THE UNIVERSITY OFCHICAGO 0 EECOIDAN OFFICIAL PUBLICATION ISSUED BY THE OFFICE OF THE SECRETARY OF FACULTIES VOLUME II, NUMBER 5REPORT ON THE OPERATIONS OFTHE UNIVERSITY OF CHICAGOLIBRARY FOR THE FISCAL YEAR1966-67*September 6, 1967On June 30, 1967 the official count of library holdings reached 2,606,431 volumes, reflecting additions,before adjustments for book losses and withdrawals,of some 126,513 volumes — an increase of approximately 3.2 per cent over the gross additions ofthe prior year, and an increase of 4.1 per cent inthe size of the Library.The exceptional progress of the past two yearsin strengthening the teaching and research resources of the University continued in 1966-67.The Library was able, in general, to acquire mostof the needed current publications in most of themajor areas of sustained University interest, withthe exception of a limited number of major reprint sets, some other very costly publicationsand some publications in fields where demandswere exceptionally heavy. The Library's acquisition of out-of-print materials continued on a verysubstantial scale.Mrs. Helen A. Regenstein and Miss Ruth Regen-stein continued their extraordinary generosity inproviding the funds for a major collection of rarebooks in English and American literature. Someremarkable additions were made to this collectionduring the year and are detailed, along with otheraccounts of acquisitions, in the second section ofthis report.Also noteworthy were the bequests of LillianAlberta Wells, Class of 1914, and William S. Blum,Class of 1927, also described later. The Libraryreceived substantial book fund gifts during theyear, including $4,137 for the Library Commemorative Fund. Personal gifts of $100 or more weremade to the Commemorative or other book fundsby Hortense Friedman, Robert Wadsworth, ArthurBaer, Paul Russell, S. Alden Perrine, John Gunther,Dr. Jan Micka, The Jewish Students ScholarshipFund in memory of David Horwich, Mrs. Carol 0.* This text has been somewhat edited and abridgedfrom the original report. CONTENTS/ May 3, 19681 Report on the Operations of The University of Chicago Library for the Fiscal Year1966-671 7 In Memoriam17 Student Loan Programs at The Universityof Chicago18 Addition to Student Involvement Report18 Tuition Increases for Graduate School ofBusiness and Extension Division18 Correction on Laboratory School Tuition18 Advisory Report Committees19 Faculty Advisory Committee to the Registrar19 Directors, Department and CommitteeChairmen and Deans2 1 Calendar of EventsSelle, Joseph H. Schaffner, Philip D. Sang, Mitchell Sniegowski, Lillian Swawite, John Gallagher,Frederick Helmers, Lawrence Lee, Robert B. Lewy,Henry Bruere and the Gustav Schirmer MedicalBook Fund from Ethel Taurog. The generous giftunder the John P. Orendorff Trust will be covered in next year's report.The Library and the University deeply appreciate the support of these friends of the Library.A list of the names of these and other donors offunds and materials is attached as Appendix A.OPERATIONSThe following table summaries some key measures of the Library's expenditures and other operations for the past five years. It will be noted thatthe ratio of total expenditures allocated for booksand binding continued to match, at 35.5 per cent,the high level set last year. There are a numberof factors that may require some reduction in thisratio in the years immediately ahead, on the assumption that the Library budget will not increaseas rapidly in the next several years as it has recently.1FIVE-YEAR ANALYSIS OF KEY LIBRARY STATISTICSaPer cent increaseItems 1962-63 1963-64 1964-65 1965-66 1966-67 in 1966-67 over1962-63 1965-66Book and serial expenditures. .. $ 436,418 $ 483,948 $ 603,614 $ 756,557 $ 872,721 100.0 15.4Binding expenditures 81,357 86,540 89,034 147,455 172,286 111.8 16.9Subtotal (517,775) (570,488) (692,648) (904,012) (1,045,007) 101.8 15.6Salary expenditures 1,071,245 1,150,921 1,230,173 1,377,797 1,558,321 45.5 13.1Expenditures for retirement,supplies and all other purposes 141,826 170,653 187,765 265,6l5d 330,042d 132. 7d 24.3dTotal Library expendituresa $1,730,846 $1,892,062 $2,110,586 $2,547,424 $2,933,370 69.5 15.2Volumes in Library 2,271,450 2,333,913 2,406,142 2,504,250 2,606,431 14.7 4.1Gross volumes added 90,609 103,595 109,390 122,560 126,513 39.6 3.2Current serial titles received .. . 20,767 23,668 25,209 27,338 29,257 40.9 7.0Volumes bound 31,406 33,868 35,463 52,821 65,039 107.1 23.1Titles catalogued 41,281 47,126 47,911 55,035 56,719 37.4 3.1Recorded circulation 838,252c 931,785c l,000,950c 1,091,771° 947,454b *> bAverage weekly scheduled hoursof public service per unit ... . 57.8 61.5 62.5 65.2 68.7 18.9 5.4Approximate staff size in F.T.E.(full-time equivalent) 250.7 255.0 264.5 287.2 306.7 22.3 6.8Ratio of books and binding expense to total expenditures . . 29 . 9% 30 . 2% 32 . 8% 35 .4% 35 . 5% 18.7 0Ratio of books and binding expense to salary expenditures. . 48.3% 49.6% 56.3% 65.2% 66.7% 38.1 2.3Gross income of photoduplica-department $101,757 $113,778 $145,028 $175,485 $225,828 121.9 28.7a The figures for expenditures shown include unrestricted, endowed and restricted expenditures as well as Library expenditures made on non-library budgets. They are not reduced for expenditures based-upon credit adjustments. For these reasons the figures are not in agreement with theofficial summary of Library expenditures made by the Comptroller, but are shown as a clearer indication of total Library costs. The Comptrollergives total Library expenditures as $2,812,268 for 1966-67.b Excludes renewals for the first time.c Owing to changes in methods of counting circulation, length of circulaton loan periods and related factors, figures from year to year are notcomparable.d Major increase largely associated with automation restricted grant funds.The primary relationship between academic excellence and the quality and scope of the support-ting collections has long been recognized, and almost all major universities have responded by attempting to provide for their students and facultythe benefits of access to major library resources.But even with very large increases in the budgetsand acquisition programs of very large universitiesit is evident that current needs in most institutionshave been growing more rapidly than available resources for support.While not a simple panacea, it is more and moreappreciated that certain kinds of research materialscan be successfully shared and that through suchsharing the growth pressures on individual university libraries may be somewhat relieved at thesame time that their resource base is significantlyenlarged. Certainly not all kinds of research materials can be used or provided in this way, butenough can be to make the long-range implicationsof cooperative resource development important.Among the relevant criteria are these: (1) theremust be positive assurance of access — that is, access must not be a courtesy to be granted, ortaken away, by a sister institution; (2) it mustbe relatively easy to identify the needed title ormaterial by means of bibliographies, citations, indexes, abstracts or other directly available tools;(3) the material must be made available reasonablyquickly in response to a request; (4) the frequencyof use per item over reasonably long periods oftime must be predictably low, and (5) the sharedresources should have a reasonable prospect oflong-range research usefulness.The Center for Research Libraries offers a national potential for greatly augmented service alongthese lines, and at least three developments duringthe year have been important in this connection.First, the membership of the Center has becomegenuinely national — indeed international — reachinga total of 29 institutions, including such universities as Harvard, the University of California atLos Angeles, Princeton, Cornell, the University ofBritish Columbia and the University of Toronto.Second, it was found that funds under the HigherEducation Act that provide federal matching forthe cooperative acquisition of cooperatively heldresearch resources on a three-to-one basis wereavailable only to degree-granting- institutions. Thisrather severely limited the implementation of amajor acquisition program that the Center hadhoped to start. It is understood that the defect inthe legislation making the Center ineligible fordirect support will be changed during the currentsession of Congress. Third, the National AdvisoryCommission on Libraries, the American Council ofLearned Societies and other groups have beengiving a substantial amount of attention to thepossibilties of cooperative access to library resources in the allocation of federal support.The University Library thus far has avoidedsome, but certainly not all, of the problems growing out of the present shortage of librarians andexperienced, supporting personnel that seem, withincreasing frequency, to be plaguing many university libraries and other organizations. In an effortto provide greater staff continuity, the Library hasbeen increasing the overall percentage of staff provided by nonstudent clerical personnel. In 1960-61 students provided 31.9 per cent of all staff hoursused; this ratio had declined to 26.0 per cent in1965-66, but even so, the student staff turnoverrate for the year was about 123 per cent. The rateof turnover in nonstudent, nonprofessional personnel, while not nearly so high, continued to increase, as it has in the past several years. The Library has also experienced delays in filling severalmajor professional positions with adequately experienced staff members during the past year.Planning for the effective operation of the Regen-stein Library, along with heavier operating loads,a larger staff, several new and anticipated Librarydepartments, the need for improved staff-readercommunication, the program of systematic analysisof library operations, and more complex budgetingand fiscal problems, combine to suggest that anumber of changes in the administrative organization of the work of the Library will be needed,along with some increase in the size of the administrative staff, in the years ahead. Two steps inthe former direction were put into effect on July1, 1967 when administrative responsibility for theEducation, Business and Economics, and Map Libraries was assigned to J. Donald Thomas, AssistantDirector for Services in the General Library, inorder to begin the detailed planning for their transfer and future operations within the Regenstein Library. Stanley E. Gwynn, Assistant Director forServices in Departmental Libraries, was asked at the same time to take responsibility, with the helpof Jean McClelland of the General Reading Collection, for planning the acquisition programneeded to build up the Undergraduate Library collection. A small committee of faculty members ofthe College faculty has been invited to advise theLibrary on acquisition policies for the future Undergraduate Library.In the face of difficult starring problems in several areas and growing problems of space, we wantto record our appreciation to the Library staff forsustaining in most parts of the Library a very satisfactory level of Library service and respondingat the same time to many special University needsor problems. The roster of professional changes inthe staff appears as Appendix B.One long-range response to certain kinds of critical data handling problems, reader access problems and needs, and certain kinds of staffing problems is the Library's automation and systemsanalysis project. In spite of substantial hardwareand software problems, and a more ambitiousschedule than a devoted Library and ComputerCenter staff could meet, there was much accomplished during the year. The following list coversa part of the project development reported byCharles Payne, Systems Development Librarian,during the year.1. An on-line computer system for Libraryterminal operation was developed, complete withcomputer operating system software, Library supervisor and command language, and software to allow simultaneous, shared-computer use with theManiac III operation.2. The design of a bibliographic data handlingsystem was completed, including definitions of allelements, tagging codes, input processing design,editing methods, record formats, record distribution, output formats and arrays and basic file organization.3. Programming to handle input, processing andsome output of bibliographic data was developed.The catalog card formatting and printing programsare now partially operational.4. A paper tape, two-charge-card, book-pocket-label typing operation was implemented and inoperation most of the year, based upon a singletyping operation.5. A large amount of preliminary analysis anddesign work was completed on circulation operations. The National Science Foundation supportedthe project effort for 1966-67 in the amount of$118,000 and as the fiscal year closed, announced3that it would continue support for 1967-69 witha further grant of $334,000.The present computer, shared primarily withthe Maniac computer, will be upgraded from anIBM 360/30 to a 360/40 around October 1, 1967.The long-range expectation is that Library operations will, as soon as technically feasible, be transferred on a shared time basis to the University's360/50 after that equipment becomes available.While operational implementation of these systemshas proved more difficult than anticipated, we areof the view that some critical long-range answersto many data processing and reader-access problems of large research libraries are most likely tobe found in such integrated, computer-based datahandling systems.Adequate space for books and operations is increasingly critical. During the summer of 1967, amajor staff effort was made to complete a furthershift of all of the Harper-Wieboldt-Classics stackcollections, the complete Business and Economicscollection, Swift, Rosenwald and several othermajor collections. Throughout the Library, freestanding shelving was added wherever it seemedpossible — in some instances at the sacrifice of smallamounts of reading space. The objectives of thesetwo measures were to try to reduce some of thepresent overcrowding of the book collection, provide as much space as possible to accommodatethe orderly growth of the collections for the nexttwo to three years, and thus to end the systematicand fairly costly effort to select and transfer furthermaterials to storage wherever possible. At the endof the year a cumulative total of some 206,629volumes had been selected and transferred to storage. These volumes continued to show a satisfactorily low rate of use — implying little inconveniencefor readers.The design of the Regenstein Library had beensubstantially completed by the end of 1965, withthe exception of the lighting design, resolution ofcertain air treatment problems and several otherkey technical questions. Most of 1966 was, in consequence, used by the architects for completion ofworking drawings and specifications, joint cost-reduction reviews with representatives of theTishman Construction Company, and preparationof bidding documents. The drawings and specifications were submitted to the U.S. Office of Education for required approval at the end of 1966, andthe University was advised that the drawings andspecifications had been approved three monthslater. During this period, further efforts were made to reduce costs without reducing the basic scopeof the building — which would have required anentirely new submission to the government. Afterthe U.S. Office of Education had approved thebidding procedures, final bid documents were prepared, and sealed bids were opened on approximately 37 separate trades on June 27, July 6 andJuly 11. After analysis and further clearance withthe U.S. Office of Education on certain bid problems, a new budget was prepared in July andAugust of 1967. It was submitted to the Board ofTrustees' Budget Committee by Mr. Harrell andMr. Lee on August 21, 1967. As soon as the finalclearances by U.S.O.E., building permits, contractacceptances, etc., can be arranged, excavation, construction of caissons and dewatering will begin —perhaps as early as mid-September.Programs for new libraries for Art and Music,to be housed in the buildings for those two departments, were prepared during the year, along witha detailed program for the central Science Library.Priority for the Science Library project has beenreduced pending a closer review of the University'sgeneral fiscal situation, final underwriting costs ofthe Regenstein and progress of the University'sfinancial Campaign. It is hoped that physical planning for the Undergraduate Library, for which aprogram was also drafted, can be started soon.Access to a large scholarly library ought to be,at least part of the time, an intellectually rewardingand stimulating experience. Happily, this is, atleast part of the time, just the way it is. But sometimes it is undeniably a frustrating experience: theneeded book is in someone else's hands — who sometimes declines to bring it back promptly; thewanted material is scattered in several locations;the Library seems not to have ordered an "obvious"title; the wanted book appears not to be on theshelf and apparently is not charged out to anotherreader; the volume is at the bindery, etc. With2,600,000 volumes in many different locations, arecorded circulation load of about 1,000,000 itemsa year — and unrecorded use that would probablyat least double or triple the total — and with morethan 10,000 eager students, faculty and staff, it isunlikely that perfect responses can be achievedevery time for every reader. Furthermore, genuinely successful use of the resources of so large alibrary, except for very simple needs, requires someknowledge and skill with bibliography, indexes,abstracts, catalog filing arrangements, and a varietyof other tools. At least some readers are sometimes frustrated because they are not familiar with4these kinds of tools and have not allowed themselves sufficient lead time to use them effectively.A substantial effort during the past year hasgone into identification of the key issues that maybe producing more than their fair share of readerfrustration. The review must deal with such matters as book processing speeds and priorities, speedof suppliers of material, speed of selection operations, optimum extent of duplication, circulationpolicies and procedures, faculty use of reservedbook procedures, rates of response to recall notices,etc.The analysis of some of these matters oftenshows a Library response that seems better thanhearsay evidence might lead one to expect. Forexample, an extended test of book availability inHarper Reserve revealed that 93 per cent of requested titles were available and delivered to thereader when asked for; 5 per cent were on reserve, but all copies were charged out at the timeof the request, and 2 per cent of the requesteditems were not on reserve because of late facultysubmission of reserve lists, out-of-print status ofthe title, slow dealer delivery or other reasons.On the other hand, a related study revealed thatsome 35 per cent of the titles that were placed onreserve in response to faculty requests were notused at all. This is a costly diversion of staff timeand book fund money. Similarly, problems for theLibrary in securing prompt return of material requested by another reader, after the original facultyborrower has held the item for a (stipulated period,are a source of undeniable frustration to some readers. An analysis of this matter in Harper Circulationrevealed that it took 14 days to secure the returnof 92 per cent of the recalled items. The remaining8 per cent were held by only 58 faculty membersin 24 different departments. A two-week delay inthe return of some items may greatly impair thework of a student or another faculty member. Thecontinued collection and analysis of pertinent dataand the effort to devise Library responses that willimprove reader access are expected to require asubstantial amount of staff effort for an indefiniteperiod.RESOURCESThe following section is an effort to list, orsummarize briefly, some of the acquisition trends,specific titles of unusual importance, and othermatters relating to the work of the year in strengthening the Library's teaching and research resources.The summary, prepared by Stanley Gwynn, is based upon some 29 separate and much more detailedreports from departmental librarians and bibliographers.Both the nature of the Library's acquisitionsand the level of expenditures were clearly influencedby at least nine factors: (a) continuing increasesin the prices of books; (b) growth in the quantityof material being published; (c) appearance ofmany new, expensive bibliographies; (d) shrinkingsupply of out-of-print titles ; (e) physical deterioration of paper and bindings of older volumes; *(f)flood of expensive reprints; (g) the University'sinvolvement in new fields of study requiring majorresources; (h) the need to extend the depth of ourcollections in a variety of fields, and (i) the needto acquire a significantly greater number of duplicates of titles in heavy demand.In the sections that follow, considerable emphasis will be given to the Library's efforts to maintainand strengthen its bibliographical resources. Thereason for this emphasis grows out of the obviousinability of any university library to have on itsown shelves all the relevant material on every subject of possible interest. Thus there is a criticalneed to make available to our own faculty, students and staff a bibliographical apparatus so comprehensive that we can be reasonably certain thatpertinent materials, wherever and whenever published, will not inadvertently be unknown.A. Purchases1. The SciencesIn 1966, Chemical Abstracts abstracted 216,746titles in the field of chemistry — the publications ofroughly one year; in 1946, it abstracted only38,753 titles. In 1966, Mathematical Reviews published 2,900 pages of reviews of research in mathematics; in 1946, it published 621 pages of reviews.These indicators of the increased rate of scientific publishing and literature coverage (559 per centfor chemistry and 467 per cent for mathematicsin a 20-year period) suggest the difficulties of thescholar who must keep up with the literature ofhis narrow speciality. They also dramatically underline the problems of the Library, which must keepup with the literature of many specialities, selectwhat is most significant for the work of the University, and demonstrate the need for the substantialfunds required for such acquisition. That the costsare substantial can be illustrated by the investment required in 1966-67 for one title alone,Chemical Abstracts, which in this year of the regular, five-year collective Index cost the Library a5total of $8,200 for the four departmental librariesthat must have this indispensable guide. In otherfields, too, indexing and abstracting services continue to increase regularly in coverage and relentlessly in cost.In chemistry, the book fund allotment was spentlargely (41 per cent) for reference works andspectral compilations and for monographs directlyrelevant to the research needs of the department.Seven new journal titles were added, includingChemical Physics Letters and Current Contents —Chemical Sciences, a new weekly "awareness"service featuring structural formulas and a computer-constructed Permuterm index.The steady growth of the bio-medical collectionsemphasized guides to the literature, indexing andabstracting services and new journal titles. Monographic additions ranged from Miles 's UnderwaterMedicine to Colin's Physiologie du Cosmonaute.There was a continuing emphasis on the social andeconomic aspects of medicine and a steadily increasing number of titles on the problems ofaging.In mathematics, Eckhart Library continued togrow most rapidly in the three principal divisionsof modern mathematics — algebra, analysis andtopology. In physics, substantial additions weremade in the area of quantum theory, quantummechanics and quantum statistics. A major effortwas made to review astronomy holdings, and some20 desiderata were ordered. The development ofclose cooperation with Yerkes Library in orderingmaterials in astronomy led to better coverage forboth libraries. A weakness in the area of radioastronomy was revealed and this area was strengthened. Increasing interest in cryogenics and laserphysics will require further attention in 1967-68.There were substantial expenditures for material,both current and retrospective, relating to computers. One such title was Pergamon's InternationalSeries of Monographs on Automation and Automatic Control. Our statistics collections, already impressive in range and depth, continued their orderlydevelopment. An important addition was the Proceedings of the 1963 "state-of-the-art" International Symposium on Classical and ContagiousDiscrete Distributions.Rosenwald Library was unable to meet all thedemands for publications in the geophysical sciences, but major additions were made in oceanography, hydrodynamics, geochemistry and the atmospheric sciences. One significant gap mentionedlast year was partially filled with the acquisition of the Proceedings of the fifth (1955), the eleventh(1964) and the twelfth (1966) conferences onRadar Meterology published by the AmericanMeteorological Society. It was necessary to subscribe to 45 new serials, including Earth ScienceReviews, Materials Research Bulletin and Lithologyand Mineral Resources. The increasing volume ofnew publications and the identification of weaknesses in paleontology, crystallography, hydrodynamics and vulcanology will require a substantial increase in funds for 1967-68.The Map Library supported geophysical programs by acquisition of a variety of maps, including the Mapa For est al de Espana (20 sheets and50 pages of text) ; the Carte Geologique au 2,000,000de VAfrique Occidentale; Folio 4, The AntarcticAtmosphere of the antarctic Map Folio Series, andFolio 12, Distribution of Decapod Crustacea inthe Northwest Atlantic, of the Serial Atlas of theMarine Environment, both published by the American Geographical Society.2. The Social SciencesIn the general area of the social sciences, retrospective additions exceeded those of the previousyears in all fields save anthropology, and additionsof current publications exceeded previous yearsin all fields except history. We continued to selectin depth for materials pertaining to the UnitedStates, South Asia and Western Europe, while increasing attention was paid to Africa, Latin America and Southeast Asia. Outstanding acquisitionsincluded microfilm runs of the Atlanta Constitution (1868-1924), the Charleston News and Courier(1873-1966), the Richmond Dispatch (1852-1903)and several other southern newspapers. Files of 10important Negro newspapers published in the1880's, 1890's and early 1900's were acquired insupport of current teaching and research interests. To meet the need for additional primarysource materials for American colonial history, weacquired the microfilmed files of 13 newspaperspublished in Massachusetts, Connecticut and Virginia in the eighteenth century.Lending important support to all areas in thesocial sciences was the accelerating development ofthe Documents Department. A growing collectionof statistics and guides to documents was heavilyused, and there was exceptionally heavy demandfor urban statistics. Our coverage of the Britishsessional papers was extended to include not onlythe "Command Papers" but all other "accountsand Papers" and all bills. Efforts were made to6supply the increasing demand for the reports ofgovernment-contract research in the social sciences,especially in the fields of education and manpower.To aid in identification and location of such material, we acquired three important government indexservices and the Congressional Index, a, very usefulcommercially prepared loose-leaf service.The Law Library added some 6,200 titles and16,000 volumes during the year, and in doing sofollowed its policy of acquiring all worthwhilenewly-published materials not only in traditionallaw but also in such emerging fields as internationalbusiness transactions, natural resources, urban affairs and the law of the poor. Of the 317 new serialtitles added, four will certify to the wide-rangingimpact of contemporary social-legal concerns:Clean Air News (a loose-leaf service), Land UseControls, Civil Liberties Law Review and WaterControl News (a loose-leaf service). The legislativematerials section added about 300 titles, includingthe Laws of the. Northern Territory of Australia, andnine reels of microfilm covering the laws and constitutions of the Chickasaw, the Choctaw, the Cherokee and the Creek nations. Among the court reportsand records were 14 volumes of Australasian TaxDecisions and 47 microfilm reels of the early courtrecords for 21 states, including the Illinois Recordsof Appellate Courts, 1809-1823. A survey of abibliography of French law from 1945 to ^960turned up 483 items, of which 376 were found tobe in the Library already; the remaining 107 titleswere added. Similar development occurred for Germany, Italy and the Latin American countries.The Education Library again strove to supportthe numerous programs directed to improving content and techniques of education for. the disadvantaged, adding dozens of titles in this area. Atthe same time, it made notable additions to itsestablished fields of child development, comparative education and history of education. As a consequence of persistent, world-wide solicitation, extended over a five-year period, we now have whatis possibly the only complete file of the Reportsof the World Assembly of the World Organizationfor Early Childhood Education. We also acquiredon microfilm the letters of the U.S. Commissionerof Education from 1870 to 1909 and possibly theonly copy in the United States of the Indian Journal of Education, Madras from 1897 to 1905.Three new national agencies for the stimulation ofresearch in education have already begun to affectour collecting. The U.S. Office of Education hasestablished 12 Educational Research Information Centers (ERIC) which collect educational literature and then make it available at low cost in microfiche or hard copies. The Education Library thisyear received its first shipment of 800 microfiche.The U.S.O.E. has also created 20 Regional Educational Laboratories to provide specialists, who willhasten the application of the results of educational research, and 10 Research and DevelopmentCenters on college and university campuses, each toconcentrate on research on a single educationalproblem. The reports and publications of these 30installations will soon be coming into the Education Library. Fortunately, the U.S.O.E. has alsobegun publication of a new monthly index, Research in Education, which may provide a comprehensive and organized approach to the vastliterature of educational research.The Library of the School of Social Service Administration continued to survey its collectionsand develop them to serve a multidisciplinary approach to social welfare and an increasing interestin civil rights, poverty, delinquency, housing andmental health. Such titles as the Proceedings of theNational Conference on Law and Poverty and theSymposium on the Law of the Poor are typical ofthe resources needed in that area. A new two-yearcommunity organization sequence introduced during the year required new materials related to therole of the social worker within the framework ofthe urban structure, including such works as Urban Renewal: The Record and the Controversy,edited by James Q. Wilson, 1966; Roland L. Warren's Perspective on the American Community,1966, and the first volume of the Urban AffairsAnnual Reviews, 1967. The establishment of thenew Social Services Center, which will begin operations in temporary quarters during 1968 arid whichwithin a few years will have over 100 students infield placements, undoubtedly means a future demand for greater library resources in this area.Collecting in geography reflected both the traditional interests of the department and the neweremphasis on planning and urbanization, and on natural resources — especially those of underdevelopednations. Under the first heading, major acquisitionsincluded the Atlas of Land forms, U.S. MilitaryAcademy, West Point, 1966; the five-volume Atlas Aerien: France, 1955-64; Norton Ginsburg'snew and expanded edition of the Historical Atlasof China, 1966, and Charles C. Colby's North Atlantic Arena: Water Transport in the World Order,1966. New journals included the Memorie diGeografia Economica e Antropica, Napoli; South-7hampton Research Series in Geography, andZprdvy, a journal of the Ceskoslovenska AkademieVeil. Geograficky' Ustav. Practoviste' v. Opave' Forurban studies, a significant addition was JosephR. Passonneau's Urban Atlas: 20 American Cities,1967. Works on Africa included B. W. Thompson'sThe Climate of Africa, 1965, and the East AfricanAgricultural and Forestry Journal (Vol. 31, 1966and continue). Rosenwald Library also continuedto correct its weaknesses in Latin American resources.Guides to the literature accounted for the largestexpenditure of the Map Library which, during theyear, committed $400 for the purchase of the 15-volume British Museum Catalogue of Printed Maps,Charts and Plans, 1886-1964, listing the holdingsof what is perhaps the largest map collection inthe world. Of the many new maps added in the areaof the social sciences, mention may be made ofthe 34 sheets of the World Map 1:2,500,000; theSoil Map of Europe, 1 :2, 500, 000, representing morethan 10 years of work by the Food and AgricultureOrganization of the United Nations; 33 new administrative maps of the Soviet Union; new editionsof 17 road maps of European countries, and 30street maps of cities in the United States. The MapLibrary also added 31 aerial photo indexes and 143air photographs in response to faculty requests.For the Business and Economics Library, acquisitions in economics reflected a continuing interestin questions of general economic planning, in theeconomic development of parts of Africa, Asia andSouth America, and in the problems of the impoverished in the United States. The business collections developed most heavily in the fields ofoperations research, international business, computer technology and marketing. New serial titlesincluded the Journal fur Marktforschung, Metra,World Business, and the Businessman. Among major reference works acquired were Dun and Brad-street's Middle Market Directory; the CommerceClearing House Trade Regulation Reporter, a five-volume service; the International Bureau of FiscalDocumentation's Guides to European Taxation,and the same Bureau's Tax News Service. A welcome addition for several reasons was Thomas'Register in microfiche form. In the future, thisannual compilation, running into six large volumes,will be discarded when its microfiche version arrives.3. Regional ProgramsBridging the social sciences and humanities andadding materials from both broad areas were the regional collections for the support of internationalstudies. For the Far Eastern Library, acquisitionsresulted in substantial improvement of the Japanesecollection and the steady growth of the Chinese.A book-buying trip by Assistant Curator JamesMorita to Japan added over a thousand volumesof basic sets of journals, documents and othersource materials, while a private collection fromTaiwan yielded several hundred volumes of oldChinese manuscripts and early printed editions. Inaddition, numerous Chinese titles of importancewere acquired in reprints or microform photo-duplicates, and a number of notable Korean documents and reference materials were added. Notless than 10,700 volumes were added to the FarEastern collections, including some 5,000 in Japanese, 4,800 in Chinese, 500 in Korean, 200 inWestern languages, and 200 reels of microfilm.The great bulk of materials added to the SouthAsian collections came to us under the Public Law480 program — some 6,700 monographic volumes in22 languages, and 428 new serial titles. This highintake reflects a substantial improvement in selec-by the Library of Congress field offices in SouthAsia, whose staff members seem to miss very fewtitles of significance. There were important purchases, too. Major additions were the India OfficeRegisters and Lists (some 3,000 fiche) and theIndian district gazetteers (4,050 fiche), both ofwhich greatly strengthen Chicago's holdings of references and basic source materials. In addition,some success attended our efforts to buy retrospective English language materials on South Asia,but such works are rapidly disappearing from themarket, and many of the available titles are inpoor condition and fetch high prices — matters thatpoint toward an increasing reliance upon thephotocopying of badly-wanted items.The bibliographer for Slavic Studies, VaclavLaska, reported a very successful year. Acquisitions included many important sets of basic research materials in the Slavic and Balkan area.In the humanities, the Library kept up with current writing and critical studies and identifiedareas in need of development. Major purchases included an offset reprint of a key title for Russianlinguistics and literature, Akademiia Nauk SSSR.Otdelenie russkogo iazyka i slovesnosti. Sbornik.1867-1928, in 101 volumes. Other purchases included over 300 volumes of Russian exile literature, some 400 monographic volumes concernedwith the Russian and Soviet theatre, about 150volumes in the Albanian, mostly literature, and8various titles in Modern Greek and in the Bulgarian, Czech, Polish, Slovak and Yugoslav languages. For the social sciences, major emphasiswas on Russian retrospective materials in history,economics and anthropology, but important acquisitions were made also for materials of the centralEuropean and Balkan areas. These included setsof the stenographic transcripts of the Czechoslovakand Bulgarian parliaments from 1918 and 1879,respectively, a complete backfile of the Yugoslavianeconomic journal, Statisticki Bilten, and a notableselection of the geographical serials of the USSR,Central Europe and the Balkan countries. Manyof these works came to us through our increasinglyproductive exchange arrangements with Soviet libraries. From this source, for example, came 13,135exposures of microfilm for the Dialectology Project.The Russian exchange operations were greatlystrengthened by Mr. Laska's visit during the yearto the major Soviet libraries.Oriental Institute acquisitions dramatically reflected the University's growing interests in thehistory and culture of the Near and Middle East;Arabic, Persian and Turkish titles accounted for53 per cent of the year's additions. The otheracquisitions were distributed among the historyand civilization of the Near East; Near Eastern artand archeology, including Islamic Art; South Asianlanguage material; Hebrew and Old Testamenttitles; Egyptology, and smaller percentages forAssyriology, Christian literature, general semitics,linguistics and general reference works.Additions under Africa-South-of-the-Sahara project, now in its third year, more than doubled the1965-66 rate. With basic monographs and journalsalready in hand, attention was given to identifyingand buying all useful current publications in thefield and to acquiring whatever significant out-of-print publications came upon the market.Purchase of materials related to Latin Americacontinued much as in previous years, but withadded emphasis on the acquisition of Brazilianpublications and of works pertaining to the discovery and the colonial and regional history ofBrazil.A developing interest in Southeast Asia led toa program of acquisitions of both current and out-of-print research materials in Western Europeanlanguages. These titles supplement a flood of Indonesian language publications that have come tous in the last few years as a product of the PL 480program, and that were arranged for use and forultimate cataloging during the year. Unfortunately, it is understood that the PL 480 program for Indonesia is likely to be terminated in the next 12to 18 months. No comparable alternative means ofaccess to Indonesian publications is available.4. The HumanitiesIn the vast field of Western languages andliteratures, the Library kept abreast on a fairlybroad basis with contemporary belles-lettres, critical editions and new scholarly studies. Efforts todevelop our holdings in Brazilian and Portugueseliterature were successfully continued, and considerable improvement was made in our holdingsof African French and Afrikaans literature. Current publication in both Spanish and SpanishAmerican literature was well covered, but retrospective buying was less successful. Acquisitionsin Romance fields and in Germanic linguistics andliterature continued along well-established lines,and we continued a special project of purchasingXerox copies of a microfilmed collection of seventeenth century German poetry located at theUniversity of Michigan. Other existing gaps werefilled with reprints or photoreproductions, such asthe new 15-volume edition of Zola's OeuvresCompletes, edited by Henri Mitterand, and amicrofilm of Cervantes: Revista Mensual for 1916-20. Other reprints were acquired, but at year's endthe Library was still holding, for lack of funds,orders for nearly $4,000 worth of desirable reprintsin French and other humanistic fields. These orderswill be placed in 1967-68.As for rare books in the humanities area, somenoteworthy additions were made. For continentaldrama, much emphasized last year, we acquired acollection of 326 titles covering French play writingfrom the late seventeenth to the early nineteenthcentury. Vying with this acquisition for distinctionwas the purchase of another edition of the Ency-clopedie — the 5 8 -volume Yverdon edition published 1770-80, which heretofore was representedin the United States only by Harvard's copy. Sourcesfor Germanic studies were significantly buttressedby the addition of numerous early topographicaldescriptions, chronicles, guidebooks and collectionsof statutes, etc. Outstanding in this area is a collection of 23 volumes containing more than 2,000documents relating to events in Hamburg from thefifteenth to the eighteenth century. To our holdingsin Italian drama, we added 45 plays in fourteenthto sixteenth century editions, 23 for the seventeenth century and eight for the eighteenth century. Among these was the first edition of Niccolo9degli Angeli's popular Arsinoe (1594), and a collection, in two volumes, of plays from one of theacademies — Delle Commedie degV Accademici In-tronati di Siena (1611).Perhaps the most important purchased additionto our collection of early manuscripts was a collection of five folio volumes containing unpublishedItalian prose translations of 59 tragedies, madeduring the years 1685 to 1703 by Antonio Francesco Ghiselli of Bologna. They include almost allthe tragedies of Pierre Corneille, Thomas Corneilleand Racine. A codex of considerable literary,linguistic and historic interest is the Rime de variautori, containing 20 poems, mostly unpublished,written in the Venetian dialect by Giovanni Francesco Busenello (1598-1659).In art, as in other fields, the most significant addition during the year was a bibliographical guide —in this case, the 25-volume Catalogue of the Libraryof the Metropolitan Museum of Art. This work isof major importance to the entire University.Twenty-five new periodical titles were added,among them two titles which are represented invery few American libraries — Novissima; AlbodyArti e Letter e (1900-1913) and Sic; Sons, I dees,Couleurs, Formes (1916-19). In monographic literature, buying was along traditional lines, with workson painting representing the largest expenditure,architecture second, and sculpture, the decorativearts, and drawing and the graphic arts following.In preparation for a planned future program ofmusuem studies, some purchasing began in theareas of preservation, curatorship and display technique. We also strengthened our resources for thestudy of Bosch, Grunewald and Brueghel. Throughout the year, most of the titles added were recentimprints, though important antiquarian items wereacquired. Reprints and exhibition catalogs alsoplayed an important role in the growth of the collection.The Music Library continued its basic policy ofcarefully keeping up with current publications, filling in old significant gaps with retrospective titlesand adding an occasional rare book where thetitle is needed for its substance. Two of the latterwere a collection of sonatas for harpsichord byDomenico Alberti (London, 1748) and an inexpensive copy of the Beethoven first edition, the Wald-stein Sonata (Op. 53), for which no holographsurvives. This last work joins a large collection ofmicrofilms of Beethoven's works which we haveacquired for a study of the Master's own fingeringsin his piano music. Other major acquisitions con sisted of early books and music in reprint, including the works of Franz Liszt, reprinted by Gregg,and the very important series, Publikation alter erpraktischer und theoretischer Musikwerke, published in 27 volumes by the Gesellschaft furMusikforschung (1873-95) and brought out againin 1966 by Broude Brothers.While the Classics Library placed emphasis oncurrent scholarly publications, it also devoted asubstantial portion of its book fund to purchasingreprints of important sets that have physically deteriorated with time and use. A standing order forreprinted editions issued under the series Biblio-theca Scriptorum Graecorum et RomanorumTeuberiana brought in editions of Aristotle, Am-mianus Marcellinus, Seneca Maximus and others.We also replaced deteriorated volumes in variousruns of periodicals, including Hermes, WienerStudien and Zeitschrift fur ver gleichende Sprach-forschung. A most significant reprint purchase wasthe 29-volume set of the British Museum's A Catalogue of the Greek Coins in the British Museum.Among the rare books added were Henri Estienne,Condones sive Orationes ex Graecis LatinisqueHistoricis Excerptae (Geneva, 1570) and twoworks of Lentulus — Augustus . . . (Amsterdam,1645) and Apex Gloriae Romane . . . (Marburg,1668). A noteworthy addition to the Library's outstanding collection of manuscript catalogs was thetwo-volume Dictionary Catalog of the ManuscriptCollection of the New York Public Library.Swift Library continued its broad coverage ofreligion and theology and its relatively narrowerapproach to philosophy. In the latter field, a majorevent was the arrival of the eight-volume Encyclopedia of Philosophy (New York: Collier andMacmillan, 1967), the first major encyclopedicwork in this field since the turn of the century,and one badly needed in view of the emergencesince that date of pragmatism, behaviorism,phenomenology, existentialism, etc. For religion andtheology, a major research tool was acquired inthe 3 2 -volume Dictionary Catalog of the KlauMemorial Library of Hebrew Union College, listing the holdings of what may be this country's mostcomprehensive collections of Hebraica-Judaica andJewish history.B. GiftsThis account of gifts to the Library during 1966-67 must begin with recognition of the furthergenerosity of Mrs. Joseph Regenstein and herdaughter Ruth Regenstein. In compliance with the10wishes of the donors, the Helen and Ruth Regenstein Collection of Rare Books acquired majorrarities in exceptionally fine condition in the general fields of English and American literature. Twomajor works from the seventeenth century wereacquired, both of them remarkable for their rarityand state. One was the first edition of Milton'sPoems (1645) and the other was the 1625 editionof Bacon's Essayes, the first complete edition andthe last to appear in his lifetime. For the followingtwo centuries, it is difficult to give priority to thetitles that were added. Frances Burney's notablefirst novel Evelina (1778) and Jane Austen'sMansfield Park (1814) were among them, as werebeautiful copies of the first edition of LaurenceSterne's The Life and Opinions of Tristram Shandy,Gentleman (1760-67) and of Tobias Smollett's epistolary novel The Expedition of Humphry Clinker(1771). The first editions of five of Oliver Goldsmith's works were added, including The DesertedVillage (1770) and The Vicar of Wakefield (1766).Finally, we may mention, among many other additions for the eighteenth century, Samuel Johnson'sProposals for Printing, by Subscription, the Dra-matick Works of William Shakespeare (1756), awork of such rarity that at one time it was believed that no copies existed.Most of the major literary figures of the nineteenth century were represented in additions to theHelen and Ruth Regenstein Collection. Outstanding among a host of outstanding titles were thefirst editions of all the Waverley novels (1814-32)of Sir Walter Scott, with each of the 74 volumescoming to us in its original binding. The first editions of four novels of George Eliot were added,as was the rarest of all Victorian novels, CharlesReade's The Cloister and the Hearth (1861), ina particularly fine copy of the first issue. Competing with it in rarity and condition was a copyof Dickens' Great Expectations (1861). For firsteditions of other British authors writing during thenineteenth century, a catalog of their names mayserve to indicate the breadth and value of theRegenstein Collection: Bulwer-Lytton, Trollope,Elizabeth Gaskell, Hardy, Butler, Meredith, Stevenson, Morris, DuMaurier, Barrie, Kipling, Gissing,Belloc, Bennett and Wilde.Acquisitions of American nineteenth centuryliterature were less numerous, but they includedsome of the great rarities of the period. One wasHawthorne's Fanshawe (1828), a work of almostlegendary rarity because of the author's attemptsto destroy all copies of this first effort. There were also the first American edition of Melville's MobyDick (1851) and the two-volume first edition ofHarriet Beecher Stowe's Uncle Tom's Cabin (Boston, 1852). Finally, there came to us the firstpublished work of Stephen Crane, Maggie, A Girlof the Streets (1893), which survives in only avery few original copies because of its initial appearance in paper wrappers.For writers of the present century in both England and the United States, careful selections weremade. Here, the Regenstein gifts enabled the Library to acquire Faulkner's Sartoris (1929) andSalmagundi (1932); Thomas Wolfe's Look Homeward, Angel; Sinclair Lewis's Hike and the Aeroplane (1912); Synge's The Well of the Saints(1905) and The Playboy of the Western World(1907); Katherine Mansfield's In a German Pension (1911), and Graham Greene's The ManWithin (1929).To honor the memory of their friend — and agood friend of the University Library — Louis H.Silver, Mr. and Mrs. Philip D. Sang made it possible for the Library to acquire a variety of rareworks which give the collections new depth andwhich will support new lines of faculty research.Twenty-five such titles were acquired during theyear, evenly divided between the sixteenth andseventeenth centuries. Most of these titles fell within the fields of Italian drama and the history ofscience and medicine — areas in which Mr. Silverhimself had supported the. Library generously. ForItalian drama, we were able to acquire additionalworks and editions of such sixteenth century playwrights as Bernardo Dovizi da Bibbiena and AngeloBeolco. Of the works of the influential Dovizi, weacquired the second edition of his La Calandra(1524). For Beolco, a link between the learnedcomedy of the academicians and the commediadell'arte, we added his play Rhodiana (1565). Toour growing collection of German baroque literature came an example of the elegant poetry of "theGerman Horace," Jakob Balde, in the form of hisMedicinae Gloriae per Satyras XXII asserta . . .(1551). To support an expanding interest in thehistory of chemistry and medicine, we were ableto acquire a number of works, including the LapisPhilosophicus Dogmaticorum (1609) of PetrusPalmarius; Tres Tractatus de Metallorum Trans-mutatione (1668), attributed to Philalethes, andJean Liebault's Secrets de Medecine et de laPhilosophie Chimique (1616), embellished with 52woodcuts.Two very remarkable bequests were received11during the year. That of Lillian Alberta Wells,Class of 1914, brought to the Library her trulydistinguished collection of approximately 500 volumes devoted to Montaigne and his contemporariesand to scholarly studies of that master of literature. The heart of this collection is represented bythree of the four editions of the Essais publishedin Montaigne's lifetime — which by a happy strokecompleted the Library's set, for we already had the1587 edition lacking in Mrs. Wells's collection. Alsoin the Wells collection was the equally famous edition of 1595, published three years after Montaigne's death and incorporating the last of hisadditions. Other notable titles in the collection included Riflant's Le Miroir des melancholicquesdescript en la XXXe section des problemesdfAristote . . . (1543) and the first edition in Italianof one of the most influential of the early emblembooks, Alciati's Emblemata (1549).As for the second bequest, the late William J.Blum, Class of 1927, left the University his collection of seven illuminated Books of Hours, to beknown as the William J. Blum Collection. Thestexceptionally fine manuscripts, produced in severaldifferent cities — for example, Paris of the late fifteenth century, Utrecht of 1460-70 and Rouen —were put to scholarly use almost immediately, inconnection with current research in the Department of Art.Other manuscripts, some old and some contemporary, came to us as gifts — four of them frommembers of the faculty: Richard P. McKeon gavea late seventeenth century manuscript of Aristotle'sLogic; Saul Bellow continued to give his ownmanuscripts and correspondence, including, for thisyear, the drafts and other manuscript material forThe Last Analysis, the notebooks and drafts forThe Adventures of Augie March and other miscellaneous writings and letters; Richard Stern deposited his notes and other materials for several ofhis plays and novels as well as some of his correspondence; while in quite another field, CharlesW. Wegener gave the Library a manuscript of Albert Einstein's, together with the Wegener-Einsteincorrespondence regarding the work.The names of many other important donors will be found in Appendix A. A few of these gifts maybe singled out for brief comment. From ProfessorBenedict Einarson came a collection which included 75 books by and about Plutarch, many ofthem rare. Professor George W. Platzman madeseveral important additions to the Rose K. Platzman Collection, including the first editions of FelixMendelssohn-Bartholdy's oratorios, Paulis (Bonn,1857) and Sommernachstraum (Leipzig, 1847).Dr. and Mrs. William Bloom presented a varietyof titles, including some 20 rare volumes in thefield of medicine. Professor George Tolley gaveapproximately 13,000 pamphlets, periodicals andmonographs on business and economics, and Professor Bernard Weinberg added to our collectiona dozen of the works of Ramiro de Maeztu.Mention should be made also of gifts to the University Archives. These were substantial both innumber and size. Two long and distinguished University of Chicago careers were documented forfuture generations by the deposit of the papers ofAmos Alonso Stagg, given us by the Stagg family,and of the papers of Robert Redfield as the giftof Mrs. Redfield. The administrative files of theHonorable William Benton for his years as Vice-President of the University came to us, as didother files and records from the offices of thePresident and of the Dean of the College. Thepapers of Edwin Oakes Jordan formed an importantaddition to our scientific papers, as did some additional papers of Henry Gordon Gale. Finally, Professor Janowitz gave the Library a small but valuable group of materials relating to the late Professor Louis Wirth.I am indebted, as always, to the members of theLibrary staff, the members of the Board of theLibrary, to many other members of the facultyand to students for both solicited and unsolicitedadvice, and to the officers of the University fortheir support.Respectfully submitted,Herman H. Fussler, DirectorUniversity LibraryB. AkinMark AshinArthur Baer APPENDIX AThe Names of Personal Donors to Various Library Funds — 1966-67Elizabeth BenyonRobert BinkerG. Bobrinskoy Henry BruereS. BurrowsDorothy Chamberlin12William CottleMary and Dick DaskaisH. DawleyK. DawleyChristopher DemosCharles H. DoleJohn EndrizT. EssigntonThomas EvansCharles R. FeldsteinMr. & Mrs. Alan FernA. FriedmanHortense FriedmanJohn GallagherB. GinsburgBarbara GoetzJohn GuntherStanley E. GwynnM. HargerWarren HaskinFrederick HelmersElsa HenzelW. HeySidney JarronJewish Students SchlorashipFundG. KeckKress FoundationAugust Kuhlom Lawrence LeeRobert B? LewyLibrary StaffLeon LiddellMr. & Mrs. Gilbert LongstreetBernard F. MalkNorman F. MacleanFrank MeisJan MickaDonald E. MihanC. Phillip MillerSigrid MoeJohn NabholtzMrs. Albert NadnolaKenneth NaylorNonesuch Coffee ShopJohn P. Orendorff TrustS. Alden PerrineFrank PickelRuth PiettleJ. D. PopeP. PowellH. C. Rasey FamilyMrs. Helen A. RegensteinMiss Ruth RegensteinE. RosenheimDennis RuschePaul RussellJulia Sabine Salvation Army StaffPhilip D. SangJack SawyerJoseph H. SchaffnerW. SchubertMrs. Carol 0. SellePeter SennH. SmithHelen SmithMitchell SniegowskiSSA Class of 1966Ernest SternRalph SternR. E. StreeterAugusta A. SwawiteLillian SwawiteL. TannenwaldEthel TaurogStuart M. TaveStuart VanceF.VeitRichard VerdiRobert W. WadsworthJerome WaldmanH. WheelerB. WilliamsWolfson FamilyZoology DepartmentThe Names of Personal Donors Presenting Books or Other MaterialsScott AdamsAllan F. AgnewHugh AitkenMr. and Mrs. Louis AlexanderJoseph AllenMrs. Samuel K. AllisonC. Arnold AndersonGerald H. AndersonDr. Aquiles A. Azar GarciaK. BaedeltC.-J. N. BaileyMary G. BalcomJoe C. BarrettRoberto BarriosMrs. Paull F. BaumGeorge W. BeadleDaniel BellRobert R.BellSaul BellowDon C. BennettDr. H. Stanley Bennett William BentonElizabeth V. BenyonEdward BernardR. Stephen BerryCharles E. BidwellWalter BlackstockDr. Benjamin S. BloomDr. and Mrs. William BloomWalter BlumDr. Patrick M. BoarmanGeorge G. BogertJames Charles BonnarCharles BooneDaniel J. BoorstinAlfred BoultonY. M. BoutrosPatrick BovaRoscoe R. Braham, Jr.Robert J. BraidwoodJudge Jacob M. BraudeFrank Breul Donald BrielandCosby BrinkleyHoward BrofskySchuyler C. BrossmanHoward BrownYale BrozenWilliam T. BrunerPhilip M. BurnoLaurence ButcherCharles ButterworthChris CadburyWeley CalefRoald F. CampbellS. M. CampbellLouis CantoriAnselmo CariniWilliam Roy CarneyLeon CarnovskyDr. George N. CasavisWilliam J. CastlemanDr. S. Chandrasekhar13Chang Chi-yunAntonio ChavesEdna ChristopherBom Mo ChungClaus-Peter ClasenCyril ClemensRonald CoaseMorrel H. CohenMrs. Herbert W. ConnerLynn ConnorWillard J. CongreveDr. John Marquis Converse0. B. Conway, Jr.John CorominasCarmen L. CouillardJ. A. CouttsDr. Giovanni CultreraLuvern L. CunninghamDr. Gerrit DaamsKenneth DamJadwiga I. DaniecDr. J. DauparasSidney DavidsonKenneth C. DavisDr. M. Edward DavisHenrietta DeanDr. Donald E. DemarayIgor Mikhailovich DiakonovBern DibnerKatharine Smith DiehlRobert DillerAaron DirectorGaylord DonnelleyHonorable Paul H. DouglasDr. Lester DragstedtEdward F. DrysdaleAllison DunhamHarold B. DunkelJ. EdwardsMrs. Anne EffratSuzanne EigenBenedict EinarsonMircea EliadeMartha ElwellJ. W. Embree, Jr.Maurice EnglishJ. E. EngstromJeffrey M. EpsteinMrs. Albert W. ErrettDr. Robert J. EsterlingDr. Audrey E. EvansEarl A. Evans, Jr.Mark R. EverettDon Farren Alan FarrisGeorge E. FeeThomas Karel FicekDr. Henry FieldStanislaw Jan FiguraMyron FinkDr. Morris FishbeinHazel FloydRobert W. FogelGordon B. Ford, Jr.Carl S. FosterGosta FranzenMilton FriedmanJ. G. FucillaHerman H. FussierD. G. GaranJean-Claude GarciaRene Coulet du GardWesley C. GeorgeJohn GeorgeoffDr. Hans GerloffNorton S. GinsburgDr. Vera GlocklinRobert GlossnerRodney GlowerAlvin GorenbeinGene GravesDavid Green, Jr.Joseph P. GreggWilliam S. GriffithZvi GrilichesBernhard GrobmannEdwin J. GunlockHans G. GuterbockAllen W. HagenbachErnest A. HaggardGeorge HaleMrs. Leslie HalkinJames G. HarlowJohn HarringtonChauncy D. HarrisJohn D. HastingsRobert HavighurstHarold HaydonGeoffrey C. HazardDr. Hans H. HechtDr. M. A.HedayatiHorst HelleFrances HenneWilliam E. HenryRichard H. HenstromJ. Noe HerreraMary HerrickRuth Herschberger Richard C. HertzMrs. Milton HerzogRobert HessJay HigginbothamW. Albert HiltnerMrs. Henry HindsByron T. HippieMaria HirschMrs. Marcus A. HirschlPaul W. HodgeDr. Thorfin R. HognessNella Rost HollanderGrace HoistReuben HorlichCharles T. HorngrenArthur Leon HornikerBert F. HoselitzHomer HoytJoseph L. Hudson, Jr.George R. HughesHonorable Hubert D. HumphreyAlbert HymaStanley G. IrvineT. K. S, IyengarDavid H. JacobsohnDr. Leon 0. JacobsonR. K. JainMorris JanowitzJohn E. JeuckCrane JohnsonEleanor JohnsonHarry JohnsonWarren C. JohnsonMrs. Charles H. JuddWalter KaegiSamuel KahnHarry KalvenStanley KaplanIrving KaplanskyJohn KardossDonald B. KeesingJohn KelloggSherwin F. KellyThomas E. KennedyStephen KimDr. C. Frederick KittleRobert M. KleinknechtDr. Ole J. KleppaLeopold E. KlopferDietrich KnellerDr. Helen L. KochGwin J. KolbA. Koster van GroosPaul Koston14Edward A. Krackeperd KramerDr. Alex KrillWilliam H. KruskalVladislav KrutaPhilip B. KurlandMargaret Marr LambertLawrence H. LanzlVaclav LaskaArthur LaurentsJohn M. LeahyWilliam LeahyBrad LeeMrs. Noble W. LeeRebecca Lawrence LeeDr. Franco LeidiNathan LeitesHans LennebergDr. George V. LeRoyEdward H. LeviJulian LeviLewis H. GreggLeon M. LiddellGordon P. LiddleDr. J. S. LightFred LighthallRobert LimaDr. John R. LindsayAlton A. LinfordMrs. G. W. LongstreetFloyd Irving LorbeerJo Desha LucasJoan LukachPhelps Paul LuriaShirley A. LyonRobert McCaulRaven I. McDavidJohn McGeeMichael P. McHughGeorge S. MacciaMary E. MacdonaldRichard P. McKeonHugh McLeanM. MahdiRashid A. MalikBenjamin MalzbergAlberto ManceauxMcKim MarriottEdward MaserHugh M. MatchettHans W. MattickGerald C. MattranHarold MayerJ. A. Tijerino Medrano Alphonse Anthony MedvedBernard 0. MeltzerGerald A. MendelSoia MentschikoffLeonard MeyerJan MickaNorbert J. MietusDr. and Mrs. C. Phillip MillerRalph J. MillsSusanna Valentine MitchellMrs. Vittoria MondolfoAlfred Armand MontapertAlvara J. MorenoEdgar L. MorphetNorval MorrisStanley MorrisHoward W. MortRuth H. MosesDr. Milton J. MossDr. James W. MoulderRobert MundellJ. Willams MyersA. M. MyhrmanGabriel NadeauCiro NavaPhilip C. NealG. G. NearingDr. Americo NegretteRichard H. NolteHonorable Barrett O'HaraRobert E. OhmL. H. OttDon Benn Owens, Jr.Dr. R. G. PageGeorges Emmanuel PangalosJuan PapadakisMrs. John F. ParisMartha E. ParkerWilliam PattisonCharles T. PayneMrs. Aaron PerbohnerMrs. Richard B. PhilbrickMorris PhilipsonJames C. PhillipsManning M. PlatilloGeorge W. PlatzmanRobert L. PlatzmanDr. Vincenc PoriskaMrs. Herbert W. PostC. Herman PritchettDr. John C. ProcknowG. ProcutaLouise U. PutzkeDr. Mark Rairtch Kip RanJames M. Rat cliff eW. C. ReavisMargaret G. ReidJohn RewaldMax RheinsteinStuart A. RiceWilliam J. RiceRay RobertsJoan RootMargaret K. RosenheimEarl E. RosenthalArchibald T. RossFrank E. RossW. E. SaarbachCarl J. SchaeferJudge Walter B. SchafferSydney K. SchiffRudy SchildJoseph SchneiderMrs. Barbara SchultzH. Stefan SchultzTheodore W. SchultzCharles P. SchwartzDr. Nathan A. ScottRobert L. ScrantonMrs. Helmut SeckelJoel SegallJames K. SeniorIan ShannonRalph ShapeyClaude ShawGlen E. ShearsMrs. John M. ShlienGeorge P. ShultzHelen SmithLloyd E. SmithMildred SouthIrving A. SpergelDr. Robert SpikeDr. Kenneth StarrKarl SteinerMr. and Mrs. Walter SteinerDr. Arthur H. SteinhausRichard G. SternGeorge StiglerW. M. StokerMarshall StoneRichard J. StorrDr. John W. StoutB. B. StreaterHarley J. StuckyBryan F. SwanMrs. Charles H. SwiftWarner T. TabbSol TaxSheldon TefftLester G. TelserJanis Yvonne TempleTymon TerleckiFrancis Noel ThomasJ. Alan ThomasConrad J. ThorenFrank Tirro0. L. TobingGeorge TolleyDon TonjesJohn TreverJ. Lloyd TrumpMrs. Kimball ValentineDr. M. M. Valle Rev. Harrie A. VanderstappenRoyal S. Van de WoestyneC. P. J. Van Der PeetDonald Van WynenLuzian VerborgenDr. Wolfgang ViereckRichard E. VikstromDr. Antonio Perez LivasIvan VolkoffDr. Dietrich VolkmannF. W. von MeisterPaul D. VothLoren WaldmanCharles W. WegenerClaude M. WeilBernard WeinbergMeyer Weinberg Samuel WeintraubMrs. John Paul WellingMrs. Lillian WellsGart WesterhoutG. Willard WhelandSister Mary Leonard WhippleGilbert WhiteLois WildyDavid Earl WileyBenjamin C. WillisCharles F. WonderlicDr. Thomas F. YoungDr. Savas ZavoyianisHans ZeiselGeorges-Denis ZimmermanDr. John Robinson ZollerAPPENDIX BChanges in Professional StaffingAppointments and PromotionsDavid Badertscher, Circulation Librarian andAssistant Reference Librarian, Law Library, December 12, 1966.Carroll Baker, Head Acquisitions Librarian,February 13, 1967. (See also "Resignations.")Karen Bendorf, Cataloger, July 1, 1966. (Seealso "Resignations.")Mrs Frieda Davidson, Cataloger, Law Library(part time), September 19, 1966.Sidney Fosdick, Cataloger, July 18, 1966.Mrs. Sharon Irvine, Assistant Reserve Librarian, July 1, 1966.Stanley Irvine, Senior Law Cataloger, July 1,1966.Jeanette Krauss, Assistant Reference Librarian, January 1, 1967.Mrs. Eileen Libby, Business and EconomicsLibrarian, July 1, 1966.Mrs. Eleanor Montague, Chemistry Librarian,September 1, 1966.Mrs. Sara Moreland, Assistant Head Acquisitions Librarian, October 24, 1966.Mrs. Judith Nadler, Cataloger, January 1,1967.Mrs. Maxine Reneker, from Assistant Reference Librarian to Classics Librarian, January 1,1967.Sabron Reynolds, Documents Librarian, August1, 1966.Beverly Sperring, Assistant Reference Librar ian, January 1, 1967.Mrs. Cassandra Talbot, Assistant CirculationLibrarian, December 8, 1966.Kent Talbot, Reference Librarian, Law Library,September 12, 1966.Howard White, Assistant Librarian, Businessand Economics Library, October 1, 1966.Mrs. Fern Willis, Assistant Computer Systems Librarian, April 3, 1967.ResignationsCarroll Baker, Head Acquisitions Librarian,June 16, 1967.Karen Bendorf, Cataloger, May 31, 1967.Racilia Nell, Assistant Reference Librarian,January 31, 1967.James Osgood, Circulation Librarian, Law Library, October 14, 1966.J. Richard Phillips, Assistant Curator, Manuscripts and Archives, Special Collections, May 31,1967.Mrs. Mary K. Salovaara, Cataloger (part time),May 19, 1967.RetirementElizabeth V. Benyon, Senior Law Catalogerand Adviser in Preparations, Law Library, March31, 1967, after 45 years of exceptional service tothe University.16IN MEMORIAMRoy D. Gutmann, a fourth year (senior) student inthe College, was slain on Monday, April 22, at 56thStreet and Kimbark Avenue.Charles U. Daly, a Vice-President of the University, made the following statement on behalf of theUniversity:"Roy Gutmann was a person of exceptionalachievement and promise."His mindless murder has lessened us all. Itis a tragedy that falls most heavily on the family,yet it also falls upon the University communityand the entire City."We will continue to work with all persons inthis whole community to advance the ideals heunderstood, served, and should have been allowedto serve much longer."STUDENT LOAN PROGRAMS AT THEUNIVERSITY OF CHICAGOApril 4, 1968The University administers each year, in additionto its scholarship and fellowship program, a majorprogram of educational loans. The characteristicsof these various loan programs are described below.University LoansA. The University Tuition Loan Program. Thisprogram provides for loans up to the amount oftuition for full-time students. Notes securing jtheseloans bear no interest as long as the borrower continues as a student at The University of Chicago.When the borrower ceases to be enrolled as a student at the University, the note will begin to bearinterest at the rate of 3 per cent per annum, andregular monthly payments in the minimum amountof $40 are expected to begin no later than fourmonths after the borrower withdraws from the University. This loan is granted on the basis of financial need, recommended by the Loan Counselor forgraduate students and by the Committee on CollegeAid for undergraduates. Application forms are available at the Office of the Bursar, Administration 102,5801 South Ellis Avenue, and must be submitted nolater than one month before registration.B. The Cash Loan Program. The University hascash loan funds from which small loans can begranted for reasonably short periods of time. Notessecuring these loans bear interest at the rate of 3,4, or 5 per cent per annum from the date the loanis taken. Government LoansA. National Defense Student Loan Program.These loans are free of interest charges as long asthe student is registered for at least one-half of anormal program at any university in the country.Nine months after the date on which the borrowerceases to be at least a half-time student, paymentson the loan begin. These payments may be inmonthly, bimonthly or quarterly installments. Upto 50 per cent of a student's total loan is subject toforgiveness when a student accepts a teaching position in private or public education at any level, andthe total loan is forgiven for teaching in an inner-city poverty area school. A student's total indebtedness is reduced by 10 per cent for each year of thefirst five years he teaches. It is necessary for thegraduate student to establish need in order to qualify for NDEA funds. These students may borrow upto $2,500 over a three-quarter period and up to atotal limit of $10,000 including any previous educational loans. NDEA loans for undergraduates,recommended by the Committee on College Aid,are based on the financial need of the student andhis family as determined by the Parents' Confidential Financial Statement. Undergraduate studentsmay be loaned no more than $1,000 in any academic year or more than $5,000 in total. Applicationforms and information are available at the Officeof the Bursar and must be submitted not later thanone month before registration.B. The State Guaranteed Loan Program. Thisprogram was authorized by the Higher EducationAct of 1965. It was designed to provide "loans ofconvenience" to full-time students from middle-income families who find it difficult to meet the risingcosts of higher education. Terms of the loan mayvary from state to state, but must fall within thisframework set by federal law:1. The loan ceiling may range between $1,000and $1,500 per academic year. Loans are availablefor six years of academic study.2. The maximum interest rate may not exceedone-half of 1 per cent per year on the unpaid balance.3. If a student's adjusted family income is under$15,000 per year, the government will pay all interest charges up to 6 per cent while he is in schooland 3 per cent on the unpaid balance during the repayment period. If the adjusted income is over$15,000, the loan may be insured, but the studentwill have to pay all interest charges. Repaymentof the loan is deferred while the student is in school.If a student receives loans totaling more than$2,000, they must be repaid in installments rangingfrom five to ten years, up to $7,500. For further17information, contact the Loan Counselor in the Office of Admissions and Aid, Administration 203,5801 South Ellis Avenue.ADDITION TO STUDENTINVOLVEMENT REPORTThe following material was not included in the original Report to the President on Student Involvement which appeared in the March 18, 1968 issue ofThe Record.Social Service AdministrationAfter a series of meetings during the winter andspring quarters of 1967, at which there was excellent attendance by both students and faculty, a proposal was developed by a joint faculty-student committee which received the formal approval of theSSA Student Association. We are now operatingwithin the framework of the plan approved at thattime.The plan calls for the establishment by the Student Association of a Committee on Student Affairs(COSA). The members of COSA are elected directly by the students. It selects its own officers anddetermines its own procedures.To date, COSA has appointed nine subcommittees, eight which represent segments of the curriculum and one which is concerned with the generaladministrative policy of the School. To date, theeight curriculum subcommittees have been activelyconsulting with faculty members concerned withthe curriculum segment assigned to them. Reportsfrom each of the subcommittees are expected, andfaculty-student discussions concerning each will bescheduled. Discussions concerning general administrative policy have not yet begun.Alton A. Linford, DeanSchool of Social Service AdministrationTUITION INCREASES FOR GRADUATESCHOOL OF BUSINESS ANDEXTENSION DIVISIONBoth the Graduate School of Business and the Extension Division have announced new tuition ratesfor part-time" students beginning with the autumnquarter of 1968.The Graduate School of Business will charge$170 for one course in its 190/MBA program and$325 for two courses. There will be no change intuition for the Executive Program of the GraduateSchool of Business.The Extension Division will charge the following for graduate and undergraduate credit courses opento the general public :i course $ 85 two courses . . . $245one course .... $135 2J courses .... $2951£ courses .... $195 three courses . . $350Tuition rates for the Downtown Center will generally remain unchanged.ADVISORY REPORT COMMITTEESThe names of four Advisory Report Committeeswere published in the December 21, 1967 issue ofThe Record. Since then, four more Committeeshave been appointed. They are as follows:Graduate School of BusinessDouglass V. Brown, Alfred P. Sloan School ofManagement, ChairmanR. A. Gordon, University of California, BerkeleyKenneth R. Andrews, Harvard Business SchoolRalph E. Gomory, IBM CorporationFar Eastern Languages and CivilizationsF. W. Mote, Princeton UniversityHoward Hibbett, Harvard UniversityMarius B. Jansen, Princeton University, ChairmanDerk Bodde, University of PennsylvaniaJohn K. Fairbank, Harvard UniversityMathematicsS. S. Chern, University of California, BerkeleyNathan Jacobson, Yale UniversityCharles B. Morrey, Jr., University of California,Berkeley, ChairmanMusicElliott Carter, New YorkEdward T. Cone, Princeton UniversityDonald J. Grout, Cornell University, ChairmanCORRECTIONLaboratory School tuition for 1968-69 waserroneously listed as $1,350 for all grades beyond Kindergarten and Nursery School, inthe January 23, 1968 issue of The Record.The 1968-69 tuition will be as follows: Kindergarten and Nursery School, $675; LowerSchool (grades one through four), $1,100;Middle School (grades five through pre-fresh-man), $1,200, and High School, $1,350.18FACULTY ADVISORY COMMITTEEXO THE REGISTRARDean of Students Charles D. O'Connell has appointed a committee of faculty members to advisethe Office of the Registrar. Members of the FacultyAdvisory Committee to the Registrar are:Albert M. Hayes, ChairmanRobert L. AshenhurstNorman H. NachtriebMrs. Lorna P. StrausMrs. Maxine L. SullivanMembers of the faculty who have questions aboutthe policies or procedures of the Office of the Registrar are invited to refer them to Mrs. Sullivan or toMr. Hayes.DIRECTORS, DEPARTMENT ANDCOMMITTEE CHAIRMEN AND DEANSMay 1,1968DIRECTORSArgonne Cancer Research HospitalDr. Alexander Gotts chalkBen May Laboratory for Cancer ResearchDr. Charles B. HugginsCenter for Balkan and Slavic Area StudiesEric P. HampCenter for Comparative Studies in Political DevelopmentJeremy AzraelCenter for Health Administration StudiesGeorge. BugbeeCenter for International StudiesChauncy D. HarrisCenter for Middle Eastern StudiesWilliam R. PolkCenter for Policy StudyCharles U. DalyCenter for Studies in Criminal JusticeNor vol R. MorrisCenter for Urban StudiesJack MeltzerComputation Center, 7094-7040 OperationsClemens C. J. RoothaanEarly Education Research CenterWilliam E. HenryEnrico Fermi InstituteRoger H. HildebrandInstitute for Computer ResearchVictor H. Yngve Institute of Professional AccountingSidney DavidsonJames Franck InstituteStuart A. RiceLaRabida-University of Chicago InstituteDr. Albert DorfmanLibraries, University of ChicagoHerman H. FussierOriental InstituteRobert McC. AdamsSonia Shankman Orthogenic SchoolBruno BettelheimWalter G. Zoller Memorial Dental ClinicDr. Albert Dahlberg, ActingYerkes ObservatoryC. Robert O'DellAnthropologyF. Clark HowellArcheological Studies (Committee)Hans G. GuterbockArtFr. Harrie A. VanderstappenAstronomy and AstrophysicsC. Robert O'DellBiochemistryEarl A. Evans, Jr.BiologyWilliam K. BakerBiophysicsRobert B. UretzBiopsy chology (Committee)Dr. Robert McClearyChemistryNorman H. NachtriebClassical Languages and LiteraturesRichard T. BruereComparative Studies in Literature (Committee)Edward WasiolekEconomicsArnold C. HarbergerEducationRoald F. CampbellEnglishGwin J. KolbFar Eastern Languages and CivilizationsEdwin McClellanFar Eastern Studies (Committee)Robert D ember gerGeneral Studies in the Humanities (Committee)Grosvenor W . CooperGenetics (Committee)Bernard S. Strauss19GeographyChauncy D. HarrisGeophysical SciencesJulian R. GoldsmithGermanic Languages and LiteraturesGeorge J. MetcalfHistoryJohn Hope FranklinHistory of Culture (Committee)Karl J. WeintraubHuman Development (Committee)William E. HenryIndustrial Relations (Committee)H. Gregg LewisInformation Sciences (Committee)Victor H. YngveDEPARTMENT AND COMMITTEECHAIRMENAfrican Studies (Committee)Philip J. FosterAnalysis of Ideas and Study of Methods (Committee)Theodore SilversteinAnatomyDr. Ronald SingerInternational Relations (Committee)Morton A. KaplanLinguisticsEric P. HampMathematical Biology (Committee)Jack D. CowanMathematicsRichard K. LashofMedicineDr. Hans H. HechtMedieval Studies (Committee)Jerome TaylorMicrobiologyJames W. MoulderMusicLeonard B. MeyerNear Eastern Languages and CivilizationsRaymond A. BowmanNew Nations (Committee)Clifford GeertzNew Testament and Early Christian LiteratureAllen P. WikgrenObstetrics and GynecologyDr. Frederick P. Zuspan Paleozoology (Committee)Everett C. OlsonPathologyDr. Robert WisslerPediatricsDr. Albert DorfmanPharmacologyDr. Lloyd J. RothPhilosophyManley H. Thompson, Jr.PhysicsMark G. InghramPhysiologyDwight J. InglePolitical ScienceGrant McConnellPopulation (Committee)Philip M. HauserPsychiatryDr. Daniel X. FreedmanPsychologyEckhard H. HessRadiologyDr. Robert D. MoseleyRomance Languages and LiteraturesBruce A. MorrissetteSlavic Area Studies (Committee)Jeremy AzraelSlavic Languages and LiteraturesEdward StankiewiczSocial Thought (Committee)Marshall G. S. HodgsonSociologyMorris JanowitzSouth Asian Languages and CivilizationsJ. A.B. van Buitenen{Edward C. Dimock, Acting)South Asian Studies (Committee)Milton B. SingerStatisticsWilliam H. KruskalSurgeryDr. Rene MenguyDEANSBiological Sciences DivisionDr. Leon 0. JacobsonHumanities DivisionRobert E. Streeter20physical Sciences Division Law SchoolA. Adrian Albert Phil C. NealSocial Sciences Division Graduate Library SchoolD. Gale Johnson Don R. SwansonThe College School of Social Service AdministrationWayne C. Booth Alton A. Lin fordGraduate School of Business Rockefeller Memorial ChapelGeorge P. Shultz E. Spencer ParsonsDivinity School University ExtensionJeraldC.Brauer Sol TaxGraduate School of Education Dean of StudentsRoald F. Campbell Charles D. O'ConnellCALENDAR OF EVENTSMAYMay 6— VARSITY BASEBALL: Concordia Tournament, at River Forest, 3:30 p.m.LECTURE: "Mass Transportation: Cinderella in Our Cities," by Tom Lisco of theChicago Area Transportation Study. Sponsored by the Urban Economics Workshop.Cobb 214, 3:30 p.m.PUBLIC LECTURE: "Aq Kupruk: An Ethnic Gray Zone in North Afghanistan," byLouis Dupree, Associate of the American Universities Field Staff and Associate Professor of Anthropology at Pennsylvania State University. Sponsored by the Center forMiddle Eastern Studies. Social Science 122, 4:00 p.m.LECTURE: "Studies on the Mechanism of Action of B12 Coenzymes," by Robert H.Abeles of the Biochemistry Department at Brandeis University. Sponsored by theChemistry Department. Kent 103, 4:00 p.m.MONDAY LECTURE: "Mind and Its Place in Nature," by Herbert Feigl, Professor of Philosophy and Director of the Minnesota Center for Philosophy of Science,University of Minnesota. Law School Auditorium, 8:00 p.m. General admission is$10 for series ticket — phone FI 6-8300; student and faculty admission free — phone3137.May 7— COMMITTEE OF THE COUNCIL: Quadrangle Club, noon.LECTURE: "Overtures to Wilde's Salome," by Richard Ellman, Professor ofEnglish at Northwestern University. Sponsored by the English Department. CobbHall 209, 3 :30 p.m.PRESENTATION OF SERVICE AWARDS: University Hospitals and Clinics andBiological Sciences Division. Ida Noyes Lounge and Library, 2:30-4:30 p.m.FILMS: "Fort Apache," directed by John Ford, 7:15 p.m. "Rio Grande," directedby Ford, 9:15 p.M; Presented by Doc Films. Quantrell Auditorium, Cobb Hall. Admission is 75 cents.INDIAN MUSIC SEMINAR: "North Indian Music IV," by Ustad GhulamhusainKhan and party, musicians-in-residence for spring quarter. Sponsored by the Committee on Southern Asian Studies. Foster Lounge, 8:00 p.m.VARSITY BASEBALL: Semi-finals Tournament, at Concordia.COMMITTEE ON CONTINUING MEDICAL EDUCATION: Frontiers of Medicine, 1967-68. "Eye Disease — Where Do We Stand?" Frank Newell, coordinator.Billings P-l 1 7, 2 :00-5 :30 p.m.21PUBLIC LECTURE: "Law and Morality," by R. J. Coulson, Professor of IslamicLaw at the University of London's School of Oriental and African Studies. Fourth ina series of six lectures on "Conflicts and Tensions in Islamic Jurisprudence." Sponsored oby the Law School and the Center for Middle Eastern Studies. Laird Bell Quadrangle, Seminar Room D, 3:30 p.m.LECTURE: "Catalysis in the Phosphoglucomutase System: Role of Metal Ions," byWilliam J. Ray, Jr., Department of Biological Sciences at Purdue University. Sponsored by the Department of Biochemistry. Abbott 101, 4:00 p.m.May £— -LECTURE: "Catalysis in the Phosphoglucomutase System: Role of Metal Ions," byWilliam J. Ray, Jr., of the Biological Sciences Department at Purdue University.Sponsored by the Biochemistry Department Graduate Training Program. Abbott 101,4:00 p.m.LECTURE: "River Blindness and the Human Geography of Northern Ghana," byJohn Hunter of the Geography Department at Michigan State University. Sponsoredby the African Studies Committee. Classics 10, 4:30 p.m.FILMS: "Nude Restaurant," directed by Andy Warhol, 5:30 and 10:30 p.m. "FortyGuns," directed by Samuel Fuller, 8:00 p.m. Presented by Doc Films. QuantrellAuditorium, Cobb Hall. Admission is 75 cents.May 9-10— BUSINESS ECONOMISTS CONFERENCE: Sponsored by the Graduate School ofBusiness, at the Center for Continuing Education.May 9— VARSITY BASEBALL: Finals Tournament, at Concordia.VARSITY GOLF: Maroons vs. North Eastern Illinois State and Loyola, at Cog Hill.LECTURE: "Gene Action Studies in the Mammalian Nervous System," by BensonS. Ginsburg, Professor of Biology. Sponsored by Advanced Genetics 395. Ricketts 7,4:00 p.m.FACULTY MEETING: Humanities, Classics 10, 4:30 p.m.LECTURE: "The Swedish Health System," by Dr. Arthur G. W. Engel, formerdirector of the National Board of Health of Sweden. A Michael Davis Lecture,sponsored by Center for Health Administration Studies of the Graduate School ofBusiness. Billings P-117, 5:00 p.m.FILM: "Kon Tiki," Burton- Judson Free Cinema, Judson Dining Room, 8:30 p.m.May 10-12— UNIVERSITY THEATRE: "Camino Real," by Tennessee Williams. Mandel Hall,8:30 p.m. Tickets required— phone 3581.May 10-11 — TENNIS : Chicagoland Intercollegiate Tennis Championship, at the University ofIllinois Circle Campus (May 10 at 1 :30 p.m., May 11 at 9:00 a.m.).May 10— POETRY CONTEST: Florence James Adams Poetry Reading Contest final competi-A tion, supervised by the Department of English. Bond Chapel, 3:00-5:30 p.m.FILM : "Before the Revolution," directed by Bernardo Bertolucci. Presented by DocFilms. Quantrell Auditorium, Cobb Hall, 7:15 and 9:30 p.m. Admission is 75 cents.LECTURE: "Masada: What Was It? What Does It Mean?" by J. Coert Rylaarsdam,Professor in the Divinity School. Hillel House, 8 :30 p.m.UNIVERSITY THEATRE: "Camino Real," by Tennessee Williams. Mandel Hall,8:30 p.m. Tickets required— phone 3581.22May 11-15— TUTORIAL: Second International Tutorial on Hormonal Cytology, directed by Dr.George L. Wied, Professor of Obstetrics and Gynecology and of Pathology andDirector of the School of Cytotechnology. At the Center for Continuing Education.May 11— VARSITY BASEBALL: Maroons vs. Wabash College, at IIT, 12:30 p.m.SEMINAR: A Conversation with Elie Wiesel, novelist. Open to faculty and students. Hillel House, 4:30 p.m.FILM: "Wild Strawberries," directed by Ingmar Bergman. Sponsored by PierceTower Cinema. Quantrell Auditorium, Cobb Hall, 7:15 and 9:15 p.m. Tickets at door— admission $1.UNIVERSITY THEATRE: "Camino Real," by Tennessee Williams. MandelHall, 8:30 p.m. Tickets required— phone 3581.May 12— UNIVERSITY SERVICES: The Reverend E. Spencer Parsons, preacher. Rockefeller Chapel, 11:00 a.m.UNIVERSITY THEATRE: "Camino Real," by Tennessee Williams. Mandel Hall,8:30 p.m. Tickets required— phone 3581.May 13 — LECTURE : Eighth Annual Carlson Memorial Lecture, sponsored by the Departmentof Physiology. The lecturer will be Dr. Walle J. H. Nauta of the Department ofPsychology at Massachusetts Institute of Technology. Billings P-117, 3:00 p.m.LECTURE: "Human Resources in Urban Economics," by Ronald Brooks and"Toward a Method of Evaluating the Benefits of Adult Education," by John Prinz.Sponsored by the Urban Economics Workshop. Cobb 214, 3:30 p.m.SEMINAR: "The Molecular Beam Studies of Chemical Reactions," by Yuan Leeof the Chemistry Department at Harvard University. Sponsored by the ChemistryDepartment. Kent 103, 4:00 p.m.ALUMNI MEETING: Local program, Cleveland, Ohio.PUBLIC LECTURE: "Nuristan: The Land of Light," by Louis Dupree, Associateof the American Universities Field Staff and Associate Professor of Anthropology atPennsylvania State University. Sponsored by the Center for Middle Eastern Studies.Social Science 122, 4:00 p.m.MONDAY LECTURE: "Genes and Behavior— A New Look at an Old Problem," byBenson Ginsburg, Professor of Psychology. Law School Auditorium, 8:00 p.m.General admission is $10 for series tickets— phone FI-6-8300; student and facultyadmission is free — phone 3137.May 14— COUNCIL: Business East 106.DEANS MEETING: 11:30 a.m.VARSITY GOLF: Maroons vs. Wheaton and Roosevelt, at St. Andrews CountryClub.VARSITY BASEBALL: Maroons vs. Illinois Tech, 3:15 p.m.May 15-19— DRAMA: Lord Byron's "Cain," Rockefeller Chapel Chancel, 8:30 p.m.May 15— ELECTIONS ASSEMBLY: Speeches by candidates for Student Council of theLaboratory High School. Mandel Hall, 9:30-11:30 a.m.CONCERT: Musical Society, Mandel Hall, 1:30-4:00 p.m. Free— open to students,faculty and staff.23PUBLIC LECTURE: "Chopin Restored: A View of the Autographs," by ThomasHiggins, Professor at Northeast Missouri State College. Lexington Hall Studio,4:30 p.m.PUBLIC LECTURE: By Dr. Paul W. Pruyser of the Menninger Foundation,Topeka, Kansas. Swift Common Room, 8:00 p.m.DRAMA: Lord Byron's "Cain," Rockefeller Chapel Chancel, 8:30 p.m.ALUMNI MEETING: Philip Hauser, speaker. Orlando, Florida..May 16-1 7— GRADUATE SCHOOL OF BUSINESS SEMINAR: "Analysis of Security Prices,"at the Center for Continuing Education.May 16— PUBLIC LECTURE: "Idealism and Realism," by R. J. Coulson, Professor of Islamic Law at the University of London's School of Oriental and African Studies. Fifthin a series of six lectures on "Conflicts and Tensions in Islamic Jurisprudence." Sponsored by the Law School and the Center for Middle Eastern Studies. Laird BellQuadrangle, Seminar Room D, 3:30 p.m.LECTURE: "New Aspects in the Chemistry of Nerve Growth Factor," by IsaacSchenkein, Associate Professor of Biochemistry at New York University College ofDentistry. Sponsored by Advanced Genetics 395. Ricketts 7, 4:00 p.m.CONCERT: Folklore Society, Mandel Hall, 7:00 p.m.-midnight. Tickets required-phone 3580.FILM: "Memorandum," Burton- Judson Free Cinema, Judson Dining Room, 8:30 p.m.DRAMA: Lord Byron's "Cain," Rockefeller Chapel Chancel, 8:30 p.m.ALUMNI MEETING: Theatre party, New York City.ALUMNI MEETING: Phillip Hauser, speaker. Miami, Florida.May 17-19— DRAMA: "They Reached for His Gun," comedy by Paul D'Andrea. Reynolds ClubTheatre, 8:30 p.m. Tickets required— phone 3572.May 17-18— COLLEGIUM MUSICUM: Solo Ensemble, with Howard M. Brown, director.Music by Ockeghem and his contemporaries. Bond Chapel, 8:30 p.m.May 17 — FILM : Sponsored by Students for a Democratic Society. Quantrell Auditorium,7:30 p.m.LECTURE: "The Republic. Image and Argument," by Herman Sinaiko, AssociateProfessor of Humanities. Last in a series of eight lectures in the Works of the MindLecture Series, sponsored by the Downtown Center. Downtown Center, Room 700,8:00 p.m. Admission is $1.50— phone FI 6-8300, Ext. 46.DRAMA: Lord Byron's "Cain," Rockefeller Chapel Chancel, 8:30 p.m.DRAMA: "They Reached for His Gun," comedy by Paul D'Andrea. Reynolds ClubTheatre, 8:30 p.m. Tickets required— phone 3572.MUSIC: An evening of folksinging, Hillel House, 8:30 p.m.COLLEGIUM MUSICUM: Solo Ensemble, with Howard M. Brown, director. Musicby Ockeghem and his contemporaries. Bond Chapel, 8:30 p.m.ALUMNI MEETING: Arthur Mann, speaker. San Diego, California.ALUMNI MEETING: Joshua Taylor, speaker. Omaha, Nebraska.May is— CONFERENCE : Bio-medical Career Conference. Registration, Mandel Hall, 9:00-9:30 a.m.; visiting basic science courses, 9:30 a.m.-noon; lunch, Hutchinson Commons, noon; lecture and discussion, Mandel Hall, 1:15-3:30 p.m. For high schooljuniors, by invitation only.DINNER: Black tie dinner for board and officers of Mothers' Aid of Lying-in Hospital. Sponsored by the Biological Sciences Division. Quadrangle Club, 7:00 p.m., preceded by cocktails.DRAMA: "They Reached for His Gun," comedy by Paul D'Andrea. Reynolds ClubTheatre, 8:30 p.m. Tickets required — phone 3572.UNIVERSITY SYMPHONY ORCHESTRA: Richard Wernick, conductor. Rossini's "William Tell Overture," Webern's "Symphony Opus 21," and Mussorgsky-Ravel's "Pictures at an Exhibition." Mandel Hall, 8:30 p.m.DRAMA: Lord Byron's "Cain," Rockefeller Chapel Chancel, 8:30 p.m.COLLEGIUM MUSICUM : Solo Ensemble, with Howard M. Brown, director. Musicby Ockeghem and his contemporaries. Bond Chapel, 8:30 p.m.May 19— UNIVERSITY SERVICES: The Reverend E. Spencer Parsons, preacher. Rockefeller Chapel, 11:00 a.m.DRAMA: Lord Byron's "Cain," Rockefeller Chapel Chancel, 8:30 p.m.DRAMA: "They Reached for His Gun," comedy by Paul D'Andrea. Reynolds ClubTheatre, 8:30 p.m. Tickets required — phone 3572.May 20— SERVICE LEAGUE PROGRAM: University of Chicago Service League, Ida NoyesLibrary and Lounge, 1:00-4:00 p.m. Members only.VARSITY GOLF: Conference Tournament, at University of Illinois Circle Campus.LECTURE : "Externalities and Land Use," by Lawrence Schall. Sponsored by theUrban Economics Workshop. Cobb 214, 3:30 p.m.SEMINAR: "Control of Synthesis of Bacteriophage T4 Proteins," by RobertHaselkorn, Associate Professor of Biophysics. Sponsored by the Chemistry Department. Kent 103, 4:00 p.m.PUBLIC LECTURE: "Theory, Method and Bias: Studies in Cultural Change inAfghanistan," by Louis Dupree, Associate of the American Universities Field Staffand Associate Professor of Anthropology at Pennsylvania State University. Sponsoredby the Center for Middle Eastern Studies. Social Science 122, 4:00 p.m.May 21— COMMITTEE OF THE COUNCIL: At the Quadrangle Club, noon.GRADUATE SCHOOL OF BUSINESS COUNCIL: At the Center for ContinuingEducation.May 22— FACULTY MEETING: Divinity School, Swift Common Room, 3:00 p.m.LECTURE: "Regulation and Mechanism of Phosphoribosylpyrophosphate Synthetase," by Robert L. Switzer of the National Heart Institute. Sponsored by theBiochemistry Department Graduate Training Program. Abbott 101, 4:00 p.m.May 23-25— GRADUATE SCHOOL OF BUSINESS CONFERENCE: "Empirical Research inAccounting," at the Center for Continuing Education.May 23— BOARD OF PRECOLLEGIATE EDUCATION: At Hutchinson. Commons, noon.25PUBLIC LECTURE: "Stability and Change," by R. J. Coulson, Professor of Islamic Law at the University of London's School of Oriental and African Studies. Lastin a series of six lectures on "Conflicts and Tensions in Islamic Jurisprudence." Sponsored by the Law School and the Center for Middle Eastern Studies. Laird BellQuadrangle, Seminar Room D, 3:30 p.m.GRADUATE SCHOOL OF BUSINESS CONFERENCE: "Empirical Research inAccounting," at the Center for Continuing Education.LECTURE: "Human Mutations and Lipid Storage Diseases," by Donald S. Fred-rickson, Director of the National Heart Institute, National Institutes of Health,Bethesda, Maryland. Sponsored by Advanced Genetics 395. Ricketts 7, 4:00 p.m.ALUMNI MEETING: Norval Morris, speaker. Boston, Massachusetts.May 24-26— PLAYS AND MUSIC : The Renaissance Players and Collegium Musicum present thespring production of plays and music of the fifteenth and sixteenth centuries, at theFirst Unitarian Church.May 24-25 — DRAMA: Renaissance Players, Ida Noyes Theatre, 8:00 p.m. Tickets required-phone 2774 or 285-6238.CHICAGO SYMPHONY ORCHESTRA: Jean Martinon, conductor. Dallapiccola's"Variazioni per Orchestra," Shapey's "Invocation: Concerto for Violin and Orchestra(conducted by the composer, with Esther Glazer as violinist), and Carter's "PianoConcerto" (with Jacob Lateiner as pianist). Mandel Hall, 8:30 p.m. Tickets required—phone 2612.May 24— GRADUATE SCHOOL OF BUSINESS CONFERENCE: "Empirical Research inAccounting," at the Center for Continuing Education.LECTURE: "Comparative Aspects of the Primary Structures of Proteins," by Dr.Emanuel Margoliash of the Biochemistry Department. Sponsored by the Biochemistry Department. Abbott 101, 2:00 p.m.PLAYS AND MUSIC: The Renaissance Players and Collegium Musicum presentthe spring production of plays and music of the fifteenth and sixteenth centuries, atthe First Unitarian Church.CHICAGO SYMPHONY ORCHESTRA: Jean Martinon, conductor. Dallapiccola's "Variazioni per Orchestra," Shapey's "Invocation: Concerto for Violin andOrchestra" (conducted by the composer, with Esther Glazer as violinist), andCarter's "Piano Concerto" (with Jacob Lateiner as pianist). Mandel Hall, 8:30 p.m.Tickets required — phone 2612.May 25 — LECTURE: "Comparative Aspects of the Primary Structures of Proteins," by DR.Emanuel Margoliash of the Biochemistry Department. Sponsored by the Biochemistry Department. Abbott 101, 10:00 a.m.GRADUATE SCHOOL OF BUSINESS CONFERENCE: "Empirical Research inAccounting," at the Center for Continuing Education.PLAYS AND MUSIC: The Renaissance Players and Collegium Musicum present thespring production of plays and music of the fifteenth and sixteenth centuries, at theFirst Unitarian Church.CHICAGO SYMPHONY ORCHESTRA: Jean Martinon, conductor. Dallapiccola's "Variazioni per Orchestra," Shapey's "Invocation: Concerto for Violin andOrchestra" (conducted by the composer, with Esther Glazer as violinist), andCarter's "Piano Concerto" (with Jacob Lateiner as pianist). Mandel Hall, 8:30 ?&•Tickets required — phone 2612.y[ay 2d— UNIVERSITY SERVICES: The Reverend John B. Thompson of the PhilosophyDepartment at California State College, Hayward, California (former Dean of Rockefeller Chapel), preacher. Rockefeller Chapel, 11:00 a.m.PLAYS AND MUSIC: The Renaissance Players and Collegium Musicum present thespring production of plays and music of the fifteenth and sixteenth centuries at theFirst Unitarian Church.COLLEGIUM-CHORUS: Benjamin Hadley, director. Bach's "Wachet Auf," remainder of the program to be announced. Location to be announced, 8:30 p.m.May 27— LECTURE: "Benefits of Wilderness Recreation," by Robert Rugg, and "Critique ofAir Pollution Research," by Lawrence Fox. Sponsored by the Chemistry Department.Kent 103, 4:00 p.m.SEMINAR: "Self-Consistent Molecular Orbital Theory for Large Molecules," byJohn Pople, of the Chemistry Department at Carnegie Institute of Technology. Sponsored by the Chemistry Department. Kent 103, 4:00 p.m.May 28— DEANS MEETING: 11:30 a.m.COLLEGE COUNCIL: In the Swift Common Room, 3:40 p.m.BENEFIT DINNER AND BALLET: For Lying-in Hospital. Cocktails and dinner,Pick-Congress Hotel, 6:00 p.m.; Joffrey Ballet Company from City Center, New York,at Auditorium Theatre, 8:30 p.m. Tickets are $15 and up. Phone Mrs. W. BarnettBlakemore, Jr. at FA 4-0193.May 29 — FILM: "Help," directed by Richard Lester. Sponsored by Pierce Tower Cinema.Quantrell Auditorium, 6:00, 8:00, and 10:00 p.m. -Admission is 75 cents.May 31— LECTURE : "Comparative Aspects of the Primary Structures of Proteins," by Dr.Emanuel Margoliash of the Biochemistry Department. Sponsored by the Biochemistry Department. Abbott 101, 2:00 p.m.DRAMA: "The Man Who Came to Dinner," by Kaufman and Hart. LaboratorySchool Drama. Mandel Hall, 8:00 p.m. Tickets required — adults $1, students 75 cents.Phone 2526 or 2521.EXHIBITSMay 5-18— MF A CANDIDATE EXHIBITION: Paintings by Mitchell Becker, at MidwayStudios. Monday-Friday, 9:00 a.m.-5:00 p.m.; Saturday and Sunday, noon-5:00 p.m.ly 6-June 14— 18th CENTURY CHINESE TASTE: Arranged by Harrie Vanderstappen, at theRenaissance Gallery, 108 Goodspeed Hall. Monday-Friday, 10:00 a.m.-5:00 p.m.; Saturday, 1:00-5 :00 p.m.May 9-June— "THE PREHISTORIC EXHIBIT": Located in the Assyrian Hall of the OrientalInstitute. Prepared by Robert Braidwood, Professor in the Oriental Institute and theDepartment of Anthropology and Field Director of the Prehistoric Project. Designedby artists Martyl Langsdorf and Robert Middaugh. This exhibit emphasizes thechange-over from food gathering to food producing, the background that made civilization possible. Museum hours are 10:00 a.m.-5:00 p.m. Tuesday through Sunday; closedon Monday and University holidays. Admission free.May 19-25— SPRING QUARTER UNDERGRADUATE STUDENTS' EXHIBITION: Paintings,prints, drawings, sculpture and ceramics, at Midway Studios. Monday-Friday, 9:00a.m.-5:00 p.m.; Saturday and Sunday, noon-5:00 p.m.27May 26-June ^—SPRING QUARTER GRADUATE STUDENTS' EXHIBITION: Paintings, prints,drawings, sculpture and ceramics, at Midway Studios. Monday-Friday, 9:00 a.m.-5:00 p.m.; Saturday and Sunday, noon-5:00 p.m.CONVENTIONS IN CHICAGOMay 2-4 — Midwest Political Science Association, at the Sheraton- Chicago Hotel.Midwestern Psychological Association, at the Palmer House.May 3-4 — Central States Modern Language Teachers Association, at the La Salle Hotel.Conference on Negro History, American Association of University Presses, at the Center for Continuing Education.May 5-9 — American College of Obstetricians and Gynecologists, at the Palmer House.May 11-15 — Tutorial on Hormonal Cytology, University of Chicago Department of Obstetrics andGynecology, at the Center for Continuing Education.May 16-18 — Directors of Labor and Industrial Relations Centers, Industrial Relations Center, atthe Center for Continuing Education.May 17-19 — National Association of College and University Food Services, at the La Salle Hotel.May 19-22 — Illinois State Medical Society, at the Sherman House.May 20-24 — Mathematical Conference in Honor of Professor Marshall Stone, Department of Mathematics, at the Center for Continuing Education.May 23-25 — United States Institute for Theatre Technology, at the University of Illinois CircleCampus, Goodman Theatre, New Trier High School and Kungsholm Restaurant. Conventioneers will tour recently renovated Chicago Auditorium Theatre. Headquarterswill be at the Sheraton-Chicago Hotel.JUNEJune 1 — LECTURE: "Comparative Aspects of the Primary Structures of Proteins," by Dr.Emanuel Margoliash of the Biochemistry Department. Sponsored by the Biochemistry Department. Abbott 101, 10:00 a.m.DRAMA: "The Man Who Came to Dinner," by Kaufman and Hart. LaboratorySchool Drama. Mandel Hall, 8:00 p.m. Tickets required — adults $1, students 75 cents.Phone 2526 or 2521.June 2— CONVOCATION SUNDAY: Rockefeller Chapel, 11:00 a.m.CONVOCATION: Chicago College of Osteopathy, at Ida Noyes Hall.June 4— COMMITTEE OF THE COUNCIL: Joint meeting of newly-elected, continuing andretiring members. Quadrangle Club, noon.June 5— ANNUAL ALUMNI RECEPTION: Graduate School of Business, at Reynolds Club.OWL AND SERPENT DINNER: Sponsored by organization of students who haveattended the University. Quadrangle Club, 6:00 p.m.June 6— FACULTY MEETING: Biological Sciences, Billings P-117, 4:30 p.m.June 7— ALUMNAE BREAKFAST: Guest speaker is Muriel Beadle. Quadrangle Club,9:20 a.m.28SPRING CONVOCATION: Rockefeller Chapel, 3:00 p.m.SPECIAL VIET NAM ASSEMBLY: Rockefeller Chapel, 7:00 p.m.CLASS DINNER: Class of 1943 Dinner, Quadrangle Club. Reception 5:30 p.m.,dinner 7:00 p.m.CLASS DINNER: Class of 1918 Dinner, special tables at Cobb Hall Medical Dinner.DRAMA: "The Man Who Came to Dinner," by Kaufman and Hart. LaboratorySchool Drama. Mandel Hall, 8:00 p.m. Tickets required — adults $1, students 75 cents.Phone 2526 or 2521.June 8— SPRING CONVOCATION: Rockefeller Chapel, 10:30 a.m.ALUMNI DAY: University of Chicago Campus.SEMINAR: Quantrell Auditorium, morning.ALL ALUMNI LUNCHEON: Presentation of Alumni Association Medal, professionalawards and public service citations. Hutchinson Commons, noon.NEIGHBORHOOD TOUR: For all alumni, 3:00 p.m.PRESIDENT'S RECEPTION: For all alumni. Quadrangle Club, 4:30-5:30 p.m.DRAMA: "The Man Who Came to Dinner," by Kaufman and Hart. LaboratorySchool Drama. Mandel Hall, 8:00 p.m. Tickets required — adults $1, students 75 cents.Phone 2526 or 2521.INTERFRATERNITY SING: Hutchinson Commons, 8:30 p.m.June 11— SPRING QUARTER ENDS.DEANS MEETING: 11:30a.m.COUNCIL : Joint meeting of newly-elected, continuing and retiring members. BusinessEast 106, 3:40 p.m.June 12— AWARDS LUNCHEON AND ANNUAL DINNER: Graduate School of Business, atthe Quadrangle Club and Hutchinson Commons,June 13— TRUSTEES MEETING.June 16-21— GRADUATE SCHOOL OF BUSINESS CONFERENCE: "Economics of RegulatedPublic Utilities," at the Center for Continuing Education.June 18— ALUMNI MEETING: University of Chicago Medical Alumni at AMA Convention.R. Jamplin, chairman. San Francisco, California.EXHIBITJune 2-30— SCULPTURE EXHIBITION: By students of Virginio Ferrari, at Midway Studios.Monday-Friday, 9:00 a.m.-5:00 p.m.; Saturday and Sunday, noon-5:00 p.m.CONVENTIONS IN CHICAGOJune 17-20— Data, Processing Supplies Association, at the La Salle Hotel.June 19-26— Research and Engineering Council of the Graphic Arts Industry, at the Sheraton-Chicago HotelJune 20-25— Print '68, with accompanying exhibition, at the International Amphitheatre and PalmerHouse.29June 21-27 — Printing Industry of America, at the Palmer House.June 23-28 — National Council of Juvenile Court Judges, at the Knickerbocker Hotel.WEEKLY ACTIVITIESADAT SHALOM RELIGIOUS SERVICE: Ida Noyes Sun Parlor, third floor, sundown.BADMINTON, CO-RECREATIONAL: Wednesday, Ida Noyes Gym, 7:30-9:30 p.m.CHESS CLUB: Sunday, Ida Noyes Sun Parlor, 3:00-6:00 p.m.CHICAGO LACROSSE CLUB: Phone Bill Wilkes or Bruce Steinwald, Ext. 4193.COLLEGIUM MUSICUM: Monday, Ida Noyes Library, 7:30-10:00 p.m.CONCERT BAND REHEARSAL: Thursday, Belfield 244, Laboratory School, 5:00 p.m.CONTEMPORARY MUSIC SOCIETY: Tuesday, Ida Noyes Cloister Club, 7:30 p.m. Open to the public.COUNTRY DANCERS: Wednesday, Ida Noyes Dance Room, 8:00-10:00 p.m.EXPERIMENTAL DANCE WORKSHOP: Wednesday, Ida Noyes Theatre, 6:30-10:30 p.m. Registration fee— phone 285-2697.FILMS: Friday and Saturday at the Blue Gargoyle, Disciples of Christ Student Center, 5655 UniversityAvenue, 8:00 p.m.FOLK DANCING: Balkanske Igre Dance Ensemble, Sunday, Ida Noyes Hall, 3 : 30-7: 00 p.m.; Israeli folkdancing, Thursday, Hillel House, 7:30-10:30 p.m.; Sunday, Ida Noyes Cloister Club, 7:30-11:00 p.m.FOLK DANCING AND SQUARE DANCING: Tuesday, International House Assembly Hall, 8:00-10:00 p.m.INTERNATIONAL DISCUSSION GROUP: Friday, Crossroads Student Center, 5621 Blackstone Avenue, 8:00 p.m. Open to the public.INTERVARSITY CHRISTIAN FELLOWSHIP: Friday, Ida Noyes Library, 7:30-9:45 p.m.KARATE CLASSES: For men and women. Monday and Wednesday, Ida Noyes Hall, beginners at 7:00p.m., intermediates at 8:15 p.m. Phone 3574.LATTER DAY SAINTS: Wednesday, Ida Noyes Hall, 7:30-10:00 p.m.MORTAR BOARD: Tuesday, Ida Noyes Hall, 7:00-8 :00 p.m.MUSIC, PLAY READINGS, STUDENT ART: Monday-Friday at the Blue Gargoyle, Disciples ofChrist Student Center, 5655 University Avenue, noon -midnight.ONE PITCH SOFTBALL: Five men and four women or four men and five women, Monday andWednesday, on the Midway, 4:30-6:00 p.m. Phone 3574.QUAD CLUB: Girls group, Thursday, Ida Noyes Hall, 8:00-9:00 pm.RADIO SERIES: From the Midway— Saturday, WNIB-FM (97.1), 11:00 a.m.; Sunday, WFMF(100.3), 7:00 a.m.; Sunday, WAIT (820), 10:00 a.m.; Tuesday, WEBH (93.9), midnight, and Friday,WEBH (93.9), 6:00 a.m. Conversations at Chicago— Friday, WFMT (98.7), 10:30 p.m.SATURDAY LUNCHEONS: Crossroads Student Center, 5621 Blackstone Avenue, 1:00 p.m. Admission is 75 cents.SOFTBALL: Part of women's varsity sports program, March 26-May 30, Tuesday and Thursday,Ida Noyes Hall, 3:30 p.m. Phone 3574.SQUARE DANCING: Saturday, Ida Noyes Hall, Dance Room, 7:30-11:00 p.m.30SUNDAY EVENING SUPPERS: Brent House, 75 cents, 6:00 p.m.; Calvert House, $1, by reservation(phone BU 8-2311), 6:00 p.m.; Chapel House, 75 cents, 5:30 p.m. followed by program at 6:30 p.m.SWIMMING, COEDUCATIONAL: Saturday, Ida Noyes Pool, 2:00-3:00 p.m.SWIMMING, FAMILY: Saturday, Ida Noyes Pool, 3 :00-4 :00 p.m.TENNIS: Part of women's varsity sports program, March 25-May 29, Monday and Wednesday, Kenwood Courts, 2 :30 p.m. Phone 3574.TV SERIES: Charlando— Saturday, WGN/Channel 9, 11:30 a.m. The University of Chicago RoundTable— Sunday, WTTW/Channel 11, 5:30 p.m.; Friday, WTTW/Channel 11, 9:30 p.m.VOLLEYBALL, CO-RECREATIONAL: Monday, Ida Noyes Gym, 7:30-9:30 p.m.WOMEN FOR RADICAL ACTION IN POLITICS: Tuesday, Ida Noyes East Lounge, 7:00-10:00 p.m.WUCB RADIO: Campus radio station, Reynolds Club, Monday-Friday, 7:00 a.m.-2:30 a.m.; Saturday, 10:00 a.m.-2:30 a.m.; Sunday, 1:00 p.m.-2:30 a.m.HOLIDAYSMother's Day Sunday, May 12Memorial Day Thursday, May 30Father's Day Sunday, June 18Independence Day Thursday, July 4Labor Day Monday, September 2Rosh Hashana Monday, September 23Yom Kippur Wednesday, October 2Columbus Day Saturday, October 12Halloween Thursday, October 31Election Day Tuesday, November 5Thanksgiving Day Thursday, November 28Hanukka Monday, December 16Christmas Wednesday, December 25IMPORTANT UNIVERSITY DATESConvocation Sunday Sunday, June 2Spring Convocation (1) Friday, June 7Spring Convocation (2) Saturday, June 8Alumni Day Saturday, June 8Spring Quarter Ends Saturday, June 8THE UNIVERSITY OF CHICAGO RECORDOFFICE OF THE SECRETARY OF THE FACULTIES31I3o3Owoo0onCfQ000ONoOSO-om I cTO> "O J/>z p > O<4p _ ™" ir-r-z a >O**4 o m