalurban universities finally banded togetherto take steps to remedy their neighbor¬hood problems and attempt to alleviatethe cost of solving them.Kimpton invited Harvard, Columbia,Yale, the U. of Pennsylvania, and MIT.Perhaps forseeing the results of this meet¬ing, he said in his invitation, “I rathersuspect that there is some federal legis¬lation that we might ponder with the ideaof seeing if we could not get forward onsome cooperative program.”Representatives of these five universitiesand UC met on April 12, 1957, and theirmeeting led up to plans for a nationwidestudy by the Association of American Uni¬versities “to determine what can be doneto halt the deterioration of neighborhoodsadjacent to urban universities.”In June, 1958, another meeting includingrepresentatives of nine universities, author¬ized UC’s Planning Unit to undertake sucha survey. Levi and Meltzer were amongUC’s representatives at this meeting.112 solves problemsThe recommendations of the survey inwhich 16 urban universities including UCparticipated, resulted in section 112 ofthe 1959 Federal Housing Act. This sec¬tion finally made it possible and desirablefor universities to participate on a largescale in urban renewal and for cities tobenefit from their activities.Specifically, section 112 stated that thedirect cost to a university of acquiring run¬down property in the open market and anycosts involved in clearing land and relocat¬ing tenants could be credited towards thelocal share of the cost of a nearby feder¬ally assisted urban renewal project.According to the Federal Housing Act,of which Section 112 is but one part, urbanrenewal costs could be divided between thecommunity in which the project is locatedand the federal government in a 1:2 ratio.The community’s share of the net costof the project has to be made to executethe general urban renewal project plan a:ijJis known as local grants in aid. These localgrants in aid are contributed through a“local public agency.”There are two forms grants in aid maytake: cash grants or non-cash grants.Cash grants include contributions in cashto the costs of acquisition, demolition, andrelocation. Non-cash grants include expend¬itures by the community on the renewalproject area for public improvements likestreets, sewers, schools and parks thatwould have to be made to execute the gen¬eral urban renewal project plan.The community may combine cash andnon-cash grants in aid to accumulate itsshare of the urban renewal project costsand qualify for maximum government aid.Section 112 merely extended the definitionof non-cash grants in aid to include certainproperty expenditures made by educationalinstitutions provided that, among other con¬ditions, the institutions and their acquired(continued on page 21)8 •<■ r*■ » »Kelsey allays drug law fears Cone blasts CalbraithianismFears that new drug legis¬lation will impede medicalprogress are unwarranted,said Dr. Frances Kelsey at theU€ Medical Alumni Associationdinner last night. Dr. Kelsey, aUC alumna and a former facultymember, is widely known for herrefusal to permit marketing of thedrug thalidomide, since shown tocause abnormalities in unborn chil¬dren whose mothers have takenthe drug.In 1938. she received the Uni¬versity's first degree in pharma¬cology. In 1950 she was grantedthe MD degree by the MedicalSchool. She was recently appointedchief of the Investigational DrugBranch of the Food and Drug ad¬ministration.Dr. Kelsey was presented withthe Gold Key of the UC MedicalAlumni Association, its highesthonor, at the dinner last night.In her address, she said that thenew amendments to the Food,Drug and Cosmetic Law “are de¬signed to eliminate all unnecessaryrisks to the public that may arisein the development of new drugs.’*“Fears have^been expressed thatthe increased governmental controlwill have an undesirable effect ondie development of new drugs,”she said. “It should be pointed out,however, that similar fears wereexpressed concerning the new drugprovisions of the Federal Food,Drug and Cosmetic Act of 1938.“Despite this, the interveningyears have shown great progressin the development of new drugs.It is to be hoped that the newregulations will result in improvedprocedures for the preclinical andclinical evaluation of the safetyand effectiveness of new drugswithout disturbing the pattern ofsound scientific research and de¬velopment.”Dr. Kelsey told of the influenceUC and the city of Chicago havehad on drug legislation for overfifty years.In 1906, she said, the first PureFood and Drug Law was passedbecause of the impact on publicopinion of Upton Sinclair’s book“The Jungle,” which describes un¬sanitary methods in the Chicagomeat packing industry. SinclairYTV got his background for the book,she noted, living back of the yardsand boarding at the UC SettlementHouse.In 1938 the Food and Drug Lawwas revised and strengthened un¬der the leadership of two UC fac¬ulty members, Dr. Eugene M. K.Geiling, professor and chairman ofthe pharmacology department, andDr. Paul R. Cannon, professor andchairman of the pathology depart¬ment.At the request of the Food andDrug Administration, they madeextensive studies of a “sulfanila¬mide elixir” that had killed atleast 100 persons, most of themsmall children, and establishedthat the cause of death was di¬ethylene glycol, used as a solventin the elixir.The 1%2 Kefauver-Harris Amend¬ments of the Food, Drug and Cos¬metic Act of 1938 resulted mainlyfrom the thalidomide incident inwhich Dr. Kelsey herself played akey role. Her refusal to approvethe drug for marketing was due inpart, she said, to her experienceof the elixir research.“The urgency of the situation,the intensive round-the-clock toxi¬cologic studies, and the subsequentchanges in the law relative to the control of drugs could not and didnot fail to make a deep impressionon a graduate student such asmyself in this University’s Depart¬ment of Pharmacology,” she said.Dr. Kelsey added that the con¬cern over the possible effects ofdrugs on unborn children alsocame from research at the Uni¬versity in 1944. More recent re¬searchers have found that unbornand newborn children are particu¬larly susceptible to drugs giventhem or their mothers becausethey lack a number of drug-metab¬olizing enzymes.Execs get cards96 executives of 54 Chicago areacompanies received Certificates ofAdvanced Management Wednesdayat the 1963 Awards Dinner of theManagement Development Semi¬nar. The seminar is a programof the Industrial Relations Center.Robert K. Burns, executive of¬ficer of the IRC and AssociateDean of- the Graduate School ofBusiness spoke on “Guidelines forManagers in an Era of Change.”“/ don't care whether it's right orwrong. Its my opinion and I love it.—James E. Newman, assistantprofessor of history. Fairfax M. Cone, a trusteeof UC and chairman of theCouncil on the GraduateSchool of Business, yesterdayattacked the teaching of “Gal-braithian” theories of economics.In a speech at the annual dinnerof Business School alumni. Conesaid, “Where you find such booksas John Kenneth Galbraith’ssmoothly sarcastic and disarming¬ly critical Affluent Society andVance Packard’s The Hidden Per¬suaders recommended for pre-Freshman year reading in a lead¬ing state university (Illinois, forexample), you may be sure thatthe purpose is to cast doubt on theprofit system.”“The University of Chicago,”Cone said, “presents a rare excep¬tion” to such teaching.“It was Chicago’s economist, Dr.Friedrich von Hayek, who madethe slashing retort to the Keynesi¬ans and the Galbraithians that,having little or nothing more todemand of material things formost Americans, they were re¬duced to the absurdity of denounc¬ing these things as no good, afterall.“Moreover, as Time Magazine reported last week in a glowingarticle about the university, MiltonFriedman is continuing in whatTime calls Hayek’s “classical”tradition.“The things which the new lib¬erals clamor against are all thenon-necessities of life, most ofwhich . . . they believe are sold toa public brain-washed by adver¬tising.”Cone suggested that his listeners“undertake to find out what brandof economics is being taught” intheir alma maters, “and if it is theGalbraithian brand: ask why?”Cone’s remarks came as part ofa speech in which he attackedpolitical and economic policieswhich deny the “importance ofprofit.”He suggested “a continuing cam¬paign of education in every busi¬ness that employs more than fivepeople to tell them . . . that busi¬ness must earn a reasonable profitsimply to survive.”His third suggestion was “tomount the strongest possible ap¬proach to our individual represent¬atives in Washington t-, demand ofthem that they reform the per¬sonal income tax schedules andthe corporate tax structure now.”John K. Gerhart, com¬mander - in - chief of theNorth American Air De¬fense Command will ad¬dress alumni tomorrow.The alumni have consistently main¬tained through the years an enlighten¬ed merest in the University, bused onits educational objectives and achieve¬ments, that has been hartening to thefaculty and to the administration.That loyalty has been so firmly basedthat the late football depression hadno effect on the allegiance of thegraduates. That particular depressionseems to be at an end, so that thehomecoming alumni today find thecombination of a strong universityund a strong football team. In theachievement of that team all of ustake a pardonable pride. 1 hope thattomorrow another achievement willcontribute to the satisfaction of yourreturn to the Midway.ROBERT M. HUTCHINS.November 2, 1934 to Returning Alumni WHAT’S HAPPENED TO FALCON'"^4. *. • qlislggEVERYTHING!AND YET...Early this year we put a 164-hp V-8 in anew kind of Falcon called the Sprint, andentered the stiffest winter road test we couldfind ... the 2,500-mile Monte Carlo Rallye. Wedidn't know what would happen ... but happen it did.First, no one dreamed ail the Rallye cars would have toexperience ttie worst winter in decades. Snow, belowzero temperatures, and the most demanding terrain inEurope took their toll. Two thirds ofthe 296 cars that started, failed toreach Monaco. AMERICA’S LIVELIEST,MOST CARE-FREE CARS everyone) in store. Against all competi¬tion, regardless of class, the lead Sprintwent on to take first in the final sixperformance legs,.,***» *We honestly didn’t know the Falcon Sprintwould do this well. But it showed us aFalcon with our new 164-hp V-8 is a carthat can perform with the best of them. So alot has happened to Falcon, and yet,.,A six-cylinder Falcon has just finished theMobil Economy Run and finished first in its class.It had to take a lot of punishment, too .. . 2,500 milesfrom Los Angeles to Detroit over mountains, deserts,and long stretches of superhighways. But the nickel¬nursing ways of the all-time EconomyChamp took all comers in its class.A lot of experts told us that theFalcon V-8's, untried as .they were,could not hope to finish the Rallyewith the best of weather. But not onlydid two Falcon Sprints finish, theyplaced first and second in their class.But there were more surprises (for FORDFALCON . FAtRLANi • FOftO • THONDIFOR 60 YEARS THE SYMBOLOF DEPENDABLE PRODUCTSMOTOR COMPANY So you see something has happenedto the Falcon. It can be what youwant it to be ... a V-8 that travelsIn the same circle as Europe's per¬formance kings ... or a Six thatcan travel cross-country on abudget. There's something to putInto your compact.•J• CHICAGO MAROON/Rosenheim: novelistsBaldwin speaks on campusfeel the tv, no cause i«;<"orrport.nt than ■ human life,”, Bald-,; seriousMh*win continued. doys; arideT'h'e American; he said; is ""'i- ThisAmeri< ans ,ac< < >*! .-their culiar -rvehsipnfof;. history1 they Will; be ghe iierm^lost from the world/'. , ever boon true that tcountry^as settled-by^heroes^and human bein,artym'a{;<lj,lt,-.ha.v;ncve!<.been^ • .proven, that;we are a-happy people, ,, F - ,h,. Raid; sThe rovntry was mM »>>>•<for personal, reagop.s.s sinf-ithey buried the ,pa^t ^now^they %re&h?es heBpSa^fe. back.'' v\ *h i /people^ They; u;ed;-treachery, 1> -/ |hej Dori; jlipyl and 'murder...to '.kill, off' treaaflW^gHPMBit^^dlMIC* of*. Iin'Mandel Hall o■“j - " f'S’ «,«-■ipnearan'ce«wm®iled} for. May 12#ent df: Festival ofishcanceiled‘,at/th«'hen ' Baldwin' col 9H3&1*^^^Miicate%h[iiThe ai t i t. Baidu in -■.om* ho<i> \v ho helpstty»Ch®ar.tfsifes#p.ossevi's but he’s not aHis vision is based ,,nihaslseenllbf- human/beii£f&B3M3iS&X ;■ . <•; , • 111t. aci111;Homer km \\«'it' sSnfe- -- • * ~ • - ■W&mi t&mmg&B un'yer.s.mes are'an’ttholdM.feibut, lie Ln. that educat alw a\ s representatives* ■’•/IworldM^Intf^h|are'- real-acadenfeneir \alues are" always!i.shioned values!re/set in' oppositio^U)xondvmnedrtjfor fi\ ory•r&v-::^'t^^pVofessors krfMhm dm tra».al; and isolate d^R^senlveimj^iees* «6h parallel'“’sbe’}W»,.ituation andthatjoj^the early;18th century?’ A,that^t?m‘e such* great writers fasSp—nA".WJrr*£.--uSorganiiedtknowledgeSHowfi’r<4tl.O., we,;.not, fwml>igro'umled; | tHey^'at tacked I ,k*4>-hi knewH ‘'I’of|ft hefb > r a c 11 o a 11nd ■>'• '. they>g?ra„t|j'is;/p!ebple;htheir' va‘O ' and'dhey,care^set g* *^5tK®eotm pa n Rvalues., I n r shovleyes-.v aVe^eondomned,,, for'd- /towjTriMn >ithe;v>rofessors a:sonet5 ieh s> ij's deimchrn,.,.K,sI'’States pbfxj»*• r 1IIj:rt - ssioni,(l "Las inw-'’e! tn; utipiml^fewj|ffi«s^gdon,■4he, j>an#o:.yious man,” «or* »fif .he <onvaimrntrd. The,1 tl<“ Ne-yrofS»y were grate-l from Africa.apa«saegE^jaBi»|gpmfeabe lonely §d.pu. »o.pert■^ %t<&we^<anWM ite . AmeriCtemu )#i(jr:p,a-s#.gbirill^ibe-ingsjftcahSw^BbeMh^l^relie^t-'-maniTo,iei%hum|gn^H^.unl:e.ssi,K^iMiwillintrmtollai A t/tJrTi1 11 ihe *thet*nattuTrl so ien<Vs"ld^ ih ,y;elofii|u'J i .ip'idly^Jltosf u-m njl’^a itf/^nHlyrerit lye'artist.C'f el tHhTsXp; '^{the^pyesen^e' of-hsuiiie-:U r«lBti®tMi nders f aiull^reBomi hy^aog l{o.s,ehheirii^'^:t lip:)yelist^/^toh;i\^aih-jin-'a 'Miinjat> it ion’ I h;v.' at e unable , tov ii,i-l t it il^tftt Uilmuul part pf m]J.eot.u a IV m < i uj1-\y;'anTl*so;'they |t u in^the^hu;mtm|^yvrd<%b:!i ito abmit imaumati\e!y?a i<rlib:ZJmu'lh.a''hake til- wdvhj., ,,_? 'dianyteslliapdiayo oi'cpt ,up oniAuhi\ <m\sit'i|es£‘?ajm<: -cortiiify to \\ A Urn \\ ;i I its. Im me r (Iran of l (”>■ (iraduatI Ohunt-e, in ,e ma,ie„,.,l addi. ^ fr°m °ne .nst.tut.on to another a.IlMay'wf0jt ,>vAs'j^eir interests orIf Undergraduate programs “not change, and neveronly are the only remaining acti snu e attachment t«. the university;eryf ,iea| 8ens^ ^ *<+ W^Vgti,'e’«frin'p'st','>he^rjy;f|un'def;,;our>:/:ow?ny>'5.fe;:;-w.^^?f/j&;?,v0j opportunities po,.,,V piohU-m-- *d.>.lop the w.lli. added ,ha, "in alphas,-iing^j(i4i needs ^o(-Jundergraduate1,1 education as the motive for contimi 'nuing:!to increase dour;: emphasi Ssonvthev '-.'.■■•:■■••; graduate work and research, I am.1 i hy*no means overlooking ithe High‘ *■*"»•%»' v“?' J^Au’ r-'#vimportance * of graduate work andf, research il^thei^ own right and1 * lithe obligation* of universities v/r .to advance them theiro own sake*.! » ■ 'h ' i aiiiii.i i ••(iiication t hain lversitviwsSSM1» • CHICAGO MAROON*■ n♦ Review of the Year Supplement ♦< r„ . RMH, LAK & Nazihead UC visitorsby David L. AikenTwo former chancellors, the 19G2 Nobel Prize win¬ner in medicine, three Supreme Court justices, and thehead of the A>rterican Nazi Party were among speakerswho visited UC this year.Robert Maynard Hutchins, UC Chancellor from1929 • 1951 returned to campus in January to speak ata Law School conference on the relation between churchand state.He said that federal aid to education is inevitable,and “should go to all educational institutions that meetfederal standards.” Hutchins currently heads the Centerfor the Study of Democratic Institutions in Santa Bar¬bara, California.His successor 'Lawrence A. Kimpton' • who is nowgeneral manager of planning with the Standard Oil Com¬pany of Indiana, gave a speech in April showing thatuniversities are not very different from oil companies.The two may differ in size and motivation, he said,but they both involve specialists doing research in manyfields, who do not always find it easy to communicatewith one another.James Dewey Watson this year became the seventh UCgraduate to win a Nobel Prize. He was honored for hisdiscoveries concerning the molecular structure of nucleicacids and its significance for information transfer inliving material.Shortly after receiving his award, Watson visitedthe UC campus to give two lectures. He was given anhonorary UC degree in 1961 at the inauguration of hisfellow Nobel Prize winning geneticist George Beadleas UC president.Kd Tatum, who shared the 1958 Nobel Prize withBeadle also visited campus this year and spoke.Controversy and a bombThe most controversial speech given on campusthis year was, of course, that of American Nazi Partyleader George Lincoln Rockwell, in February.Rockwell was invited to speak by Vincent Houseless than a week after he had been banned by North¬western. Controversy bristled for several weeks on whe¬ther he should have been invited or allowed to speak.Immediately before his speech, bomb threats forcedUC officials to move the speech from 1157-seat MandelHall to much smaller nearby Breasted Hall. Consequently,over 400 people milled around Breasted during the talk.Rockwell insisted to an orderly audience that hisparty is not German, not subversive, and not dictatorial.He claimed that Communism is a Jewish movement, butnoted that even then “20G of the Jews are 100 r/c loyal.”3 Justices visitThree of the nine justices of the U. S. SupremeCourt found their way to the UC campus during theyear.In March, Justice John Marshall Harlan gave “AGlimpse of the Supreme Court at Work” at the LawSchool.He was followed in May by Justice Arthur Gold¬berg who spoke at the groundbreaking ceremonies forthe new wing of the Sonia Shankman Orthogenic Schoolon efforts being made to cope with problems involvingchildren.Justice Tom C. Clark also camein May, to judge a moot courtcompetition at the Law School,and speak elsewhere in the city.Former UC presidentSir Leslie K. Munro, formerpresident of the United NationsGeneral Assembly, spoke on as¬pects of international politics ina series of three lectures in Janu¬ary.He discussed the “unsettling in¬fluence” of new nations in theUN and international politics, thetendency of western nations towork through NATO instead ofthe UN, and the InternationalCommission of Jruists, which hecited for its work in matters ofencroachment of legal rights inmany nations.Hannah Arendt’s seminar series“On Revolution” was a highlightof the fall in the field of socialscience.M iss Arendt, a noted politicalscientist, gave four lectures, cov¬ering the causes and influences ofrevolutions, the psychology ofleaders of revolutions, the im¬portance of revolution in the mod- Space lab headsnew UC buildingsGround-breaking for a space laboratory, plans for anew library, and the opening of the Center for ContinuingEducation highlighted university expansion this year.The Laboratory for Astrophysics and Space Research,56th St. and Ingleside, will be one of the nation’s firstinterdisciplinary space centers, and will serve as theheadquarters for many theoretical and experimentalstudies related to American space efforts.Made possible by a $1,750,000 grant from the NationalAeionautics and Space Administration, the Laboratorywill also enable UC to centralize its space research andenable graduate students to work in space programs.Discuss plans for new librariesThe construction of a new library system to housedepartmental collections was placed first on the Univer¬sity’s priority list.Two plans for the new library are now being con¬sidered. One would involve a single structure and containall collections, the other would have a separate library forthe sciences, and another tor the humanities and socialsciences.A tentative plan was suggested for a humanities andsocial sciences library which would be located in the areanow occupied by the tennis courts at 58th St. and Uni¬versity Ave.The University expects that the new library systemwill cost around $10 million when it is completed.Extensive changes were made in Harper library, whichwill be adequate until the new libraries are completed.The circulation desk was expanded, and the card cata¬logue was moved into a larger room. In addition, facili¬ties were provided for the South Asian collection, andnew lighting and furniture was installed in the SocialSciences reading room.Center for Continuing EducationThe Center for Continuing Education, 1307 E. 60thSt., was opened in January with a conference on “NuclearRadiation and Social Ethics.”(continued Hu page 13)'Multiple college' system proposed(continued on page It)James Dewey Watson The possibility of instituting- a “multiplecollege” system at UC, giving a choice ofseveral programs to each undergraduate, hasbeen the center of discussion among Collegepolicy makers for the past few months.In addition, changes were made this year inseveral college courses, a student curriculum com¬mittee was established, and the examination systemcontinued its gradual move away from “compre¬hensive examinations.”A special faculty committee on multiple collegeswas appointed in March to investigate the possibili¬ties of establishing a system which would divide theundergraduate body into several separate colleges.The colleges would differ in their curricula and ap¬proaches towards general education.The committee will make recommendations tothe College Policy committee sometime next year.The Policy committee made up of representativesof the various college sections will then make recom¬mendations to the whole College faculty, forlegislation.Discussion on a system of multiple colleges wasbegun last year by Policy committee. When theMultiple College committee was appointed in March,proposals included setting up the colleges withvarying blends of specialized and general education,varying approaches towards general education, andinterest in various of the academic fields. It is hopedthat a system of multiple college could providecloser contact between students and faculty. The Col¬leges would not have separate living units, althoughthey might have some physical facilities of their own.Another aim of a multiple colleges system, aswell as of the current investigations, is to encouragemore faculty members not directly involved inundergraduate education to participate in discus¬sions and programs of the College.At recent faculty meetings, there was some in¬terested enthusiasm expressed for the idea ofmultiple colleges, as well as some skepticism aboutthe need for such a “radical’’ departure from thepresent system. Recently, subcommittees of the multiple collegecommittee have been considering the types of pro¬grams desirable for a liberal arts college, a collegeof scientists, a college of social sciences, and one ofthe humanities.One of the prime purposes of these committeesis to encourage “thorough self-scrutiny” of the Col¬lege’s four year programs.A recent report to the College faculty from Deanof the College Alan Simpson stated that the MultipleCollege committee’s investigations have alreadyhighlighted a need for new inodes of general educa¬tion, better articulation of courses, more tutorialprograms, and better management for some of themajors.In addition, progress has been made towardsinvolving divisional faculty members in the discus¬sions of the College, said Simpson.The liberal arts and mathematics subcommitteesof the Multiple college committee have submittedproposals to be discussed.The science committee is working on a proposal,and the biology committee has expressed the opinionthat if there is to be a biology college, it should bepart of a combined science college.The subcommittee on social sciences has beendiscussing the possibility of giving work now studiedat the graduate level to undergraduates.Curriculum changesChanges in the College curriculum this year in¬cluded the addition of a program of “general studiesin the social sciences,” headed by professor of SocialScience and economies Bert Hoselitz. The new BAprogram is for students who wish to combine a broadinterest in the social sciences with the study of twodepartmental fields.Another addition to the curriculum is a threequarter course on Latin-American civilization, stress¬ing an interdisciplinary approach to the study ofLatin America. The sequence, under the chairman¬ship of instructor in history in the College HerbertKlein, will be modeled along the lines of the non¬western civilization courses, which include intro¬ductions to Russian, Islamic, and Indian civilization,(continued on me 13) UC minds advanceknowledgefrontier*UC scholars in many fields completed research pro¬jects in a wide variety of subjects this year. Scientificlab studies resulted in many new developments, whilesocial and humanistic topics were subjects of severalimportant publications by UC professors.Scientific highlightsAn “impossible chemical reaction “achieved byscientists at Arjonne National Laboratory was the firstscientific highlight of the year, announced in October.Three chemists from the Lab, which UC runs for theU. S. government, made xenon, which was considered aninert gas, combine with flourine.In November Argonne Laboratory announced an¬other important breakthrough just two days before thetwentieth anniversary celebration- of the first chainreaction which started the atomic age.The new development was the use for the firsttime of plutonium as a fuel. A by-product of nuclearfission, plutonium had previously been used only inweapons.UC physicist John Sakurai turned out to be anaccurate prophet when his prediction in an article lastDecember of the existence of an atomic particle wasproved true by experiment. The particle, called the phi-meson, is produced by bombarding an atom with eithera man-made beam of particles, or with cosmic rays.Among the many other developments from UC sci¬entists is a new technique involving radioactive iso¬topes for the relief of pain in cancer patients.The device, announced in April, allows surgeons tocut pain-transmitting nerve fibers in the spinal cordwith a special needle which emits intense short - rangeradiation.UC biophysic* professor Humberto Fernandez.Moranand three University of Wisconsin scientists announcedan important discovery with implication for the investi¬gation of biological energy systems.With special electron microscope techniques, thescientists studied cell mitochondria which play a keyrole in transforming food into bodily energy. Theyfound “elementary particles” consisting of enzymes, andsucceeded in analyzing their structure.According to FeVnadez-Moran, the dissovery can becompared to the Rosetta stone, “the deciphering ofwhich will ultimately permit us to decipher the molecularcode of the energy-transducing systems in the living cell.”Finds in archaeologyUC archeologists on an expedition in Egypt’r. Nubiandesert have made several important discoveries. The firstthis year was the site of what may have been the centerof the ancient Nubian-Egyptian gold trade on a site onthe Nile River.Later, in the spring, word was received (hat the ex¬pedition has discovered a major Nubian burial vault whichcontained many “beautiful speciments” of Nubian art,and important clues to the state of Nubian civilization.BooksUC professor of history William H. McNeill thisspring published a major work which, he said, exempli¬fies a new approach to writing history.His book, The Rise of the W’est,presents world history as “a deve¬lopment perceived primarilythrough the clash of alien peoples.”The other main systems of historywriting offers either a “naive”concentration on the West, or an“unviable” theory of the rises offalls of civilization from internalcauses.An important book published byUC Press this year was a three-volume collection of essays byUC professor and political sci¬entist Hans Morgenthau. The setcovers pieces written during thepast 25 years. Major subjectstreated include foreign aid, theUnited Nations, and nuclear dis¬armament.Another important book involv¬ing UC professors featured ana¬lyses by three social scientists, ofthe dilemma for the U. S. causedby hostility from new nations.Morton Kaplan, Bert F. Hoselitz,and Leonard Binder each wrote achapter in the book Revolution inWorld Politics.Tang Tsou, assistant professor ofpolitical science, published a ma-(continued ®n page It)Sir Leslie K. MunroJune 7, m3 • CHICAGO MAROON • IIK9 Harper fight tops housing year Cuba main issuein SG past yearby Robin Kaufmanand Deidre HallowayControversy over the addi¬tion of the Harper Surf hotelto the dormitory system wasthe main problem in a seriesof housing difficulties this year.The announcement that thehotel for transients located at 54and Harper would replace C-groupas an undergraduate women’s dor¬mitory, was met with complaintsfrom students and their parentsthat the proposed dormintory “istoo far away.”Other problems in the housingsystem included the near closingof the Pierce tower cafeteria, ashortage of married and graduatestudent housing, and continueddoubts about the future of SnellHitchcock, because of buildingcode violations.C-Group. located at 59 and Uni¬versity, is scheduled to be con¬verted to office space for the psy¬chology department next year.Despite objections by more than90 per cent of the students i.nd par¬ents involved, the Harper Surf willbe opened as a partial replace¬ment for the C-Group. However,so that girls who wish to livecloser to campus may do so, thefourth floor of East house will beused for women next year. Easthouse is currently a men’s dorm.The University stated that it wasunable to provide any other re¬placement for C-group next year.However, the construction of anew dormitory has been placed onthe University’s priority list. Thir¬ty two women signed up for the72 room Harper Surf dormitory.The rest of the spaces will be filledby transfer students and graduatewomen.In place of the space on fourthfloor East which will be taken overby girls, 50 undergraduate menwill live in Snell hall, a graduatemen’s dormitory.One house of Burton JudsonCourts was^ changed from under¬graduate to graduate housing fornext year, to provide housing formore graduate students.Women’s hours were again asource of controversy. Earlier inthe year the hours system was re¬vised so that all first year women,after their first quarter in resi¬dence. will have the same fourhours to stay out beyond a regu¬lation midnight curfew. For theautumn quarter all first year wom¬en will have the 11 pm curfewsplus four additional hours whichwas the provision previously de¬ signated for women under 18. tract system—for winter quarter.James Newman, assistant Dean Breakfast service had been dis-of Students, explained that the new continued at the end of autumnsystem promised to be fairer toall first year women in allowingeach of them, regardless of age,to enter the university on the samesocial footing. He said that themore limited hours system for en¬tering women students during theirfirst quarter was designed to helpbhem until they became orientedto the University.As the year progressed, clamor-ings among women for a moredrastic change in women’s hoursbecame insistently louder. Maroonpolls of women residing in the dor¬mitory system revealed that 90per cent favored some change inwomen’s hours regulations.Suggestions for change rangedfrom the total abolition of all hoursregulations to abolition of hoursfor girls securing their parents’approval. The House Councils ofeach of the women’s dormitories quarter. A 13 meal per week con¬tract is planned for the PierceTower system for next year.More than 300 undergraduatespetitioned to be released from theUniversity’s residence rule requir¬ing men to live in the dormitoriesfor two years and women for allfour years. 214 of these weregranted.The college faculty passed arecommendation to transfer con¬trol to 12 of the Office of Resi¬dence Halls and Commons(RH&C.) The suggestion was madeon the belief that students’ livingconditions have an effect on theiracademic and intellectual lives.Previously RH&C, which was un¬der the directorship of Ray Brown,vice president for administration,provides for student housing andfood. The proposal failed to stiradministration action, however.passed resolutions recommending Dean Vice explained that it wouldbe impossible to replace RH&C’scontrol of the cafeterias on cam¬pus with a private catering con¬cern. He said that this substitutionwould put too many long-time uni-some revisal of the policy regard¬ing hours. These, along with aStudent Government proposal,were submitted to the administra¬tion for discussion and considera¬tion. Despite the almost universal versity employees out of work.student support for a change inpolicy, the administration an¬nounced that no major revisionwould be made.In explaining the stand, DeanNewman proclaimed it was the“university’s right and duty toregulate what students do outsidethe classroom.” He described thepresent policy as a "reasonable”one which enabled women studentsto lead an “orderly life.”To add to the problems, dormi¬tory room and board rates wereincreased for the second year ina row. This raise is intended tooffset the $67,658.92 operating defi¬cit incurred by Residence Hallsand Commons this year. To helpthe dorms break even, rates in A student committee was set upto plan a graduate-undergraduate-faculty housing unit. It was hopedthat the unit would serve to in¬crease communication betweenstudents and faculty and wouldeventually become a campus socialand cultural center. The housingunit was to be designed more likean apartment than a dormitory.The plans for the apartmentwere abandoned according to DeanNewman, because additional dor¬mitory space was unnecessary.Also, the plan imposed financialimpossibilities which would existfor at least another five years.Among other developments inpossibilities for student housingoutside the dormitory units was“conventional” dormitories were the University Realty Managementraised $15 per quarter with a $10increase in board for dorms withboard contracts, and $10 more permonth rent in apartment dorms.Because of the increase in rates,an additional $100 in the estimate Corporation’s (URM) announce¬ment of its intentions to changeits policy by renting to non-relatedstudents. It was explained that theformer policy resulted from singlestudents, “patterns of life.” Theirof living expenses will be allowed habits of keeping late hours werefor scholarship applications bystudents residing in the dormitorysystem.Due to financial difficulties en¬countered in running the PierceTower cafeteria on a cash basis,it was announced that the systemwould be continued on a limited»scale—a ten-meal per week con-11 often disturbing to married stu¬dents who have children and wereaccustomed to rising early.Provisions for expanding hous¬ing facilities for married students,which were previously in shortage,were effected. With finances fromfederal subsidies, the Shelbourne(Continued on page 13),! PR°-£ieC77f.fWITTS bef0/?£ c*a'S/%p 40;No dripping, no spilling! Covers completely!Old Spice Pro-Electric protects sensitiveskin areas from razor pull, burn. Sets upyour beard for the cleanest, closest,most comfortable shave ever! 1.00 O/vTH4rSHU LTO N'rtf'- ^ Two referenda, an unpre-cendented recall, and the elec¬tion of a government pledgedto concern itself primarilywith “students as students” werethe most significant SG events ofthe past year.The recall had its basis in atelegram sent on October 23, bythe SG Executive Committee toPresident Kennedy protesting theUS blockade of Cuba.The blockade was described inthe telegram as a “step towardnuclear conflict” which heightenedworld tension and constituted athreat to “the establishment ofpeace with freedom.”Two days later, the SG assem¬bly, meeting in emergency session,also deplored the establishment ofthe blockade arguing that the pres¬ence of "weapons in Cuba withouttheir use against any other nationcannot constitute an act of aggres¬sion against the United States.”The resolution was favored bysixteen representatives and op¬posed by nine. There were twoabstentions.The meeting was attended bymore than 150 students who wereprimarily pro-Kennedv. At the be¬ginning of the meeting, a petitioncalling for a referendum to deter¬mine student opinion about theblockade was submitted. The peti¬tion. which was signed by 1037students, was referred to a com¬mittee.In the referendum, held in No¬vember. seventy-eight per cent ofthe 1589 students voting endorsedthe blockade.Later that month, a petition call¬ing for the recall of 13 SG repre¬sentatives from the College wassubmitted to the Assembly. Thepetition stated that the personsnamed showed “irresponsible ac¬tion” in voting for the “sending ofa second telegram by the Assemblyto President Kennedy.” (The As¬sembly sent a letter, not a tele¬gram to Kennedy.)Twelve of the thirteen personson the petition were members ofPOL1T, the party which controlledthe Assembly. Richard Jacobson,an independent, was also named.In January, two weeks beforethe recall vote, POLIT resolvedthat “a POLIT majority in SG willnot take stands on future issuesof such a controversial nature asthe Cuban crisis of October, 1962,unless it is possible beforehand toascertain what student opinion onthe issue is.”Twelve of the thirteen SG repre¬sentatives on the ballot were re¬called in a three-day vote whichended January 25. Pamela Pro-cuniar was not recalled. The re¬maining persons, eleven POI.ITmembers and one independent,were recalled by small margins.More than 1160 persons voted inthe election. Miss Procuniar wasretained In office by thirty-onevotes. The others lost by from20 to 91 votes.In a referendum held simultane¬ously with the recall vote, morethan sixty per cent of the under¬graduates voting indicated ap¬proval of the University’s accept¬ance of funds for Stagg Scholar¬ships. Most students, however, feltthat some changes should be madein the administration of theawards. Seventy-five percent, forexample, felt that need should bea condition for receiving theaward. (The University announced plansin November, 1962 for a “nation¬wide search for two ‘scholar-ath¬letes’ to hold the Amos AlonzoStagg Scholarships.” The Scholar¬ships provide for full tuition. SGplanned a demonstration againstthe institution of these awards butcalled it off after agreeing withDean of Students Warner Wick tosubmit the issue to a campus-widereferendum.)Arthur MacEwon Dean Warner WickThe University announced onFebruary 1 that procedures forStagg Scholarships would not bechanged this year.The Executive committee of SG,consisting of four POLIT membersafter the recall, replaced the As¬sembly’s recalled members wilhseven POLIT members, three inde¬pendents and two members of theUniversity Party. POLIT appar¬ently interpreted the recall as avote against the Cuban resolutionrather than a vote against theparty’s program.On February 7, 30 students hadformed a student political partywhich would be both "liberal” and“representative.” The new groupcriticized the two parties then ac¬tive as being too conservative(University Party) and non-repre¬sentative (POLIT).Eleven days later, the UniversityParty (UP) and the IndependentReform Party (1RP) merged,forming a new party (later namedGNOSIS). The party platform wasto be based on the principle thatstudent government should be con¬cerned primarily with interestswhich concern students as stu¬dents. The new group also favoredresidential representation.In the regular spring election.GNOSIS captured a majority ofseats in the Assembly, the newparty won 31 seats against 16 forPOLIT. The Law School Party hadthree seats, one seat went to theLiberal Party. In the previouselection, POLIT garnered 32 of 50seats.Three GNOSIS candidates wereelected delegates to the NationalStudent Association (NSA) and twoPOLIT candidates were elected.Three NSA alternates are GNOSISchoices; POLIT and the LiberalParty have one alternate each.The creation of a student cur¬riculum committee was announcedon May 8 by the SG Faculty rela¬tions committee and the Dean ofthe College.The committee, which had beenunder consideration since the be¬ginning of the year, consists ofrepresentatives from various cam¬pus organizations. The group willdiscuss the College curriculum and'related topics. They will meet withfaculty and administration mem¬bers, and will make"Recommenda¬tions.On May 9, SG announced theformation of a Social Rules com¬mittee to participate in the estab¬lishment of standards engenderedto define and prevent infractionsof established college regulations.SG is currently planning a dis¬armament conference to be heldnext February.During the year, SG has givenassistance to the student tutoringprojects, consulted with the ad¬ministration on several issues af¬fecting students and conductedseveral charter flights to NewYork and Europe. In addition SGhas managed the campus bookco-op.12 • CHICAGO MAROON • May 17, 1963* V Vulture returns to review year's cultueAs a concession to those who voiced disapproval of this year's excel*lent cultural policy and disliked seeing the Culture Vulture soar awayfrom the pages of the Maroon, we bring the old bird back for one finalforay. We invoke the feather-beaten scavenger to shake <off his ashesand emerge, not with the delicate agility of a phoenix, but with the preda*tory habits which the old bird exhibited. Thus, we present here a chatty,informal review of the year's cultural events.by Vicky ShiefmanCulture EditorMusicUnder the sponsorship of themusic department, the variety t>Cmusic presented on campus thisquarter was astounding. Contem¬porary music was amply repre¬sented by Gunther Schuller, fa¬mous for his integration of classi¬cal and jazz music into “ThirdStream’’ music, and Paul Jacobs,pianist of the New York Philhar¬monic and noted exponent of twen¬tieth century music.Professor of Music Easley Black¬wood presented three of his owncompositions bhis year. “Music forFtute and Harpsichord, Op. 12,” awork of spdre sound, contrastedwith his “Second String Quartet,Op. 6,’’ which the Lenox Stringquartet presented in all its rich¬ness* Violinist Jacobs performeda “Sonata” by Blackwood.Milton Baljbit explained whysomeone composes electronic mu¬sic in a FOTA-sponsored lectureand Maroon music critic Pete Ra-binowitz questioned why anyonewould want to listen to it.Classical favorites were certain¬ly not forgotten as evidenced bytfie richness of such offerings asthe Collegium Musicum's concertof music from sixteenth centurycourts, the Russian choir's annualLenten concert, violinist IsidoreCohen, Rockefeller Chapel’s pre¬sentation of Hadyn's b-flat Major,Mass and the concert of the UCsymphony orchestra where threeconcerto winners performed. .Not least in popular support wasthe diorvsian spirit represented bythe dionysian spirit represented byfield, who rock-and-rolled at theWednesday night twist parties.Folk music was offered by thefolklore society culminating intheir third annual Folk Festivalduring winter quarter.Represented in the folk festivalwere exponents of blue grass,blues, Ozark mountain tradition,and spirituals. The New Lost CityRamblers provided a contrast tothe indiginous singing element byshowing how city-folk can alsolearn the rural Southern tradition.Sad to say, jazz was noticeablylacking except for an occasionalconcert at the Last Stage or someother place not directly related tothe University.DanceModern dance seemed to be re¬vived on campus this year. Threeout of the four campus dance con¬certs this year were of the modernvariety. (This omits the sessionsheld by Folk and country dancers,mainly because they gave no con¬certs, not because of lack of inter¬est. Many attended these work¬shops.)Modern dancers included MerceCunningham, and Erich Watkins.FOTA sponsored a lecture-demon¬stration on this subject given byCarroll Russell and Shirley Ben-ther.A ballet entitled “Metamorphosisof the Owls” written by Dan Jor¬dan, a graduate student in humandevelopment, was presented thisfall. The dance, written as part ofa PhD thesis designed to help diag¬nose and treat mental illness, en¬abled Jordan to gauge audiencereaction. Tests were administeredbefore and after the performance to see the effect the dance created.FilmsIt would be difficult to list ordescribe all the films shown in oraround campus during the pastthree quarters.Hollywood was displayed at B-Jand Int House while Doc Films, asusual, choose the more esoteric.The Highlight of the film seasonwas the Midwest Film Festival^ acontinuous group of showings sub¬mitted to Documentary films forprizes in their annual event.The National Film Board of Can¬ada took second and third prizeswith “Les Enfants du Silence” and“Dance Squared,” First prize wentto an unusual and highly personalexperimentation of photography en¬titled “Metanoia.” While manyquestioned the appropriateness oftiie awards, all attending enjoyedat least one other of the filmsshown. “The Connection” by JackGelber. which followed the playquite closely, drew large appreci¬ative audiencs, and rumors of avice squad raid.Experimental films appeared oncampus when FOTA sponsored anevening of movies by artist BruceConner, Glenn Alvey, and campusproductions of the twist party.A 1958 graduate of UC, VernZimmerman showed four films onwhich he has worked, including thedelightful “Lemon Hearts” whichshows one actor traveling throughthe slums of San Francisco.ArtAlso noted for its infinite varietywere the year’s roster of art ex¬hibits. Lexington featured suchmoderns as George Kokines, HarryBouras, Bruce Conner, Jerry Pins-ler, and Aaron Siskind.Midway Studios favored regionalrepresentation of new artists. Theydisplayed etchings, engravings,and woodcuts of UC instructorMax Kahn, and the student artshow of six bachelor of fine artscandidates.The Renaissance society featuredHirokai Morino, one of Japan’sleading potters and visiting instruc¬tor in ceramics, and Matta’s paint¬ings, drawings, and sculpture.FOTA brought groups of artiststo view such as the Chicago Re¬gional Artist show and the StudentArt Exhibit.Art discussions were also part ofFOTA.Sculptress Anna Mahler ex¬plained her desire for a return tothe inevitable figure form.An art panel consisting of BrunoBettelheim, critic - psychologist -professor, Bruce Conner, HarryBouras, Miss Mahler, with mod¬erator John Cawelti, surprised theaudience.Artist Conner remained silentthroughout the discussion until heopened a suitcase, took out threebells and handed them bo the panelmembers, then dispersing a clang¬ing array of marbles over the tableand onto the stage.Frank Lloyd Wright’s Robiehouse opened its doors to payingvisitors in order to raise $250,000to restore it, even though it costonly $37,000.LecturesIt is hard to draw an exact linebetween cultural, academic, andeven scientific lectures. Hopefully,such a line does not exist. Thoselectures which touched on art were numerous. A few notables wereauthors James Baldwin, Saul Bel¬low, James Farrell, Norman Mail¬er, and Stephen Spender.At a FOTA-CORE sponsored lec¬ture, Baldwin provoked his audi¬ence into reconsidering their posi¬tions as human beings withoutrecourse to the “negro myth.”Professor on the committee ofsocial thought, Bellow said thatthe romantic idea of the individualhas been completely rejected butas yet no vital new concept hasbeen found to replace it.Farrell reminisced about his ex¬periences at UC and explained theinfluences of the University on hisartistic work.Mailer attempted to convey themeaning of existentialism whileSpender read from a poem whichhe is in the process of writing.Anais Nin, author of Under aGlass Bell and friend of artistic setof post-war Paris explained hertheories of art in a My Life andYours lecture.John Hall Wheelock, Americanpoet, novelist, and critic, suggestedthat the differences between thetwo knowledges of science and hu¬manities should be retained whileProfessor of physical science atHarvard, Gerald Holton called fora unification based on thematicanalysis.TheatreThe merger of University Thea¬tre and the Actors Workshop afterthe latter’s presentation of “TheMerry Wives of Windsor,” gave thecampus a real treat in theatre.James O’Reilly was appointed as¬sistant director of UT. A series ofreadings and discussions of playswere inaugurated including “LookHomeward Angel” adapted fromthe Thomas Wolfe novel.Serious dramas presented were“Night Flight,” an original play byUC artist - in - residence RobertStrang, “Blood Wedding” by Fed-erice Garcia Lorca, and “BraveNew World” adapted from Huxley.“Good News” a college satire ofthe 20’s was a comedy offering.Off campus, in Hyde Park, theLast Stage produced unusual andnew plays such as a new transla¬tion of Aristophanes’ “The Cloud”by James Redfield, assistant pro-fesor of social thought.International Players, a new group composed mainly of foreignstudents, ranging from Indians toEnglishmen, formed. Under thedirection of Joe Ehrenberg, theypresented Wilde’s “The Import¬ance of Being Earnest” and Gira-doux’s “Tiger at the Gates.”Two foreign language eveningsof theatre were presented in thespring quarter. The graduate Ger¬manics club gave a comedy, “DieDeutschen Kleinstadter” while aprofessional French group, “LeTreteau de Paris” produced twoone-acts of Giradoux and Cocteau.Faculty members contributedtheir annual revels under the titleof “Impatience or True Type,” astory of the conflict between sci¬ence and the humanities. It will berepeated in Mandel Hall tonight.PublicationsFour publications which rightful¬ly claim to deal with art or beartistic, appeared on campus this-year.The Cap and Gown, the year¬book, came in a new format thisyear, being more of a mood pieceof sights and sounds on campusrather, than detailed listings ofevents during the year.If we may insert a plug, theMaroon continued presenting bookreviews written by students andfaculty and will next year produceits own literary supplement. Thisyear’s faculty reviewers includedGeorge Bobrinsky, Wayne Booth,Phil Foster, Joel Seidman, NedRosenhein, Russell Thomas, andBernard Weisberger.On the literary scene. The Chi¬cago Review kept publishing quar¬terly in its typically thoughtfulway.Phoenix continued this year, un¬der the editorship of Robert Lamb,to put out well-organized tsues cen¬tered around one important topic.The first issue dealt with the filmas art; the second dealt with cen¬sorship; and the thrird, with FOTA.It presented articles written byparticipating artists Eric Hawkins.Bruno Bettelheim, and pictures ofwork of Anna Mahler and BruceConner.UnclassifiablesSome events are too important tobe overlooked but do not fit any¬where else.Claes Oldenberg’s Happening created a feeling of the city of Chi¬cago. Although the happeningseemed spontaneous, a oast hadrehearsed the every-day roleswhich they then repeated beforean audience. Oldenberg also triedto explain his approach to art ina so-called lecture in the “My Lifeand Yours” series.Three campus organizationsshould be praised for the effortsthey made to enrich our campuscultural life. The South Asian com¬mittee is noted for its second artseries which consisted of threeeevenings of South Asian dance andmusic.Shorey House coffee hours broad¬ened to include a forum on “ThePlace of Creative Arts in the Uni¬versity.” S. Ronald Weiner, in¬structor in English and head ofShorey, moderated. Those partici¬pating were Grosvenor Cooper,professor of music; Harold Hay-don, associate professor of art; andStuart M. Tave, associate professorof English.This year’s FOTA deserves spe¬cial recognition. When the annualspring series of events was sched¬uled to be dropped due to lack ofstudent participation, Bob Beck,Larry Lindgren, and others camearound to produce one of the bestshows on campus.They proved that interesting,new artists can draw crowds andmoney. FOTA invited people tocampus such as Baldwin or Mailer,who although they may not havea Phd, have worthwhile things tosay. One hopes that next year,there will be as good a staff han¬dling FOTA and that the Univer¬sity will be more generous in itsallocation of funds, enabling FOTA19&4 to top this year’s success.Pictures on loan from MmShapiro collection must bereturned to the Ida Noyescheckroom desk today.Housing review continued(Continued from Page 12)on 5110 Kentwood; the Gaylord,5316 Dorchester, and the Grosve¬nor, 5220 Kenwood are being re¬modeled for habitation primarlyby married students. Further ex¬tension of the Married Student andAuxiliary Housing program in¬cluded the establishment of a mar¬ried student center around theFairfax (Dorchester and 51 Street).Harry Weese who was the archi¬tect of Pierce Tower, was engagedto design the new fraternity quad¬rangle. The quadrangle is plannedfor the square block between 55 and 56 Streets from Ellis to Green¬wood Avenue. The university wouldretain ownership of property rightsbut would lease the quadranglehouses to fraternities for two yearperiods. The plan was opposed byAlpha Theta and Phi Kappa Psion the basis that it would tend toreduce the individual character ofthe fraternities.New Women's dormitory at 58and Woodlawn has been namedWoodward Court, in honor of FritzWoodward, acting president of theUniversity in 1925 and 1928-29. Theindividual houses of New Dormwere also named. Scene from "Metamorphosis of the Owls'*June 7, Mil ft. CHICAGO MAROON 11'VERTI&IMEOT■'“ZREN'T ■ w-isaya ip®f iynipnPplikijvommumst,tlieMoscoworganwJ recentlysaidthisofMorae-ArmamentWB)"r"&v"^ fSfv'ORALRE-ARMAMENTiscertainlytliemostprominentassociationwhichaimstosav< ineseati«ne®enthe;■&4^1'W/11civilizationMromCommunism.Ithasstaffhcaclquarter||an?;±Lurope,As ^^MKj|^^eop^|m)ld;:;i(ssenp|ie^^^^^m'AmiipjSca'' leadersofMoralRe-ArmamentclaimitissuperiortocapitalismandCommunism, moralsofthebourgeoisworldarebankrupt,theprophetsofMoralRe-Armamentsaanideologytosatisfythelongingforabsolutestandards,anideologyabletomovetheheartsoftheprivileged aswellastheunder-privileged....Theytrainofficers,philosophers,filmdirectorsandmovewith200,300, or400peopleinstrengthwithup-to-datetechnicalequipment,radiotransmitters,libraries.•..Notlongago theyissuedacalltoCommuniststhroughfullpagesinthepress.InthistheCommunistsarechallengedto takepartin‘thegreatestrevolutionofalltime/ThesepeoplesaytheproblemisneitherCommunismnor capitalism,butthenecessitytochangehumannaturetotheroots.Theypuffthemselvesupwithprideand evensuggesttoMarxiststheyshouldchangeandtakeupanideologythatisforeverybody.Thisisreally themostboldstrokethathascomefromthesepropagandistsofreconciliationandforgiveness. ..:,,y.,-- ,/v-y;,.y^y.- .■>■~-i—-atrytoexplainattitudesofMoralRe*Armamen■..yvJ-A/Ti-INTELLIGENTNAnONALSEGURirfe,' . wAFREEPRLiS. I■■ ■■'.;■'■'/; ^CpMMUNISTS,fASCISp;OTPER^^M mgtopaythepriceofchangingthemselvesinatochangenewspapermenwhoabusethen-libertybydistortingorsuppressing Communism,Pascisrh,oranysmallperilous“ism” whichabolishes Godandsetsraceagainstrace,classagainstclass,coloragainst color,managainstman,inanatomicage.,VI1t.-.apatternofunitTHEUNITEDSTATESOEAMERICA andpurposefortheworld.. --AT*v*&"triesbirt^titselfdeeplydivided.uwinPos CjJ>a*<-0-litiASOCIETYwhere;m>manIshandicappedbycolor,race,back-*T groundorupbringing,allhavethechanceoffull,satisfyinglife. PEACE.AREVOLUTIONOFCHANGE—social,economic,national, universal,foundedonpersonalchange.usetriesbutisitselfdeeplydivided*1a.aierssocietyandgovernmentwhobetraytheirtm^,«nd influenceandpowertoforcedecadenceuponus—bigotswhotry topersecutethoseunwillingtocompromiseortocoverup. Pacifism,whichseemstomakewarcertain.Leaderswhocry “peace”butcreateconditionsthatleadtowar.Philosophersand foolswhocry“peace”buttrainmantolivelikeabeast,andso doomhimtolivelikeabeast,treatotherslikebeasts,andmarch thepathtoslaughterhouseorzoo. Reaction,whichstrivestochangeeverybodyelseexceptitself.«.*FULLANDPERMANENTEMPLOYMENTinindustrythat meetstheneedsofhumanityratherthanbrimmingthepocketsofafewwhilethebelliesofmanystayvoid.Steelyselfishnessofright,acidbitternessofleftwhichcreateclass war,lock-outs,unofficialstrikesandleadinevitablytonational bankruptcyandwar.GOD’SSTANDARDOFHONESTYthatmeansnoskeletonsin anyclosetandafairday’sworkforafairday’swage.Human“honesty” whichpublishesotherpeople’sshortcomings whilecoveringupitsown,tellsmentogetasmuchastheycanin returnforaslittleaspossible.GOD’SSTANDARDOFABSOLUTEPURITY.Homosexuality,lesbianism,pornography,adultery,lieswhichsaysinisnolongersinwhenenoughpeoplecometolikeit.Preoccupa¬ tionwithdirtwhichrobsanationofsweatandskillandhelpsto loseitsmarkets.MARRIAGESTHATLASTbecausetheyareapromise,forbet¬ ter,forworse,heldsacredbypartnersandpeople.Divorcebyconsentwhetherlegalizedorwangled.GREATARTintheater,films,television.Producersandcriticswhoupliftgrimeasgeniusandbarthosewho standfordecency,faithandhonor.w2wm1—4 E—1 C£W&GOD’SSTANDARDOFUNSELFISHNESSwhichmeansthe pursuitofagoalallhumanitycanacceptandshare—theremakingoftheworldbasedongovernmentbymengovernedbyGod. t,GOD’SSTANDARDOFLOVEthatcuresevilaswellasfor¬ givingit TRUTH. GOD,CHRISTASPERSONALFRIENDANDSAVIOUR,a ChurchaflamewiththeHolySpirit.Humanselfishnessthatelevates“numberone”intothenational idol,saysallwhorefusetoworshipitaresquares. Human“love”thattellsmenevilisallright,cannotbecuredandsosaysthereisnothingtoforgiveandthatmancanmanageby himself* Liesinventedbyknaves,endorsedbytheexpertsandswallowedbyfools,whichseparateanationfrommoralandspiritualrebirth. Thoseinandoutofchurcheswhousetheology,science,personal compromiseandpositiontorobthenationsoftruefaith.Thisisoneofaseriesofpagesappearingintheprincipalnewspapersoftheworld.LikealltheworldwideadvanceofMoralRe-Armament, thesepagesareundertakenbymenandwomenwhogiveoutofconvictionandsacrifice,Contributionsandinquiriesmaybeaddressedto: MoralRe-Armament,640FifthAvenue,NewYork19,N.Y»Forthebackgroundtothispageread"FRANKBUCHMAN’SSECRET"byPeterHoward(Doubleday$2,75)—availableatyourbookstore.ADVERTISEMENTADVERTISEMENTADVERTISEMENTCHICAGOMAROON•June7.1961Notional news reviewCongress aids education, more bills may be passedby Laura GodofskyCongress treated universi¬ties relatively well this year.There is a good chance thataid to higher education legis¬lation will be passed this session,despite the objections of the Na¬tional Educational Association.In addition, the National DefenseEducation Act loan program’s dis¬claimer affidavit, to which manyuniversities objected, was repealed;and government sponsorship offaculty research continued to in¬crease.Aid legislationThe House of Representativeshas already passed a $236 millionmedical school aid bill and is ex¬pected to pass a $2 billion aca-damic facilities construction billthis month. Both are expected towin Senate approval.These two bills embody proposalsthat appeared this winter in Presi¬dent Kennedy’s “omnibus” educa¬tion bill, which dealt with all levelsof education, from kindergarten tograduate school.The comprehensive omnibusapproach was an attempt to userelatively popular measures, suchas aid to higher education, tostimulate simultaneous passage ofless popular, more controversialmeasures, such as elementary andsecondary school aid.With a variety of continuing con¬troversies over the less popularmeasures killing all chances of theentire omnibus bill’s passage, lead¬ers recently agreed to divide it intoa number of narrower, separatebills. Among the provisions thatwere scrapped for this year atleast was aid to elementary andsecondary schools.Arguments over supporting par¬ochial and segregated schools, aswell as conservatives’ opposition tothe principle of federal aid to edu¬cation were most significant in thedecision to abandon elementaryand secondary aid. Because highereducation is not compulsory as areelementary and secondary educa¬tion, objections to aiding it are notso strong.With the abandonment of elemen¬tary and secondary school aid, oneof the omnibus bill’s supporters,the National Education Associa¬tion, turned against the remainingprovisions, including aid to highereducation.Decline of NEAThis reversal, however, may wellcause the NEA’s decline as a legis¬ lative influence in Congress.Having already supported theentire omnibus bill in committeehearings, the NEA will alienateCongressmen by opposing parts ofit now. And by opposing measuresdesigned to meet some of the mostpressing problems facing US edu¬cation today, the NEA will un¬doubtedly alienate many US edu¬cators.Last year, many educators wereincensed at the NEA’s role in de-feaating a $1.4 billion higher edu¬cation construction grant and loanbill. Claiming that the bill, whichincluded church-related schoolsamong its beneficiaries, would“imperil” the division of churchand state, the NEA sent telegramsto all members of the House ofRepresentatives urging them to de¬feat the bill, which they did by avote of 186 for and 214 against.Roth the American Council onEducation and the Association forHigher Education have con¬demned the NEA this year for act¬ing against the interests of educa¬tion. From the vehemence of theirreactions, it would appear thatthey and other higher education or¬ganizations are not going to letthe NEA again succeed in actingagainst their interests.NDEA affidavit repealedDespite the difficulty in gettingmajor higher education legislation,one small, but highly significantbill was passed this autumn. Al¬most before anyone realized whatwas happening. Congress voted torepeal the controversial disclaimeraffidavit provision of the NDEA.In place of the affidavit, whichmany universities refused to ad¬minister to their students, a pro¬vision was passed stating that per¬sons who knowingly belong to sub¬versive organizations are subjectto up to five years in jail and upto $10,000 in fines if they applyfor or receive funds under theNDEA loan program.Following this change, practical¬ly all of the 31 universities thathad withdrawn in protest from theprogram, including UC, rejoined it,even though the view was express¬ed on some campuses that thecriminal provision, likevthe affi¬davit, still left political stringsattached to federal aid.Space monthAlthough no legislation was in¬volved, another major university-government event was MidwestSpace Month. Space Month waslargely a publicity campaign puton by UC and other area universi¬ ties, local industry, and the Chi¬cago and Illinois governments toattract more government researchand development contracts to thestarved Midwest.Conferences, discussions, lec¬tures and exhibits were held andfairly well attended to demonstratesincere and overwhelming local in¬terest in space.Do-ngerous imbalanceBut while these efforts were be¬ing made to procure more govern¬ment funds, increasing numbers ofpersons voiced concern this yearabout disturbing results of presentgovernment research and aid pro¬grams.A report prepared by KennethLittle of the University of Wis¬consin and another by the Brook¬ings Institute showed the increas¬ ing concentration in a few univer¬sities and a few disciplines of gov¬ernment funds.UC for example, is one of 25.universities that share nearly 70%of all federal research funds. Fur¬ther, about 75% of the University'stotal annual "budget comes fromgovernment funds. This includesover $60 million for Argonne na¬tional laboratory, which equals toall other University expenditures.Of the remaining $60 million or so,nearly 30% comes from govern¬ment contracts.Since government contracts havebeen concentrated in scientificareas, the humanities have suf¬fered. Even though scientific re¬search project expenses are paidlargely by government contracts,there is overhead involved that de¬ tracts from other funds and fields,so President Beadle testified be¬fore a House Subcommittee on Ap¬propriations this year.Keppel appointedAnother significant developmentwas the appointment of FrancisKeppel, dean of the Harvard Grad¬uate School of Education as Ster¬ling McMurrin’s successor as Com¬missioner of Education. Keppel’*appointment was expected to bringabout a sharp increase in the Com¬missioner’s powers, but thus farfew changes have been evident.And finally, as universities pre¬pared to accommodate a deluge ofreturning Peace Corps volunteers,a program was introduced for adomestic service corps. Little ac¬tion has been taken so far thisyear on the proposals.Students engage in social actionNSA activities increaseUC group leads assemblyAgain agreeing that they are“members of the total commun¬ity,” US students participated inthe educational and political lifeof their country and the worldthrough the United States NationalStudent Association (NSA) thisyear.Some 1200 students from 400nember schools attended NSA’s'5th National Student Congress at3tho State University last sum-ner, where the year’s policiesvere made.With UC’s POLIT delegation tak¬ing a leading role, the Congresspassed resolutions condemning nu¬clear testing, urging Congress toreconsider the McCarran Act, andasking strong federal support ofeducation and civil rights.In its “basic policy declarations,”which are stronger than resolu¬tions, the Congress advocated na¬tional investments in education tooounter investments in the ColdWar; condemned oppression by dic¬tatorship, colonialism, imperialism,totalitarianism, discrimination, andeconomic deprivation, and sup¬ported students working againstthem: and urged universities notto infringe upon the right of dueprocess when students were ac¬cused of breaking campus rules.At a meeting before the Con¬gress, the editors of 35 studentnewspapers, including the Maroon,formed the US Student Press Asso¬ciation (USSPA). USSPA has dur¬ing the year more than tripled its membership, run a national pressservice (Collegiate Press Serv¬ice), published a journal and bib¬liographies, and held two confer¬ences. The Maroon representedMidwestern dailies on the Associa¬tion’s National Executive Board.During the school year, NSAsponsored conferences, combatedabridgements of academic free¬dom, and conducted educationaland social action campaigns.NSA’s officers represented USstudents at a variety of nationaland international meeetings. Lastmonth, the President of NSA testi¬fied before a US Senate subcom¬mittee on the need for increasedstudent financial aid.The International student situa¬tion remained essentially un¬changed, with relations betweenthe Communist-led InternationalUnion of Students and the WesternInternational Student Conferenceparalleling those between the Com¬munist and Western blocs.One highlight of the year wasthe VIII World Youth Festival,held last summer in Helsinki, Fin¬land, and attended by 13.000 youngpeople from 137 countries.Although debate still rages onwhether or to what degree theFestival was undemocratically runand Communist dominated, mostparticipants agreed that attend¬ance provided bhem with a valu¬able opportunity to meet theircolleagues from both sides of bheIron Curtain. Throughout the country, studentscontinued to explore political prob¬lems and engage in social actionthis year.Some of bhem, notably civilrights demonstrators and collegetutors, were at least partially suc¬cessful in achieving their objec¬tives. But others, particularly left¬ist discussion groups and oppon-ents of the Cuban blockade, pro¬voked unusually strong adversereactions.Civil rights action*White and Negro students con¬tinued their participation in nation¬wide civil rights demonstrations,voter registration drives, and openoccupancy campaigns. They re¬ceived additional encouragementthis year from the SupremeCourt’s reversal of many sit-indemonstrators’ convictions.Last summer, former UC studentLinda Perlstein was among demon¬strators who were jailed in Cairo,Illinois, for their eventually suc¬cessful efforts to integrate recrea¬tion facilities.Members of the Student Non-Violent Coordinating Committeecontinued to risk, and in somecases suffered, physical harm asthey worked to register and edu¬cate Mississippi and GeorgiaNegroes.UC students were among thosewho responded generously to aplea for food for Mississippi townswhere federal surpluses adminis¬tered by local officials were with¬held from Negroes who did vote.U C students were also amongthose who demonstrated in theiruniversities’ cities in support ofcivil rights efforts in Birmingham,Alabama, and Greenwood, Missis¬sippi.And in some Northern cities, in¬cluding Chicago, Yellow Springs,Ohio, and Wheaton, Illinois, stu¬dents through their campus NAACPor CORE chapters worked againstdiscrimination by neighborhoodlandlords and shop-owners.At the same time, many studentschanneled their energies into tutor¬ing projects like UC’s. Under theaegis of the Northern StudentMovement, headquartered at Yale,a number of neighborhood tutoringand cultural enrichment programshave been started.Political difficultiesThe Cuban crisis of last Octoberevoked perhaps the most intensereactions from all parts of the po¬litical spectrum. It marked one ofthe first times protest demonstra¬tors were outnumbered by counterdemonstrators. UC’s recall wasperhaps bhe most extreme counter¬reaction, but all over the countrystudents circulated petitions anddemonstrated in support of Ken¬nedy’s blockade of Cuba.Several groups formed to ex¬plore political ideas and conditionsmet with government oppositionthis year.In New York, a leftist student dis¬cussion group, Advance, was or¬dered to register as a Communistgroup under the Subversive Activi¬ties Control Act.In Bloomington, the Indiana Uni¬versity chapter of bhe Young So¬cialist Alliance, which has a UCcounterpart, was indicted undera state subversive law. The grouphas been uuder attack aiil year, but the particular cause for theindictment was a lecture deliveredat an IU YSA meeting in whichbhe speaker said that the US Negrowould, with both violence and non¬violence, achieve his rights.In December, a trip to Cuba bya group of American students wascancelled because of the impossi¬bility of arranging commercialtransportation and obtaining per¬mission from the US governmentto travel to Cuba.Academic freedom casesIn other developments, the per¬ennial “academic freedom cases”arose at a number of universitieswhere speakers were banned andoutspoken editors or faculty mem¬bers were removed from theirpositions.Among this year’s banned speak¬ers were all Communists at Mich¬igan universities; Marxist histo¬rian Herbert Aptheker at Buffalo.American Nazi Party -leaderGeorge Lincoln Rockwell at North¬western (both men spoke at UCthis spring), and four leading “lib¬eral” theologians at Catholic Uni¬versity. (The university cannotseparate itself from the views ofthe men who speak at it, explaineda dean.)Faculty members at LincolnCollege in Illinois and BrandeisUniversity in Massachusetts werefired by their presidents for dis¬playing strong feelings for Cubaor against the blockade. The University of Illinois wascensured by the American Asso¬ciation of University Professors(AAUP) for having fired Leo Kochfor supporting premarital sexualrelations in a letter to the UI stu¬dent newspaper. Although AAUPcensure represents the academicprofession’s sternest disapproval,it seems to have had little effectat UI.One result however, has beenthat Roosevelt University facultymembers tried, unsuccessfully, tohave UI President David Henry’sengagement as commencementspeaker cancelled.Finally, editors at Wheaton,Notre Dame, Flint, and Coloradoran into administration oppositionwhen they tried to exercise free¬dom of the student press. And atthe University of Alabama, an in-tegrationist editor was given abodyguard after threats weremade on his life and a cross wasburned on his lawn.Quote of the daySince 3600 BC there have been14,531 wars great and small, andin all the centuries of recordedhistory the world has known only292 years of peace.—findings of a Norwfgian-srlfntiiitwho applied an elertronir computer tothe study of conflicts throughout his¬tory, reported in a recent article iathe New York Times Magazine.Outside political pressuresinjure Ole Miss, ColoradoExternal political pressures thisyear removed the University ofColorado from the “brink of great¬ness” and guaranteed the Univer¬sity of Mississippi a hard time inever getting there.Colo, administrators quitAt Colorado, President QuiggNewton and at least eight top ad¬ministrators resigned just as theirefforts to transform the partyschool of the West into a center oftop-notch research and teachingactivity were beginning to pay off.Attacks on some of the policiesNewton implemented in creatingan atmosphere of academic free¬dom led to his firing Gary Alt-hen,editor of the student newspaper,after a review attacking SenatorBarry Goldwater was printed.The firing came less than twoweeks after Newton had eloquentlyanswered Goldwater’s demands forretribution by stating, “Senator, Ishall not silence them.”The Althen incident was the cul¬mination of several years of at¬tacks on Newton, and pressure onthe university.Joseph Smiley, president of theUniversity of Texas, was chosento succeed Newton,Miss professors quitIn Oxford, Mississippi, at least35 full professors have resigned inthe aftermath of the nation’s mostviolent attempt to integrate an in¬stitution of higher learning.At Mississippi, where events con¬trasted sharply with peaceful inter¬ gration at Tulane and Clemson,federal troops led by former UClaw professor and current deputyattorney general Nicholas Katzen-bach were brought in to executea court order to admit JamesMeredibh. Meredith was finally en¬rolled despite obstructionist effortsby Mississippi’s governor RosaBarnett,Meredith continues jo be har¬assed or shunned by many of theOle Miss students. Still accompa¬nied by federal Marshals, he hasbeen doing only borderline workthis year.Both the American Council onEducation and the Association ofHigher Education at their annualmeetings in Chicago passed resolu¬tions aimed against the politicalinterference at Ole Miss.The Southern Association of Col¬leges and Secondary Schools, re¬gional accrediting agency, put allthe state institutions at Mississippion strict probation, threatening towithdraw accreditation if there i»any future political interference intheir affairs.On Monday, Mississippi’s neigh¬bor, bhe University of Alabama, isscheduled to be integrated. Ala¬bama’s Governor Wallace, assbaunoh a segregationist as Bar¬nett, has pledged to personallyblockade the entrance of Negrostudents but simultaneously P^'vent violence. Apparently the trag¬edy of Ole Miss has been of lim¬ited value in preventing other suchperformances.U • CHICAGO MAROON • Jane 7, 1963¥Elections, renewal are major city issuesby David L. AikenandJohn T. WilliamsAn indication of the ap¬proaching1 end of the UCurban renewal activities, andlocal, state and Congressionalelections were the outstandingevents in the University neighbor¬hood this year.The announcement in March ofthe proposed merger of HPKCCand SECC signified the approachingculmination of the University’s ex¬tensive neighborhood program.SECC was formed at UC initia¬tive, in 1952 to work for neighbor¬hood stability and crime reduction.SECC’s activities complementedthose of HPKCC for the past dec¬ade. The latter group was formedin 1949 to organize the communityprimarily at the grass roots level.The merger statement, afterstating that the two organizationshave overlapping interests, goes onto say that a joint committee hadbeen appointed to “explorewhether their services to the com¬munity could be better and moreeconomically provided by oneorganization.”* It has been indicated that HPKCCwill be the survivor of the twogroups.The University decided in theearly fifties that it had to investin the community or risk engulf-ment by approaching slums. Theresult was a pioneering urban re¬newal program in Hyde Parkwhich involved expenditures bygovernment and private sourcesexceeding $100 million.In addition, the University spentlarge sums investing in real estatefor academic and non-academic«• ■ uses.Currently, the University isawaiting city action on its planfor a major addition to the cam¬pus. The plan would clear a stripone mile long and a block wide■ immediately south of the Midway.The completion of this project willprobably mark the end of theUniversity’s major efforts in pre¬serving the community.The South Campus plan was pre¬sented to the City Council in De¬cember, 1960. Council considerationof the plan was delayed afterstrong protests by Alderman Leon„ M. Despres and representatives ofthe Woodlawn community.The major community oppositioncame from The Woodlawn Organi¬zation, which was organized earlyin 1961. The immediate goal of thisgroup was to fight the South Cam¬pus plan unless it could be con¬sidered as part of a general urbanrenewal program for the area.’* Last summer, such a comprehen¬sive plan, including South Campuswas tentatively prepared by thecity. The city is currently studyingsuggestions and comments on theplan submitted by various groupswithin and outside the Woodlawn’ area.Julian Levi, currently executivedirector of SECC, has been ap¬pointed professor of urban studiesat UC. He will assume his newduties next month.Despres reelectedk In the Winter Aldermanic elec¬tions in Chicago, the contest in the‘ Fifth Ward was the city’s mostclosely followed, partially becauseof the supporters of each candidate.Leon Despres, the independentincumbent, was given an over-Aldermon Leon Despres whelming victory in his bid for athird term in the election, heldFebruary 26.Despres was supported by Mar¬shall Korshak, fifth ward Demo¬cratic committeeman. He was en¬dorsed by both Democratic MayorDaley, and in a surprise move, byDaley’s unsuccessful mayoral op¬ponent, Benjamin Adamowski, aRepublican.Despre’s opposition was Chaun-cey Eskridge, a Negro Democratwho claimed the support of hisparty’s Regular ward organization.His main public support, however,came from Aid. Kenneth Camp¬bell, of the South Side 20th ward.Campbell announced he was “in¬vading” the fifth ward by sup¬porting Eskridge, picturing hisaction as a “revolt at the grassroots” by precinct workers againstKorshak’s support of Despres.Campbell, who successfullysought re-election in the campaign,has been generally considered theman most likely to succeed ailingCongressman William L. Dawsonas boss of the South Side NegroDemocratic machine.Alderman Thomas Keane, of the31st ward on the north side, wasreportedly another supporter ofEskridge. Keane is chairman ofthe city council finance commit¬tee, and is second only to MayorDaley in influence in city politics.A veteran political observer andprominent member of the Inde¬pendent Voters of Illinois said atthe time that most Democraticward committeemen thought Kor¬shak was wrong in supportingDespres.Mayor Daley overruled them, thecommentator continued, under apolicy to let each committeemanhave his way in choosing hisward’s aldermanic candidate. Themayor is generally against revolt,he said.That the races of the two can¬didates was not an important fac¬tor was indicated by the electionresults. Despres swept every pre¬ cinct In the entire ward except forone area, the 62d precinct, whichis located between 63d and 65thStreets east of the IC tracks. InWoodlawn, Despres took 73% ofthe vote.The over all vote gave Despres81% of the vote, with a margin of15,815 to 2.486. The UC area gaveDespres 93% of its vote.The Despres victory not onlywas in keeping with the traditionalfifth ward preference for inde¬pendent aldermen but it alsomarked a political victory for Kor¬shak over some of his most in¬fluential and party-minded Demo¬cratic colleagues. Korshak violatedone of the unwritten laws of poli¬tics by endorsing Despres—prob¬ably the staunchest critics of Chi¬cago’s Democratic machine.Another important Aldermanicrace was in the neighboring fourthward, where Negro independentcandidate Timuel D. Black, whowas endorsed by the IVI, was de¬feated by the Democratic incum¬bent, Claude Holman.Black got more votes in his wardas an independent than Eskridgereceived in the 5th ward with partybacking.Daley winsMayor Richard J. Daley’s victoryin the April 2 mayoral election wassignificant for its relatively smallmargin. Daley had only 55.6% ofthe total vote in beating Republi¬can Adamowski.His margin of 137,500 votes con¬trasted with his two previous mar¬gins, 466,700 in 1959, and, 126,700in his first victory in 1955.Analysts attributed much ofAdamowski’s unexpectedly goodshowing to taxpayer’s attitudes toexpenses of the urban renewal pro¬gram under Daley. Peter Rossi,director of the National OpinionResearch Center (NORC), said italso reflects a long-term declinein Daley’s grass-roots support.In November, Hyde Park areawas specifically interested in athree-way race for US Congress¬ man Representative. The winner,incumbent Democrat B a r r a 11O'Hara, easily defeated SidneyLens, an independent write-in can¬didate who ran on a “peace plat¬form,” and Phillip G. Bixler, aRepublican. Lens had his greatestsupport in the Hyde Park votingdistricts.In the state-wide election for USSenator, GOP incumbent EverettDirksen beat UC alumnus Demo¬crat Sidney Yates by a widemargin.ADC crisisA crisis for recipients of Aid toDependent Children funds, causedby failure of the state legislatureto appropriate emergency funds forMay and June, led to action andinterest by many students andfaculty members.The tie-up began in April, whenregular funds appropriated for theprogram last year ran out. Re¬publicans in the state legislatureheld up a bill, introduced in April,to grant emergency funds for theperiod until the next fiscal year’sappropriation was available inJuly.The balking legislators wantedceilings for individual aid grantswritten into any new appropriation.Democrats and Governor Otto Ker-ner opposed this measure. Accord¬ing to observers, the issues in¬volved were the state’s budget sit¬uation versus adequate levels ofassistance.The legislature was deadlockedby the Republican majority in boththe House and Senate. Finally, inMay, the crisis came to a head asthe regular relief checks failed toarrive.Aid recipients were forced to de¬pend on food distributed by privatecharitable and community organi¬zations. Food collection was or¬ganized all over Chicago, includingdrives by students at UC and otheruniversities.Soon Federal surplus food wasbrought in, and distributed by theprivate agencies. Aid recipientsUC makes administrative changesThe appointment of threenew deans, the resignation ofJohn T. Wilson, and the re¬tirement of R. Wendell Har¬rison were the main developmentsin the administration this year.Wilson, -who came to UC lastyear from the National ScienceFoundation to serve as special as¬sistant to President Beadle, re¬signed his post this spring to be¬come the deputy director of thefoundation.While at UC, he moved the creditcourses which had been offeredat the downtown center back tothe campus, and abandoned thehome study program.Harrison, 65, retired this yearfrom his post as vice president ofthe University and dean of thefaculties. He had served as theacting chancellor after LawrenceA. Kimpton resigned in 1960 untilthe Trustees selected George WellsBeadle to lead UC.Neal is law deanProfessor of Law Phil CaldwellNeal was appointed dean of theLaw school, and succeeded EdwardLevi who became Provost of theUniversity last year.An expert on constitutional law,Neal has also worked in the fieldsof anti-trust and administrativelaw, and was one of the eightlegal scholars selected to write ahistory of the US Supreme Court.Under Levi, the law school facul¬ty was greatly evpanded, the newlaw school building was completed,and the University succeeding inbringing the Center for the Ameri¬can Bar Association to the Midway.Shultz heads businessGeorge P. Shultz, authority onindustrial relations and nationalpolicy, was named Dean of theGraduate School of Business, andsucceeded W. Allen Wallis whobecame President of the Universityof Rochester.Shultz came to UC as professorof industrial relations in 1957. Pre¬viously, he had been on the facultyat MIT, and had occupied advisorypositions in the government underboth Eisenhower and Kennedy. Robert E. Streeter, professor ofEnglish, was named acting Deanof the Division of humanities. Hewill replace Napier Wilt who re¬tired after serving 11 years as theDean and 40 on the faculty.Mew Library DeanPhysicist Don Swanson was ap¬pointed dean of the Graduate Li¬brary School, and is one of thenation’s first physical scientists tohead a professional library school.Before accepting the post, Swan¬son was working with a group in¬vestigating the feasibility of auto¬mating many of the bibliographicaloperations in the Library of Con¬gress.He is also an authority on com¬puter applications for storing andretriving information, and is aspecialist in the relationship be¬tween natural and computer lan¬guages and the problems whichthese pose in practical application.Departmental changesJulian R. Goldsmith, succeededSuerre Petterson as chairman ofthe department of geophysical sci¬ences.Robert Hess, chairman of theCommittee on Human Develop¬ment, was appointed AssistantDean of the Graduate school of Ed¬ucation.Francis Lloyd, superintendent ofschools in Clayton, Missouri, wasnamed Director of the Laboratoryschools, a part of the GraduateSchool of Education.The post, which was vacant fortwo years, includes the nurseryschool, elementary school, andhigh school, with a total enroll¬ment of 1600.Dr. Albert Dorfman, professorin the department of pediatrics,was appointed chairman of the de¬partment of pediatrics. He is re¬placing Dr. F. Howell Wright, pro¬fessor in the department of pedi¬atrics, who will continue to teachat UC.CollegeMax Putzel, assistant dean ofstudents, was named associateDean of Undergraduate Studentsand assistant professional lecturerjn German in the College. Norton Ginsburg, professor in thedepartment of geography, was ap¬pointed Associate Dean of the Col¬lege, replacing Warner Wick whowill remain Dean of Students.Assistant Dean of the College,Albert Hayes, was appointed to theposition of College Examiner, andwill take over from David Wil¬liams, professor of humanities,whose term expires in October.Everett Olsen and Perrin Low-rey were chosen as section headsfor the physical sciences and hu¬manities sections in the College.During the Summer, two changeswere made in the office of StudentHousing. James Vice was ap¬pointed Director, replacing JohnHuntoon who left UC to join thefaculty of the university of NorthDakota, and James Maser came inas the assistant director,A. Wayne Gieseman succeededAlbert Cotton as bursar of theUniversity. Cotton, who has workedin the Bursar’s office since 1926,remained at UC this year as stu¬dent loan officer.Tom O'Keefe was selected as theDirector of Student Activities.The Officies of Financial Aid andAdmissions were combined andunderwent a partial reorganizationduring the year.Charles O'Connell became direc¬tor of financial aid and admissionwhen G. Richard Hopwood re¬signed to become director of theFulbright scholarship program inIran. He was previously directorof admissions.According to Dean of StudentsWarner Wick, the consolidationwas made to avoid duplicating ef¬forts. Previously all applicationshad passed both offices.The University also reorganizedthe administration of scholarshipand fellowship programs alongmore specialized and functionallines.Coordinators were ap>pointed toadminister government traineeprograms College financial aid.Fulbright and other exchange pro¬grams, and the National DefenseEducation Act. wjio had not received their checkgot Cook County Public Assistanceboard approval for the emergencyrations.Finally, under pressure frommany groups to end the crisis,Gov. Kerner agreed to ceiling pro¬posals of the Republicans. Toplimits W'ere put on payments forindividual members of the family,and for rent. In many categories,these were lower than previouslevels, but an additional authoriza¬tion of $15 for every teen-ager wasalso included in the measure.Artisans affectedUrban renewal and Hyde Parkartisans came in contact in March.Plans were announced in the sameweek to evict the seven occupantsof the 57th Street art colony, andto build a pioneer community arti¬san center.The $500,000 center, namedHarper Court, would provide facili¬ties for small businesses and cul¬tural activities. It would be locatedon Harper Ave. between 52nd and53rd Streets. The sponsoring com¬mittee for the project was led byMrs. Muriel Beadle, wife of UC’spresident.The buildings of the “art colony”were originally used as shops forthe 1890 Chicago World’s Fair. Ur¬ban renewal officials contend theyare possible firetraps.Most of the present colony oc¬cupants would qualify for facilitiesin the new center, but feel theyshould be allowed to stay at leastuntil plans for Harper Courtcrystallize.Open occupancyOpen occupancy became a sub¬ject for widespread discussion oncampus and throughout the state,when a Fair Housing Practices Billto ban discrimination was intro¬duced in the Illinois State Legis¬lature.UC students, faculty, and ad¬ministrators became involved in acampaign to ensure the bill’s pas¬sage.The first action taken was a let¬ter urging the University to for¬mally support the bill, sent to allmembers of the faculty. 145 facultymembers responded in suppx>rt ofthe measure.The faculty letter and COREfailed to get the UC Board ofTrustees to take a stand on thebill, however. The Board felt thebill, not being directly related toacademic concerns, is not the kindof issue on which it should take apublic position.The proposed bill would pro¬hibit discrimination in sale orrental of all housing except privatehomes, private clubs, and religiousinstitutions. It would also prohibitdiscrimination in financing of allhousing.The bill would also establish acommission to investigate viola¬tions of anti-discrimination poli¬cies. If efforts at conciliation andpersuasion fail in a case, it wouldbe empowered to issue “cease anddesist” orders. These would beenforceable through the courts, andnon-compliance w'ould be punish¬able as a contempt. The commis¬sioners would receive onlyexpenses, no salaries.UC CORE sponsored a bus tripin May, to Springfield, the statecapital, to attend a House Execu¬tive Committee hearing on the bill.The group, numbering 45, wasnot aliow'ed inside the House cham¬ber, but presented written testi¬mony w'hich showed results of apx>ll of Hyde Park residents. 75%signed a petition urging passage ofthe bill, it said, while a a total of85% expressed support.Although the House executivecommittee approved the bill, it hasnot yet been voted upon by theentire legislature.John CharlesWilson O’ConnellMay 17. 1963 • CHICAGO MAROON • 17Two Harper visiting scholars on campus NORC conducts researchHis topics covered man’s controlof his environment, science andpolitics, the end of history andbeginning of world community,and “The Shape of Things toCome.”FOTA features speakersThis year’s Festival 'of the Arts(FOTA) featured a wide range ofspeakers dealing with cultural top¬ics. One notable aspect of FOTA,however, was something that didnot happen—the proposed appear¬ance of Russian poet YevgenyYevtushenko, who was not allowedto leave his country after incurr¬ing the wrath of officials for al¬lowing himself too much freedomon a tour of Europe.There was much interest in whatdid happen, even so. LiteratureMas well represented by threeauthors. James T. Farrell, authorof Studs Lonigan among manyother novels, and a UC alumnus,recounted some of his experienceshere in speaking on the role of theuniversity in literature.Norman Mailer, controversialauthor whose writings include TheNaked and the Dead, and Adver¬tisements for Myself, attempted toconvey the meaning of existential¬ism with readings from several ofhis M’orks.James Baldwin, noted Negroauthor, was unable to speak atthe scheduled time because of aphysical collapse suffered just be¬fore, but did appear the followingweek. He spoke on the “SocialResponsibility of the Artist.”(continued from page ft)ern world, and the dissipation ofrevolutionary spirit.The material covered in thisseries has since been publishedin book form. Miss Arendt, whowas appointed professor in theCommittee on Social Thought inDecember has recently gained na-tionwide attention for her newbook and recent articles on AdolfEichmann.Harper scholarsTwo important scholar* spokeon campus this year under thePaul Vincent Harper VisitingScholar Program.In November, Jerome Bruner,professor of psychology from Har¬vard, spoke on theories of learningand development. He divided thelearning process into the stages ofaction, or actual physical situa¬tions; images, which stand for sit¬uations; and finally symbols, suchas words.Noted French political analystRaymond Aron appeared in Marchas the second Harper VisitingScholar, and gave two speechesplus several seminars.His first speech outlined andanalyzed the present state of theAtlantic alliance, saying it hasremained an integrated defensivealliance, "without developing intoa real community.His major speech discussed thecharacteristics and prospects ofthe atomic age, reaching the con¬clusion that the present situationis “much more tolerable in realitythan in the analysis of the special¬ists.”Atom scientists meetThirty-four of the participatingscientists returned to UC for thetwentieth anniversiary of the firstnuclear chain reaction, which was dissemination of knowledge. We, ber university.Poets speakPoet John Hall Wheelock de¬livered the first lecture of theyear in the William Vaughn Moodyseries in November. He exploredthe “resistance” between the twotypes of knowledge, which he des¬cribed as the “outer” knowledgeof the scientist, and the “inner”knowledge of the poet. A natural“resistance” must be overcome be¬fore a man can experience “inner”knowledge, Wheelock said.Stephen Spender, British poetand critic, gave the second Moodylecture in January. He read fromhis own and others’ poetry.French novelist Anais Nin ap¬peared in November under the“My Life and Yours” discussionseries. She emphasized the neces¬sity of experimentation in art, andsaid symbolism in art is necessaryfor communication with the uncon¬scious part of the soul.Derrett sparks studyFew people are now studyingHindu law', according to DuncanDerrett, and in a lecture deliveredat the Law School in April, theBritish scholar made an effort tocorrect this situation. A visitinglecturer from the University ofLondon, Derrett gave a series ofspeeches on the law, religion andthe state in India.Derrett’s efforts brought quickresults when the UC Law Schooland South Asian Studies Commit¬tee organized a conference for dis¬cussion of problems in study ofAsian Law. (continued from page 111jor book in May, called America’sFailure in China. He asserted thatChina’s emergence as a hostilepower in 1951^ was partially due tothe United State’s assumption thatits interests in China were notworth a war.Members of the law school fac¬ulty completed their jury studythis year.NORC projectsResearch on many questions hascome from the National opinionResearch Center (NORC), whichis affiliated with UC.NORC completed a survey whichshoved that UC sends a higherpercentage of its college gradu¬ates to graduate school’s than anyother U S college. Among themany others now in progress, arestudies of how occupations deter¬mine social status, and how grad¬uate students finance their edu¬cation.Culture and psychologyArt was put to use by sciencein an unusual ballet presented atMandel Hall in October by a UCgraduate student who wrote thework to test a psychological the¬ory.Dan Jordan, a student in theCommittee of Human developmentwrote the ballet as part of hisPhD thesis to test a theory ofpsychologist Carl Jung which ex¬plained why some kinds of artslast and others vanish quickly interms of the unconeious mind.Education professor Robert Hav-University expansion efforts continues(continued from page ii) students at any of the Big Ten The quadrangle, made up of sev-The Center’s purpose, said Di- Universities to UC to study, for a eral houses, would be built by UCrector Alex Sutherland, “is the short period of time, at any mem- and rented by the fraternities untilachieved under the west stands ofStagg Field on December 2, 1942. with the faculty, will define aproblem area, determine what kind Get Robie houseAt" a luncheon meeting of the °f ca" helP !°l.solv,f- a^ Pr«sid?nt Beadle formallJ ac‘finally bring them together here. cepted the deed to one of Frank cost was paid off. The fraternities,however, have been unable to de¬cide if they want to support theidea.group, Walter Zinn, who was first Designed by the noted architect, Lloyd Wringt’s Robie House thisdirector of Argonne National Lab- Edward st the Center wintfrroratory, sa.d the uses of atomic CQSt $4 miUion and has alre£energy which followed the expen- held more than 50 conferences.ment exceed by far what thegreatest optimist among us would . . ,]uive predicted.” For the future, Expand Educational Programs ^g^campaign almed primarily at construction of a memorial at theStagg field site where Italiani/iuci yid$”IYIII#W II dl LUIlt/Cl)MissThe estimated $250,000 neededfor restoration will be securedthrough an international fund rais- Memorial to FermiPlans were announced by Presi¬dent Beadle and Italian PrimeMinister Amintere Fanfani for thehe said, “Only misdirected political Several grants were received ar£bde.c^' „. . . forces can prevent a greater whlch will enable UC to increase Another well-knownenjoyment of life’s higher values” understanding of education,which will be facilitated by use of ^ie Center for Comparative Edu-atomic energy cation received a $350,000 grant to_ ‘ , participate in a study of achieve-Center starts programs ment in ten foreign countries. UCThe new Center for Continuing will work with Columbia Univer architect,Van Der Rohe, submittedplans this year for the new SocialService Administration buildingwhich will be located on 60th St.between Ellis and Kenbark.At a cost of an estimated $1,250.- born Enrico Fermi and his col-legues achieved man’s first selfsustained nuclear reaction.Fanfani, who visited UC thisyear, suggested that the Italiangovernment was prepare^ to com-Education opened in January. sity’s Teachers College on this the new building will enable mission a major work of sculptureThe Center’s first conference project. ° 1 ° : *->— ” *’"* e *u~Mas the iirst of its kind, a meeting The Center also received -of theologians and students of nu- $24o,o00 grant to undertake a three- fl°°rs °f Cobb hal1clear medicine to discuss problems year study of the relationship be-relating to the effects ot radiation tween education and economicon humans. productivity. The grant, given by the Social Service Administrationto move from the third and fourthReconstruct Cobb hallEarly this quarter, an architect by an Italian artist for the me¬morial.In addition, Fanfani suggestedthat he would seek approval fromthe Italian parliament for the con¬struction of two scientific laboraSome 300 labor and business the Carnegie Corporation, will be was aPP°in^ 1° draw up working tories—one to be built at UC andleaders were the next group to use based in several Latin American p ans *?r “ie infernal reconstrue- the other in Italy,the Center. They met to discuss and African countries. In the fall, Uo". and ^novation of Cobb hall. President Beadle hopes that thethe changing policies of the Na- Robert Havighurst, head of the . “le School of Social Serv- memorial will be ready in 1968tional Labor Relations Board. study, went to South America to *ce Administration will be moving for the 25th anniversary of theset up the Brazilian branch of the ,° _ ,, m atomic age, and commented that150 scientists followed with asymposium on plutonium chemis¬try, timed to coincide wbth thetwentieth anniversary of the ele¬ment’s first weighing. Aspects of hoped that the College humanities Fanfani’s recent loss of power innow _°ffer^(f Lexington Italy will probably not adverselywill be transferred to Cobb.Cobb hall, the oldest building oncampus, may also receive a 500 affect plans for the memorial be¬cause there are many privategroups in Italy that would financeit, he said.project.The educational improvementproject in Pakistan was bolsteredby a $1,040,400 grant from theplutoniums possible use as a source I*ord foundation. The grant will s&At auditorium as wel as a xtuof fuel power were discussed. enable the project to be continued dS-facX k^ngeThe problem of narcotics addic- a C0Bs*derable time. UC has Supreme Court Justice Arthur J. , „ , ,tion was topic of discussion for already established centers in both Goidberg was the main speaker at LuHieran schoolphilosophers, government officials, , ast and j st Pak,stan to Provide the groundbreaking ceremonies for A $6,906,000 Lutheran seminaryscientists and lawyers who met in , e“ucatlon secondary the new addition to the Sonia may be constructed on campusMay at the Center. school teachers. Shankman Orthogenic School for next year. While the LutheranReliaion dialoa » UC was one of 11 major mid- Emotionally Disturbed Children. groups have not officially selectedg o a ogue western institutions that set up a In November, Harry Weese, the a site, one of the areas underJew* »nd Protestants used the program of inter-university coop- architect who designed Pierce consideration lies between Wood-Center for an important seminar eration with a $100,000 grant this Towers, submitted plans to the lawn and University Ave. on 54designed to explore the similarities year. One of the offshoots of this University for a fraternity quad- st. Another is at George Williams*. difference* between their grant was the travelling scholar rangle which may he built at 56th College, which is moving to thefaiths. The ethics of each faith program, which permits graduate St. and Ellis Ave. suburbs,were compared in relation to th«present needs of our society.Principal speakers included J.Coert Rylaarsdam, of the UC Div¬inity School, and Arthur A. Cohenof New York’s Jewish TheologicalSchool. Paul Iticoeur, of the Uni¬versity of Paris, and Brandeis pro¬fessor Nahum N. Glatzer, and play¬wright Dore Schary, M'ho is chair¬man of the National Commissionof the Anti-Defamation League.Bulletin editorEugene Rabinowitch, visitingprofessor of social sciences andeditor of the “Bulletin of AtomicScientists,” gave four lectures inApril on “The Scientific Revolu¬tion.” Planned building far the School of Social Service Administrationl« ighurst, who will finally head astudy of the Chicago school sys¬tem, announced results of his lat¬est research comparing the atti¬tudes and interests of teenagers inChicago with those in BuenosAires, Argentina.He found differences in atti¬tudes toward freedom and teach¬ers, among many other things,and attibuted them to differencesin national culture.Course changeslend freedom(continued from page II)Plans were made by the staffof the general education Biologysequence to experiment with sev¬eral course variants next year.Several courses will be offered tofulfill the general education 111requirement, varying in content buthaving the common purpose of de¬veloping scientific literacy, demon¬strating the kinds of questionsscientists ask of nature, what kindsof data they get, and how theyinterpret this data.The staff of the English Composi¬tion course experimented with sev¬eral variants to determine whichparts of the course could best becompressed, and w'hat would bethe effect of using complete textsin place of short syllabus readings.In some sections, classes methalf as often as usual; in others,complete texts were used. Althoughno final conclusions were reached,one of the instructors commentedthat the students seemed more in¬terested in the complete texts. Stu¬dents in the variants did as wellon the first quarters exam as thosein the ordinary courses, while thestudents in the varients did morejxiorly on the second quarter exam.Examinations changingMore courses changed from thecomprehensive system of examsto a system quarterly grades ofrecord, and “cumulative comps.”The only general education coursesstill in which the course grade de¬pends on one comprehensive examat the end of the year are Humani¬ties I, the History of Western Civi¬lization, Social Sciences I, andsome languages.The College Policy committee re¬cently urged the faculty of thevarious courses to having “cumula¬tive comps”—in which each quar¬ter is counted as a percentage ofthe final grade—change to eithera pure comprehensive system or toone with quarterly grades of rec¬ord—a grade given each quarterbased on that quarters work andtest.Student curriculum committeeformedOther activity in the College thisyear was the creation of a studentcurriculum committee to meet withfaculty members and administra¬tors to discuss matters involvingthe College curriculum.The committee, set up by StudentGovernment and Alan Simpson,Dean of the College, representa¬tives of various campus organiza¬tions, including the honorary so¬cieties, publications, and severalmiscellaneous groups.At its first meeting severalweeks ago, the committee decidedto establish subcommittees to in¬vestigate examination policies,multiple colleges, and several othertopics.The staff of the Social ScienceII course recently announced thatit will have three student assistants-to help with the Soc. II course nextyear, on an experimental basis.The College students, who will re¬ceive partial stipends, will helpprepare bibliographies for coursework, and coordinate various proj¬ects. The students might also helpin curricular planning for thecourse, the second year of thegeneral education requirement inthe Social Sciences.Publication of a College Curricu¬lum Bulletin, for faculty membersto present and discuss proposalson undergraduate education con¬tinued this year. The bulletins werestarted last year in an effort tostimulate discussion on curricularmatters, and were published in theMaroon this year to provide widercirculation of ideas.• CHICAGO MAROON o June 7, 19*3warns foundationsto expect govt, scrutiny Area programs need volunteersStudent volunteers for two this summer relating to the work ing in a new study center ineducational and recreational of SWAP- The seminar is being set neighborhood church. aprojects, including tutoring,By Tom HeogyPhilanthropic foundations must expect increasingly close are being sought for summerscrutiny by the Internal Revenue Bureau and Congress, Pr°srams of the Student Wood-t warned Julian Levi, professor of urban studies.Levi, who is director of the American Council of Educationstudy of federal taxation policiesand their impact on American ■ ■ -higher education, addressed repre- vOH6Q6 SiUOOIItS up by professors who have shown “It is hoped that the center canan interest in the project. They eventually be run and staffed bypropose to meet once a week, when interested members of that com-•71 sentatives of many foundations onMay 21 at the 6th Biennial Con¬ference on-Charitable Foundations.American institutions of highereducation last year received $195,-500,000 from foundations, 24.3% oftheir total voluntary support. Ofthis amount, UC received $6,898,710,which constituted 51% of its volun¬tary support.In explaining the anticipatedcrackdown, Levi stated, “any re¬alistic appraisal of present posi¬tions must conclude . . . that when lawn Area Project (SWAP) and.Chicago’s “domestic peace corps.”Volunteers in the peace corpsprogram will conduct play andgame periods, pre-school readingprojects, and remedial tutoringsessions for children living in Chi¬cago Housing Authority projectson the south and west sides.c „ , . Work will go on at three centers:Small groups of college students Wentworth Gardens (37th andare being organized to spend week- Wentworth), Rockwell Gardensends doing voluntary service in (Jackson and Western), and in thearea mental institutions, the Amer- Woodlawn neighborhood. No spe-do service workican Friends Service Committeehas announced.The two day programs consistsof orientation and dinner Friday cial training is required of volun¬teers.The work of SWAP is confinedto high school students. Both SWAP experts in various fields will dis¬cuss such problems as tutoring,race relations, and facts on theWoodlawn area.The program will admit about 20students, according to Leinhardt.“These students will preferably bethose who have done some tutoringthis year and plan to continue,”Leinhardt stated.“One of the essential aims ofthis seminar is to thoroughly in¬struct a group of individuals sothey will form a nucleus of semi¬experts able to direct and advisethe tutoring projects next year,”he said.Leinhardt described anotherapproach to be attempted. “One of munity. In this way we at theUniversity are, hopefully, acting ascatalysts for widespread neighbor¬hood reaction against their direeducational problems.”Further information about SWAPmay be obtained in the StudentGovernment office, Ida Noyes Hall.Those interested in the peace corpsmay write, specifying preferencesof sites and volunteer interests, toMrs. Mary Jeanne Carlson, Chi¬cago Commission on Human Rela¬tions, Mayor’s Committee on NewResidents, 211 West Wacker Drive(Room 1310), Chicago 6, Ill.evening, service in the institutions and the Wooc,lawn Tutoring Proj- the ways we will be trying to meetaggregate assets of foundations ex- °.n Saturday, and evaluation ses-ceed $11^ billion and 77% of that slons on Sunaay morning,total is within 129 foundations, pub- The AFSC points out that theselie concern and comment will programs allow one to renderpersist.” badly needed services to peopleThe tax-free status of this money who would otherwise be neglected,“will not go unnoticed with those The time allows participants toI concerned with issues of taxation,he added.The danger, Levi warned, is thatlegislation applicable to all founda¬tions may be caused by those withexcessive administrative costs,small distributions, business trans¬actions to the doner’s benefit, andwho fail to make public their ac¬counts.Another possible motivation forregulation is the overall position offoundations in the economy whichhas been questioned, by suchgroups as Select Committee onSmall Business of the House ofRepresentatives in the 87th Con¬gress, whose chairman stated,“the rapidly increasing concentra¬tion of economic power in founda¬tions which in my view is farmore dangerous than anything thathas happened in the past in the“-way of concentration of economicx>wer.”In the future, stated Levi, theneed for foundation money inhigher education will increase. In1970 it is estimated that $520,000,000will be needed annually.Arguing that government financ¬ing alone is not the answer tomeeting this need, he “reminded”Jiis audience “that even if a federalprogram of loans and grants pro¬viding for academic facilities inhigher education is adopted, theneed for philanthropy will, in fact,be deepened. The federal grantrequires matching; the loan repay¬ment.”.. In many respects, Levi said, thesame problem that exists withfederal aid also exists with founda¬tion grants. “It is a curious ques¬tion as to why some foundationsfeel that particular work and re¬searchers at an institution are en¬titled to support, but that the insti¬tution which houses them andmakes the climate and environ¬ment possible for their work is tofend for itself.”He pointed out that in order tocompensate for this type of sup¬port from both government andfoundations, more general supportwill be needed by American col¬leges and universities.Need volunteersVolunteers are needed by theInternational Voluntary Serv¬ice (IVS) to work and camp*in both the North and South.c The Largo, Florida, camp ur¬gently needs male volunteers toenlarge facilities for a Negro com¬munity cut off from using whitefacilities, and to drain a mosquitoinfested swamp.Camps are also held in Chicago,^Tennessee, California, and Indiana.Interested students should contactVS, 5220 South Harper or phoneWA 4-0872. ect, for grade school children, havebeen offered support by the womenof the Community Interest Group.Sam Leinhardt, a director ofSWAP, described the projectsplanned for the summer. “Our im¬mediate concern is with the settingup of a storefront on 63rd Streetmeet like-minded people with which will become our center ofwhom they can share many ex- operations this summer. It will giveperiences. us a base in the neighborhoodThe Institutional Service Units where the kids can read, meet andare held every weekend beginning be tutored. The people from theat 5 p.m. Friday. The cost is $3. Urban League have offered toFurther information can be had underwrite the bill for the center.”by writing the AFSC office, 431 S. Plans are underway for a semi-Dearbom or by calling HA 7-2533. nar to be given at the University the community’s educational needsthis summer is by helping differentareas set up their own studycenters.“This quarter we received a dis¬tress call from the regional PTAdirector in the Oak Lawn area,who said countless numbers of stu¬dents in her area were being passedthrough all the grades of schoolwith reading levels five and sixyears behind their nominal grade.“Well, a noble band of UC stu¬dents in company with Professorand Mrs. Wayne Booth are nowdevoting about three hours everyweek to the running of and tutor- SUBSCRIBETO THEMAROONResult; "Cushion Recoil" provides adramatically smoother ridein 1963 Ford-built carsUC received a $176,000 grantfrom the Carnegie Corporation thisweek to train primary and second¬ary school consultants to coirectremediable reading difficulties and""prevent reading problems.The grant will be used mainlyfor fellowships in the next fourvears. The challenge given Ford engineers was to design suspensionsthat would permit wheels virtually to roll with the punches—notonly in a vertical plane but fore-and-aft as well. Conventionalsuspension systems provide only a partial solution to road shocksby limiting wheel recoil to an up-and-down motion.The solution? Exclusive Cushion Recoil suspension design in allFord-built cars for '63! Cushion Recoil, with cushioning actionin a fore-and-aft plane as well as vertical, smothers the jars andJolts of rough roads, adds to your comfort, safety, and drivingpleasure. Even the thump of freeway tar strips is reduced, andcn deeply rutted roads you experience better control of the car.Furthermore, your Ford-buitt car is spared the wear and tear ofroad-induced vibration^^Another assignment completed-one more example of engineer¬ing excellence at Ford and new ideas for the American Road., SOAKS UP ROAD SHOCK. Exclusive FordMotor Company Cushion Recoil action movesback as well as up for a smoother ride.,,VMOTOR COMPANYThe American Road, Dearborn, Michiflanwhere engineering leadershipBRINGS YOU BETTER-BUILT CARS_ JflJune 7, 1763 • CHICAGO MAROON A (JJ.Departments strengthened by appointments“ jtujs jkss.ot ari’ zpartments and professionalschools were strengthenedthis year with many new anddistinguished appointments. Donald Erickson, assistant pro¬fessor of education at Florida StateUniversity, will be assistant pro¬fessor of education.William Fowler, from the Mer-rill-Palmer Institute of Human De¬velopment, will be principal of theNursery school. Leonard Flatkes,assistant professor. instructor, toLeonard Krieger, professor ofhistory at Yale University, wasnamed as the first University pro¬fessor this year. The Universityprofessorships were created tohonor top ranking scholars whenthey join the faculty.During the year five new Dis¬tinguished Service professorshipswere awarded to Saunders Mac-Lane, professor of mathematics;Milton Friedman, professor of eco¬nomics ; Fred Eggan, professorand chairman of the department of will begin teaching in the departanthropology; Dr. Charles Huggins, ment of history in the fall. He is sor. was promoted to professor inthe department of anthropology.Asistide Zolberg, was appointedassistant professor in the dept, ofpolitical science. Coming from theWilliam Griffith, assistant pro- University of Wisconsin, Zolberg isfessor of dairy science at the Vir¬ginia Polytechnic Institute, will beworking in adult education.Daniel Lortie, lecturer in educa¬tion at Harvard, joins the facultyas associate professor in the grad¬uate school of education.Ping-Ti IIo, an authority on, Chi- search associate in the departmentnese social and economic history, of political science.professor and director of the BenMay Laboratory for Cancer Re¬search; and George Wentzel, pro¬fessor in the department of physicsand Enrico Fermi Institutes.Mircea Eliade, professor in theDivinity school, was named to theSewall L. Avery DistinguishedService Professorship.Clyde Hutchinson, professor inthe department of chemistry andin the Enrico Fermi Institutes, wasnamed to the chemistry depart¬ments only name chair—the CarlWilliam Wisendorth professorship.Melvin S. Newman, professor ofchemistry and chairman of theDivision of organic chemistry atOhio State University, was ap¬pointed Morgan kharash VisitingProfessor in the Department ofchemistry.Wayce Booth, author of “TheRhetoric of Fiction,” winner of theGauss award, and visiting profes¬sor of English, accepted the GeorgeM. Pullman professorship in thedepartment of English.Daniel C. Lortie, an expert onthe sociological and psychologicalaspects of teaching, will join theGraduate School of Education asan associate professor this sum¬mer. He is currently at HarvardUniversity.John Hope Franklin, authorityon slavery and reconstruction, hasbeen appointed Professor of Amer¬ican history, and will begin teach¬ing duties in autumn 1964.Franklin,’ professor and chair¬man of the Department of historyat Brooklyn College. New York, iscurrently serving as the WilliamPitt Professor of American Historyat St. John's College at Cambridge,England.Nathan Keyfitz, sociologist anddemographer will join the facultyin autumn as professor of sociologyand Codirector of the Populationand Research Testing Center. Heis now serving as professor ofsociology at the University ofToronto. Canada.Ralph E. Matlaw, authority onthe Russian literary culture, wasappointed professor of Russianliterature in the department ofSlavic languages and literatures.Sidney Davidson, prominant ac¬counting theoretician was nameda- the first recipient of the ArthurYoung Professorship in the Gradu¬ate School of Business.Erica Reiner, associate professorin the Oriental Institute, will joint!i departmenf of linguistics.Eanl Friedrich, associate profes-the department of anthro- currently professor of history inAsian studies at the University ofBritish Columbia.Philip Kuhn, accepted an ap¬pointment in the department ofhistory. His specialty is modernChina.David Pingree, assistant profes¬sor of history and science, willjoin the Department of History. Heis currently with the Oriental In¬stitute.Peter Stearns and Herbert Klein,will both become members of thedepartment of history. Currentlythey are teaching in the College.• Norman Spector, assistant pro¬fessor in the department of ro¬mance languages, will be promotedto the rank of assistant professor.George Hales, assistant professorin the department of romance lan¬guages and literature, will be pro¬moted to associate professor.Howard Brown, associate pro¬fessor in the department of musicand director of Collegium Musicum.will be promoted to associate pro¬fessor.Jua Matras, from the Universityof Israel, will be a research as¬sociate in the department of sta¬tistics.Ichiro Satake, from Japan, willbe a professor in the departmentof mathematics.Eugene Parker, associate profes¬sor in the department of physics,has been promoted to professor.William Lichten, assistant pro¬fessor in the department of phys¬ics, was promoted to the rank ofassociate professor.Dr. Kent Morest will join thefaculty from the National Instituteof Health.Dr. Robert Pinz, promoted toinstructor in the department ofradiology.Dr. John Fennessy and Dr.Warned Dziadzka were both ac- Gradunte Divinity School.'Martin Marty, had been ap-L. A. Fallers, associate profes- Pointed associate prolessor in theDivinity School. Marty was oncampus this year as a visitingprofessor and has accepted a per¬manent appointment.Gosto Ahlstroni, will continue toteach in the Divinity School as theVisiting Associate Professor of OldTestament. He is originally fromUplsala University, Sweden.T. A. Burkill, visiting associateprofessor of New Testament, willcontinue to teach.Helmut Theielicke, from the Uni¬versity of Hamburg. Germany,will be a visiting professor duringthe fall quarter.Ragnar Bring, from the Univer¬sity of Lund. Sweeden. will bevisiting professor in informationstudies.Donald Finley, is being ap¬pointed assistant professor in theSchool for Social Service Adminis¬tration. He is from Toronto,Canada.Eilen Switzer, was anpointedField Work Assistant Professor ina specialist in the African field.David Greenstone, will be as¬sistant professor in the departmentof political science and will spendhis first year on the faculty atMakere College, Uganda.Constance Rolnick. will be re-ff'e are going to lube the bestmen tee con find, although ice willprobably raise faculty salaries acrossthe country in the process.UC Provost Ed Levi,quoted in Time, May 31Gerhard Gloss, associate profes¬sor, was promoted to professor inthe department of political science.Nien-chu Yang, has been ap- community organization. She ispointed professor in the depart- coming from the Welfare Councilment of political science.Dr. Everly Fleischer, instructor,was promoted to assistant proles¬sor in the department of chemistry.John C. Light. was promoted toassistant professor and will jointhe institute of metals.Dr. Lennar Wharton, was ap¬pointed assistant professor in thedepartment of chemistry and in¬stitute of metals. Wharton is com¬ing from Harvard.Dr. E. T. Kaiser, from Washing¬ton University in St. Louis, wasappointed assistant professor in thedepartment of chemistry.Larry Kevan, from Kings Col¬lege. University of Durham, wasappointed instructor in the depart¬ment of chemistry and in the En¬rico Fermi institutes.Frank Fitch. was promoted toassociate professor in the depart¬ment of pathology.Dr. Fred Katz, from the US AirForce School of Aerospace Medi¬cine, Texas, was appointed assist¬ant professor of medicine.Dr. John Thompson, was ap¬pointed assistant professor ot med¬icine.Dr. Donald Con non, was pro¬moted to instructor of medicine.Dr. L. Ferguson, named instruc¬tor and chief resident in the de¬partment of medicine.L. Jesse Lemisch. from YaleUniversity, will be joining the de¬partment of history and the Col-cepted as instructors in the depart- lege as assistant professor.ment of radiology.Herbert Grubel was appointedassistant professor. He is comingfrom Stanford University.Professor Fogel, from the Uni¬versity of Rochester, was appointedvisiting professor in the depart- professorment of economics. zoologyEdward Maser, associate pro- Langdon Gilkey, from the Van-Dr. J. Goldberg, from the Uni¬versity of Wisconsin, w'ill be anassistant professor in the depart¬ment- of physiology.Dr. L. H. Thockmorton. instruc¬tor, will be promoted to assistantin the department of of Metropolitan Chicago.Irving Spergel, assistant profes¬sor, will he promoted to associateprofessor in the SSA.Alan Wa *e. asscd-tif professorin the SSA. will be promoted torasro-riate professor.NL'trlas Cakff, from StanfordUniversity, w as appointed assistantprofessor of production manage¬ment in the Graduate School ofBusiness.E. Cary Brown, from the Massa¬chusetts Institute of Technology,was appointed Ford FoundationVisiting Professor of Business Eco¬nomics. He will be on campusuntil June. 1964.Frank W. Carlhorg. from UC,was appointed instructor in Sta¬tistics.Harry L. Davis, from North¬western University, will be an in¬structor in marketing.Harold Demsetz, from the Uni¬versity of California at Los An¬geles, was appointed associateprofessor of business economics.Eugene Faina, from UC, wasmade assistant professor of fwnance.John M. Kohlmeier. from Har¬vard University, was made instruc¬tor in accounting.Dennis S. Lees, from the Uni¬versity of Keele, England, was ap¬pointed Visiting Associate Profes¬sor of business economics.Robert Rice, from Hofstra Col¬lege. was appointed Assistant Pro¬fessor of business economics.Henri Theil will be on campusnext year as the Ford FoundationVisiting Professor of Econometricsand Management Science.H. Edward Wrapp, from HarvardUniversity, was appointed profes¬sor of business policy and directorof the Executive program.Morgenthau and Stigler nameddistinguished service professors]K)logy. will join the department oflinguistics, along with HowardAronson, assistant professor in thedepartment of Slavic languages.Kurt Rein, will be at UC in thefall as visiting professor in theDepartment of Germanic lan¬guages. He is currently at theUniversity of Munich.S. S. Prawerm, senior lecturerin German at the University ofBirmingham, will be visiting as¬sociate professor in German.I.ar Svenonious, visiting associ¬ate professor of philosophy at theUniversity of California, Berkeley,will be an assistant professor inthe department of philosophy. Heis an expert on mathematical logi¬cal and philosophy. UC political scientist HansMorgenthau, who has servedas an advisor to PresidentsTruman, Eisenhower, andKennedy, has been named to theAlbert A. Michaelson distinguishedservice professorship.Morgentbau’s appointment wasmade by President George Beadleupon the recommendation of UC’shead-hunting, cigar-chomping pro¬vost Ed Levi. The Michaelson chairhas been held this year by physi¬cist Gregor Wentzel, who will reachretirement age (65) in the fall and with its national interest ratherthan with world opinion.In his recently published three-volume work. Politics in the 2©thCentury (UC Press. 1962, $25!),Morgenthau called for 'a criticalexamination of our foreign aidpolicy in line with the realtitiesof the times. “Short of the miracu¬lous transformation of their collec¬tive intelligence,” some nationswill not be likely to use foreign aidlor economic development. He said.Morgenthau also believes thatthe preservation ef moral valueswiH then become Michaelson pro- *s essential to the survival of civili-fessor emeritus.The author of many books andarticles on international relations,Morgenthau is currently servingas consultant to the DepartmentsEugene Gendelin. from the Uni- of State and Defense. He is spend-versity of Wisconsin, will be visit- ing this quarter in Geneva, Switzer-ing associate professor of psychol- land.ogy and philosophy. During the Morgenthau is a proponent ofautumn he will offer a course in the “realist” approach to interna-the basic principles of phenome- tional relations, believing that thenology and existentialism, and in US should be concerned primarily zation, and insists especially on themaintenance of high moral stand¬ards by members of the academicprofession—his fellow professors.59-year old Morgenthau has beena member of the department ofpolitical science since 1945. He wasappointed professor in 1961. Since1950. he has been director of theUniversity’s Center for the Studyof American Foreign and Militarypolicy. F. G. Hailey, from the Universityof London, will be Visiting Associ¬ate Professor in Anthropology dur¬ing the winter and spring quarters.Phyllis J. Relnick, was appointedLecturer in political science and aresearch fellow of the South AsianLanguage and Area Center.Debi Prasan Pattanayak, wasappointed Visiting Assistant Pi’o-fessor in the department of lin¬guistics.Hannah Arendt, author and so¬cial philosopher, was appointedprofessor in the Committee on So¬cial Thought.Miss Arendt will begin teachingnext fall. She is currently at theInstitute for Advanced Studies,Wesleyan University, Connecticut.DeparturesHerman Finer, professor in thedepartment of political science, re¬tired. Finer came to UC in 1946from the London School of Eco¬nomics. He will continue to teachcourses in the extension division.Edgar Shor, assistant professorin the department of political sci¬ence and in the College, has ac¬cepted an appointment at ColgateUniversity.Charles Witke. assistant profes¬sor in the department of classicallanguages and literature, will begoing to the University of Cali¬fornia. Berkeley.Ro'ert Hiller, assistant professorin the department of GermanicGeorge J. Stigler, CharlesWalgreen professor of Ameri¬can institutions in the Gradu¬ate School of Business hasbeen given the additional title ofdistinguished service professor.His major academic fields of in¬terest are public policy with spe¬cial reference to public control ofbusiness, and the history of eco¬nomic thought.A member of the faculty since1958. Stigler served as chairmanof the price statistics review com¬mittee of the National Bureau ofEconomic Research last January.The committee reviewed the en¬tire federal program of price sta¬tistics and reported its findings toCongress’ Joint Economic Com-mitte’s subcommittee on economicstatistics.Stigler is president-elect of theAmerican Economic Association. languages, will be leaving the fac-ultv for the University of Nebraska. ■**Bernard Weisberger. associate <‘-professor in the department of his¬tory, will be leaving UC for theUniversity of Rochester.Howard Pally, professor emer¬itus. will retire from UC and teachin the honours division at the Uni¬versity of Santa Clara, California. ^Harrison White, assistant profes-sor in the department of .statistics,will be going to Harvard Univer¬sity.Karl Taeuber. assistant professorin the department of statistics andresearch associate in the depart¬ment of sociology, will be going U»-Berkeley.Paul Talalay. professor in thedepartments of biochemistry andmedicine will be leaving the Uni¬versity.Dr. Dorothy Cooney, instructorin the department of radiology willleave UC this year.Dr. Robert Burges, instructor inthe department of radiology’, may.,.,be leaving UC for the University ^of Illinois.Robert Rosmann. associate pro¬fessor in the department of eco¬nomics, resigned from the faculty.Robert Jordan, instructor ofphysical anthropology, is leavingfor Foothill College, California.Dr. Jean Spencer, assistant pro¬fessor in the department of medi¬cine. will be leaving UC.Robert Blanuer, assistant pro¬fessor in the department of soci¬ology, will be going to the Univer¬sity of California, Berkeley.Michael Dewar, professor in thedepartment of chemistry, will beleaving UC to take the Welch*'Foundation chair at the Universityof Texas.Richard M. W'eaver, professor ofEnglish in the College, died. Hewas on the faculty for 20 yearsand had served as the chairman ofthe College English Compositioncourse.Dr. Ralph David, assistant pro¬fessor in the department of pedi¬atrics, left UC and will be workingBellview Hospital in New York.Markus Barth, professor in theDivinity School, will be going tothe Pittsburgh Theological Semi*nary. • ***Robert J. Connor, assistant pro¬fessor of production managementresigned, and will go to the Uni¬versity of Buffalo.Corwin D. Edwards, professor ofgovernment and business, leavesUC for the University of Oregon.Howard L. Jones, professor o|statistics, will retire.Paul W! MacAvoy, assistant pro¬fessor of business economics,leaves UC for MIT.H. Martin Weingartner, assistantprofessor of Industrial relations,will be joining the MIT faculty.Jacob I. Weissman, associate^professor of law in the GraduateSchool of Business, resigned. Hewill be teaching at Hofstra Col¬lege.Millions for cities and acres for universities(continued from page 8)property are in or near an urban renewalproject .area., In other words, Section 112 meant thatexpenditures by universities in or near ur¬ban renewal projects would be classed withstreets, sewers, schools, and parks as ex¬penditures that expansion activities,i Among the Senate champions of Section112 was Illinois Senator, Hyde Park resi¬dent, and former UC economics professorPaul Douglas.Educational ReuseSection 112 did two main things:First, it allowed as much cleared landlas desired to be used for “educationaljfacilities” from dormitories to classrooms|to research labs.Previously, at least 51% of cleared landliad to be reused as residences. It alsopllowed rehabilitation, rather than demoli¬tion of buildings that would be used by(universities.Matching grantsSecondly, Section 112 encouraged city-iniversity cooperation by enabling cities toreceive $2 for every $1 that a universitylight spend on urban renewal activity. Iflie city assumed the additional expense ofI planning and administering renewal pro¬jects, the federal government would“match” every dollar the city spent with $3.In Hyde Park, the city assumed respon¬sibility for the planning and contracted?ith UC to execute it so that every dol¬lar of city or University funds generated|th ree dollars from the federal government.Excess creditsHie Housing Act also provides that if thecommunity’s share of an urban renewali project were to exceed Vi or Va of theproject’s net cost through eligible expen¬ditures, including through Section 112those made by educational institutions,these excess “credits” may be applied toother urban renewal projects undertakenin the city.This means In Chicago that since UC’s“expenditure of $11 million is more than Vaf the project costs in the UC area, anyextra federal funds of the $33 million UCis earning for the city can be applied bythe city to any other urban renewal projectin the city. —With the city short on funds to financeits urban renewal activities, this provisionhas become a major asset to Chicago.Woodlawn protestsThis provision has also caused morefriction in the University community thanmost laws have. Because the city will de¬cide how to use the excess funds, a num¬ber of areas, including Woodlawn, have re¬quested these funds for their own urbanrenewal projects., The University, through more legislationdrafted by Levi, has offered to enter intoan agreement making the excess federalfunds available provided that some ofthese funds finance its south campus pro¬ject. This project, which would increasethe area of the campus by one square mileJrom 60-61 Streets, Cottage Grove to Stony,has aroused much antagonism in the Wood-Jawn Community.Woodlawn leaders feel that a South cam¬pus plan should not be approved withouta plan for the rest of Woodlawn, which ex¬tends to 67 Street. Their complaintsthrough The Woodlawn Organization have.held up so far city council approval of theSouth Campus plan, and have brought aboutthe formation of a Woodlawn plan, whichis currently being discussed.But, according to Levi, unless the Cityapproves the South Campus plan, therewill be no federal funds to finance a Wood¬lawn plan, or any other plan.Levi said that in order for Section112 credits to be made available to thelity of Chicago, the requirements of fede¬ral and state law must be met. One of theserequirements is that only universities whichare within !4 mile of an urban renewalproject can have jtJieir renewal expendi¬tures count as local grants-in-aid to gene¬rate matching federal funds.Because the outside boundaries of Hyde‘Park-Kenwood urban renewal project lie.nore than Va mile from the UC campus,this requirement must be waived beforethe city can get federal funds from uni¬versity expenditures. “This can be done onthe showing of a total campus plan andits relationship through faculty and stu¬dent housing locations,” said Levi, addingthat “South Campus is an essential partOf such a plan.”Federal credits, then, according toLevi “cannot be obtained without imple¬mentation of Sduth Campus. “And SouthCampus cannot be implemented withoutthe approval of the Chicago City Council.”Levi said that once the University isguaranteed its South' Campus plan so it can meet the requirements for gen,.-rating the determination of their “opponents” to that private housing will quickly raisefedeial funds to the city the decision on remain in the community and that they prices and shut the Philadelphia school’sW .? appens to the rest of the funds is will gradually feel their way towards some faculty out of the marketentirely in the hands of the city council, reasonable working arrangement.After south campus and Hyde Park com- Throughout the nation, universities andtheir surrounding communities are comingnntments are met, said Levi, it is entirelyup to the city council to decide whether . , ... ,to use Chicago’s anticipated $20 million t®rmfJ1wlth each othe!/„This> too, is aSection 112 generated surplus of federalfunds in Woodlawn or in other areas of the result of the enactment of Section 112.Many cities involvedA partial list of the cities and universitiescity, such as Uptown, Ravenswood, andLawndale, which have been promised ur- . „ban renewal action but have not yet re- that are in some way involved in 112 ex¬cel veu it. pansion programs includes:The city has to decide whether SouthCampus and Woodlawn are separate, hesaid. The $20 million could be spent inWoodlawn, elsewhere, or in some combina¬tion of areas. —As a matter of principle, added Levi, de¬ciding on where to spend surplus federaliunds must be made in terms of commit¬ments and priorities of areas.He emphasized, however, that unlessSouth Campus is approved, the federalcredits will not be generated and no areasin the city will benefit from renewal funds.Fair reuse valueSection 112 also provided that institutionsintending to redevelop or rehabilitate ac¬quired property for educational uses maypurchase project land at a- much lower costthan the normal open market price. Thislower cost is called the “fair reuse value,”and is intended to help expand existingcampus and help create new campuses. Itwill help UC purchase condemned land forSouth Campus, and it will help the Univer¬sity of Illinois create a Chicago branch atHarrison-Halsted.Section 112 sets some checks upon uni¬versity participation in neighborhood urbanrenewal and upon city benefits from uni¬versity participation.It stated that if the university’s acquiredproperty is located within an urban renewal Waco — Baylor UniversityNew Ilaven — Yale UniversityBoston — Northeastern, Boston UniversityHarvardProvidence — BrownDanville, Kentucky — Central College ofKentuckyPhiladelphia — Drexel Institute andU of PennsylvaniaPittsburgh — Duquesiie, U of PittsburghChicago — UC, I1T, UICBethlehem, Pa — Lehigh UJefferson City, Missouri — Lincoln UniversitySpringfield, Ohio — Uittenburg UDetroit — Detroit Medical Center,Wayne State UniversityColumbus — Ohio State UNewark — Newark College of EngineeringCamden — RutgersSeattle — Seattle U, U of WashingtonSyracuse, NY — State University of NYCpstate Medical CenterCincinnati — U of CincinnatiBaltimore — U of MarylandLos Angeles — U of Southern CaliforniaColumbia, South Carolina — U of SouthCarolinaScranton, Penna — U of ScrantonUniversity, Indiana — Vincennes UniversityAtlanta — Georgia State CollegeHuntington, W Virginia — Marshall UniversityCleveland — Western Reserve, Case Instituteof TechnologyClevelandOne of the most ambitious plans hascome out of Cleveland, where a twenty-year project is underway. PittsburghIn Pittsburgh, the University of Pitts¬burgh and Carnegie Tech are the principalsponsors of the construction of the OaklandCultural District, a 572-acre area scheduledto become one of the nation’s largest cul¬tural centers. Pitt alone will spend $250million on the project.This plan, in contrast to WPDC andsimilar to UC’s, aims to oust 40% of thearea’s permanent residents, and 3000 ofthe 3800 apartments planned to be builtthere will not be suited for them economi¬cally.New housing in Hyde Park, particularlytownhouses and the university apartmentsat 55th between Dorchester and Harper,are geared for upper middle income fam¬ilies. Public housing has been delayed anddoes- not appear to be widely planned forHyde Park.Also in Pittsburgh neighborhood residentshave stilled some part of the university'splans in a situation that could be comparedto protests of the Woodlawn Organizationto the South Campus-plan which was origi¬nally conceived without much attention toWoodlawn’s problems.Pitt and Carnegie wanted to include an“industrial research park” in their plan,but the site chosen was in the midst of acrowded Negro area. Because Pittsburghhas a shortage of housing for its Negropopulation, the plan evoked strong opposi¬tion and was killed.New YorkIn New York, the Morningside HeightsCorporation has offered a variety of serv¬ices to the surrounding community. TheseIn 1952, 30 institutions of higher education services include:a) Planning efforts and assistance studies.b) Sponsorship' and financing of privateredevelopment. Included in this field werea cooperative housing project and a shop-project area, its uses must conform with and Cu^ure *n the area known as Universitythe area’s general urban re’newal plan. Circle joined together and came up with aAnd, if the university’s acquired property year plan. These included Western Re¬is outside the urban renewal area, its uses 5erve and Case Institute of Technology.mu.>t conlorm to the development plan pro- Their cooperation resulted in 1957 in the ping center, with very favorable terms toposed by the university and approved by founding of the University Circle Develop- tenant-owners.the federal government and city. ment Foundation, which coordinates the c) Relocation with priorities on housingWhile planning, the local community expansion of 29 institutions in a 488-acre the cooperative unit to displaced families.area about 4 miles from the heart ofmust make a finding that renewal projectwill “promote public welfare and proper Cleveland.development of the community” by makingland available to the qualified institutionor by providing “a cohesive neighborhood d) Youth services, workers, leadership,and facilities.e) Code enforcement, similar to theSECC.f) Proposals to New York City fromwhich a general renewal plan for Morning-The Foundation approves building plans,handles land acquisition, and sells land, .... ... ... , fr°m a land pool. It has its own policeenvironment compatible with functions and force and is developing parking facilitiesneeds of the institution.” '. for the whole area. It also develops and ^ . .Before the city may receive credits for administers open spaces throughout the s^e Heights, Inc., is being developed,the university’s expenditures and thereby entire University Circle area. Among the institutions participating inqualify for correspondingly larger grants By last autumn, confirmed commitments • Morningside Heights, Inc., are Columbia,from the federal government, the univer- from the University Circle Development Barnard, the Jewish Theological Seminary,sities must do two things: Foundation for local credit for land ac- and Juilliard.1. They must certify property expendi- quisition and demolition were about $6.8tures. million, with another $6 million expected.2. They must consent to the use of their Eventually, like Chicago, the city of Cleve- BostonThe largest city and project about to beexpenditures as part of the local publicagency’s contribution.These last two checks are not nearly asimportant as the need for the city to pass land will have excess money from these brou^ht under sec}ioln n2 benefits appearscredits to use in other developments, too.As of. this January, the foundation hadacquired 44 acres of land,_which is about V\the proper legislation so that section 112 a total of 170 acres needed for growthover the next two decades.credits may be applied, said Levi.Results of 112 PhiladelphiaIn Philadelphia, the U. of Pennsylvania to be Boston, and here Levi is playing amajor role.Last December, he prepared a study forthe city of- Boston and the Boston Redevel¬opment authority demonstrating the bene¬fits that could accrue to the city fromexploiting the opportunities of section 112.31 colleges and universities and 25 hos-nancing that Section 112 could bring about 'IP) Drexel Institute of Technology, and pitals and medical centers within Bosto.is the elimination of (he city govern- Temple are leading a program aimed at are ehg.hle to partlc pate m ^ewa! aement form financing. Indeed, it is pos, Tf.' closely '"‘T''1"""8 ,h' lnsl,tuUons tlvlty lhal w<,ul11 r'sult m 112 cre4l“-sible that a community urban renewal 01 the area wlt" the community. The based on date furnished byproject would be financed entirely by the 5 institutions headed by UP banded to- the institutions, showed a total of $31,953,000federal government and an educational in- gether in 1959 to create the West Phila- jn potential credits from the schools px-stitution near or in the project area. delphia Development Corporation (WPDC). penses, netting the city over $60 million112 also created a strong incentive for The emphasis in WPDC is similar to and solving tax problems..local public agencies to undertake projects HPKCC on rehabilitation and conservation, jn the report, Levi suggested three newin university areas, enabling universities with strong citizen participation. It has urban renewal projects so that institutionsto make progress towards eliminating the held many meetings with area residents. would be in or near them and could *ithblight surrounding them. It aided the city, it intends to create a University City- the city of Boston benefit from the appliea-because the city would have had to perform within the West Philly area, but with a tion of Section 112.and finance work done by the universities minimum of dislocation of the existing The schools in Boston which would con-if the universities had not done so. community. While 800 acres in the total of tribute largest amounts were NortheasternSection 112 also helped institutions ex- nearly 2000 are subject to some form of (over $7 million), Harvard Medical Schoolpand, for this act through the concept of urban renewal, only 165 are slated for (over $4 million), Boston University coverfair reuse value enabled them to get clearance. 53 million), and the Tufts-New Englandcheaper land and develop it to lead to an “We do not wish to create a single-class Medical Center (over $5V4 million),improved environment. community, sterilized of all cultural, eth- _Finally, Section 112’s provisions forced nic, and racial differences that make urban Partnership succeedinguniversities to end their isolation from society dynamic,” commented a WPDC And so it seems that the universities andsurrounding neighborhoods. With universi- representative. cities of the United States seem destinedties becoming participants in local urban Just as in Hyde Park, the prospect and to benefit greatly from the application ofrenewal activity, even if they wanted to initial progress of renewal in West Phila- Section 112 and the legislation which led upignore the residents of the community delphia has brought about a great increase to and has followed from it.nearby, the community would not allow in the number of University personnel liv- As the architect of most of this tegisla-them to act so irresponsibly. ing in the area. Since WPDC was formed, tion> l6vj is being called upon to consultThis has become most obvious in Wood- the number of UP staffers living in Uni- w^b many cities and tell them how theylawn, where the University and Woodlawn versity City has doubled from 600 to over may best use the provisions of the law icommunities seem to have become pain- 1200. By 1970, 3500 staff personnel will live wrote<fully aware of each other’s existence and there, estimates Leo Molinaro, head of Universities are expanding, citle.' areimportance. WPDC. enlarging their own renewal programs.It would seem that leaders of both in- But in West Philadelphia there have been and in short, a successful new partnershipterests are becoming increasingly aware of some fears expressed, though called remote, seems to be in the making.June 7, 1963 CHICAGO MAROON 21NORC survey_ . . Optimism grows for thePursue voluntary education passage of occupancy billTwenty percent of Amer¬ican adults pursued somekind of voluntary educationlast year, according to a re¬cent survey conducted by the Na¬tional Opinion Research Center(NORC).The NORC survey was the firstpart of three-phase study spon¬sored by the Carnegie Corpora¬tion to discover the educationalexperiences of the American popu¬lation. applied rather than the theoreticaland on skills rather than know¬ledge or values.“Subject matter directly use¬ful to one’s performance in theareas of work, family, and social-personal adjustment represent asignificant proportion of the totalactivities . . .. These results pointstrongly to the pragmatic qualityof adult education in America.”A non-profit corporation con¬nected with the University of Chi¬cago, NORC conducts research onsocial science or social policyproblems through survey.In a completed statistical ana¬lysis, NORC analyzed the numberand characteristics of adults en¬gaged in studying various subjectsthvough a wide variety of studymethods.The nationwide survey whichqueried .adults in 11,957 house¬holds, revealed that high schooland college graduates composedthree-fourths of the adults gainingfurther education.Most adults interviewed in theproject studied subjects related totheir jobs and work skills, whileinterest in hobbies and recreation,and in religion and moral ethicsfollowed according to the numberof adults studying topics in thosefields.John W. C. Johnstone, seniorstudy director of the NORC andassistant professor of sociologyat the University, reports:“It is quite clear from thesefindings that the major emphasisof adult education is on the practi¬cal rather than the academic on the The survey also indicated thatthe most widely pursued methodof education among adults wasattending classes. Independentself instruction follows closely asthe next most popular method withgroup discussions, lectures andtalks, an'd correspondence studyfollowing. Educational television, the report disclosed, attracted re¬latively few adults to its educa¬tional efforts.As many men as women fol¬lowed educational pursuits. 83%of the adults students are marriedand 79% are under 50.Other aspects of the study showthat correspondence study is dom¬inated by men, and educationaltelevision by women, but indepen¬dent self study is split 50-50. Re¬ligious institutions draw the small¬est percentage of persons who havebeen to college. The recent attemptamong newspapers to increasetheir subscriptions, by offeringlong-playing, low-cost instructionin foreign language, has accele¬rated the independent study ofthat subject.F.C. Howell studies earlyman in two Spanish sitesProfessor of AnthropologyF. Clark Ilowell left for north¬ern Spain last week to con¬tinue bis studies of very earlyman sites.Howell, who is particularly in¬terested in human evolution, willexamine the sites of Torralha andAmbrona, in the province of Soria.He has received a two year grantof $60,000 from the National Sci¬ence Foundation for his investiga¬tion.According to Howell, his two pre¬vious field seasons in Spain haveexposed the “oldest undisturbedoccupational places of early man inEurope.”The site at Torralba wras dis¬covered in 1888 during railway construction in that region, butvery little was known about ituntil 1960 when Howell began asystematic investigation.At that time. Howell and hisparty discovered a .site richer inevidence of an early communityat Ambrona, a mile north of Tor¬ralba.Five graduate students fromUC’s department of anthropologywill participate in the project. Les¬lie Freeman. Craig Morris, Rich¬ard Klein, and Thomas and Bar¬bara Lynch.Howell will also be accompa¬nied by graduate students fromthe University of California atBerkeley, two Spanish studentsfrom the University of Zaragoza,and by collaborators from the US,France, the Neverlands, and Spain. Hope grew Wednesday thatan open occupancy bill mightyet be passed in this sessionof the Illinois legislaturedespite the defeat of the bill inTuesday’s House session.Rep. Cecil A. Partee (D-Ohi-cago), sponsor of the bill, movedTuesday that consideration of thebill be postponed after only 67legislators went on record in favorof passage—22 less than the ma-pority of 89 needed.Partee stated Wednesday that hehopes to garner the additional votesfrom among the 45 representativeswho refused to vote on the bill.Among that number are at least 25Democrats.The Democrats failed to actdespite warnings from minorityleader Paul Powell (D-Vienna) andminority whip John Touhy (D-Chi-cago) that the bill is backed byMayor Richard J. Daley and Gov.Otto Kerner and is part of the plat¬form ot the Democratic Party.Commenting on Tuesday’s ac¬tion, Bruce Rappaport, president ofUC CORE, said that he was “very disappointed, particularly since thearguments used against it werevery poor, considering the numberof states in which it is used suc¬cessfully.” >Stated Rappaport, “I am par¬ticularly disappointed that so manyrepresentatives from the Chicagoarea voted against it in view of thefact that the problem in the Chi¬cago area is so acute.”Declared Arthur F. Mold, chair¬man of the legislative commute!of the Chicago Real Estate BoatlP(CREB), “We are gratified that thelegislature decided on this basis.”The CREB had opposed the billon the grounds that it is a violationof certain constitutional rights,private property, and privacy.Henry will speak¬er! Roosevelt Univ.by Tom DeVriesEditor, Roosevelt TorchMay hold anotherevolution trialOne of theseven golden keysto brewingBudweiser. News of wliat might de¬velop into a second “Scopestrial" in Memphis, Tennesseehas rekindled interest in thequestion of teaching evolution topublic high school students.Unlike John Scopes, who wastried in 1925 for actually teachingthe Darwinian theory in his class¬room, Martha Powell, a biologyinstructor in the Memphis publicschool system, simply explainedthe evolution theory to an inter¬ested student. Later on, she madeplans for a debate on the subject.The school's principal, however,forbade the debate and Miss Pow¬ell then declared that she wouldbe willing to stand trial on theissue.There lias been no legal actionand no debate up to this point.The news of the present contro¬versy, however, has promptedScopes, now a consulting geologistfor an oil company in Shreveport,Louisiana, to reminisce about hisown trial.“It all seemed mighty importantat the time,” said Scopes of thetrial, “but looking back, I guessabout all the trial accomplishedwas to deter 15 other states whowere prepared to pass the samekind of law.”In the end, Scopes was oonvictedand fined $100, but the fine waslater dismissed on a technicality.A dozen professors who had at¬tended the trial subsequently do¬nated a scholarship to Scopes, whoused the money for graduatestudy in geology at UC.Clarence Darrow, who defendedScopes, was for many years afaculty member at UC.Scopes, commenting on the newevolution action, stated: “I can’tunderstand why in this space agethey are arguing over somethingso archaic.” David D. Henry, presidentof the University of Illinois;has been confirmed as com¬mencement speaker at Roose¬velt University over the objectionsof the graduating class and mem¬bers of the faculty. Dr. Henry willalso receive and honorary Doctorof Laws degree.Members of the faculty havecomplained that Henry should notbe honored because of his recentcensure by the American Associa¬tion of University Professors.The selection of speaker wasmade by University president Ed¬ward J. Sparling, but the annoum-£ment was not made until after ar¬rangements were completed.Henry was instrumental in firingLeo Koch from the UI faculty in1960. Koch had written a letterto the campus newspaper, the--Daily mini, advocating premaritj;sexual intercourse under certainconditions.RU graduating class officers tol<the Maroon they resented the appearance of the head of a competing university. UI plans to opeia four-year branch in Chicago ir1964. Observers said Henry’s appearance was designed to establislgood Roosevelt relations wit!Henry. ^Early in the week a boycott antpicket of the ceremony wenplanned. However, no organizerprotest is now expected.Following the announcement thaHenry would speak, a meeting othe Roosevelt chapter of the AAljlpassed a resolution condemn injPresident Sparling for honoriniHenry.' The association, the resolutioisaid, “strongly protests the conferring of an honorary degree . .on President Henry of the University of Illinois.”“Such an honor,” it continued“implies support and approval othe head of an administrationwhich has just been censured . .for a violation of accepted standards of- academic freedom an<tenure. . . .”The resolution demanded that qihonorary degree not be granted.,.^AGEING ON BEECHWOOD CHIPS! DR. A. ZIMBLER, OptometristIN THENEW HYDE PARK SHOPPING CENTER1510 E. 55th St. DO 3-7644*EYE EXAMINATIONS *PRESCRIPTIONS FILLED CONTACT LENSESNEWEST STYLING IN FRAMESSTUDENT DISCOUNTBudweiser rests on a dense lattice of beechwood during a l gperiod of ageing. This contributes to the meUowness-the clarity!_of the King of Beers. One of the seven special things we doto make your enjoyment of Budweiser even greater.ANHEUSER BUSCH, INC. o ST. LOUIS • NEWARK e_L05 ANGELE5_o_ TAMPA PIZZASFor The Price Of 3NICKY’S1133 C. 55th NO 7-90*3. MU 4-479022 • CHICAGO MAROON • June 7, 1963GAD F LYReport from the Midway-UC exposed'The following article appeared inthe May issue of Dimension, maga¬zine supplement of the Daily North-Uertern. The author is a 1962 gradu¬ate of Northwestern and is now astudent in the UC Law School.en4>m-ise-ionsem-willctoravernot:entcia-wasEd-ar¬isingr intterthe;‘Wla:itoldap-petpen► inap-lishi t hjh-anSrereizedthatoflUP. /'ingtion:on-/er-me' 'ie&oftionnd-and3ft * She said it with typical NUspecificity: “the University ofChicago? Well . . . well, youknow ...” Her shrug summed^ip what to me is the prevailingiorthwestern attitude toward Chi-cagoland’s other great university.She didn’t understand it, but sheknew she didn’t like it. This esayis designed to help provide somecontent for her sentence.Ask a University of Chicago stu¬dent what makes his alma materistinctive and the chances arethat he will borrow ex-ChancellorRobert Maynard Hutchins’ termand reply that here everyone con¬centrates on “education.” He maybe referring to his smaller classesand fewer exams which theoreti¬cally allow him more depth andreflection in study, but probablyne means something quite differ¬ent. It is the supplements to class-work that are the unique factorsin the education received here. Al¬though by no means all elementsof a UC education can be coveredhere, some examples should behelpful.* At the University of Chicago, ac¬tive political participation is def-You won't have to putyour moving or storageproblem off until tomor¬row if you call us today.PETERSON MOVINGAND STORAGE CO.1011 East 55th StreetBUtterfield 8-6711l"iDO YOURECOGNIZETHIS MAN?Ralph J. Wood, Jr.. CLU1 N. LaSALLEChicago, IllinoisM 2-2290 FA 4-6800He Is an active member ofyour community and he rep¬resents the Sun Life Assur¬ance Company of Canada.With the backing of thisinternational organization —one of the world’s great lifeinsurance companies — he iswell qualified to advise youon ell life insurance matters.He is a valuable man toknow. May he call upon youat your convenience?fSUN LIFEASSURANCE COMPANYOF CANADA initely deemed educational, andit’s best to be, or pretend to be aliberal. “Marry a Republican?”one boy said to me proudly. “I’venever even dated one.” So, whenthe Maroon, the campus news¬paper, published a recommenda¬tion of the best area doctor topatronize, it was not surprising tosee that one of his major assertedqualifications was support of theMedicare bill. Further, it is asource of pride in some circlesthat the Maroon presents one ofthe nation’s most complete ac¬counts of student picketing activi¬ties around the country.But if Political action is a partof education, athletics are not. Inthe fall, the University announcedthe creation of a scholarship to benamed after Amos Alonzo Stagg,the 100-year-old former footballcoach. Student Government pro¬tested. Their asserted theory wasthat it would be unthinkable tohave athletic ability play any portin the selection of a scholarshipwinner, but it soon became evi¬dent that their real fear was areturn to big-time football.The University made it clear thatthe winners would have to meetall entrance requirements of theschool, that there would be onlytwo of them each year, and thatcontinued athletic participationwould not be required. That, how¬ever, failed to pacify the studentleaders. In a memorable commenton the Chicago-concept of educa¬tion, the Maroon wrote that ath¬letics may play a part in characterbuilding, but that that was unim¬portant. Character building is ir¬relevant to education, went the rea¬soning, and therefore athletics areless than tolerable.Of course if the activity is la¬beled “art,” its relation to educa¬tion is definite. Some truly uniqueactivities protected by the “cul¬ture” label have thus' been pre¬sented. In February the UC hada folk festival; naturally they hadonly real folk. The hit of the eve¬ning, I’m told, was Fred McDowell,a cotton farmer. Fred is the fel¬low that, as the Maroon put it,“plays the guitar in an unusualmanner by sliding a bottle up anddown the strings instead of usinghis fingers.”About a week later, Claes Olden-berg performed. It seems that Mr.Oldenberg produces “happenings” in which he tries to capture theatmosphere of a city. To conveyChicago, various members of hiscast at specified times threw mudat a west wall; typed “now is thetime for all good men to kill their,mothers” on a brown paper sack;stood around in steel helmets andswim fins, and dropped burlapbags on the audience. The bags,the artist tells us, “representedturds”; they were his idea of ajoke. Yet this was education, andso, apparently, was well received.This week the school’s artist-in-residence opens his exhibition.Part of it will be his suitcase andits contents — 3,000 marbles.Northwestern, on the other hand,symbolizes non-education. One ofNU’s really unforgivable sins isbeing part of the Big Ten whichthe UC has renounced. Further,the major part of the battle to letGeorge Lincoln Rockwell speakhere seemed to be to show theworld that this university does nothave Northwestern’s speaker pol¬icy. There was just one note ofreal envy about NU in the Maroonthis year. It was buried in a storyabout a recent meeting of the Citi¬zens for Decent Literature. Thearticle mentioned that the authorof Bobby Sox Sinners, a bannedbook, had been a Northwesterncoed. For a moment, UC studentsstood in worship awe.Not all here is as it seems. Thisessay concerns really only a mi¬nority, though a vocal minority,of the school. The entire Univer¬sity of Chicago is about the sizeof Northwestern’s Evanston cam¬pus, but the undergraduate popu¬lation — the College — ‘is muchsmaller, just over 2,000 students.The rest of the university commun¬ity is much like that at any othermajor institution. As one wordlyfreshman put it, “They’ve comehere corrupted and hardenedagainst true education.”Further, the undergraduate stu¬dent body seems to be undergo¬ing a real revolution of attitude.The old student leaders are fallinginto disrepute. Without thinkingtwice, the student governmenttook a typical UC position that theUnited States was wrong to takea firm stand in the Cuban block¬ade. They let President Kennedyknow with a quick telegram. How¬ever the majority of the under¬graduate student body, in an un¬ precedented revolt, voted to re¬call 12 of the 13 representativeswho had voted to send the tele¬grams. This month, in the campus¬wide election, an increasing mi¬nority of interested undergradu¬ates elected enough representatives-to soundly defeat the party that has controlled the campus foryears. Some say it is due to anew admissions policy. Whateverthe cause, the University of Chi¬cago is apparently slowly movingaway from its position as thefreak among universities.—Thomas D. MorganJimmy’sand the University RoomRESERVED EXCLUSIVELY FOR UNIVERSITY CLIENTELEFifty Fifth and Woodlawn Avc.shore drive motelFACING LAKE MICHIGANSpecial University of Chicago Rates. Beautiful Rooms,Free TV, Parking, Courtesy Coffee.Closest Motel to Univ. of Chicago and Museum of Science & Industry.FOR INFORMATION OR RESERVATIONSWRITE OR CALL Ml 3-2300SHORE DRIVE MOTEL ,56th St. & So. Shore Dr. • Chicago 37, IllinoisLondon... late summer... lovely!September 3-26Group Flight) Chicago to London<395Via Pan Am Jets, round tripFor more information,Call 667-8284, or Ext. 3272 Treat Yourself to aGood HaircutWindermere HotelBarbershopGentlemen's haircuttingand manicuringwith or without appointmentFA 4-6000 1642 E, 56th ST.Tell Them Steve Sent You**COCA COiA" AN© “CCnt" A#t ncGtsrenco t*ao« maohs which totHTirv oscourses.... ughregister... rushstand... wait...shuf f le. <. go...twitch... fidget...yawn...stopmove... nearernearer... filled...pausetake a break...things go betterwith CokeTRA0C-MAHN f>Bottled under the authority ofThe Coca-Cola Company by:Coca-Cola Bottling Co. of ChicagoJune 7, ' )63 • CHICAGO MAROONClip & SaveA UC guide to NY City(This column was originally planned for the lastIssue of the MAROON in the winter quarter but the effortsof enemy agents prevented its -appearance. Since its valueknows no season, we have decided to print it now, as aguide for the casual tourist as well — UC gets some 1 million in grantsas the serious traveler to theMecca of the East, Bagdad on theHudson, Sodom by the Sea — inother words, New York.)Definitely "out" places What to seeFilms: SANJURO by Kurosawa;TWO DAUGHTERS by Ray; TheMMA series on the complete filmsThe Village; The Guggenheim of Hitchcock; PLAYS: The BeastMuseum; the subway station at in Me; The Blacks; The Pinter42nd & Broadway; 42nd ft Broad- Characters in Searchway. Great Neck; the Bronx; • ’Brooklyn; Queens; Rienzi's: Cafe Author; Mother Courage andBizzare; Cafe Wha?; Figaro's; all Her Children; Strange Interludesmall “hand-made'’ jewelry and/ (bring lunch): A Man for All Sea-or clothing shops; San Remo’s; sons; Liule Me; pretty dead forLincoln Center; Lindy s; RadioCity-- Music Hall; Fifth' Avenue;Siaten Island Ferry; Statue ofLiberty.Definitely "in" placesThe White Horse Tavern—around films but watch the Thalia.Places to meet other UCstudent (invariable)The White Horse Tavern; The650 Hudson Su; Chumley’s; Mr. Village, Figaro’s especially; TheWaffle’s—'between 5th & 6.h Ave.on 8th St., weekend mornings Museum ol Modern Art film show-, , , , ings; The Village, especially week-only; Whalens on 6lh Ave. and ends; 5(b Avenue; Carnegie Hall;8th St., weekend evenings only;Prexy’s—on 6th Ave. just south of N. Y. Pro Musica concerts; Wash¬ington Square, Sunday only; the8th St., between 2 and 6 AM only; F“lk. Music Center on MacdougalP. J. Clark’s, on 55th St. and3rd Ave., mid-evening; Central & Minetta: The Peace Center; The„ _ Village; Columbia U. summerPark, late evening only alone; school; Fire Island. P_town.The Frick Collection: The Museumof Modern Art; The Cloisters—takeNo. 4 bus; Hubert’s Flea Circus &Museum, evenings; Fire Island-weather permitting — weekendsonly; The Fat Black Pussy Cat,front room only, Macdougal near3rd St.—very chic to enter by back RWJBFSO deadline July 22Applications for this year's For¬eign Service officer examinationsmust be in by July 22.The written examination will bedoor; Figaro’s, Macdougal and 3rd, h ,d September 7anytime; The Sleeker St. Cinema, further ^ktiort mav be ob-midnight showings, Bleeker & Sul- tained from the office of careerli\an; Serendipity Three, lunch counseling and placement, Revn-only; San Remo’s; Carnegie Hall; olds CIllb( RM 202.Kat’z Delicatessen on Houston;Great Neck; the Bronx; Queens; Another degree for BeadleBrooklyn; The Plaza, first floor UC President George Wellsbar; Cafe Bizzare. for the cog- Beadle will give the commence-nescinte; U. N. cafeteria for delegates; the 37th floor of the Em¬pire State Building.students (invariably)With a friend who has a grand- ment address and receive an hon¬orary degree from the Universityof Miami on Tuesday.Athletic scholarships are . . . onemother who loves to cook; the of the greatest swindles ever per-“Y”; the Marlton, 8th St. just off Petrated on American youth.5th Ave., cheap, good service and (Their) aim is not education ofaffectionate desk clerks; with a youth but the entertainment offriend who has a mother who likes orders.. , —A. Whitney Gnswald,10 COOK. late president of Yale The UC Medical School wasone of 23 private US medicalschools to receive grants of$250,000 this week from theRichard King Mellon CharitableTrusts. The grants are to be usedto increase salaries of medicalfaculty members.Selection of the medical schools,each of which will receive $50,000per year for the next five years,was based on a study by Dr. Wil¬lard C. Rappley, retired dean ofthe College of Physicians and Sur¬geons of Columbia University, NewYork, and Dr. Fordvce B. St. John,retired professor of clinical surgeryat the Columbia-Presbyterian Med¬ical Center in New York.The schools were chosen on thecombined basis of need, demon¬strated excellence, and geographi¬cal distribution.The Rappleye-St. John study re¬veals that support for the basicoperations of the nation's 87 ac¬credited medical schools is lessthan one per cent of the total na¬tional amount spent annually forhealth services. The study alsonoted that health services nowrank third among US activities inthe number of persons employed.The report estimates that theschools receiving the grants will beable to recruit and support morethan 350 potential medical teachersand investigators, depending onhow they allocate their grants.The 23 schools comprise morethan half of the total of 45 privatemedical schools in the UnitedStates.$250,000 for aging studyThe Committee on HumanDevelopment has beenawarded a grant of morethan $250,000 to train spe¬cialists in the problems of the- aged.The grant from the NationalInstitute of Mental Health coversa five-year period, and will beunder the direction of Mrs. Ber¬nice Neugarten, associate pro¬fessor in the Committee.More than $57,000 will be pro¬vided annually to train graduatestudents in the psychological andsocial aspects of aging. It is ex¬pected they will then be preparedfor teaching and research careersin this field. The funds will be used to pro¬vide cash stipends and tuitioncosts to students from the firstthrough the fourth year of grad¬uate study.$275,595 for chem workGerhard L. Closs, asso¬ciate professor of chemistryreceived $51,(100 from theNational Science Foundationfor research entitled “Chemistryof Cyclopropenes and RelatedCompounds.” The grant is for twoyears.Stuart A. Rice, professor ofchemistry and professor and direc¬tor of the Institute for the Studyof Metals, was granted $99,364 bythe Office of Aerospace Researchof the US Air Force for studies intheoretical chemistry.John Willard Stout, professor ofchemistry and in the Institute forthe Study of Metals, w'as awarded$84,200 for studies of the electronicenergy levels in paramagneticcrystals over a two-year period.The grant was aw’arded by theNational Science Foundation.Philip J. Dickerman. seniorphysicist at the Laboratories forApplied Sciences, received a $40,-431 grant from the Office of Aero¬space Research for studies of thetransport properties of partiallyionized gases.Peace Corps returneesUC is one of eight US uni¬versities participating in a new fellowship program de¬signed to provide graduateeducation to returning PeaceCorps volunteers.About 75 fellowships will beawarded to students in subjectsof great importance in the de¬veloping nallons. These subjectsinclude economics, business acRministration, public administra¬tion, law, education, political sci¬ence, public health, communitydevelopment, and English.The program will be admin¬istered under a $400,000 FordFoundation grant by an inter¬university committee with head¬quarters at Penn State. C. ArnoldAnderson, professor of educationand director of the ComparativeEducation Center, will representUC.Fellowships will provide astipend of $1800, fees, and tuition.CLASSIFIEDFOR RENT, ROOMS, APTS, ETC.NEAR campus room. pvt. bath. $10a week. Call DO 3-2521.3 ROOM, new apartment. 8130 Sagi¬naw. Call 731-3497, after 5 pm.5 ROOM apartment for 3 people. PL2-2593. 5341 S. Kimbark. $115 month.SO. SHORE—77th JEFFERY — PVT.PRKG 4 ROOM (2 BEDROOM) MOD.APT. RENT WITH OPTION TO BUY.SEE IT. OWNER LEAVING TOWN.RE 1-3786 EVES.—WEEKENDS.COMMUNE apt. for rent-with or with¬out roomate partially furn. close tocampus and stores. Call 684-3078.PRIVATE Ige. studio room. bath. $15week available any time. Very attrac¬tive. Call 643-8538.A CHOICE all year round home. Gasheated, beautifully equipped, furnishedand landscaped. Can be purchased ata most reasonable price as the owneris moving to a distant area. It is withinwalking distance from the South Shorerailroad and within walking distancefrom our home and Hudson Lake, Ind.Contact Dr Altenberg at MA 3-0595for appt on Sunday. Telephone num¬ber at Hudson lake is OL 4-3706 if youwish to call on Sunday.2 LARGE ROOMS for men in pvt.home. $40-$30 month. Call MU 4-5076.SUMMER Sub-lease well furnished 4room basement apt. Everett Ave. $75month Avail. June 21. Call BU. 8-3216.FURNISHED 2 bedroom house. 25 min.from Libras of Congress. Avail. June20-Sept 10 $100 month plus util. An¬derson 45 j Ridte Rd., Greenbeit, Md.Phone 301-474-7599.SUB-LET for summer. 4 >7 room, 2bedroom. $85 month. 5432 UniversityAve Call 643-7379.LAKE MICH cottage private beach,modern Suit family of six. Ph. 493-2680FOR SALEBLAGKFRIA RS record on sale at Stu¬dent activities office during summer.Non-returning students send name,summer address and $3.50 to Black-friars. wo Reynolds club and recordwill be sent to you.COOP apt 4*2 rooms, third floor, nosmall children north south exposurestable neighborhood, good trnns., mod¬ern (citeV’f "■ close to university, byowner. $' Mortgage paid. Phoneevenings. PL 2-3381. ^GRADUATE woman has apartment toshare. call extension 2886. GRADUATING? Transferring? Drop¬ping out? Flunking out? No matter whyyou’re leaving the University, don’t gowithout arranging a subscription to theMaroon for next year.For only $1 a quarter, the Maroonwill follow you anywhere in the world.Send name, -desired mailing address,and money (or we can bill you later)to the Maroon, 1212 E. 59th Street,Chicago 17 (or use fac. ex.)And if you happen to be returningnext year, join the large group of stu¬dents who know how much easier itis to have the Maroon sent home thanto write letters every week. Gift sub¬scriptions are available at the samefantastic rate of $1 a quarter.TWENTY THREE days in Europe.S.G.-sponsored group flight via PanAm jet. Sept. 3-26, O’Hare field toLondon. Fare much lower than com¬mercial rates. 667-8284, 5-7 pm or Ex¬tension 3272, 3:30-5 pm.WANTEDPART of an apt. to store many books,some clothing, and, if you want it,the world's most comfortable chair.Will let you use the chair and pay areasonable fee for summer. Also havea chest, bookcase, and two lampswhich I would like to entrust to you.but not totally necessary. Call 2210North House (BU 8-6610) today andleave message. Really DESPERATE,since I have to move out of dormby tomorrow at 9 am.WANTED. 2 male roommates to share1st floor apt. with 3rd. Summer quar¬ter. Rent $45 mo. Call 667-0591.SEEKING male grad, students to share4 bedrm. apt. <8> rooms for just $31.25month for the summer and/or thewhole year at 6030 Ellis Ave, CaliBU 8-3971.WANT rider going to Boston area.Leaving June 27. CR 2-6934 evenings.During days, HI 6-6383.GARAGE for auto storage. July toAug. HY 3-5454, after 5 pm.SUMMER work camp volunteers need¬ed, male and female. Male volunteersurgently needed for Florida work camp(July) Call WA 4-0872. InternationalVoluntary Service.2 GIRLS want third to share nice Ige.apartment, own room. DO 3-2762.2 WOMEN grad, students want a 3rdto share 7 room apartment. BU 8-2913.after 6 pm. ____________EXPERIENCED typist wants workeither mornings or on own time. Ex¬tension 2886. THANKS TO ST. JUDE for favorgranted. K.D.WANTED: Drive my car to Calif, ap¬proximately end of June or drive itback end of July. Tel. G, Greenwood,WE 5-5410, evenings.WANTED: Anyone at U. of Chicago tofly round trip, Chieago-London, Sept.3-26, Pan Am jet. Over 3 weeks inEurope. What better time than betweenquarters? Open to staff, faculty, stu:dents, and their families. 667-8284, 5-7pm, or Extension 3272, 3:30-5 pm,U-HIGH junior girl (quiet student)looking for family for residence nextyear. Needs to remain here for lastyear of school. Please call 752-6363,in evenings.RIDE TO CHICAGO, week of June 14.and to N.Y. soon after. Call Ext. 3285. /JPERSONALSTeen-Tours - Students — U. S., Mexico.Puerto Rico, Europe, Israel. R. Bar¬nett. 345 W. 86th St., New York 24,N.Y.CLEANING woman available now orin the fall. $10.65 per day any sizeapt. Can come once every 2 weeks ormore often. Call Edna at DR 3-6465.CLOTHES need mending? Call HY3-5438. Also alterations.HARRY, let’s fly away together be¬tween quarters! Where? To Londonfrom Chicago. Sept. 3-26. Group flightvia Pan Am jets. Call 667-8284, 5-7pm, or Ext. 3272, 3:30-5 pm.STOP! Don’t go without arranging tohave the Maroon follow you. See ForSale advertisement.SHERWIN KAPLAN, a fourth yearstudent in the College, has passed hisRussian comp and will enter the UCLaw School this fall.KAPLAN, known as Sherwin to hisfriends, has had n active life as a.iundergraduate. Aside from his contri¬butions to the study of Slavic lan-guages and literature, Kaplan was best ^known for being station manager of -■*campus radio station WUCB.He can be seen walking around cam¬pus wearing his cap and gown.PERFECT for faculty, staff vacations:Chieago-London flight, Sept. 3-26, Lowgroup fare. 667-8284 or Extension 3272.EVERYONE on June 17 flight to N. i.Pay immed. Full bal. Room still openon flight.‘GOOD-BYE.’’ : To All Our FriendsGood LuckFarewell and Mange TakkAfter 4 years we aregraduating or rather, vacatingby request of urban renewal.We invite youto attend our Final SaleENDING JUNE 30th .600 Norwegian ski troopsweaters $5.00a good buy at 3 times the .price — you bought 3,000of them before.20%-40% savings onfurniture and gift items.Open 12-8 p.m. — Sunday 12-6 p.m.SCANDINAVIANIMPORTS1542 E. 57 NO 7-4040(Signed) RodneyCHI C A G O M A R O O M • Jun® 7. 196324 •Booj^PagePraises the same same approach toalmost all U.S. educational problems Centaur' "daring, rebellious, fun //ThomasPart HI ofThe Schools was originallypublished in 1961. The new¬ly released paper back edi¬tion makes available at amoderate cost one of the mostinteresting books on the Americanpublic school system I have en¬countered. Mr. Mayer is not —• re¬peat not — a professional educa¬tor. He is a free-lance writer withwide experience in journalism and?. passionate concern for education.His book is for the general public,although every teacher (and notjust public school teachers) willbe rewarded for reading it. For themost valuable contribution of thisbook is its sanity in the approachto almost all of the educationalproblems thathave turned toomany educatorsand lay critics in¬to angry youngand angry oldmen, more adeptat throwing vit-triol than at pro¬ducing informedargument. Read,for example thelast three chap¬ters of the book.They f ormthe work, and they bear the col¬lective title, “A Handful of Real-ia,” provacative and crptic, asare many of the sectional andchapter headings. The chapter dealssuccessively with tests and testingmethods, technological aids to edu¬cation (television, teaching mach¬ines, etc.), and teach trainingor, as it is now universally called“teacher education.” You can starta riot any day among teacherswith a mild remark on any oneof these topics. You just don’t speakof “objective examinations” insome circles without causing facesto turn purple. But Mr. Mayer isneither a Jacques Barzun nor apublic relations agent for the Edu¬cational Testing Service. Insteadhe offers a shrewd appraisan of thevirtues and defects all kinds oftesting, with a clear eye upon thethings which one may be testingfor. I don’t mean to imply that heis a professional mediator. He isas blunt as any one in pointing outpretentiousness and sham. Readthe chapter on teacher training,Summer programs(Continued from page 7)treatment of alcoholics and theirfamilies.The University’s Community andFamily Study Center will sponsora workshop on “Mass Communi¬cation and Motivation with SpecialReference to Family Planning.”The workshop will deal with theproblems of inducing low-educationand low-income populations in theUS and abroad to reduce theirfertility. Courses meet in two ses¬sions: June 24-July 3 and July 8-19.The Graduate School of Businesswill offer a regular listing ofcourses and four faculty seminars:“Mathematical Models and DigitalComputers in Business” (June 24-August 2), “Faculty Research inMarketing” (July 8-August 2),“Recent Development in AppliedEconomics” (July 29-August 23),and “The Economics of RegulatedPublic Utilities” (June 24-28). vThe psychology department willoffer two workshop-seminars onthe Rorschach Test. The first,“Basic Principles,” is June 17-21:the second, “Advanced ClinicalInterpretation,” is June 24-28.And, finally, there will be threespecial carillon recitals. On July17 and August 30, guest carillon-neur Wyatt Insko will perform. OnAugust 13, Robert Lodine will bethe guest carillonneur. especially the story about the Su¬perintendent of New Trier HighSchool, who didn’t have enough“credits” in education to satisfythe North Central Association. Buthis bluntness and his irony aretempered by a constant awarenessthat the issues which disturb uscannot be divided into two sides— one all black and the other allwhite.Part I of the book (“Notes to¬ward an Introduction to Educa¬tion”) is less discursive than thetitle suggests. A thread which runsthrough the entire section is thebackground of a democratic so¬ciety, (and not merely in Americabut in England and western Eu¬rope) against which the applica¬tions of various educational the¬ories and dogmas are projected.You may be interested in the de¬velopment of the idea of free pu¬blic education as an expressionof democracy in the United Statesand in Europe and also in thedevelopment of the compulsory at¬tendance laws here and abroad.Free public education has beenboth defended and opposed as aviolation of democratic principles;so, too, have compulsory attend¬ance laws. Or you may be inter¬ested in the distinction which Mr.Mayer draws between some of theideas which were forerunners ofthe progressive education move¬ment in the United States and theinstitutionalizing of the ideas inthe Progressive Education Asso¬ciation, which was a powerful in¬strument in elementary and sec¬ondary education in the 1920’sand 30’s. Mr. Mayer suggests that(he institutionalizing of an edu¬cation theory is almost certainlyits death knell, a provocativethought.Part II (“That’s What We learnin the Schools”) is a review of thesubstance of elementary and sec¬ondary school education. Sub¬stance is not merely subject mat¬ter but subject matter-plus-meth¬od. Remember, however, this isnot a discourse by a teacher onHie methods of teaching mathema¬tics, foreign languages, native lan¬guages and literature, (popularlycalled English) and the back¬ground of human affairs (Mr.Mayer’s phrase for the social sci¬ences). It is an account by a per¬ceptive layman who has witnessedteaching by many kinds of teach¬ers in many kinds of schools toall kinds of students. It is a freshpoint of view, illuminated by tran¬script of actual class room ex¬periences. And it is not a whollydiscouraging point of view.If you are intersted in publiceducation, its virtues and its vices,its challenges and its forbiddingaspects, you wall find The Schoolsworth reading.Russell ThomasRussell Thomas, professor of hu¬manities, and executive secretary forthe council of advanced studies, iscurrently teaching one section ofHumanities 126, and is director ofthe tutorial studies program. He haswritten a book and articles on gen¬eral education. BoothTolstoi rejectedA few years ago, when copies ofthe first two chapters of “Warand Peace” were dispatched alongwith an outline for the rest of thenovel to ten well-known publishinghouses, only four spotted theprank and the rest sent rejectionslips.—Herman Kogan inPANORAMA, May 2« John Updike, The CentaurWell, now, what have wehere? It’s called a novel,right on the dust jacket, butthe title and the beautifulphotograph of a Greek centaur,suggest what the first epigraph,from Karl Barth, and the secondepigraph, from Old Greek FolkStories Told Anew, quickly con¬firm: if this is to be a novel, itwill be a novel With Resonance,Levels, and perhaps even someAmbiance thrown in. And if weare unfortunate enough to see areview or so before we beginreading, our suspicions are con¬firmed: how silly of poor Updike,to undertake a mixture of classi¬cal, Christian, and modern ele¬ments that was doomed to failurefrom the start.Why bother to read the book atall? One could write an annihilat¬ing review of it using nothingmore than the Mythological In¬dex which the author’s wife per¬suaded him to ap¬pend. From it welearn that Achil¬les is alluded toon pages 13, 95,and 222, “Aphro-dite (Venus)(sic) on forty]two out of 298pages, “Chari-c 1 o /Ceres” o nfifty nine pages,and Zeus, quiteappropriately the winner, on sixty-six pages. We also learn that “notall characters have a stable refer¬ent (a pun?); Diefendorf, for ex¬ample, is now a centaur, now amerman, and sometimes even Her¬cules.”The reviews I’ve seen have allfallen more or less gleefully intothis trap that Updike has set forthem: “wotta pity,” they chant,“that poor Updike, who had themakings here of a good everydayrealistic novel about a harriedmiddle-aged science teacher andhis neurotic, gifted son, shouldhave messed it up so royally withall this machinery about GreekGods.”But Updike, who can hardly beconsidered naive enough not tohave predicted these , reactions,has done something far differentfrom what the attacks would sug¬gest. Compare the real texture ofyour experience, in reading thefollowing bits from the opening'section, with anything you mighthave been led to expect from anabstract description of the book.Caldwell, the teacher-centaur hasjust been shot through the anklewith an arrow, in the midst of alecture. He staggers into the hall,and hears children in another classpinging “America the Beautiful:”To shining sea. The old baloney. He hadheard it first in Passaic. Since then, howStrange he had grown! His top half felt allafloat in a starry firmament of idels andyoung voices singing; the rest of his selfwas heavily gunk in a swamp where it must,eventually, drown. Each time the feathersbrushed the floor, the shaft worked in hiswound. He tried to keep that leg fromtouching the floor, but the jagged clatter ofthe three remaining hooves sounded soloud he was afraid one of the doors wouldsnap open and another teacher emerge tobar his way. . . . His bowels weakly con¬vulsed; on the glimmering varnished boards, right in front of the trophy case with itahundred silver eyes, he deposited, withoutbreaking stride, a steaming dark spreadingcone. His great gray-dappled flanks twitchedwith distaste, but like a figurehead on theprow of a foundering ship his head andtorso pressed forward.Now wait a minute, here: aschool teacher is a school teacherand a horse is a horse. Therefore,ergo, consequently, this must beCaldwell’s fantasy. But it c*n’t behis fantasy, because . . .As is true at every point inreading any book, you now havethe choice of whether to read on.I fond that I did read on, withnever a moment’s doubt. And with¬in a few pages I found the follow¬ing (this time I ask you to readit aloud):He moved, if not at ■ prance, yet withsuch pressured stoic grace that the limp wasenrolled m his stride. . . . Beneath hisbelly the grimacing grilles flashed in thewhite winter sun. . . . With a sluggishdigestive rumble, the classes shifted. . . .The thing in his ankle was thawing, andhis stomach assuming an unsettled flutter.We may want to reject this kindof playful gallop, of course, oncewe have taken it into account. ButI’ve not noticed any of the re¬viewers even mentioning it, to saynothing of the fun of the mock-heroic similes- that roll throughthe three main sections (begin¬ning, middle, and end, too, if youreally want to know) in whichChiron the centaur is dominant.And what do we do with the factthat the deliberate excessivenessof these heroics is dropped, whenthe final decisive act of self-sac¬rificial suicide is reached: “Chironaccepted death.”.Well, whatever we make of allthis, it is not the simple fantasy.of a realistic hero. The hero isnot simply the school teacher; heis Caldwell /Chiron, and his mostdecisive moments, except for onesolid bit of reality when he learnsfrom a colleague that “Dieu esttres fin,” are experienced as cen¬taur. We find at the center of thebook, for example, a full evoca¬tion of what life might have been,at a time when there were still“students of the stars,” and it isfar beyond anything Caldwell him¬self might imagine:Chiron hurried, a little late, down thecorridors of tamarisk, yew, bay, and kermesoak. Beneath the cedars and silver firs,whose hushed heads were shadows permeatedwith Olympian blue, a vigorous underwoodof arbutus, wild pear, cornel, box, andandrachne filled with scents of flower andsap and new twig the middle air of theforest. . . . He came into the clearing andhis students were already there: Jason,Achilles, Asclepios, his daughter Ocyrhoe,and the dozen other princely children ofOlympus abandoned to his care. . . . Thechildren opened each day’s session with ahymn to Zeus. When they stood, theirbodies, clad lightly, were not yet differ¬entiated into wedges and vases, attacking andcontaining, tools for Ares and Hestia, butwere the same in silhouette, though ofvarious heights: slim pale reeds of a singlepipe harmoniously hymning the god ofexistence pure. . . . His students completeddie centaur. They fleshed his wisdom withexpectation. . . . 'Our subject today . . .is the Genesis of All Things. In the be¬ginning . . . Love set the Universe inmotion . . .’Pretentious? Perhaps. But sub¬limity — or whatever term youlike to use for the literatre thatexcites your highest admiration —always results from ambition thathas barely escaped pretentiousness.In modern times we seem convincedthat the escape hatch has beenclosed. How many novels “about”a high-school teacher can you name that are not just witty opfunny or sincere or whatever, butconvincingly noble? None, ofcorse; please don’t pretend — youcan name none. Even if you’veread this one, you have yourdoubts — like me. But where isthe author to find his subjects, ifhe hankers after a bit of nobilityand feels the pressure of a stylethat demands an occasional ana-pest or heroic simile? Kings? Pre¬sidents, in the age of “The FirstFamily”? Jesus? Significance isof course relatively easy: haveyour sophisticated character re¬cite a Jesus Prayer. But nobility?Moving portraits of self-sacrifi¬cial love? Try your hand at it,and you’ll find yourself like mereluctant to condemn Updike forrebelling against our realistic con¬ventions.Whether we conclude, aftersavoring the unusual variety in thisshort novel, that Updike has madea great novel out of his experimentis a question that should not evenbe attempted until we’ve had achance to work our way into it.Meanwhile, if you don’t find morethat is truly daring and shockingand rebellious and finally fun inthis work than in a dozen “shock¬ingly honest” works by Mailer andIverouac et al, you and I had bet¬ter go our separate ways.Wayne BoothWayne Booth, professor ofEnglish, is currently teaching coursesin literary criticism.WHAT’SNEWIN THE JUNEATLANTIC?“Higher Education in the 21st Cen¬tury”: Ford Foundation’s Alvin C.Eurich tells how colleges might copewith growing student population andscientific knowledge in the next 40years.ALSOAlbert Camus: A previously unpub-'lished short essay, “The Riddle".Robert Lowell: Translations offive poems of Russian poet, OsipMandelstam.Jessica Mitford: “The Undertakers’Racket”, a critical appraisal of one ofour most successful industries.Oscar Handlin: “Shaped in theWilderness: The Americans'*(Atlantic Extra).Month in and monthout The Atlantic'seditors seek out ex¬citing expressions ofnew and provocativeideas. And whetherthese expressionstake the form ofprose or poetry, factor fiction, they al¬ways attain a re¬markably high levelof academic valueand literary interest.Make room in yourlife for The Atlantic.Get a copy today.Alumnisubscribeto theMaroonMITZIE'SFLOWER SHOPS1225 E. 63rd St.HY 3-53531340 E. 55th St.Ml 3-4020COLOR DEVELOPINGPREPAID MAILERS• RIIN Roll, 3 mm 20 exp $L2935 MM, 34 exp $1.98MODEL CAMERA1342 E. 55* HY 3-9259NSA DISCOUNTS New Car Loansas low as,00 PERHUNDRED$4UNIVERSITY NAT’L BANK1354 E. 55th ST., CHICAGOMU 4-2000MEMBER F.D.I.C. FINAL NOTICE!!All unclaimed 1963 Yearbooks are presently being heldat the Alumni Association Office. They may be pickedup there by those individuals who have purchased year¬books, received notification of their purchase by mail,but failed to pick them up at the proper time.GOLD CITY INNSpecializing in Cantonese FoodOrders to Take Out10% Discount to Students With This Ad5228 Harper HY 3-2559June 7. 1963 • CHIC AGO 14 A R O O W » 25Calendar of eventsCabaret Dam, also showing collection of art, re¬ligious, & daily life objects from the“Calypso Carnival,” competition be- Ancient Near East, 10-5 daily, closedtween singers from Trinidad and Ja- 12-1 Tues. & Wed., closed all day Mon.,maica. The Blue Angel. 624 S. Mich- Breasted Hall, 5? & University, free.® •3°- 11:30, 2: $3.50 min. Friday New Directions in Enamels, an ex-ar^r. Sa^u'5iay-. „ . „ . hibit of enamel panels by Gregory Niz-The Gate of Horn, folksingers Ron nik. Marie Opalecky, Diane Girls, HydeEUran & Carolyn Hester, through June Park Art Center, 5236 S. Blackstone,16; Judy Collins & Danndy Cox JunelS- 1-4 daily, through June 28.li . ® & 11 nightly,8:30,10:30, Picture of the year exhibition (paint-cT.'ir adn}’ Fn" togs>> Center for Continuing Education,Sun., 1036 North State, SU 7*2633. through Monday,hi^Ni^twT’^l^1 .M?t Ravinia Festival of Flowers, ex-W 30 closed Mon - fi^t show biclud^ blblted W North Shore garden anddinner S4 86 Sat' S6« Sun «■ flower clubs, 5-10 June 18, 10-5 Junesecond show’includes buffet $2.50; im- 19'u^r Park‘perial Room, Del Prado Hotel, 5307 S. exhibit*Hvde Park Plvri HY eXTllDlt WHICH IS part Of the US-USSK'EarthaKitt & Jay Nemeth,, through gE™* S522S5“ J*™*1June 13. 8:30 & 12; $3 cover. $3.50 Sat; frv 57 ’&MSouth Shor^ fr^The Empire Room, Palmer House, riinv5 ir5s e™™1 shore> free» 9-30-5.30State & Monroe. RA 6-7722. dally’. 10* Sun-Kungsholm Restaurant Puppet Opera, _ “It’s Only Money: American Paper“Porgy & Bess through June 12, “HMS Currency from the Colonies to the Con-Pinafore” June 13-26; 2 & 8 daily; federacy” (special collections). Harper2. 8, 10 Fri. & Sat.; 3 & 8 Sun.; for Library, 1st floor & 6th floor west,patrons of restaurant, 100 E. Ontario, through July 6, Mon.-Fri. 9-5, Sat. 9-1.Vaughan Meader, mimic of Presi- Chicago Invitational Area Art Show,dent Kennedy, June 10-July l, 8:45 & doses tomorrow-. New Dorm Central11:45, $2.50 cover, $4 Fri. & Sat., closed Unit, contains award-winning paintings.Sun., The Polynesian Room, Edgewater Prize-winning art works from ThirdBeach Hotel, 5300 North Sheridan, LO Annual Exhibit of students of the1-6000 School of the Art Institute, UC artist-Twenty Thousand Frozen Grenadiers, in-residence. Harry Bouras helped se-Second City’s 11th satirical revue, lect winners, Cliff Dwellers Club, 220nightly at 9 & 11; 9, 11, and 1 Sats.closed Mon., $2. Fri. & Sat S2 50, 1846North Wells, DE 7-3992ConcertsCarillon recitals, Daniel Robins, Uni- S. MichiganGraphic Art exhibition, sponsored bythe Society of Typographic Arts, startstoday, tlirough June 28, Grover Her¬mann Hall, I IT. 33 and Dearborn, free.Silent Movies, continuous showingsafter dark, featuring Charlie Chaplinversity Carilloneur, 5 p.m. Wed. & Sun., Marie Dressier, Rudolph Valentino,Rockefeller chapel, free, hell’s bells! Ben Turpin, Ramon Navarro. GillianCarl Fruh, cellist in recital, one 10, ' Gish, and others, at the “Roman GarSecond City Cabaret Theatre, 8:30 p.m., den.’’ Old Town's oldest outdoor cafe,$2, $1.50 students, refreshments, DE next door to Second City, 1846 N.7-3992, 1846 N. Wells. Wells, until lam, nightly except Mon-Folk music concert with Win Stracke, days.Fleming Brown, Ray Tate, Larry Ehr-lich, Liz Dickinson, Johnny Carbo, Val- rlllTISucia Buffington, Ted Johnson, Shirley . _ . _ , ,Hersch & friends, tomorrow & Sun. Hyde Park Theatre: Starts today for6 p.m.. $1, Old Town School of Folk °?e week. “Sundays and Cybele;”Music, 333 W. North. starts next Friday, “The Four Days ofChad Mitchell Trio, Camela House, Naples; Lake Park at 53 Street, forthrough June 11, the place will un- performance times call NO 7-9071, spe-doubtedly be reeking with Chicago high cial student rate with ID cardschool prom-goers. Prehide: Dog, Star, Man, StanTheodore Bikel, Guella Gill. Oranim Bra dir-- Sun^ay at 9 pm., $1,Zabar Group, folksingers all, June 17- 5235 S. Blackstone, 667-2066.30, 8:30 nightly. 6:45 & 9:45 Sat.. Closed „ c,ark™eat?e Fllm F«s*Mon., $1.95-$3.95, $2.50 - $4.50 late Sat. tival, different double-feature daily,show, Tenthouse Theatre. US 41, West open 24 hours a day, student discount,Park Ave., between Skokie’s Green free monthly prograin guide available,Bay Rds., Highland Park, ID 2-U60. ,£°£h aaJk S,h' ,«««Grant Park Symphony Orchestra Con- 35 ®ays at d^ais Yflth -*900certs, free concerts in Grant Park Boxer Rebellion m China Charlton Hes-Bandshell, Columbia Inner Drive at ton, Ava Gardner, David Niven, Todd11th St., starting June 26. From June theater, 170 N. Dearborn, 8:15 Mon -26-30, pianist Gary Graffman and con- Sat., 8 pm. Sun., 2:30 Wed., Sat. &ductor Irwin Hoffman are featured. Sun. mats, $1.75-$3.50.June 26: Berlioz’s Benevenuto Cellini “Cleopatra,” with Liz Taylor, etc..Overture and Symphonie Fantastique, State-Lake Theater, State & Lake Sts..Bartok’s Concerto No. 3. June 28: La opens June 26, all seats reserved, helpForza Del Destino Overture (Verdi), save 20th Century Fox.Harvest Dance from the opera Ruth “ZAZIE,” “New Wave” French com-(Charkovsky —world premiere). Sym- edy, 11-year-old girl named Zaziephony No 2 (Dvorak), Concerto No. 5 comes to Paris for a brief stay and(Beethoven). June 29 - 30; Symphony turns the city upside down. Plaza The-No 7 (Prokofieff), Firebird Suite atre, 308 W. North Ave., Midwest pre-(travinsky), Concerto No. 2 (Rachma¬ninoff). Can be heard from the grasson blankets.Ravinia Festival - Chicago SymphonyOrchestra, concert-goers may listen miere. en Francais Nafureelement.Lectures Fullerton Pkwy. & Lake Shore Drive.DI 8-7075.“Fanny,” about people living andworking on the Marseilles waterfront,June 14-6, 21-3. 28-30, 8:30 Fri. & Sat.,7 pm. Sun., $1.55 & $2.65, $2 & $3Sat., Encore Theater, 1419 North Wells,WH 4-8414.“The King & I,” with Jane Morgan,June 10-30, Melody Top Theatre, justoff Congress Expwy. at Wolf Road inHillside, $1.95-$4.50, 8:30 Mon.-Fri., 6& 9:30 Sat.. 7:30 Sun.“Look Homeward, Angel,” June 11-15, based on a part of Thomas Wolfe’snovel, Lincoln Park Players, on-the-lake, in-the-round, sponsored by theChicago Park District, Fullerton Pkwy.Sc Lake Shore Drive, 8:30 pm., $1,DI 8-7075.“The Madwoman of Chaillot,” JeanGiraudoux's fantasy-comedy dealingwith Paris sewer folk seeking solutionsto the problems of happiness, June 14-16. 8:30 Fri. & Sat., 7:30 Sun., $2,students $1, McCormick Players. 1001N. Dearborn, WH 4-4380.“Mary, Mary,” Jean Kerr’s com¬edy, closing June 15, ngihtly 8:30, Wed.Sc Sat. mat, 2 pm., closed Sun., $2.50-$4.95. Fri, & Sat.. $2.75-$5.50, mat $2.50-$4.50. Blackstone Theater, 60 E. Balbo,CE 6-8240.“Milk And Honey,” musical comedyabout a Brooklyn Jewish widow’s tripto Israel, 8:30 nightly, 2 pm. matineeWed. & Sat.closed gun., $2.50-$5.95.Fri. & Sat., $2.50-$6.60, mat $2,50-$4.95.Schubert Theater. 22 W. Monroe. CE 6-8240.“Our Town,” Thornton Wilder'sdrama about life in a small US town.Jack and Jill Players, June 8, 22, 30,8 pm. $1.25, 218 S. Wabash. WA 2-0317.“Put It in Writing,” musical review,nightly at 8:30, Fri. & Sat., 8:30 &11:30, Sun. 7:30 & 10:30. Closed Mon.,$2.95 & $3.95. $4.95 Fri. & Sat., TheHappy Medium, Delaware & Rush,DE 7-1000.“Silk Stockings,” with Don Ameche,June 12-30. Dorchester Music Hall, 154St. Sc Calumet Expg., Dolton. $3.50-$4.50.“Show Boat,” Theatre First. Inc.,June 7, 8. 9, 14, 15. 16. Fri. & Sat.8:30, 7:30 Sun., $1.75. Students with ID$1.10. LA 5-9761, 2930 No. Southport,the Athenaeum.“Struts and Frets,” satirical musicalreview for and about Chicago directedby Julius Monk, 8:30 & 11 nightly,closed Sun., $5 min., Fri. & Sat., $6min., 56 W. Huron, Ml 2-1600.“Take Her, She’s Mine,” comedyabout college life from student andparent points of view. Opens June 17.8:30 nightly, Wed. & Sat. mat. at 2pm., closed Sun., $2.50-4.95. Fri. &Sat $2.75-5.50. Mat $2.50-4.50. Black¬stone Theatre, 60 East Balbo, CE 6-8340.Court Theatre, Shakespeare’s “Mid¬summer Night’s Dream” July 5-21.Molier’s “The Miser” July 26-Aug. 11,Shakespeare’s “King Lear,” Aug. 16-Sept. 1. Concerts also scheduled in¬cluding Montoya. Single adm. $1.50,Sat. $2, season $4. student discount.Tickets and information available fromUniversity Theatre, 5705 S. University,Chicago 37, MI 3-0800.L. G.FRIDAY, JUNE 7Art Institute Lectures by Staff mem-from blankets on the grass or reserved »««• Sunday Gallery Talks: “Le Cor-seats in the music shed, Pablo Casals PvMwtJn' 6 theconducts June 27. Boskovsky conducts s^™aal f fhtad^ntt institute’’ by Nop.Tnnp nmaram nf Viennese music ^CllOOl 01 _ ine ANOrSKA S= 8U88STAS -'SEfor Ravinia appearances this summer f25 fecturesPon Cezanne Gtodayyinclude Joan Baez, Peter, Paul & Talks- four lectures on Cezanne, today,Mary, Ella Fitzgerald & Count Basie, fune 1i’21'A* 12 Michigan'Igor Stravinsky, Walter Hendl. Sir Wm. /ree’ Art instltute’ Micmgan &tttrtvMS Tonic? MiliAn Drnirnc AualllS.Walton, Byron Janis, Milton Preves,Leon Fleisher. Ravinia is in Highland Chicago Cubs’ home games: June7-9, Los Angeles: June 18-20, Houston;Park, train transportation available, V'^e #1-3 Pittsburgh 75c $3 WrigleyAssn., Rm. 405. 105 S. La Salle, Chi- Chicago White Sox home games?cago 3, ST 2-9636.r»o.7io oi June 11, Minnesota; June 12, Los An-throuah miff June 14-16, Kansas City; June^I ^b^neui.^„C°Le^.a"KHTa^kln,So at 24-7, kew York, 75c-$3, Comiskey Park,the London House, through June 18.DanceThe Royal Ballet, formerly the Sad 35 & Shields, 924-1000.Ringling Brothers Barnum & BailyCircus, June 19-30, 2:30 & 8:15 daily:10, 2. & 8:15 Sat.; 2 & 6 Sun., $1.50-ler’s Wells Ballet, 150-member troupe $3.50, International Amphitheatre, 42 Scfeaturing* Margot Fonteyn, Rudolf Nu- Halsted YA 7-5580.reyev, Svetlana Beriosove, Gerd Lar- _ . .sen, Lynn Seymour David Blair. Alex- Spring SignTS TO Seeander Grant, Ninette de Valois (direc- ■ * *tor). June 11: Giselle. June 12: La Fete Baha’i House of Worship, 9-sided na-Etrange, Elektra, the Invitation. June tional temple of the Baha’i world faith,13: Symphony, Marguerite Sc Armand, 10:30-9 daily, Sheridan & Linden, Wil-The Rite of Spring. June 14: Les hnette.Sylphides, the Rite of Spring, Le Cor- Boat tril>s. 2-hour rides on Lakesaire pas de deux, Facade. June 15 Michigan or down the Chicago River,mat & eve.: Sleeping Beauty. June ?175' 1-hour rides on Lake Michigan,16 mat & eve.: Swan Lake. 8:30 $1-25. Docks at Michigan Ave. Bridgenightly. 2 & 8 Sat. & Sun., $3-$7.50 ($4- at„Wa?kfr, , .. . , . „10 on June 11), Crown Theatre Me- Brookfield Zoo, feeding from 3-4:30,Cormick Place, 23 & Outer Drive porpoise performances as added at-,FR 2-0566 traction, open 10-6 daily, 10-7 Sunday,25c, 8500 West, 3100 South.EyflihiiiAnc Buckingham Fountain, water dis-» - tf - ^plays 11:30-3, 5-9:30, colored displayArt Fair, June 1 o & 16, noon to dark, 9-9:30 nightly, additional color display-oa o -^ea“ows Shopping Center, 35th 10-10:30 on Grant Park concert nights,Sc South Parkway. Congress at the Outer Drive in GrantArt Institute: Society for Contem- Park,porary Art annual exhibition, through Chinatown, Chinese temple in theJune 16; exhibition by students of the On Leong Merchants Assn. Open 12-10School of the Art Institute, June 14- daily, free, 22 & Wentworth.July 21; the Works of Corbusier, Lincoln Park Zoo, feeding from 1-4,through June 23; “Old Master Draw- Zoorookery rock garden has freelyings from Chatsworth,” including works wandering animals, open 9-5 daily,by Da Vinci, Raphael, Veronese, Van 9.4:30 weekends, 2200 North in LincolnDyck, Rembrant, Rubens, Durer, Hoi- parkbein. Inigo Jones, through June 23; Morton Arboretum, 1100 acres withMaster prints of Six Centuries from 4800 different kinds of woody plantsthe Art Institute Collection, continuing; labeled for visitors, open 7:45-sunset,ceramics by Gertrud and Otto Natzler, buildings open 9-12, 1-5, 2-5 weekends;through Sunday; Glass by Harvey Lit- admission free, but there is a 50ctleton, June 15-Sept. 2; American Ce- charge for driving through grounds, 25ramies Sc Glass from the permanent mjies from Chicago on Illinois Statecollection, through June 16; Contem- Highway No. 53 in Lisle,porary Japanese prints, continuing; Robie House, Frank Lloyd Wright’scolor photographs by Charles Swed- famous prairie house recently donatedlund, through June 30. Daily 10-5, to UC and the object of a $250,000Thurs., 10-9:30, Sun. 12-5, free, Michi- fund-raising restoration campaign,gan & Adams. Take the IC to Van tours 10-4 Sat. and 1-5 Sun., $1.Buren.Francis Stein Biesel Memorial Ex- ThonfrAhibition, through June 15, 10-5, Good- •nc'|n*speed Hall. “The Boy Friend,” Jack & Jill Play-Chicago International Trade Fair, ers, June 9. 15, 23, 7 pm., $1.50, 218June 19-July 7, exhibits by more than South Wabash, WA 2-0317.33 nations, many products for sale, “The Caretaker,” by Harold Pinter,—entertainment from 2-10 daily, $1.50, through June 23, 9 pm, Tues.-Thurs.,McCormack Place, Outer Drive at 23rd 8 and 11:15 pm Fri. and Sat., 8:30 pmStreet. Sun., $2 week-nights and Sunday; $2.50Old Town Holiday Arts Sc Crafts pri and Sat.; Playwrights at SecondFair, 14th annual outdoor fair & sale City, 1842 North Wells, AN 3-5150.of work in all media, June 8-9, from “Come Blow Your Horn,” throughnoon to dusk, auction from 2 to dusk on June 30, nightly at 7, Sun. at 6, dinnerOrleans Street, puppet shows, book preceeding play included in adm. price,stalls, refreshments, garden walks, $3.95 daily, $4.93 Fri. & Sat., closedstreet decorationsj 1800 block of Lin- Mon., Candlelight Dinner Playhouse,coin Park West Sc HJ. Orleans, between 5508 S. Archer, Summit, GI 8-2717.3U0-340 West. 75c. BU 1-1513. “Everybody Loves Op-’,” Shabbona •Oriental Institute, displaying a model Sayre Players, June 18-22, 8:30 pm.,of the Nile Valley in Egypt depicting TTieatre-on-the-lake, in-the-round, spon-the Abu Simbel Temple & the Aswan sored by the Chicago Park District, Open House. Controlled EnvironmentLaboratory of the Botany Department,5630 Ingleside Avenue, 9 am.Seminar: “Academic-PredictionTests,” Panelists: John Stalnaker,President, National Merit ScholarshipCorp.; Lyle Spencer. Science ResearchAssociates: Margaret Perry, Asso¬ciate Director of Admissions, UC;George Playe, Dean of UndergraduateStudents, UC; Center for ContinuingEducation, 1307 E. 60th, 10 am.Episcopal Holy Communion: BondChapel, 11:30 am.Colloquium: “Comparative Neuro-.anatomical Sensory Systems in Racoonand Coatimundi,” Dr. Wallace Welker,Department of Physiology, Universityof Wisconsin, Abbott 101, 3 pm.Convocation: Conferring of Degreesin Divisions of Biological and PhysicalSciences, and Schools of Business, Div¬inity, Law, Library, Medicine, SocialService, George W. Beadle, RockefellerChapel, 3 pm. Admission by ticketsonly.First Annual NCAA College DivisionTrack and Field Championships: StaggField, 4 pm.Fiftieth Reunion: Class of 1913, Quad¬rangle Club, 5 pm. —Jewish Sabbath Services and OnegShabbat: Hillel House, 7:45 pm.1963 Faculty Revels: “Impatience,or True to Type,” Mandel Hall, 8:30pm.SATURDAY. JUNE 8Breakfast for new graduates: Quad¬rangle Club, 8 am.1908 Class Breakfast: QuadrangleClub, 8:30 am.New Films about the University:“The Idea,” and “The Many Facesof Argonne,” Center for ContinuingEducation, 1307 E. 60th.Conferring of degrees in the Divi¬sions of the Humanities and SocialSciences, the School of Education, andthe College, George W. Beadle, Rocke¬feller Chapel, 10 am. Admission byticket only.Tours of Frank Lloyd Wright’s RobieHouse, 10 am and 4 pm.Emeritus Club Annual Reception, forAlumni who graduated 50 years ormore ago, Reynolds Club, 10 am.Seminar: “The Making of a Crim¬inal,” Panelists: Harold Solomon, Vis¬iting UC professor of criminal law;Reverend Hames Jones, St. Leonard'sHouse, Chicago; Frank Morrissey, Ill.Bureau of Vocational Rehabilitation,10 am.Finals, NCAA Track and Field Cham¬pionships, Stagg Field, 11:30 am.Annual All-Alumni Luncheon: Awardof alumhi medals and citations, ad¬dress by General John Gerhart, Com¬mander in Chief, North American AirDefense Command, Hutchinson Court,12:30 pm.Geography Alumni Luncheon, Quad¬rangle Club. 12:30 pm.Lecture Tour: “Fact and Fancy inAnimal Behavior,” Professor BentonGinsberg, Cobb Hall. 110, followed bytour of new College biology researchlaboratories, 2:45 pm.Lecture: “The Population Dilemma,”Phillip Hauser, UC Professor of So¬ciology, Eckhart 113, 2:45 pm.SUNDAY. JUNE 9Episcopal Sung Eucharist with Ser¬mon: Bond Chapel, 9:30 am.Lutheran Commuuion: Taylor Chapel.9 am.Roman Catholic Mass, 8:30, 10, 11,12 am, Calvert House. TAhSAM-YNNCHINESE • AMERICANRESTAURANTSpecializing InCANTONESE ANDAMERICAN DISHESOPEN DAILY11 A.M. to 9:30 P.M.ORDERS TO TAKE OUT1318 East 63rd St. BU 8-9018 3 PIZZAS FOR PRICE OF 2Free UC DeliveryTERRY'S PIZZAMl 3-40451518 E. 63rd StreetHARPERLIQUOR STORE1514 E. 53rd StreetFull line of Imported and domesticwines, liquors and beer at lowestprices.FREE DELIVERYPHONE ^_ A - — 1233FA 4=}jgOn Campus withMwSholman(Author of “I Was a Teen-age Dwarf", “Th* ManyLoves of Dobtei-age iJwae Gillis”, etc.)TILL WE MEET AGAINWith today’s installment I complete my ninth year of writingcolumns in your college newspaper for the makers of MarlboroCigarettes. In view of the occasion, I hope I may lie forgivenif I get a little misty.These nine years have passed like nine minutes. In fact,I would not believe that so much time has gone by except thatI have iny wife nearby as a handy reference. When I startedcolunming for Marlboros, she was a slip of a girl—supple as areed and fair as the sunrise. Today she is gnarled, lumpy, andgiven to biting the postman. Still, I count myself lucky. Mostof my friends who were married at the same time have wiveswho chase cars all day. I myself have never had this troubleand I attribute my good fortune to the fact that I have neverstruck my wife with my hand. I have always used a folded****"*!lfs & w Md kmlumtinewspaper—even throughout the prolonged newspaper strikein New York. During this period I had the airmail edition ofthe Manchester Guardian flown in daily from England. I mustconfess, however, that it was not entirely satisfactory. The air¬mail edition of the Guardian is printed on paper_so light andflimsy that it makes little or no impression when one slaps one’swife. Mine, in fact, thought it was some kind of game, and toreseveral pairs of my trousers.But I digress. I was saying what a pleasure it has been towrite this column for the last nine years for the makers ofMarlboro Cigarettes—a fine group of men, as anyone who hassampled their wares would suspect. They are as mellow as theaged tobaccos they blend. They are as pure as the white cellulosefilter they have devised. They are loyal, true, companionable,and constant, and I have never for an instant wavered in mybelief that some day they will pay me for these last nine years.But working for the makers of Marlboro has not been thegreatest of my pleasures over the last nine years. The chiefsatisfaction has been writing for you—the college populationof America. It is a rare and lucky columnist who can find anaudience so’full of intelligence and verve. I would like verymuch to show my appreciation by asking you ail over to myhouse for tea and oatmeal cookies, but there is no telling howmany of you my wife would bite.For many of you this is the last year of college. This is espe¬cially true for seniors. To those I extend my heartfelt wishesthat you will find the world outside a happy valley. To juniorsI extend my heartfelt wishes that you will become seniors. Tosophomores I extend my heartfelt wishes that you will becomejuniors. To freshmen I extend my heartfelt wishes that you willbecome sophomores. To those of you going on into graduateschool I extend my heartfelt wishes that you will marry money.To all of you let me say one thing: during the year I havebeen frivolous and funny during the past year—possibly lessoften than I have imagined—but the time has now come forsome serious talk. Whatever your status, whatever your plans,I hope that success will attend your ventures.Stay happy. Stay loose. V1063 Max SbulmanHe, the makers of Marlboro Cigarettes, confess to more thana few nervous momenta during the nine gears we have spon¬sored this uninhibited and uncensored column. But in themain, we have had fun and so, we hope, have you. Let usodd our good wishes to Old Max’a stay happy; stay loose* 4-1- - V' BLACK LITE LOUNGE6222 S. WesternRush St. of the South Sideyet"Poor Playboy's Club"Jazz Entertainment DancingFri., Sat., San. 38th ANNUALPHI SIGMA DELTASTRAWBERRYFESTIVALSATURDAY. JUNE 8thAFTER THE I.F. SINGDANCING, LIVE ENTERTAINMENTPLENTY OF ICE CREAM & STRAWBERRIESAdmission 50c 5625 WocdlawnRobie House Tours, $1.00Tl,MIC MIG A MMl HOMY FOMINS JtAMNI MOM Ml•MON WIUIS HOMY SCHMIOtR Special student rate of $1.00 ineffect during this engagementonly (except Saturday night).PIZZA — PASTA — DANCINGBEER ON DRAFTTHE PLACE TO GOON RUSH STREET900 N. RUSH STREET MO 4-8600CINEMA THEATERChicago Ave. at MichiganNow Playing"DAVID and LISA"Nominated for 2Academy Awards“BEST AMERICANFILM OF 1962“TIME MAG.Winner San Francisco andVenice Film FestivalsBEST PICTURE.ACTOR AND ACTRESSStudent Rates $1Daily Except Saturday UponPresentation of ID CardsRANDELL.HARPER SQUAREBEAUTY AND COSMETIC SALONOPEN EVENINGS5700 HARPER AVE. \ FA 4-2097MRS. BILLIE TREGANZA, PROP."EXTRAORDINARY”Claudia Cassidy, Chicago TribuneHAROLD PINTER’S“THE CARETAKER”[PERF: 9 P.M. Tues., Wed., Thurs. & 8:30 P.M. Sun.8 & 11 P.M. Friday & SaturdayADM. $2.00 week nights & Sun.$2.50 Friday & SaturdaySPECIAL STUDENT DISCOUNT — 50c(exc. Sat.)For reservations phone AN 3-5150PLAYWRIGHTS ATSECOND CITY1842 N. Wells, Old Town AdvertisementTIKI TOPICSAlolia Nui (Hearty Greatings)Show her you love her.Treat her to a wonderful eveningof theatre, dinner and cocktails.A mouthwatering complete dinnerof French Fried Shrimp,Golden Fried Chicken or Beef,and all at theenticing price of $1,95.AND THEN right upstairs to ahilarious evening at the“Last Stage”, a comedy thathas everyone talking. Real livelegitimate theatre right here inHyde Park. How about that ? ?And afterwards back toCIRALS, HOUSE OF TIKI1510 Hyde Park Blvd.for the grand climax,with the perfect drink.RememberCIRALS. HOUSE OF TIKI andTHE LAST STAGE1510 Hyde Park Blvd.Kitchen open 11:00 4.M. to 3:00 A.M.No Food Wednesday■■■■■■■■■■■■■■■■■■ Of ARBORN AT DIVISIONVittorio GassmanIOYE fliyoigRCENy“An ingenious and thoroughlycaptivating romp ! — Alperf, So* Review Chicago’s most unusualtheatre, offering onlythe finest foreign anddomestic films.STUDENTSTake advantage of thespecial discount avail¬able to you. 90^ any dayexcept Saturday. ShowI.D. card to the coshiac.. u \.c Faculty report studies Woodlawn area, urges UC actionby Job* T. William*City N«ws EditorTwo members of the UC facultyrecently advocated the establishmentof a University Center for UrbanStudies which would transcend de¬partmental lines in search of'solutions forthe contemporary society’s major problems.Irving Spergel and Richard Mundy, mem¬bers of the faculty of the School of SocialService Administration, made the proposalin a report dealing with the social condi¬tions in the East Woodlawn community.The study, which was financed by theFord Foundation, has been distributed toseveral members of tbe UC faculty as wellas to community and governmental bodies.The reaction has been primarily favorable,according to Spergel.The study had four major aims:(1) To delineate the significant socialfactors which structure and influence thepatterns of life of the East Woodlawnpopulation.(2) To provide the significant elementsof a design for social problem preventionand the development of human resourcesin the woodlawn area.(3) To indicate general areas of researchand training which may be undertakenalong with programs of opportunity andservice.(4) To present information and ideas,some better developed than others, as aguide for significant social concern andinvolvement by the School of Social Serv¬ice Administration, the departments of So¬ciology and Psychology, and other schools,divisions, and departments of the Univer*sity of Chicago.The study cited census figures whichgave the community’s population as 60,-030; more than eighty-six per cent of thepopulation is Negro. The educational levelof the community’s residents was low; theaverage level achievement of persons overtwenty-five years was 9.6 years ofschool.The income and occupation levels of thepeople are generally lower class. Wide¬spread separation, divorce transiency anddeteriorated, overcrowded housing werefound in the community.“These population and housing attributesof East Woodlawn strongly indicated thepresence of serious social problems. How¬ever, characteristics of the East Woodlawnpopulation appeared to be typical of thenon-white population as a whole in Chica¬go. The problems of the East Woodlawncommunity were not unique in the city,”according to the report.Spergel and Mundy found that crime inthe community was considerably higherthan in most sectors of the city; Wood¬lawn is located in one of the four mostcrime-ridden police districU, accorrding tothe study.In addition, unemployment rates for EastWoodlawn residents, as well as for non¬whites in the city in general, were aboutthree times as high as those for whites*The waste of youth power and poten¬tial was described as “fantastic." an esti¬mated 50 to 70 per cent of Hie youths inEast Woodlawn and similar areas are outof school and unemployed, according to thestudy.Finally the breakdown in social, edu¬cational, economic and housing spheres ofexistence was matched by the public healthbreakdown manifested in high rates ofveneral disease, tuberculosis, accidentalpoisoning of children, infant mortality, il-legitamacy, dental decay and vision decayon the part of children," the report con¬tinued.In relating the problems of the com¬munity to the patterns of racial discrimi¬nation, Spergel and Mundy concluded thatthe Negro has been “subjected to discri¬mination and excluded from participationin the life of the white community sosystematically and completely that hisproblems are virtaully different in kindfrom those of other minority groups.“Every type of damage which the hu-man personality can sustain in a life ex¬perience marked by conflict and frustra¬tion becomes evident in the mass of thelower class Negro population.”The study lists four forces which “makefor crime deliquency and norm-violatingbehavior:(1) The values of an urban society withgenerally unattainable aspiration for statusand prestige.(2) The inadequacies of family lifeamong Negroes overcome by a tradition ofchronic social, cultural and economic pov¬erty.(3) The special problems which comewith membership in a minority group whichis still systematically discriminated against.(4) The highly destructive effects of re¬Joseph H. AaronConnecticut MutualLife InsuranceProtection135 S. LaSalle SLMl 3-5986 RA 6-1060 sidential segregation which intensify allexisting problems.The community groups in East Wood¬lawn take positions “around or betweenthe policy poles of the two major powergroups: The Woodlawn Organization(TWO) and the South East Chicago Com¬mission, (SECC) according to the study.“TWO, supported by groups inside aswell as by some groups outside the areahas developed a militant social action pro¬gram based on the idea of “self - determi¬nation," particularly in relation to socialand physical planning,” the report stated-“SECC, representing Hie interests of theUniversity of Chicago, and concerned withserious blight and disorder in the «EastWoodlawn area, has been particularly con¬cerned with building code enforcement andcrime control in the area abutting theUniversity of Chicago campus,” accordingto the study.“SECC and TWO have been at logger¬heads over plans for physical redevelop¬ment of the Woodlawn area.”The local schools are greatly overcrowd¬ed and, as a result of the Board of Educa¬tion’s “neighborhood school policy, theyexist in a condition of de facto segrega¬tion, the report continued.“The relationship between the schoolsand the community has meen impeded bythe development of two kinds of ‘distance.’Vertical or class distance constitutes acommunication barrier in which parentsfeel that the school is not giving theirchildren what they need. Frustration isfelt both by the middle class orientedteacher who perceives his students as ‘un¬ to attract older teen-agers and adults whohave previously had “negative school ex¬perience.” The school should be organizedand staffed by the Board of Educationwith assistance from other groups- Federalfunds, on a limited basis may be obtainedfor such purposes, according to the report.(5)Teacher-training programs in Wood¬lawn should include exposure to aspects ofNegro culture and familiarization with par¬ticular techniques and attitAdes required tocommunicate with and effectively to teachculturally deprived people.EmploymentFederal planning and funds should beused to develop new employment opportu¬nities for marginal workers. This programshould proceed on a regional or city-widebasis. New ways of subsidizing business, oncondition that marginal workers be em¬ployed and trained, should be found. Anew and permanent form of a Works Pro¬gress Administration will have to assurecontinued employment of marginal work¬ers.Service*Several new service programs “to facili¬tate the utilization of opportunity systemby socially and culturally handicapped per¬sons,” were advocated.(1) A Social Health Services Centerwhich would provide referal informationand guidance for a wide range of social,economic, legal and medical problems.(2) School social services (group workand casework) in conjuction with the va¬rious school enrichment programs shouldbe established.(3) Social service and vocational coun*Photo by CassThree youthful residents of Woodlawn.educable’ and by the students whose homeand community experience has not attunedthem to either the content or the form oftheir classroom material.(2) Local citizens feel that “all decisionsare made downtown” and the central ad.ministration does not care for ‘our kids.’The prevailing feeling, manifested in hosti¬lity and mass protests by local organiza¬tions, is that whatever the Board of Edu¬cation does to alleviate the school situa¬tion in East Woodlawn only confirms thesecond class status of the Negro residentsof the area.The study concluded with proposals fora Woodlawn community development pro¬gram;HousingStaged construction of low and mid¬dle income housing with provisions forrelocation in other areas of the city. Un¬used commercial and industrial structuresshould be cleared first, followed by hous.ing which has deteriorated to the extentthat rehabilitation is impossible.Strict enforcement of the building codesshould be undertaken quickly. Relocationshould provide for new housing no worse,preferrebly better than that currently pos¬sessed by persons required to move. Inte¬gration of all-white communities by reloca¬tion of Woodlawn Negroes should pro¬ceed “under such conditions which do notlead to rapid or mass evaluation of the‘old community’.”Education(1) The existing educational structuresshould be improved. Educational opportu¬nities should be planned on a regional, asopposed to a neighborhood, basis. Theneighborhood concept should be abandoned,if necessary, or at least significant excep¬tions to it should be made “in order thatthe basic right of full optimal access toeducational opportunities be provided toall children.”(2) Special cultural and social enrich¬ment programs should he developed forpre-school and early elementary gradechildren in Woodlawn. (The nursery schoolproject developed by professor of psycho¬logy and sociology Fred Strodtheck and thetutoring projects instituted by UC stu¬dents were cited as model programs).(3) Special work-study programs, gearedto the needs of potential drop-outs shouldbe further developed at the local highschool. Intensive training, leading to speci¬fic employment possibilities, should he cre¬ated or expanded.(4) A new educational Institution, anAdult Education Development Center,should be created with a flexible program soling units should be established in theAdult Education Development center andin those industries, businesses and publicagencies developing employment projectsdealing with marginal workers.(4) A street club worker unit should bedeveloped to deal with gangs and delin¬quent groups.(5) Existing organizations should behelped through consultation and subsidiza¬tion of The Woodlawn Opportunity andService Council to strengthen, improve,and expand particular programs to bettermeet the needs of the East Woodlawn pop¬ulation.(6) A major public general hospital fa¬cility and mobile diagnostic and educationalunits should be established to serve thesouth side of Chicago. Private hospitalsshould be encouraged, and supportedthrough subsidy, to expand their facilitiesand to make them available to low incomeresidents of the South Side*(7) The existing block club programin the community should be expanded. Theblock club should become a major unit ofself government and self-help. It shouldbecome a means for the democratic partici¬pation of people on each block in thepolicy decisions of agencies which affecttheir daily social living. Individual organi¬zations should function as units of a largerassociation or associations of block organi¬zations. The guiding principle of block or¬ganization sholud be creativity, flexibility,and independence of program along 'withinformality, simplicity and rationaliza¬tion of operating procedures.OrganizationThe report cites three failures in the or¬ganizational structure of the community;lack of communication between the variousagencies, lack of concern on the part of theagencies for the needs of low incomegroups and an absence of democratic par¬ticipation in decision-making processes oflocal governmental bodies.Spergel and Mundy propose the estab¬lishment of the Woodlawn Opportunity andService Council, a special city governmen¬tal authority, to set major objectives, de¬termine basic policies, and develop key pro¬grams for the improvement of living con¬ditions of the residents of the community.For the effective functioning of th«Woodlawn Opportunity end Service Coun¬cil, existing public and voluntary agencieamay need voluntarily and systematically torestructure patterns of service and even torelinquish some degree of constitutionalautonomy.The new body should Include on it»policy making board and various commit¬ tees representatives from all the n\%jjpublic agencies, as well as from the important local and city-wide voluntary agenciesand local block organizations.UC * Role“The University, with its wealth of fa,cilities, research and training staff, af)f'with its traditional interest in urban af.fairs, can be a vast resource in the implementation of a Woodlawn communityplan,” according to the report.“The East Woodlawn area can deriv«much benefit through collaboration withthe University for the development mdtesting of many new ideas and pro;r<,mtfor community improvement. A great op,portnuity awaits the University if it canmobilize its research and training resourcesacross school lines to function as a Centerfor Urban Studies and Training,” the studycontinued*The three basic types of programs en¬visioned for the Center are: fundamentalurban research, applied action and evalua¬tion research, and training and curriculunsdevelopment.The specific types of programs t<> hedeveloped by the Center may be describedas follows:(1) Demonstration and Evaluation:Demonstration of new types of social service, legal, medical, and educational programs in East Woodlawn should be conducted. The community should be drawinto planning of action programs whichwould test radically new approaches to th«provision of opportunities, services, anddevelopment of administrative patternsThe impact or effect of existing, and tobe developed, opportunities and service- onfamily patterns, employment, delinquency,health, morale, and housing should be measured.An attempt should be made to evaluatethe effects of different types of adminis¬trative arrangement for the conduct of opportunity or service programs.(2) Basic Research: Basic notions inthe social, political, economic, biological,and psychological sciences in such area*as perceptions and attitudes, group and or¬ganizational processes, child rearing pat_terns, political action, lower class culture,employment, mental breakdown, geneticfactors in relation to social, psychologicaland medical problems, might he tested inthe Woodlawn community.Channels of communication among re¬searchers and action personnel must bekept open in the various research project Ji *and these projects should be optimally aintegrated. *(3) Training: The Center should co¬ordinate the training of students in newapproaches to resolution of urban prob¬lems, especially in the areas of education,medical, legal, psychological, and socialservice to lower class persons.Resident venters for faculty, students,community leaders and citizens should bestablished in East Woodlawn intion with the Center. Cross fertiliideas and creative experiences in loweclass urban living could be offered to par¬ticipants of the Center. University ownedhomes and residences for faculty and stu¬dents should be provided and interspersedthroughout Hie East Woodlawn community.On a systematic basis these residence*should become focal points for University!; snoumin conjunct itilization iffys in lowen r\and community interaction and planning.(4) Curriculum Development: The Ce«-fter •hould take vigorouc responsibility forthe development of published material* *tall levels of usefulness to citizens, profes¬sionals, adults and children.Although the Center would serve initial¬ly as the research and training arm of th**Woodlawn Opportunity and Service Couitjfcii, its ultimate aim should be the training^ \of personnel to cope with the problems or^low income communities generally and thedevelopment of studies bearing on all as¬pects of urban affairs, especially on lowerclass life. The program of the Centershould be conducted by a multidisciplinarystaff.JO • CHICAGO MAROON • Juno 7, 1963 X*