>rr* ±\ ^nrr^X v\MAY 1962 kr* V>: ivaftuniversi ty o fCHICAGOmagazine X V-<•' * s k«V3<& ^ V|.Tlu :-:<*:••</ .<-"\"yl Zl& K \-A>'SMf-iu •;r •» .J*"**.i>< sv ^r /5 -A <r>C*^ r.v : • - ^'^'i * K ** 1 \t -rat ¦>"\ /4 v-1** j&flft-'IX XuSome thingsyou musttie down!Funds for a higher education, for example.In the past twenty years college costs havedoubled and they may well redouble in thenext twenty. It pays, therefore, to make certain . . . well in advance . . . that the necessarymoney will be available, come what may.Life insurance offers you the means. AndConnecticut Mutual Life offers you a choiceof popular plans. In Plan A, all the moneyfor college is provided, whether you live ordie. In Plan B, part of the money is providedif you live ... all of it if you do not.Talk with a CML man. Ask him to explainin detail how easily you can guarantee moneyfor the higher education of your children.You'll find him a helpful man to know.Dividends paid to policyholdersfor 116 yearsOwned by its policyholders, CML provides high qualitylife insurance at low cost and gives personal servicethrough more than 300 offices in the United States.Connecticut Mutual LifeINSURANCE COMPANY • HARTFORDYour fellow alumni nowwith CMLJoseph H. Aaron '27 ChicagoEdward B. Bates, CLU '40 Home officeChester F. Goss, CLU '52 MiamiRobert A. Havens '50 AlbuquerquePaul 0. Lewis, CLU '28 ChicagoFred G. Reed '33 ChicagoDan 0. Sabath •43 ChicagoRussell C. Whitney, CLU '29 Chicagomemo padLon«ieisbackoth ° snould walk into my office theJr eij afternoon but Amos Alonzo Stagg,kte k °f Sus(luenanna University-mo' ,ecause Lonnie and wife haveW0 h back to Chicago-actually Home-(M near tneir daugnter» Barbarapri rs* Eccker). You are no more sur-j ,eci than I was, particularly whenshift ?6d that Lonnie had suddenlyted from ivy to investments.fac ;ter a quarter of a century on thea\v ^ °f Susquehanna and three yearsvisftf ^r°m retirement, Lonnie wasWaiul his daugnter last August. Hec iked into the offices of Reynolds &Co mPany, where he had had an ac-the^' Said Lonnie> simply, "One of^s executives offered me a positionan account executive-and I took it."but >St°ry is a nttle more involvedSee , we'll let him tell you when youto ti"1' Tne Point is tne family movedro j0mew°od and Lonnie workedWin? the clock through the fall andti0 ' P^paring for all the examina-au2s Wnich would make him a licensedajj nority in the investment world. Nowy0 ,j|e needs are customers. And ify ,}} turn to the Class News sectionuu see the Reynolds & Co. announce-me*t of his «-« — t^-ney/ position. Lonnie tells me that his son AmosIII is doing exceptionally well in GrandRapids, Michigan where he is a vicepresident of Eberhard Co a foodchain His son-in-law in Homewoodis with Merrill Lynch etc., investments.Philadelphia at noonAll these years we've been avoidingnoon luncheons for local club meetingsSo when we learned that PresidentBeadle was to be giving an eveningspeech at the University of Pennsylvania on March 21st and that he couldinclude a meeting with our Philade I-phia alumni if it were the lunch hour,I called Harold Laden, one of our keyalumni in tha': city, and said howBWith some doubts as to a good turnout we set up a luncheon at the Warwick Hotel. I flew into Philadelphiafor the meeting and was agreeably impressed with a record turnout of eightyIt was one of our best meetings in thatcitv in a generation. I'm now ready torecommend it to othei -clubs in citieswhere suburbs drain off our alumni atfilf^New York where our alumni in the communications field were holding a 5:30cocktail party and program at the Hai-"ISt Sola Pool, mAM^39 PhD'52, chairman of the international communications program at the Center forInternational Studies at M.I.T., was thespeaker. His was a fascinating subject:"A People Machine," and 125 communicators asked questions far into thedinner hour.The New York cocktail party hasbeen successfully substituted for theformer seven dollar dinner, where atfive o'clock, everyone rushes out otManhattan to three states. This cocktail hour is another format I recommendto clubs in commuting cities.And in Los Angeles . . .on March 23rd, Bruno Bettelheim, director of the Sonia ShankmanOrthogenic School, was the speaker ata meeting which Brownlee Haydon(vice president of the Club) reportedwas a "rousing success" with the largest turnout in the seven-year historyof the Los Angeles Club - nearly 500people."Brownlee added that the programwas taped by a local FM station forlater broadcast and the Club hopes toprint copies of the speech for thosein attendance.Mr. Bettelheim is not only one ofour best and most fascinating speakersbut one of our most cooperative.He called me early in the year tosay that he would be in Los Angelesin late March and could he be of anyservice to our alumni while he wasthere. Of course he's tops in our bookas he is tops with our alumni whereverhe appears.My next Club visits: Buffalo on May1st with Philip M. Hauser, chairmanof the Department of Sociology, andCleveland on May 23rd with W. AllenWallis, dean of the Graduate Schoolof Business.FinallyWe are hoping you can visit us forReunion, June 8th and 9th. TowerTopics, with the complete program,should reach you at any moment. We'llbe waiting for you with iced tea orcoffee in the Alumni Lounge (5733University Avenue).As I write this on April 11th, wehave 1500 more Foundation gifts thanthis date last year. Could it be thatthis is the year when we will zoomto a new all-time high of more than15,000 contributors? Last year the figure was 13,727.Amos Alonzo Stagg ScholarshipAs the Grand Old Man approachesthe beginning of his second hundredyears, the University announces theestablishment of an Amos Alonzo StaggScholarship Fund. This will be an all-expense, endowed scholarship for highschool seniors with scholastic standing,leadership qualities, character, andphysical stamina.Former Chancellor Kimpton madethe first substantial contribution to thisfund. Gifts marked "Stagg Fund," canbe sent to the Alumni Office.H.W.M.May.> 1962U N I VERSITY OFCHICAGOmagazine5733 University AvenueChicago 37, IllinoisMidway 3-0800; Extension 3244EDITOR Marjorie BurkhardtEDITORIAL ASSISTANT Rona MearsFEATURES3 Great TeachersDwight J. Ingle5 Theatre in Bond Chapel6 Notes from the Classes of '97 and '029 Children in CourtCharles H. ShiremanII Social Sciences Tea12 New Dorm Open House22 3 Steps to a New KentDEPARTMENTSI Memo Pad15 News of the Quadrangles17 Books by Faculty and Alumni25 News of the Alumni36 MemorialsCOVERStudent, complete with book bag, tries out thenew grass in the main quadrangle.CREDITSCover, 5, 11-12, 15, 17, 22 top, 23 bottom, 24:Daniel Lyon; 9: Citizenship Training Group,Boston Juvenile Court; 16: J. L. Marchael;22 bottom, 23 top: Lee Balterman.THE ALUMNI ASSOCIATIONPRESIDENT John F. Dille, Jr.EXECUTIVE DIRECTOR Howard W. MortADMINISTRATIVE ASST Ruth G. HalloranPROGRAMMING MaryJeanne CarlsonALUMNI FOUNDATIONNational chairman C. E. McKittrickChicago-Midwest Area Florence MedowREGIONAL OFFICESEastern Region John Callahan26 E. 38th StreetNew York 16, N. Y.MUrray Hill 3-1063Los Angeles Mrs. Marie Stephens1195 Charles St., Pasadena 3After 3 P.M.— SYcamore 3-4545MEMBERSHIP RATES (Including Magazine)I year. $5.00: 3 years, $12.00Published monthly, October through June, by theUniversity of Chicaqo Alumni Association, 5733 University Avenue, Chicaqo 37, III. Annual subscriptionprice, (5.00. Single copies, 25 cents. Entered assecond class matter December I, 1934, at the PostOffice of Chicago, III., under the act of March 3,1879. Advertising eqent: The American AlumniCouncil. 22 Washington Square. New York, N. Y. for a cool, comfortable SummerOUR EXCLUSIVE, LIGHTWEIGHTSUITS AND SPORTWEAR(shown) Our New Washable Suit oj 7 '-Ounce Dacron®Polyester and Worsted in Town Wear Colorings, $60Our Featherweight Dacron® Polyester andRayon Suits, $42.50Our Remarkable Brooksweave (Dacron® Polyester andCotton) Suits, $49.50; Odd Jackets, $37.50; OddTrousers, $16.50; Bermuda Length Shorts, $13.50Our Distinctive Tropical Worsted Suits, jrom $80*Our Traditional Cotton Seersucker Suits, $35;Odd Jackets, $25; Odd Trousers, $12.50Hand- Woven Cotton India Madras Odd Jackets, $39.50Lightweight Worsted Blazers, $5 5Illustrated catalog and swatches upon request."Slightly higher west of the Rockies.ESTABLISHED ISISSalens fumishUigi^ats ^f hoe*74 E. MADISON ST., NEAR MICHIGAN AVE., CHICAGO 2, ILL.NEW YORK • BOSTON • PITTSBURGH • SAN KRANCISCO • I.OS ANGELES2 THE UNIVERSITY OF CHICAGO MAGAZlN^Professor Ingle, a noted hormone researcher andchairman of the Department of Physiology, is concerned "with the decline in interest in teaching whichjs a barrier to excellence in our College." Himselfinvolved in research, as well as teaching, he feelsthat every teacher has the right to an opportunity^or inquiry as a member of a university faculty, anda right to freedom of choice in determining theobject matter of his course. Mr. Ingle was the discoverer of the biological effects of the hormonescortisone and hydrocortisone. He came to the University in 1953, having received his Bachelor's andMaster's from the University of Idaho, and his Ph.D.from the University of Minnesota. He had been onthe staff at the Mayo Clinic and of Upjohn Co. QREAT TEACHERSFOR OURUNIVERSITYBY DWIGHT J. INGLEWhere can we find great teachers? It is surely truethat interest in and quality of teaching have declined,and that this will limit the achievements of institutionsdevoted to teaching and discovery. I write in responseto the gentle wisdornof Professor Kermit Eby in hisessay"The Odrjs are A^Sn^t'^(Uniyerjj^oTChicagoM^^^^archTl962J. I shartThis concernandhisdoubt 'tfiaTtTiis and" '"otKer universities can satisfy theirneed for "dedicated, able, and enthusiastic teachers."I agree that the rising emphasis on research has broughta decline in the number of good teachers. But, as anindividual who loves the laboratory, my perspective andbiases are different. I welcome this opportunity toexpress my faiths, subjective as they are. The word"research" is used in its broadest sense here, to includeother forms of inquiry besides that conducted in alaboratory.Research and writing are rewarded more generouslythan is teaching. It is not that researchers are over-rewarded, but that teachers are under-rewarded. Thisinequity can be corrected any time that administratorsand the fund-granting agencies which support education and research determine to do so. A talent forteaching and a talent for research do not always coexist; there will always be individuals gifted in onewho should not attempt the other. But what aboutPresident Beadle's University of X, our dream for theUniversity of Chicago? One of the primary goals of theUniversity of X was "the fullest possible intellectualand emotional development of those individuals withthe highest degree of creative ability and the greatestpromise for leadership." Should we aim for generalseparation of teachers and researchers? Nol I believethat each scholar has the right to inquiry if he doesit well. Similarly, each scholar should have the opportunity to teach if he does it well. Teaching and discovery can reinforce each other; optimal interplayMAY, 1962 3between them is an essential to develop a greatuniversity.Secondly, I believe that, generally speaking, goodresearchers excel non-researchers as' teachers. I amthinking now of creative men who do research becausethey cannot help it; whose enthusiasm sets light in theminds of young people around them because they findtheir field of inquiry a wonderland. John Manley,William Nitze, James Breasted, Leonard White, CariMoore, Karl Lashley, and Dallas Phemister were a fewof that kind. There were and are many others. As faras communication in the sciences is concerned, few, ifany, men can write an adequate textbook unaided byspecialists, and the teacher without research experienceis likely to make fuzzy, inaccurate syntheses of rapidlyevolving fields. There are notable exceptions, and Iwould nurture them in our University and bestow onthem rewards and approbation, but their kind is decreasing and may become rare.Universities must offer some highly organized elementary and service courses and these can representexcellent teaching. But it seems to me that a university becomes great only when its faculty includesunique individuals who each have something to saythat could not be said by another. Their courses shouldrepresent free enterprise in teaching and direct linesof communication between discovery and learning.Teaching and inquiry need not be incompatible,provided that enough time is available for each activity.We must see that they are complementary, for teachingand research can be mutually enriching. Research ishere to stay, and certain freedoms are required by theresearchers. The days when research was done at oddhours snatched at random from a harried schedule willnot and should not return. Teaching loads must belight and permit a predictable schedule for research.The scholar should be an individualist in teaching,and this freedom in a university is just as importantas freedom of inquiry. I do not support freedom to beirresponsible or insensitive to the needs of students.But many potentially good teachers purposely stayaway from highly organized programs which make afetish of bundles of facts and which measure the success of teaching solely in terms of students' performance on standardized examinations. As an individual,I have tried to be humble, but am not so lacking inpride that I would take part in committee-run courses.I do not imply that exchanging ideas on the aims andcontent of courses is useless, but this can easily be overdone to the point of destroying the individuality of thegifted teacher.I have a firm opinion that the quality of teachingin colleges and universities could be improved by formalattention to the aims, philosophy, and techniques ofeducation; the average teacher is grossly ignorant ofthese. Educational philosophy and methods evolvedover a long period into a body of useful information.Teachers in elementary and secondary schools are required to study the methods of education, but at theuniversity level this is not true. Knowledge of teachingmethods is important, but this alone does not producegreat teachers. There is an element of art in greatteaching just as in great research.Professor Eby and all of us are concerned with the University of X; can our University of Chicago identifywith it? I do not believe that this University can become great again without first building a great college.I have heard over and over that the Hutchins planfailed because the faculty of the divisions would notsupport general education and were interested only inpre-professional education. This was a factor, but therewas a more crucial reason for failure. The attempt tobuild a staff devoted to full-time teaching withoutopportunity for discovery, without qualifications for appointments in the divisions, was bound to fail. Andthere were other contributing factors, such as publicrelations and admissions policies which went awry,but they need not be discussed here.A-£*. S an individual, I approve of general education inthe college, but it must include an understanding of aworld studied and shaped by science. Science need notbe a barrier to the flowering of the human spirit. Theteaching of science can be linked with humanism,but there must be a factual substratum on which scientific—or, indeed, any scholarly advance— is based. Thosestudents who are headed for professional training andwant to get going at it should find disciplinary, informational courses at the undergraduate level.I would be pleased to see our undergraduates incontact with ideas more than with data, but at thesame time given an infinitely better training than theypresently get in methods of evaluating claims to knowledge. My impression that undergraduates commonlyfail to learn how to judge evidence may be shapedunduly by reading the Maroon. I hope for the daywhen each great teacher from the divisions has theopportunity and interest to teach undergraduates. Butthis will never come if only heavy teaching loads areoffered and if the teacher risks becoming less importantthan the committee.A great deal of education, even at the graduate level,can emphasize the mystery, color, beauty, and dramaof a subject. I feel that teaching which aims towardeither appreciation or mastery of information is usuallydone best by individuals engaged in original inquiryof their own choice. This University has had manysuch men. I was never a student here, but Child andHerrick were among the great teachers of Chicagowho inspired me with their concepts of developmentalbiology. Some readers will remember the early-morningclasses of A. J. Carlson with standing room only, anda round table at the Quadrangle Club where each noonEnrico Fermi sat surrounded by young men. I knowmany brilliant investigators in research institutes andindustry who long for students, but who would notgive up an undue amount of time from research.There are, I think, only artificial barriers to thecreation of the University of X and identifying it withthe University of Chicago; but these barriers seem justas formidable and enduring to me as to Professor Eby.We can achieve it, though, if we aim more for freedomthan organization, more for quality than size, and areguided by the natural reasons why scholars and studentsseek to learn and discover rather than by the objectiveto teach trades. ¦4 THE UNIVERSITY OF CHICAGO MAGAZINETHEATREAT NIGHTIN BONDCHAPEL,'• S- Eliofs "Murder in the Cathedral" was the first offering this quarter bydiversity Theatre. Their search for new stages resulted in this performancen B°nd Chapel. Next scheduled: "Caine Mutiny" in the Law School courtroom.MAY, 1962WALDO PRESTON BREEDENA Girl's Basketball Team of 1895 — tentative identification:Standing from left to right — Lucia May Manning, '95, Inez Rice,'98, Sarah E. Wallace, '97, Nellie Tefft (Spitzer), '97, Ruth Moore,'02. Seated from left to right — Unknown, Maude Barnes (Ellis),'96, Mary Hubbard, '96, Unknown, Mary Furness, '96, ElsieMiller, '00, MD'04. BURT BARKERNOTES FROMThe Classes of1897 and 1902We asked members of theclasses of 1897 and 1902,the two oldest classes returningto the Annual June Reunion,to tell us about their accomplishmentssince leaving the University andtheir reminiscences of the old days. BURT B. BARKER, 1897-Portland,Ore.: Received my LL.B. degree fromHarvard Law School in 1901; 1901-1917— practiced law in Chicago and wassecretary of the Chicago Bar Assn. fortwo terms; 1918-1928— practiced lawin New York City; from 1928 to date-vice president of the University of Oregon. Have not retired although I amemeritus in official capacity. I still havemy office and secretarial help as beforebecoming emeritus. Now 88 years old,I walk 20 blocks each day to lunch andyesterday worked four hours in mygarden. Among honors and events ofinterest: received an LL.D. in 1955from Linficld College in McMinnville,Ore.; was president of the Oregon Historical Society for two terms, three tripsto London doing research in Hudson'sBay Archives, and published threebooks on Dr. John McLoughlin. (Mr.Barker is chairman of the LegislativeCommittee of Oregon to put Statuesof Dr. John McLoughlin and Rev. JasonLee in Statuary Hall, Washington, D.C,also replicas of them on the capitalgrounds in Salem, Ore.)In reminiscing about my years at theU of C, I remember how we raised ourclass (1897) flag over cither Kent Hallor Ryerson. The class of '98 took itclown and replaced it with their flag.There was a rare fight between the twoclasses and we finally won and loweredthe '98 flag and replaced it with ourown '97. Then we had a bunch of thegirls of our class sit on the stairs toprevent the '98 men from going againinto the tower. In this way we keptour flag flying all day. I had that flagfor many years and brought it to our 50th reunion. It should be exhibitedat our 65th reunion.WALDO P. BREEDEN, 1897-Pitts-burgh, Pa.: Since college I have spentone year of service on the staff of theFirst Division, 2nd Army Corps at CampAlger, Va., in the Spanish AmericanWar; three years studying law in lawoffice and working as business managerof an architectural firm in Jamestown,N.Y.; attendance at law school at theUniversity of Pennsylvania; practicinglaw at Pittsburgh, Pa. to date; still notretired. Know a large number of U ofC alumni on the faculty of the University of Pittsburgh, Carnegie Instituteof Technology and Mellon Institute,and in the Pittsburgh pulpits.(In reminiscences about his years atthe University:) was a member of thebasketball team; played football as fullback of the scrubs; played baseball ascatcher on the reserves and substitutecatcher on the varsity; organized theChicago Consolidated Baseball Team'CCs,' which included Fred Merrifield,'98, '01, Phil Rand, '97, Merrill P. Griffith, '97, and W. Scott Bond, '97. Thefootball team in 1892 (the year theUniversity opened) included Stagg andDonald McGillivray, '93, as half-backs;and in baseball, Ralph W. Webster, '95,PhD'02, MD'98, and Henry Adkinson,'97, AM'97, as inficldcrs, with Staggand Fred Nichols, '97, composing areversible battery. The following year,victories began to come quite frecjuent-ly, and a celebration would follow, witha bonfire near Snell Hall. The policewould invariably muscle in to stop thefun and when the participants wouldseek the shelter of Snell Hall, the cops6 THE UNIVERSITY OF CHICAGO MAGAZINE|fjyI ' 1 HI^¦ko l-J. ^1 •1 ^ 7*r^HNELLIE HALSTED TAYLORTHEODOSIA KANE ESHBAUGHfollowed the fleeing students and thenWould be doused witii water. The finalgame with Michigan was won 10 to 6,and in the fervor of the celebration,Fred Steigmeyer, '97, wrote the "JohnD. Rockefeller Song," which was moreoften sung than the Alma Mater. StaggWould lead the fun at die bonfire festivities and sing, "Are you diereMortality?" with pantomine accompaniments.I also remember there was a prohibition against marriage by studentsand when Frank E. Herring and another student were so bold as to disobey, they were promptly expelled. Aridiculing song was composed, in whichtlie refrain included: "The profs makestudent customs at the U, Our dignified trustees and gifted faculties, Allmake the students Cuss 'em at the U."THEODOSIA KANE ESHBAUGH,1897-Evanston, 111.: For some years Ioccasionally wrote for the ChicagoRecord-Herald (no longer published),and for the Kansas City Star. Havevisited Canada (Vancouver Island toQuebec), once around the world, ninetimes in Europe, four times in England.My travels have brought me in contactwith many interesting people and I"ave over the years corresponded withfriends made in England, France, Italy,Switzerland, Egypt and Japan.Some of the happiest years of mylife were when I was a student at theUniversity. I was a charter memberof the Quadranglers and of Nu PiSigma. The faculty did not allow sororities to be established but did permitWomen's clubs and it was at my sug gestion that the Quadranglers and NuPi Sigma were founded. At that timeNu Pi Sigma was a social club comprised of elected members of the women's clubs tiien existent— Mortarboards,Quadranglers, Esoterics and Sigmas.Now, I am told it is an honor society.I was the youngest girl in the University, Stella Robertson Stagg, die nextyoungest. I was under the requiredage as a matter of fact, but had a sortof pull through my father's identification with the Chicago Academy, laterthe Lewis Institute. In 1894 I waselected chairman of the Dramatic Committee and under my direction severalplaylets were put on, though we didn'thave any scenery. In one of thoseplaylets or two, I played opposite WaltAtwood (Wallace Walter Atwood '97,PhD'03).LEILA FISH MALLORY, 1897-Clear-water, Fla.: Widow of associate professorHervey Foster Mallory, who was director of U of C Home Study Department;mother of Ruth Mallory Smith, '20,and Norman Harper Mallory, '25. Since1943 I have been reporting for theClearwater Lawn Bowling Club in adaily news column. Have never retired, still "at it."I value the personal contact widione of the great men of my lifetime,President William Rainey Harper, andother great men of that period as theoutstanding memories of my life. Ihad a personal note on his 93rd birdi-day from Amos Alonzo Stagg whosewife was my basketball captain for fouryears. They were both fine charactersto be in contact with young collegiates. ROBERT H. H. GOHEEN, 1902-(MD'05)-Princeton, N.J.: Since collegeI have been a medical missionary to India of the Presbyterian Church for 40years, and staff member and director ofthe Associated Missions Medical Office,New York City for five years. Thirty-three years— starting from nothing inan isolated and unfriendly area on thewest coasts of India just north of Goaat Vengurla— to build a general hospital, a leprosarium and a tuberculosissanatorium, was a program full of chal-leges and corresponding rewards. Thelast term we were transferred to Mirajup on the Deccan Plateau. Here 1was to be the director of the widelyknown Medical Center consisting ofa large hospital and medical school—with myself a:; professor of surgery—a leprosarium, a sanatorium and fourbranch hospitals. Extracurricular activities during this time included beingeditor of the Journal of the ChristianMedical Association of India for fiveyears, then president of die associationfor one term. One year also, I becamesuperintendent of the Union MissionsTuberculosis Sanatorium at Arogyvar-am, Madras State. This provided theopportunity to introduce thoracic surgery, with very rewarding results, asI had found in our own small sanatorium in the late twenties.(Some reminiscences about his yearsat die U of C): After having hadLatin and Greek taught by methodsthen current, it was a novel experiencein the German class, taught by a youngGerman, not to be allowed, after thefirst ten minutes of the course, a singleword in English from anyone— notMAY, 1962 7usual in those days, but very effective!I received a scholarship award of$50.00 that entailed a research problem. As I was going in for medicine,a biology problem was assigned underthe direction of Professor LewellynBarker. In afternoon seminars eachweek our problems were discussed inhis office while tea was served andoften a distinguished guest would bepresent. My problem was to try toimmunize female rats to prevent conception by injections of a male rat'sspermatozoa subcutaneously. It did notsucceed!!Retirement has included seven yearsin Orlando, Fla., and five years inPrinceton, Life in central Floridawith its salubrious climate and manydelightful people there for similarreasons makes for many warm friendships, good golf, congenial club andchurch activities, and little to wishfor except proximity to our childrenand grandchildren. The wish materialized when we yielded to the urgingof our son, Bob, after his election aspresident of Princeton University in1957, that we should come to Princeton to occupy his house when he, hiswife and six children would move intoProspect, the president's residence. Thestep was taken and has not been regretted. Our family now includes eightgrandchildren and two great grandchildren.OSCAR O. HAMILTON, 1902-Frank-fort, Ind. : I taught physics, chemistryand algebra in the public high school atSavanna, 111., one year. In bankingbusiness at Stockwell, Ind., and Cayuga,Ind., for 52 years. Retired as presidentof the Stockwell State Bank in 1956.While at the U of C was Phi BetaKappa and received two scholarships inchemistry. (He and his wife have entered Wesley Manor, a Methodist homein Frankfort.)ROBERT L. HENRY, JR., 1902 (JD'08)-Louisville, Ky.: 1904-07 RhodesScholar at Oxford, receiving B.C.L. degree. 1907-11: Professor of Law, University of Louisiana. 1901-12: Professorof Law, University of Illinois. 1912-14:Dean of College of Law, University ofNorth Dakota. 1914-16: Professor ofLaw, University of Iowa. 1917-18: Captain of Information and instructor inOfficers Training Camps. 1918-19:Major, General Staff of War Department, Washington, D.C. 1919: Memberof Construction Demobilization Committee. 1919-21: Member of WarDepartment Board of Contract Adjustment. 1921-22: Lecturer at OxfordUniversity. 1921-24: research and writing at Oxford, with book Contracts in the Local Courts of Medieval Englandpublished. 1924-49: Judge on MixedCourts of Egypt-Tribunal, 1924-39;president of Tribunal, 1937-39; Justice,Court of Appeals, Supreme Court, 1939-49. (Among Mr. Henry's honors: Honorary D.C.L. from Oxford Universityin 1926; alumni medal from U of Cin 1942; decoration of Grand Officerof the Order of the Nile in 1949; listedin Who's Who in America since 1913;and in Who's Who (British) since1924.) Retired as judge in 1949 whenMixed Courts closed. Since then Ihave been engaged in research andwriting, with many articles in legalmagazines.Known as "Pat" Henry at the University, I was a member of the trackteam for three years and winner ofthe "C" three times. It was a thrillto meet the 'Old Man' (Stagg) at the50th anniversary of the graduation ofmy class in 1952. He was at the U of Cto celebrate his 90th birthday. Heremembered me instantly when I wentto shake his hand. I said, "Hello, Lon,"and he said, "Hello, Pat." We hadn'tseen each other for at least 40 years.He is certainly a unique personalityand a most remarkable man.RUTH E. MOORE, 1902-Chicago, 111.:Occupation since college days: was 42years teaching in high schools, chiefly in Chicago's Lake View High School.Retiring in 1940, I found an activelife in Women's City Club, Red Cross,and League of Women Voters. From1944 on, our zeal for the United Nations, understanding it and boosting it,was full time work and very exciting.Concentration on world affairs has beena continuing activity on through theyears even when I have been no longerconnected with the League of WomenVoters or the Council on Foreign Relations.Back in my first years on campus(1894-96) a few highlights I recall:1) Chapel service with Dr. Harperpresiding held in the north room ofCobb Hall, 2) A mass meeting to celebrate Mr. Rockefeller's gift of $3,000,-000 held in Ryerson Lecture Hall, 3)Going to call on the newly-marriedStella and Alonzo Stagg in their apartment, 4) Miss Talbot's supervising themaking of French dressing at the dinner table in Beecher.ZELLMER R. PETTET, 1902-Phoenix,Ariz.: Merchant, farmer, agriculturalstatistician for 25 years with the U.-S.D.A.Agricultural Census, became chief sta-tistican. Since retirement, a plant breeder working on research production ofnew varieties of plants, particularlytrees. Mr. Stagg was a source of inspiretion! Athletic career most satisfyingexperience of my life. (The '02 Capand Gown notes that Mr. Pettet wason the track team, '99-'01, the footballteam, '00, and the relay team, '01.)ERNEST L. TALBERT, 1902 (PhD'09—Cincinnati, Ohio: Professor of so«ciology emeritus of the U of C. In theSpirit of Jefferson, a book of essays andcommentaries was published recently-.the viewpoint derives from the teachingof John Dewey, George H. Mead andother fine minds on the campus. OftenI have thought of the mental independence which the University of Chicagofostered. Since retirement in 1949, Ihave sent monthly letters to some 200of my former students, the topics bearing on my main interest— social psychology.NELLIE HALSTED TAYLOR, 1902-Los Angeles, Calif.: After college Itaught several terms in the domesticscience department at Central School inOak Park, 111., working with seventh andeighth grade girls, until my marriageto Ernest King Taylor in 1908. Wemoved to Danville, Ky., then in 1912to Los Angeles. Here in California webecame members of Saint Paul's Cathedral and I found myself plunged intoactivities: 25 years representing thecathedral on Interdenominational Groupof Churches, 25 years in the MotionPicture Council Board of Review, 25 inthe Community Chest and 20 years inP.T.A. group work. Advancing age(nearly 85) seems to be closing in onactivities now. But let me add thatour city has given the University ofChicago its new chancellor, who wroteme a generously kind reply to my congratulations.Since receiving my Ph.B. on December 16, 1902, I think back with pridethat it took place at the end of thefirst decade, and that the great founder,William Rainey Harper signed mydiploma. I can recall many of myprofessors, especially Dr. Chamberlainand his farewell which brought tearsto many eyes.ANNIE L. WELLER, 1902-Charles-ton, 111.: I taught for 37 years and washead of the geography department atEastern Illinois State University untilmy retirement in 1940. Weller Hallthere was named for me. Travel: 15months in Europe, six months in thePhilippines, travel over most of Canada and the U.S. My nephew is J. Marvin Weller, professor of geology at theU of C.8 THE UNIVERSITY OF CHICAGO MAGAZINECHILDRENIN COURTBY CHARLES H. SHIREMANDuring the interval between 1948and 1959, the number of delinquencyreferrals to American juvenile courtsincreased by more than 100 per cent.In this same period, however, thecountry's child population between theages of 10 and 17 grew by less than50 per cent. The groiving influenceand power of this court have underlined the many questions that existabout its unique operation.Mr. Shireman is assistant professort rm the School of Social ServiceAdministration. The years recently passed have seen the growth ofincreasing, often rather shocked, awareness of thedegree to which the juvenile court has become aninstitution powerfully affecting the lives of a surprisingly large proportion of American youth. The Children's Bureau of the U. S. Department of Health,Education, and Welfare has estimated that during theiradolescent years, as many as 12 per cent of all ourcountry's young people, and perhaps 20 per cent of allboys, may be referred on delinquency charges to juvenile courts. For certain disadvantaged populationgroups in our larger cities, this proportion is evenhigher. For example, reports from Philadelphia indicate that as many as 40 per cent of all Negro boys maybe expected to appear during their adolescent yearsbefore such courts.In addition, most juvenile courts also have jurisdiction over dependent and neglected children. To themwere referred in 1960 some 131,000 such children.Over the lives of these children, delinquent and dependent, the court often exercises tremendous power.It may simply dismiss the case or return the child to hishome under the continued supervision of a probationofficer. It may remove the child from his home andfamily and place him in a foster family home or aninstitution. Or, in most states, the court may, in itswisdom, take almost any other action seeming to bein the best interests of the child and of society.These considerations create the necessity for study ofthe degree to which the court constructively employsits powers so as to act as an instrument for good in thelives of so many thousands of our young people. Notall reports on this point are encouraging. The juvenilecourt has, during the past decade, been subject to increased critical examination and, rather frequently,to bitter attack.There is, in fact, a certain biting irony in the factthat recent months have seen the emergence of deepand widely-expressed public concern over the allegedinadequacies and injustices of the Family Court ofCook County, Illinois, as the county's juvenile court isMAY, 1962 9called. Irony, for here in Cook County the juvenilecourt was born. Here, in 1899, a small band of devotedreformers associated with the Chicago Woman's Cluband the Illinois State Conference of Charities, workingin close cooperation with the Chicago Bar Association,secured passage of legislation bringing into being whatwas probably the world's first juvenile court. That courtwas almost immediately hailed as a major socio-legalinvention. It became the forerunner of a movementthat with surprising rapidity brought into being juvenilecourt systems in each state of the United States andin most of the industrialized world as well.Few would debate the lofty motives of the court'searly proponents. Their goal was the assurance, in thewords of the Illinois statute, "—that the care, custody,and discipline of the children brought before the courtshall approximate as nearly as possible that which theyshould receive from their parents, and that as far aspossible they shall be treated not as criminals, but aschildren in need of aid, encouragement and guidance — " Thus, legal proceedings regarding such children were no longer to constitute adversary, criminaltrials. They were to become inquiries into the bestinterests of the child. Rehabilitation, rather than retaliation or deterrence was the court's avowed goal andwas to shape its techniques of service.In order to accomplish this, the court was conceivedof as operating with a considerable degree of informality. It was to be freed of many of the strict, proceduralrequirements of the criminal law. Further, the expertiseof the behavioral sciences was to be injected into thecourt process. Decisions as to the child's welfare wereto be made on the basis of competent, clinical judgment. Provision was made for the employment ofprobation officers, who were to inquire into the causesof social maladjustment, prescribe treatment plans, andso counsel children and families as to enable them tosolve life problems productive of dependency anddelinquency.The adoption of such goals by the framers of thecourt is indicative of their admirable dedication to thewelfare of the child. However, the mere statement, oreven the legislative affirmation of goals, no matter howadmirable, does not assure their attainment. In fact,many of the juvenile court's critics today express seriousquestion as to the degree to which the juvenile courthas attained its stated objectives. Some would evenquestion whether or not these objectives are attainablein a court of law.These questions have long been of concern to members of the faculty of the University of Chicago. TheUniversity's School of Social Service Administration hasbeen particularly active in their study. The School haslong been associated with the juvenile court and itsproblems. Among its very founders were numberedseveral persons who had, somewhat earlier, participatedin the founding of the first juvenile court, in Chicago.During the following decades School faculty membershave maintained their interest in the court. Continuingthis tradition, the School recently has engaged in aprocess which has elicited the participation of a number of distinguished professors of law and of socialwork, juvenile court judges, chief probation officers, andother scholars in the study of certain major issues con-10 fronting the court today. A volume of essays resultingfrom this study, entitled "Justice for the Child" andsoon to be published, recently served as the basis i°xa nation-wide conference under the same title, sponsored by the School with the support of the University sCenter for Continuing Education.The issues concerning the court's role and functionraised in this and other studies are numerous. Manyof the most important of them may be summarized,however, under two major questions: First, to whaextent does the juvenile court successfully function asa court of law and thus as an instrument of justice.Second, to what extent does it succeed in accomplishing its goal of rehabilitation through diagnosis and theprovision of proper treatment?IUNDAMENTAL to the democratic way of life is thetradition emerging out of centuries of struggle anconflict that the citizen's behavior, insofar as it musbe controlled by the state, should be regulated onlythrough specific legal processes, uniformly appl*e(*rather than by the variable discretion of men. In keeping with this philosophy, the individual whose propertyfreedom, or life is at stake before the bar of justice ^guaranteed by the American constitution, by the constitutions of the various states, by statute, and by l°nSand cherished precedent, certain protections of duprocess of law. .The juvenile court, however, is not consideredbe a criminal court. Instead, it is held to be one7ewhich proceedings are essentially inquiries into tnchild's best interests. Thus, in some juvenile c0U^many of the protections accorded the individual in *criminal court are either ignored completely or pr^vided only in attenuated form. This is a major an^complicated issue which may here be only briefly deawith. Illustrative of the problem, however, are tnfollowing examples: t1. No person may be tried in criminal court excepon the charge of the commission of a specific act de*XJ$defined by law as a crime. Yet the juvenile courtcommonly given the right to exert its broad P°fein a bewildering variety of loosely-defined situatio •Included under the court's jurisdiction in most states a^children who commit acts which would constltU.tscrimes if committed by an adult. Also falling underpurview, usually, are children thought for various r ^sons to be "endangered," or behaving in a manner wn^creates the probability of future delinquency or depe^ency. Thus, in many states the court's broad J>oW ,may be exercised over children described as "inC°j^gible" or "engaging in immoral conduct" or "using vl 'obscene or vulgar language" or "growing up in idlenand crime." mFurther, the court is also commonly given au^°^ut" ' "&e.» ofover children who, through no fault of their own,as a result of acts of omission or commission onpart of their families, are said to be "dependent"neglected" or "subjected to injurious living conditio •Continued on ?ogeTHE UNIVERSITY OF CHICAGO MAGAZl^Social Sciences TeaGraduate Students —Crowded and Conversational^AY, 1962 11New Dorm Weekly Open HouseUndergrads — Noise and ActionTHE UNIVERSITY OF CHICAGO MAGAZlNContinued from page 10Further flexibility is conferred on the juvenile courtunder statutes which list similar conditions as elementsof both delinquency and dependency or neglect Statedas broadly as they often are, such definitions could quitepossibly subject almost any child to the interventionof the authority of the state into his life and that othis family. Clearly, it was the intent of the courtsfounders to prevent serious damage to the personalityand character of the child through nonadversary,benign procedures applied with emphasis on prevention. In recent years, however, commentators have expressed concern lest vagueness in defining the courtsjurisdiction may lead to action which, although undertaken for the child's presumed good, lacks proof ot aproper basis for exercise of state power. The trend otthe future will probably be towards more specific definition of jurisdiction over three principal categories otchildren: (a) Those who are dependent, abandoned, orneglected; (b) Those whose behavior clearly indicatesa tendency towards delinquency; and (c) Those whohave demonstrably violated federal, state or local laws.2. Traditional criminal procedures establish a seriesof protections accorded during the process of adjudication. These include, among others, the right to juryWal; the right to representation by, and when necessary, provision of counsel; the right to confrontation ofones accusers and of witnesses against one and, thus,strict limitations upon the use of hearsay evidence;the right to bail; and the right to appeal and to themaking of a record of court proceedings as a basis torpossible appeal. f , .Because, however, the child brought before the juvenile court is not considered to be accused of a crime,these safeguards, available to the meanest criminal maynot be offered him. Yet, although the child has notbeen tried in a criminal action, the juvenile court hearing may result in the family's loss of control over himand he may be deprived of his liberty through placement, often for a long time, in a correctional institution. To both child and family, the results ot thejuvenile court proceeding may appear to resemble withuncomfortable closeness those of a criminal trial.The problem here is, of course, a difficult one. Thecourt does and must strive to provide a hearing thatis oriented towards treatment, is informal and understandable and does not constitute an adversary proceeding against the child. At the same time he must begiven— and must clearly see that he is given— theProtections of a fair hearing. But a fair hearing, in ourtradition, has become equated with the protectionsnecessitated by an adversary system!It is not yet entirely clear how this dilemma may bestbe resolved. Perhaps the most feasible step towardssolution is that recently adopted in the State of California. Here, juvenile court hearings must, by virtue otReentry enacted legislation, take place in two stages.The first of these stages constitutes an inquiry into thejurisdictional facts— into the question of whether or notthe child's behavior or the circumstances of his life aredearly such as warrant the intervention of the stateduring this stage some of the traditional protections otdue process are made available. If the child is found to be properly within the court's jurisdiction, the secondstage of the hearing takes place, usually immediatelyafterward. Its purpose is to determine the proper disposition of the case. During this stage, the court maytake into consideration reports of probation officers'investigations, statements from schools, reports ofclinical examinations, or any other material havingbearing upon the question as to the child's needs andwelfare.True, these provisions may in some cases result incumbersome juvenile court hearings which could smackof the adversary system of the criminal court. Yet thecourt is a court of law. Children as well as adultsdeserve protection against the risk of arbitrary usurpation of authority by the state. In addition, the child'sclear perception that he is encouraged to set forth hisversion of the allegations against him is essential notonly to justice, but to effective treatment as well. Further, the occasion for extensive and formal inquiry intojurisdictional facts may seldom arise. In over 90 per centof all cases coming before most juvenile courts, thefacts of the offense or of the situation bringing thechild before the court are admitted by all parties concerned. In cases in which such facts are questioned,however, the juvenile court has much to learn fromtraditional procedures.The worth of any social institution must be measurednot merely by its intent but by its accomplishmentsThe juvenile court must, in the long run, be evaluatedin terms of the degree to which it actually succeeds inproviding children "—the care, custody, and discipline—they should receive from their parents—. The fulfillment of this mission requires deep compassion on thepart of all associated with the court. But it also requireswisdom and competence.IHE judge of the juvenile court must possess thedeepest concern for the needs of the young and thefinest of legal skills. He must also be understanding ofthe contributions of and must collaborate effectivelywith representatives of a variety of disciplines— socialwork, education, and psychiatry, for example. Furthermore, he must administer a large probation staff and adetention home, and, sometimes, a child guidance clinicor other facilities attached to the court.Many communities have produced judges who demonstrate to admirable degree the qualities of humanity,wisdom, and leadership necessary to discharge theseresponsibilities. This may occur largely by chancehowever. The juvenile court judge is often not selectedfor his position on the basis of specific training, experience, or aptitude. On the contrary, he is frequentlyelected to a court of general jurisdiction and assigned,sometimes on a rotating basis, to the juvenile court.Various proposals for the solution of this problem havebeen advanced. Gubernatorial appointment of juvenilecourt judges, perhaps from a panel of qualified nominees suggested by a responsible citizens committee, isone frequently recommended plan. In states in whichjuvenile court judges are elected, it is probably desirable that they stand as candidates specifically for thisparticularly demanding position. If the judge must run^AY, 1962 13for election as one of many judges of a court of generaljurisdiction, informed community groups should exertthemselves so as to bring maximum pressure upon thepolitical parties for the nomination of particularly qualified candidates, with the understanding that they willbe assigned to the juvenile court if elected.No matter how wise and how dedicated the judge,however, the court is dependent for the performanceof its mission upon its probation department and uponthe treatment resources available in the community.The probation officer is responsible for the investigationof problems underlying delinquency or dependencyand the exploration of available treatment alternatives.In delinquency cases, particularly, he is a major treatment resource. As the counselor of delinquent childrenand their families, he must help them achieve an understanding of the problems underlying delinquentbehavior and the steps toward solution. In some caseshe will require the resources of psychiatric and otherspecialized consultative and treatment services.By dint of courageous community leadership, a fewcourts have been able to secure reasonably adequateprobation staffs and allied resources. In the majority ofcommunities, however, juvenile courts are still withoutthe resources necessary to the fulfillment of their promise to the child. The Children's Bureau reports that ofsome 3,500 juvenile court probation officers in theUnited States, 3,000 do not have professional training.The degree to which the untrained staff member maybe expected to discharge the complicated diagnosticand treatment task of the probation officer is doubtful.Their casework supervisors, who bear major teachingand consultative as well as administrative responsibilities, very often lack professional training. In addition,these officers are confronted with staggering caseloadsthat permit them, on the national average, to spendonly about one hour per case per month. Under suchconditions, pre-hearing or pre-disposition investigationscannot possibly constitute adequate inquiries into theproblems underlying delinquency or dependency, orinto possible treatment dispositions. Decisions vital tothe child's future life must often be made on superficial bases. Probation supervision and counseling maybe so ineffectual as to convince the child only thatthe probation officer, who represents to him the authority of society, is too busy to be concerned about him,does not understand him and his problems, or may beeasily duped or simply disregarded.These problems are hard to solve. The generally recommended training for probation officers is that leading to a Master's degree in social work. This country'sgraduate schools of social work, however, cannot nowand will not in the foreseeable future be able to providetrained personnel in quantities even approaching theamounts needed by juvenile courts and other correctional programs. Some practical steps may be taken,however. A "crash" program for the provision of fullprofessional training to casework supervisors is at leastwithin the realm of possibility. Very large numbers ofpresently employed probation officers are young, eager,dedicated individuals who have undergraduate degrees.For such people, imaginative staff development programs which include the provision of qualified super-14 vision and of carefully planned in-service training offertremendous promise. Here again is a major challengeto community leadership.In many other ways, however, the juvenile court hasnot yet fulfilled the promise of its founders. In numerous communities, courts still confine children in grosslyinadequate detention homes or even in adult jails. Community treatment resources are frequently so limitedthat the judge faces the alternative of ignoring theneeds of the particularly disturbed child or of committing him to the mass care correctional institution-All too often such institutions offer little more thansecure custody in the company of hundreds of youthswhose primary common bond is the fact that they havebeen declared unacceptable as residents of the freecommunity.AAuCH then remains to be done toward the provisionfor the child before the court of such help as should bepossible by the application of presently available know -edge and skills. Perhaps even more alarming, however,is the fact that we are still in the beginning stages othe development of our understanding of the trunature of delinquency and of the treatment needs othe delinquent. Such understanding as we do havetends to be fragmented. Various students see the problem of delinquency as being, alternatively, prirnariysociocultural, or related to large degree to psychiatryillness, or even essentially of biological origin. Uniketheories of etiology are as yet lacking. The trend jtoward gradually increasing recognition of the multip^causation of delinquency, but the bias of special disciplines remains powerful.As a result, treatment theory is also in the earystages of development. The care of the delinquentoday is still to disturbing degrees characterized vyuntested assumptions and pious hopes. eFortunately, recent years have seen at least sotOacceleration of research in this field. The sociologydepartment of the University of Chicago has during tnpast three years engaged in partnership with |Y.M.C.A. of Chicago in a creative study of the delinquent street gang. The School of Social Service Aministration is soon to launch, with the aid of a gra ¦from the National Institute of Health, a major researexperiment in probation treatment. On other campu^gand in an increasing number of correctional agencipotentially fruitful research is under way.The promise of the juvenile court is based onassumption that the rehabilitation of the child is m^than a dream, that the state actually will ProV1eC„trained judges, adequate staff, and other resources nessary to its accomplishment. The court is still ininfancy as a social institution, however. It has maand is making a significant contribution to the wel *of our young people, but to a disturbing degreepromise remains umumiicu. r\z a. xxvux^ w*r— Jav"Sit has yet to be fairly tried. The challenge to tod V)and tomorrow's generations is to truly test the degto which the juvenile court may be enabled to playproper role in the preparation of American youthresponsible membership in a democratic society.THE UNIVERSITY OF CHICAGO MA,gazin£news o f the quadranglessi? **? OUTER SPACE-Microscopic0£ y of the powdery, black materialcentu meteorite which fel1 t0 earth acjj ***y ago has contributed a newAje fi* touthe longstanding debate:there "life forms" in meteorites?tjnv study reveals large numbers ofErp !"°unded particles, pale and dark,6 eemsh yellow in color. They haveli]<nsParer>t outer coatings. Antenna-(U aPpendages protrude occasionallylr°ugh their double-walled surface."es marchers at Fordham Universitythe University of Chicago have,.avvn conflicting conclusions fromentical experiments on samples frome same rare meteorites. The Fordham°r°up says the "organized elements"esernble fossil algae and may be the^mains of extra terrestrial life-thatey are "possible remnants of or-Sanisms"the Chicago scientists challenge theof m" They found nothing but globulesthe mineral troilite, grains of silicate,ar>d supercooled liquid droplets of?u"Ur and hydrocarbons in their own"ivestigation.. The opposing views were presented!n a five-article symposium on the life-'""fneteorite controversy published inthe March 24th issue of Nature.The University of Chicago research-ers> Frank W. Fitch, Henry P. Schwarcz,and Edward Anders, reported that theyhave established that the "organized^ernents" alleged to be fossil organisms*rom space are, in fact either:^sulfur and hydrocarbon particles0riginating in the meteorite which were converted to round, "organized" shapesby the action of the organic liquid usedto separate the heavy material in themeteorite sample from the light;2-globules of troilite, an organic compound of iron and sulfur with magnetic properties which occurs rarely onearth; or3-rounded silicate grains, apparentlyinorganic in origin.Evidence that the rounded particleswere due to the first cause describedabove — the organic separation — wasfound in analyzing the light fractionof the meteorite specimen, the fractionin which the Fordham scientists saythey observed "organized elements.Control experiments at Chicagoshowed that unless the separated fractions were washed with extraordinarycare, a residue of sulfur and hydrocarbon droplets from the organic solventremained, identical in description to theso-called "organized elements."The silicate grains, the third groupof observed particles, were also presentin the light fraction. No other organized objects fitting the Fordham description were apparent.In the heavy fraction of the meteoritesample, the observed particles respondedto the gentle motion of a magnet overthe microscope field. The turns andwiggles of the "organized" shapes indicated, together with previous x-raystudies, that these particles were eithertroilite or magnetite. Therefore theytoo must be ruled out as the suggestedlife forms, according to the UC group."It is interesting to note that Orgueil and Ivuna, the only carbonaceous chondrites (the rare form of meteorite onwhich the current debate is centered)containing organized elements in abundance, also happen to be the only onescontaining both troilite and magnetitein appreciable amounts," the Chicagoteam said.PROVOST AND TRUSTEE-EdwardH. Levi, dean of the Law School, hasbeen appointed the first provost in the72-year history of the University. Asprovost, he will have general responsibility under the president for theacademic administration of the University. It is intended that after July 1,1963, the provost also will be the deanof the faculties and that the academicbudget officer will report to him.The provost will take the initiativein proposing plans and action in academic matters and in meeting andconsulting with deans, chairmen, andmembers of the faculty. In the absenceof the president, the provost will serveas the University's senior officer.His particular assignment will be theseeking of top echelon scholars. Asdean of the Law School, Mr. Levi hasbeen doing just this since 1950. In thenew Law buildings across the Midway,there is a booming program in teaching,research and publishing. Mr. Levi willcontinue to teach as a professor of law,and, until a successor is appointed andtakes over, he will continue to serve asdean of the Law School.Dr. Lowell T. Coggeshall, vice-presi-^AY, 1962 15dent of the University and Frederick H.Rawson Professor of Medicine, has become one of the few faculty members(other than the head of the University)to be elected to the Hoard of Trustees.PROVOST EDWARD LEVIIn his enlarged position, Dr. Coggeshall will be concerned, under PresidentBeadle, primarily with policy, planning,and improving facilities for the growthof the University and for the moreeffective use of its total resources. Hewill work closely with the chairman ofthe Board and the president.LAWRENCE AWARD-University ofChicago chemist Anthony L. Turkevichwas one of five U.S. scientists chosento receive the U.S. Atomic Energy Commission's Ernest O. Lawrence Awardfor 1962. Established in 1960 to perpetuate the memory of the atomic scientist who invented the cyclotron, theLawrence Award is made in recognitionof "especially meritorious contributionsto the development, use, or control ofatomic energy."Mr. Turkevich, who is a professorin the Department of Chemistry andthe Enrico Fermi Institute for NuclearStudies, received a medal, citation, and$5,000.He joined the University faculty in1946, after participating in the wartime atomic bomb project in the Metallurgical Laboratory on the campusand at the Los Alamos Scientific Laboratory. He was cited in the AECannouncement "for contributions to ra-diochemistry in activation analysis, toanalysis of intranuclear cascades, andto the use of radiochemical techniquesthroughout atomic energy."Mr. Turkevich is now on leave from16 Chicago for the current academic yearfor research at the CERN, EuropeanOrganization for Nuclear Research inGeneva, Switzerland, with CERN's huge25 billion electron volt atom smasher.URBAN LOWER CLASS-Authoritiesat the 13th annual symposium of theUniversity's Committee on Human Development, on "The Urban LowerClass," called on the schools to developnew programs to help underprivilegedyoungsters.In this April 13 program, Robert J.Havighurst, professor on the Committeeand in the Department of Education,said that "Schools should be used asinstruments for social urban renewal.""Smart citv planners, wise communityleaders, and creative educational administrators can find the way to the primary level, giving these children avariety of enrichments which middle-class children are more likely to get >ntheir homes.2— Enrichment programs for lower-classchildren in the elementary school thatsystematically give lower-class childrensome of the intellectually stimulatingexperiences fairly common in middle-class families, such as access to museums, libraries, theatres, and concerts.3— Nursery school programs especiallydesigned for lower-class children asmeans of giving intellectual stimulationat a crucial point in the child's l»e'4-Talent discovery and developmentprograms at the junior and senior lugschool levels, because these boys antgirls need counseling and stimulationto think about the importance of acollege education. ,,s for maladjustedimiiisurauors can nnu uie way 10 uic 5— Work-Study programs iui .¦.«..»-,-all-class community and the mixed-class youth at the junior high school leveschool," he said. He advocated school give youth a chance to grow up sapolicies aimed at keeping middle-class factorily through the avenue of wor •people from leaving changing city neighborhoods.Said Mr. Havighurst:"At present every big city is becoming more segregated economically andracially, through the moving of middle-class people to suburbs or tomiddle-class areas of the city, while thelower-class in-migrants take over thehouses deserted by their former middle-class residents. If mixed-class localcommunities are to be retained in thesecities, the middle-class people mustquit moving out. And middle-class people are very sensitive to the statusratio of the school to which theirchildren go. As the status ratio goesdown toward the critical point, theyget readv to move out. Only a schoolpolicy aimed at maintaining a statusratio well above the critical point canreassure them sufficiently to inducethem to stay."Mr. Havighurst said that the "policiesof the public schools are decisive indetermining whether all-class integratedcommunities can be maintained or recreated in our large city."At this time, we need flexible andexperimental educational programs andpolicies to help improve our democraticurban society," he said. "We needflexibility not only within the four wallsof the school, but also in the relationsof the school system to the communityit serves."Efforts to improve the lower-classschool should be applied at the elementary and secondary school levels,with major emphasis on the elementaryschool. Mr. Havighurst listed five procedures for improving the lower-classschool:1— Enrichment programs for culturally-deprived children at the kindergarten- .... ....„.igh A four-point plan to speed the edUjcation of the nation's underprivilegechildren was outlined by Allison Davis.professor of Education. He advocated-1-More intensive training beginningat the pie-school level, notably in tnkindergarten;2-Lengthening the school day, as 'the case of day-care centers for endren of working mothers; ,3-Changing the materials used for reading and other types of academic lea»ing; and u4-Expanding the teaching force tnroUSthe use of volunteers from those eOcated women and men who are wiUinfeto coach these groups of children, Wiin the school, either after or durinj,school hours. . . i eMr. Davis said, "Today, with «^increase in automation and other lasaving processes, every local commun /feels confronted by the prospect ot ^increasingly large/ permanent &T°UP. itunemployed workers, who, with^families, seem destined to constitute •endentdemoralized and completely dep1drain on the nation. s"At the same time, however, scoof American communities need mteachers. We can get these ^JT^,from the next generation of chuof low socio-economic levels, if wethem more effectively. . •„"We need more skilled peopleelectronics. Able children of slum »^lies can learn electronics, if they •trained and motivated effectivelyour schools. We need more Pe0P , Vyearc inventors, more people whothe drive, the ambition, and the tWto learn, to produce, and to acn>( ^"We need more 'hungry fighters, «they say in prize-fighting. We "aCONTINUED ON PAGETHE UNIVERSITY OF CHICAGO MAGAZINEsome books by faculty & alumni-4 spring list for summer reading^CAN GENESIS: A PERSONAL INVESTIGATION INTO THE ANIMALORIGINS AND NATURE OF MAN:ty Robert Ardrey, '30. Atheneum, 1961,£80 PP-, $6.95.ttecent anthropological and behavioral>s.coveries have shed new Ught on theunal inheritance of man which Mr. Ar-c.ey describes in this investigation.self wes show that in addition to sex andpreservation, other instincts of equal, greater importance have been inheritedin\ •nan' Territoriality, hierarchy, and thein iC* °^ social cooperation, all foundtile animal world, are easily recognizedas human too., But the most disturbing thesis Mr. Ar-fey presents is that the systematic useWeapons preceded man on earth: thatpre-man ape used weapons and was aPfedatory killer. While this is a controversial thesis, it is nevertheless alarmingu° consider Mr. Ardrey's belief that theSe of weapons is part of our animal inheri-a,??e> and therefore the use of weapons,Pride in weapons, and improvement of thefeans of killing, are among key elementshuman history and civilization.. fhis much-discussed book was nonaged for the National Book Award ine non-fiction category.THE AMERICAN NEWSPAPERMAN: byBernard A. Weisberger, AM'47, PhD'50,associate professor of history. The Uni-yjrsity of Chicago Press, 1961, $4.50.^ Mr. Weisberger tells the story of thewierican newspaperman's developmenter two and a half centuries: from thefruiter-writer-editor-owner of Colonial days to the present day reporter. We are shownthe age of the essayist; the functional, commercial and sectional paper; the search formass-reader markets set off by the comingof railroads and telegraph; the rise of real"bigness" which relegated editorship tobusiness management and brought the columnist into the public eye.ASYLUMS: ESSAYS ON THE SOCIALSITUATION OF MENTAL PATIENTSAND OTHER INMATES: by ErvingGoffman, AM'49, PhD'51. Anchor Books,Doubleday & Co., Inc. (paperback),1961, 386 pp., $1.45.Asylums is an analysis of life in "totalinstitutions"— closed worlds (mental institutions, prisons, monasteries, army trainingcamps, naval vessels and others) wherethe inmates are regimented, surroundedby other inmates, and unable to leave. Mr.Goffman describes what these institutionsmake of the inmate and what he can makeof life inside them. The author's thesis isthat the most important factor in formingthe mental hospital patient is his institution, not his illness, and that his reactionsand adjustments are those of inmates inother types of total institutions as well.ATLAS OF ECONOMIC DEVELOPMENT: by Norton Ginsburg, '41, AM-'47, PhD'49, professor of geography.The University of Chicago Press, 1961,$7.50.A "social and economic" landscape ofthe world is presented here in 48 mapswith accompanying text and tables, in anattempt to clarifv such terms as "rich"and poor," "backward" and "advanced,"May 1962 "developed" and "underdeveloped," asthey apply to countries. The maps present the geographic distribution of grossnational product, exports and imports;non-monetary factors such as agriculturalyields and steel consumption; demographicfactors such as population density anddistribution in rural and urban areas. Patterns of relative development show up inthese map presentations which make comparisons clear and which may suggest newapproaches to the solution of developmentalproblems.THE BLACK MUSLIMS IN AMERICA:by C. Eric Lincoln, '56. Beacon Press,1961, 276 pp., $4.95.Mr. Lincoln has compiled the first complete study of the Black Muslims— anorganization of more than 100,000 Negroeswho preach black autonomy, black supremacy, and black union against thewhite world. In interviews with BlackMuslim leaders and ministers, throughconversations with members and visits toMuslim temples, the author has tappedformerly undocumented sources of thismovement.Behind the myths and ritual, and analleged tie to Islam, the author believesthis new form of black nationalism reflectsthe American Negro's rising discontentwith the way things are and his determination to change them. He makes clear whatthe movement's mass appeal is; whatfrightening implications it holds.BLACK NATIONALISM: A SEARCHFOR AN IDENTITY IN AMERICA:by E.U. Essien-Udom, AM'57, PhD'61.1"The University of Chicago Press, 1962,367 pp., $6.95.This is another study of the BlackMuslim movement in America and of thenature of its appeal to the lower classurban Negro. The author, who lived forseveral years on the South Side of Chicagowhere the movement has its headquarters,believes the teachings of Muhammad havebrought to his followers that which hasbeen denied them elsewhere— a sense ofhuman dignity.As a Nigerian, Mr. Essien-Udom wasable to mingle freely with members ofthe group and win the confidence of theirleader, Elijah Muhammad. The authorconcludes that he did not find the advocacy of violence in Black Nationalism,but rather that the cornerstone of themovement is its internal achievements incoping with the social, educational, andpsychological environment of its members.THE BLIND BALLOTS: by Georg Mann,'34. The Macmillan Co., 1962, 277 pp.,$4.95.Mr. Mann (also author of The DollarDiploma, 1960), has written a comic novelabout the school board election in Ryswick,a small midwestern university town.BOOK REVIEWING FOR AN AUDIENCE: A PRACTICAL GUIDE INTECHNIQUE FOR LECTURE ANDBROADCAST: by Evelyn Oppenheimer,'29. Chilton Co., 1962, 132 pp., $3.50.Miss Oppenheimer explains the techniques of oral book reviewing and in thefinal section of her book, presents samplebook reviews which show the practicalapplication of her advice and suggestions.BOSS CERMAK OF CHICAGO: ASTUDY OF POLITICAL LEADERSHIP: by Alex Gottfried, AM'48, PhD-'52. The University of WashingtonPress, 1962, 459 pp., $6.50.Generally Anton J. Cermak is only remembered as the Chicago mayor whowas killed by a bullet intended for President-elect Roosevelt. But the monumentCermak himself created was the first cohesive city and state-wide Democraticmachine in the history of Chicago. It ishis own ethnic group, the Czechs, whohave perpetuated his name. Their supportwas a part of the complex of forces, mostof which lay in Cermak's own personality,that took him from obscure ward activitiesto Chicago's highest elective office.Mr. Gottfried's biography of Cermak isalso a study in urban politics, and considers party structure, party power relations and conflicts, and the gradual erectionof an impenetrable machine.CAPTAIN NEWMAN, M.D.: by Leo Rosten, '30, PhD'37. Harper & Brothers,1962, 331 pp., $4.95.Mr. Rosten, the creator of H°Y0M0A0NK0A0P0L0A°N, has produced a new galaxy of characters, some humorous, sometragic: they are the patients and staff ofWard 7, the psychiatric ward at an AirCorps base somewhere in the southwestU.S. during World War II. Under thedirection of Captain Newman, M.D., theward is a haven not only for men shattered18 by combat, but for many a rollicking per- CULTURE FOR THE MILLIONS? MASSsonality, and it's the only place in the MEDIA IN MODERN SOCIETY: editeoArmy where "you can go around telling by Norman Jacobs. D. Van Nostra"the truth all the time without being Co. Inc., 1961, 200 pp., $4.95.crucified." in this collection of papers by creativeartists, scholars and communications rn£ '¦•COMMUNISM TODAY: BELIEF AND Edward Shils, '37, professor of sociologyPRACTICE: by Victor Ferkiss, PhD'54. and social thought, has contributedDeus Books, Paulist Press (paperback), chapter entitled, "Mass Society and l^1961, 192 pp., 95«\Mr. Ferkiss provides a picture of communism written in non-technical languagefor the average reader, which attempts todo justice to the many aspects and subtle- Culture." While many of the volumeschapters merely reiterate stereotypespopular culture and the mass media auo1^ence, Mr. Shils is more optimistic, que?'tioning the prevalent view that high cuiwhat communism is, then how the "three- and that the modern "low-brow «pronged nature" of communism (creed, "middle-brow" cultures detract from "conspiracy and reform movement) is re- development of high culture. The p»Pfleeted in the currents set in motion by and discussions in this book were orlg'nV,its teaching. The final section shows how presented at a conference sponsored Jthe variety of ways in which communismoperates, demands a multi-faceted approach to the struggle against it.CONGRESS AND THE COURT: byWalter F. Murphy, PhD'57. The University of Chicago Press, 1962, 307 pp.,$6.95."The casual visitor who wanders throughthe white marble temple which housesthe Supreme Court of the United Statescomes away with a dominant, almost overwhelming impression of serenity. . . . Like the Tamiment Institute and the journal,Daedalus.A DOCUMENTARY HISTORY OFAMERICAN ECONOMIC POLI^1SINCE 1789: edited by William Letwm.'43, PhD'51. Anchor Books, Doubleday& Co., Inc. (paperback), 1961, 406 pP"$1.45.From the mass of documents in Amercan economic history, a representatigroup of 29 has been selected and ea%efor this volume, to show, "how each ot i „r ui j ». — i of nne °lDaniel Webster's physical appearance, then, number of problems was treated at °nethat of the Supreme Court building is a the moments when it was politicallylivinir lie. . . . We are ouiet here.' Oliver Cent." In his introductory essay, M 'living lie. . . . We are quiet here,' Oliver gent.'Wendell Holmes said, 'but it is the quiet Letwin summarizes the forces and mc »of a storm centre.' " ments that have made American econ0jjS)Here is a penetrating analysis of the re- policy "exceedingly confused." But he ad >lationship between Congress and the Su- this very confusion reduced "the extf1" j,epreme Court which sketches the offstage and disorder potentially so great intactics, the "politicking," and the conflict- United States ... to remarkable modeing pressures that ultimately influence the tion."judgment of the Court. After a summaryof the history of the struggle between the THE EXCITEMENT OF SCIENCE: byCourt and the will of the people as repre- |ohn R_ p]attj professor of physlcSsented by Congress, Mr. Murphy takes ashis main theme, the legislative attacks onthe Warren Court from 1954 to 1959.CREATIVITY AND INTELLIGENCE:EXPLORATIONS WITH GIFTEDSTUDENTS: by Jacob W. Getzels, professor of educational psychology, andPhilip W. Jackson, associate professor ofeducational psychology. John Wiley &Sons, Inc., 1962, 293 pp., $6.50.Here is the complete report of an inquiryinto high creative ability in children and Houghton Mifflin Co., 1962, 174 pP"$3.50.To those who are troubled by the destructive potential of advanced technologyMr. Piatt presents a strong response. **examines the nature of contemporary sence, describes how scientific discovc /and invention occur, and how they e nesocial change. It is an optimistic vieof man's ability to use science for maing a more secure life, for promotingwider prosperity.Mr. Piatt writes, "We are not in )¦",its relationship to high intelligence, which grip 0f incomprehensible forces. The rm»was reported in part in the December, 0f man can determine the quality of «1961, issue of the Magazine. 'but byA major portion of the book is devoted operational methods. And today we live >to a detailed comparison of children who a time when self-directinff man, knoWin&are high in either creativity or IQ butnot concommitantly as high in the otherarea. According to this study, highly creative and highly intelligent children differsignificantly with respect to personal values,imaginative production, career goals andfamily backgrounds. Exclusive reliance onIQ tests often prevents the recognition ofcreative ability, the authors contend, andthey suggest means for correcting thissituation. The methods used for measuring and assessing creativity are describedin detail in the appendix. life of man, not by mysticala time when self-directing man, —and acting, can at last begin to use..iehighest intelligence to take responsecharge of his destiny."FREUD: THE MIND OF THE MORALIST: by Philip Rieff, '46, AM'47, PhD ^Anchor Books, Doubleday & Co.,(paperback), 1961, 441 pp., $1.45.This paperback edition of Mr. R": 'book (which first appeared in 1959) .a few revised and augmented passages'is largely the same as the original edit'0THE UNIVERSITY OF CHICAGO MA GAZIN*5Mr. Rieff has tried to "show the mind ofFreud," and the intellectual and moralimplications of his work. The Reporterhas called it, "... A brilliant and beautifully reasoned example of what Freud'sinfluence has really been: an increasingintellectual vigilance about human nature.FUNCTIONS OF VARIED EXPERIENCE: by Donald W. Fiske, professorof psychology, and Salvatore R. Maddi,assistant professor of psychology. TheDorscy Press, Inc., 1961, 501 pp., $7.95.The fifteen papers assembled for thisbook are about varied experience, itseffects on organisms, and the functions itserves. Variation in experience whichcomes from the changes occurring momentto moment in the environment, is produced not only by external forces but alsoby the behavior of the organism. Theauthors suggest that this varied experienceis necessary for an organism to developand function properly and to maintain alevel of alertness.Other contributors to the volume include alumni Theodore Schaefer, Jr., 50,PhD'57, assistant professor of biology andPsychology; William R. Thompson, PhD-51; andW. I. Welkcr, PhD'54; and facultymembers John R. Piatt, professor ofphysics, and Austin H. Riesen, professor°f psychology.GREAT BOOKS AND SMALL GROUPS:by James A. Davis, assistant professorof sociology and senior study director ofthe National Opinion Research Center.The Free Press of Glencoe. Inc., 1961,237 pp., $6.00.The National Opinion Research Centerat the University gathered data from almost 2000 Great Books participants in1957, and this book is the third in a seriesof reports on that data. Here the researchers are concerned with factors that keepPeople in the Great Books program fromone year to the next-and, indirectly, thefactors which tend to keep members inany on-going liberal education program.Emphasis in this study was on the differences between those members who continued and those who dropped out, thosegroups which held their members andthose which lost a high proportion. Foundimportant for retaining group membershipWere: roles within the group, social interaction between members outside of thegroup, intellectual and ideological variables, and religious and political affiliations.HIDDEN CHANNELS OF THE MIND:by Louisa E. Rhine, '19, SM'21, PhD'23.William Sloane Associates, 1961, 291pp., $5.00.Everyday experiences of a psychic orextrasensory nature are related and cata-'oged in this book by Mrs. Rhine. Currentlaboratory research and the known (asWell as some unexplained) aspects of extrasensory perception are illustrated bycarefully chosen case histories of realhappenings.!N PRAISE OF ADAM: by Reuel Denney, professor of social sciences. The University of Chicago Press, 1961, 70 pp.,$3.50. „In Praise of Adam, Mr. Denney s second collection of poems (his first was TheConnecticut River, 1939), won a nomination for the National Book Award inpoetry this year. Allen Tate says aboutif "In Praise of Adam places [Mr. Denney] as one of the three leading poets otthe postwar period, the two others beingLowell and Shapiro."Mr. Denney notes about this volume."These poems, in contrast to earlier ones,are more dramatic in quality-they evokea wider variety of human characters, insituations in which they experience development and self-discovery. Many of therhythms employed are new in my work.My poems write themselves and lact astheir listener, editor and exhibitor.Mr. Denney won the Yale Poetry Prizein 1939 and the Eunice Tietjens i Pmawarded by Poetry magazine in 1954. Heis also co-author of The Lonely Crowd(1950), and author of The AstonishedMuse (1957).THE LAND IS BRIGHT: by Noel B.Gerson, '34. Doubleday & Co., Inc.,1961, 356 pp., $4.50.Mr Gerson has written his fifteenthhistorical novel about the first three yearsof the Plymouth Colony; it is particularlyconcerned with its founder and first governor, William Bradford.NATO - THE ENTANGLING ALLIANCE: by Robert E. Osgood, associateprofessor of political science. The University of Chicago Press, 1962, 416 pp.,$7.50.Never before, in times of peace, has agroup of nations been so committed to acommon interest as are the members otthe North Atlantic Treaty Organization,and this commitment has marked a revolution in foreign policy. Mr. Osgood explorespolitical and psychological aspects of thetask of peacetime collaboration in NATO-the interaction of strategic logic withallied cohesion, political warfare, anddiplomacy.More generally, this is also a study ofthe role of military power in the nuclearage including problems such as the stabilization of deference, and the commandand control of nuclear weapons; and challenges: the growth of Soviet nuclearpower, the tactics of "peaceful coexistence," the prospect of America's alliesacquiring nuclear weapons, the economicand political resurgence of western Europe.The author suggests that a major strategicrevision in NATO is necessary, that theU. S. must be the instigator, and that theEuropeans must assume a larger responsibility in NATO's plans and decisions.THE NEW FRANCE: by Edward R.Tannenbaum, '42, PhD'50. The University of Chicago Press, 1961, $5.00.According to Mr. Tannenbaum, it istime to correct a lot of misconceptionsabout France, to stop thinking of her as"decadent" and stuck in a rut of fleetinggovernments and old fashioned ways. He describes "bureaucrats with electroniccomputers, middle-aged ladies on motorscooters, workers in the Casino at Cannes,peasant girls in shorts"-and gives an inside view of a France being pushed forward by new dynamism.THE NEW WORLD, 1939/1946: VOLUME I OF A HISTORY OF THEATOMIC ENERGY COMMISSION: byRichard G. Hewlett, AM'48, PhD'52,and Oscar E. Anderson, Jr. The Pennsylvania State University Press, 1962,766 pp., $5.50.This is the first volume of a detailedhistory of the Atomic Energy Commission The writers who are professionalscientific historians, have told the story ofthe discovery of the nature of atomicfission, the efforts to convince the government of its possibilities, and the race withNazi Germany to produce a bomb, inehistory is thorough and well-documented,reflecting the authors' free and full use ofAEC and government records, includingclassified material.THE POLITICS OF URBAN RENEWAL,THE CHICAGO FINDINGS: by PeterH Rossi, professor of sociology anddirector of the National Opinion Research Center, and Robert A. Dentler,PhD'60. The Free Press of Glencoe,Inc., 1962, 308 pp., $6.00.This study, conducted by the NationalOpinion Research Center at the University relates the drama of how citizens inHyde Park-Kenwood devised a workableplan for conservation and renewal. Sinceurban renewal is characteristically done toa neighborhood, not by it, Hyde Park-Kenwood is a unique instance of genuinecitizen participation in the urban renewalprocess. The study seeks to answer suchquestions as how much influence citizensof the community were able to exert,whether public involvement led to production of a better plan, and if it increased public acceptance and understanding of planning.PRESIDENT JAMES BUCHANAN, ABIOGRAPHY: by Philip S. Klein, AM'32. The Pennsylvania State UniversityPress, University Park, Pa., 1961, 506pp., $7.50.James Buchanan, fifteenth president ofthe U. S., remains one of the least knownstatesmen of the American nation, so thisbiography fills an important need in thedocumenting of U. S. political history. Mr.Klein points out that the James Buchanandescribed by his own contemporaries inthe years before 1861 is very different fromthe Buchanan often portrayed unfavorablyand bitterly by writers of post-Civil Warreminiscences.Mr. Klein comments, "The man whoelects to play the role of peacemaker may,if he succeeds, be soon buried in historical oblivion, for it is the perversetendency of mankind to glorify war butto forget those who surmount crises bythought rather than by threat. A peacemaker who fails, on the other hand, islikely to receive for his efforts only resounding curses from both the warringMay, 1962 19camps. Such was the fate of JamesBuchanan."PROTESTS OF AN EX-ORGANIZATIONMAN: by Kermit Eby, professor of socialsciences. Beacon Press, 1961, 146 pp.,$3.50.Mr. Eby is a man who has had morethan three decades of experience in organizing all sorts of groups— students,religious activities, teachers, laborers. Butnow he protests, knowing that America isover-organized and that we have given upideals of individuality and inner-directionin favor of the group.In this book the author is not discussing the obvious bureaucracy of business,government and suburbia. He claims thatleaders with self-seeking motives, andpreaching a colorless conformity have infiltrated some of the most individualisticand idealistic institutions in our society:the churches, the labor movement and tneuniversity. "My greatest fear for free institutions," he says, "comes at the pointof contact with ever-increasing numbers of"kept men'— men who are the prisonerseither of an ideology, an institution or anorganization. Theirs, when they speak, isnot a free and self-determined opinion;theirs instead is the apology for policyexternal to themselves."RADAR OBSERVES THE WEATHER:by Louis J. Battan, SM'49, PhD'53.Anchor Books, Doubleday & Co., Inc.(paperback), 1962, 158 pp., 95<t.The use of radar in meteorology as anaid to more precise weather forecastingand storm warnings have convertedmeteorology and forecasting from an artto a science. Mr. Battan discusses theseuses of radar, but more importantly emphasizes the employment of radar as ascientific tool that gives great new understanding of weather processes which willbuild the knowledge necessary for large-scale control of the weather.THE SCIENCE OF DREAMS: ANANALYSIS OF WHAT YOU DREAMAND WHY: by Edwin Diamond, '47,AM'49. Doubleday & Co., Inc., 1962,264 pp., $4.50."In an unadorned cubicle in the University of Chicago's Abbott Hall, twostudious-looking explorers began thequest." And so begins Mr. Diamond'schronicle of what modern scientists arelearning about dreams, the process ofdreaming, and dreamers.Mr. Diamond, who is science editor ofNewsweek magazine, has written clearlyand interestingly for the general reader,and discusses: the relationship of sexualityand dreams, the role of dreaming inprimitive societies, the use of dreams tomaintain sanity, the topics of dreams ofboth normal and abnormal dreamers, andother topics. Throughout the story, research at the U of C plays an importantpart, as do numerous alumni and facultymembers who participated in the University's dream research.THE SEARCH FOR A COMMON20 LEARNING: GENERAL EDUCATION, 1800-1960: by Russell Thompson, AM'27, PhD'42, professor of humanities. McGraw-Hill Book Co. Inc.,1962, 324 pp., $6.95."General education" is a contemporaryeducational phenomenon. It is commonlyregarded as a part but not the whole ofa liberal education, and important problems have developed out of this two-foldconcept of the function of the liberal artscollege. In Part I of this study, the authoroutlines the historical background of general education from 1800 to 1930, andPart II includes contemporary thought andpractice in general education as it is represented in the current academic programsof 18 American colleges and universities.Considerable space is given to the innovations in general education at the U of CCollege during the 1930s.SELECTED POEMS OF WILLIAMBUTLER YEATS: edited by M. L.Rosenthal, '37, AM'38. The MacmillanCo. (paperback), 1962, 236 pp., $1.95.Mr. Rosenthal, poetry editor of TheNation, and professor of English at NewYork University, has compiled a selectionof Yeat's poetry. In his introduction andnotes, the author provides an analysis ofYeat's development, his Me and thought,his techniques, and his subtle use ofsymbolism.THE STRUCTURE OF COLLECTIVEBARGAINING: edited by Arnold R.Weber, associate professor of industrialrelations, Graduate School of Business.The Free Press of Glencoe, Inc., 1961,380 pp., $8.50.In the last three decades, collective bargaining has become an integral part ofthe making of economic decisions in theUnited States. This volume, an examination of recent developments in collectivebargaining, is based on a seminar held inMay, 1960, sponsored by the U of CGraduate School of Business and the Mc-Kinsey Foundation. Participants in theseminar were theorists and practitioners,including men from university faculties,management and trade unions. Formalpapers, as well as some discussions fromthe seminar are included in this volumeon such topics as the evolution and recenttrends of bargaining structure, and ananalysis of the historical impact of publicpolicy on that structure.TO PLEASE A CHILD: A BIOGRAPHYOF L. FRANK BAUM, ROYAL HISTORIAN OF OZ: by Frank JoslynBaum and Russell P. MacFall, AM'31.Reilly & Lee Co., 1961, 284 pp., $6.00.In 1902, a musical called The Wizardof Oz, brought to fame a middle-agedman whom almost nobody had ever heardof before. From that time on, L. FrankBaum delighted children and adults withstories of the wonderful land of Oz, whichappeared on the stage, in movies and inbooks. Mr. MacFall has used the Baumfamily archives, and the reminiscences ofthe late Frank J. Baum, the subject'seldest son, to compile this biography. THE WEALTH OF THE GENTRY: byAlan Simpson, Thomas E. DonnelleyProfessor of History and Dean of tnCollege. The University of ChicagoPress, 1962, 225 pp., $5.00.In this technical study of wealth of tngentry in 16th and 17th century EnglanOjthe author deals mainly with the economics of family finance." After discusing contemporary accounts of old Engllife, Mr. Simpson then analyzes threesocial types: the rising lawyer, the rismSmerchant, and the courtier. He also aeawith the landlord and his ability to keepabreast of inflationary times with only tnincome from his landholdings, and nna'£discusses the rising bourgeoisie of the 1°century.WHEN FOUND MAKE A VERSE Of'by Helen Smith Bevington, '26. Simonand Schuster, 1961, 314 pp., $4.50."Ideas, light as goose feathers, &everywhere, requiring only good eye,slSand good hearing to detect them, rmarks Mrs. Bevington. A New York Ttn&reviewer agreed and added, "Her bookher best example." Mrs. Bevington is fjassociate professor of English at DuUniversity, who has compiled a volurnof gay verse and comments on WWtopics, ". . . swimming over her bng ,world of North Carolina, England an^Italy [making] a gay tapestry of prose anpoetry."THE WILL TO LIVE: SELECTEDWRITINGS OF ARTHUR SCHOPE*HAUER: edited by Richard Taylor, *£Anchor Books, Doubleday & Co., iD '(paperback), 1962, 365 pp., $1-45.The philosophy of Arthur Schopenhaue(1788-1860) is concerned with the meaning and purpose of existence. His profou iinsight into the tragic and irratwnnature of man made him the precursorthe most advanced of modern thinkers.this volume, Mr. Taylor has selected anarranged writings from On the Will -Nature, the supplementary volumesThe World As Will and Idea, and ironvarious essays, with an eye to sh°vf1J*how all of Schopenhauer's speculation^about man and the world derive from «**concept of will as the fundamental reality-ZEN AND AMERICAN THOUGHT: byVan Meter Ames, '19, PhD'24. 1"University of Hawaii Press, 1962,pp., $4.50."Wise men of the East are stimulati»6the Western mind," says Van Meter Am 'speaking of Zen Buddhism, but they fnot infusing the West with somethingforeign, they are awakening it to res°uIgn)of its own, he believes. Mr. Ames find i- 'though not by that name, throughAmerican life and sees Zen philosophythe thinking of such Americans as ]ea^eson, Emerson, Thoreau, Whitman, *"elder Henry James, William James, De*ey.Mead and others. This book exhibitslifetime of work by the a-ithor in the heof American philosophy, plus a sympathetic understanding of Chinese an^Japanese philosophy in general andin particular.THE UNIVERSITY OF CHICAGO MAGAZINECONTINUED FROM PAGE 16millions of children who are hungryn°t only for food, but for a chance,a better house, better education, betterPeaces in their communities. "He continued, "Acculturation is nota hypothetical force in American society.This process of learning a new culturenas made the United States. Its suc-Cessful operation has been documentedn°t only for all the groups of European^migrants, but for native low-statuswhite and Negro groups in some degree."This is what we do best in America;°Ur social system has proved superiorto any other in the acculturation ofj°w-status groups. . . . Over long periods of time, it is an irresistible force.But now we no longer have indefinitely*°ng periods of time for acculturationto raise the level of skill and goals^ inthe bottom third of our population."He warned: "We have only one generation."GANG WORKERS-Here are somefindings in a preliminary report on asurvey of the effects of "gang workers"among lower income groups in Chicago,Prepared by James F. Short, Jr., visitingassociate professor of sociology at theUniversity.The report, titled "Street CornerGroups and Patterns of Delinquency,"was made with the assistance of a grantfrom the National Institute of MentalHealth Research, by members of theUniversity's Department of Sociologyin conjunction with the program of De-tached Workers of the YMCA of Metropolitan Chicago. Detached or "gang"Workers are trained, responsible adultswho attempt to gain confidence ofyouthful gangs and exert effective guid-ance. Primary task of the study is toprovide basis in data and interpretationf°r policy changes by agencies whichare concerned with problems of delinquent behavior.Here are some observations from thereport:-"We want to know why gang fight-lng is virtually eliminated among gangswith which the gang workers have beeneffective.-"Not all gangs have workers and itIs a mark of distinction to have a workerbecause this is, ipso facto, a demonstration of the reputation of the gang-onlythe toughest gangs get workers.-"The worker introduces a considerable safety factor into the gang conflictsituation because boys know he will goto great lengths to prevent inter-ganginflict.-"He (the gang worker) can always°e informed surreptitiously so that thetask force (a special police unit) canhe called in to prevent a rumble (gang fight), if all negotiations fail; and negotiation, itself, gives the gang considerable prestige.-"The worker can perform manyservices for the boys which are functional to adolescent needs. He makesavailable athletic equipment and canintervene with the police and otherauthorities ... and can help the gangboys, especially as they grow older, tofind employment. The lower class ethicof reciprocity obligates the boys torespect the worker's wishes as a resultof such services."The YMCA's Detached Workers program, finding that gang leaders are themore stable members of their groups,is seeking to capitalize on these leadership qualities by involving the leadersin assistantship and consultant roles inthe program.The report also cited certain behaviorsettings which play an important role indelinquent behavior. They are:-High incidence of guns found amonglower class adults.—Milling character of life on thestreet. A great deal of lower class lifetakes place in the street and other semi-public settings.—Physical violence is a means of settling disputes.—High consumption of alcohol inpublic.—Tendency to distrust outsiders."Elements such as these combine toenhance the prospects of a high incidence of delinquency within lowerclass communities," the report said."The values of the lower class Negrogang boys are expressed as one thing,but their actions are another. For example, the boys positively evaluated'those who work for good grades atschool, 'someone who reads good booksand 'someone who saves his money.'"Yet these boys, for the most part,are early school dropouts; they readalmost nothing and they spend suchmoney as they acquire almost immediately upon its acquisition."The boys individually also expressedvalues and behavior which were notconsistent with what they expressed asa group."For example, one group of 12 boyswas found by the gang worker almostunanimously to favor as ideal and expected for themselves the virtues ofmarriage, small families, hard work andthrift, and keeping their sons in school."In a later group session, however,these same boys disclaimed these attitudes, refused to discuss the subjectseriously, and derided anyone whopracticed the virtues they had previously espoused."Thus, group pressure and expectations operate to define for the boy whatis acceptable behavior in the group. The attitude of the adult communityand of the boys to illegitimacy is "permissive." In one instance, the father ofa girl who was "running around with"a boy talked to the boy and asked him"to be careful" and "don't get her introuble.""It is significant that he did not askthe boy to refrain from having sex relations with the girl— only to be 'careful,' in order to avoid pregnancy. Sexrelations apparently were taken forgranted."The report also says that there appears to be a "great deal more" familycontrol and protection over girls thanboys within lower income groups inChicago."The point to be made is that forgirls who become participants in streetcorner society, the decision to enterinto a particular union is made withinthe context of that society and thatstreet corner society exercises constraints over the union."The report also states that sexualprowess is a mark of considerable distinction among boys— similar to athleticability and fighting. "For girls, skillfulemployment of their sex provides prestige, and even power, in an essentiallymale-dominated peer society (streetcorner society)."The status universe of the gang isits reputation for fighting other gangs.Gangs which are not good fighters aredown-graded in the status hierarchy."The report also pointed out:"Status problems of the lower classgang boys are not so much associatedwith failure to achieve membership inthe middle class as they are with failureto achieve status within the context ofadult, middle-class dominated institutions such as the school and church andeconomic and political institutions."Lower class children are ill-equippedin terms of such middle-class virtuesas ambition and manners, thrift andstick-to-it-iveness, neatness and punctuality, and willingness to defer immediate gratification for long-run and notaltogether tangible and certain rewards."The gang boys do not appear to bereacting against the middle-class systemof values so much as they are acting inpursuit of a system of values which insome respects runs counter to middle-class values. Not only is malicious andnegativistic behavior relatively rare . . .but theft, while frequent, is rarely economically non-utilitarian."Those doing the research had firsthand observation, working with gangworkers in the field.To obtain the cooperation of thegang members, the gang workers oftenintroduced the University researchersas friends who were interested in theefforts of the worker.^AY, 1962 21Kenf Theafre has been the scene of many importantUniversity events in its 68 years. Originally servingas the University's main auditorium, more recentlyit has been the lecture hall for a roster of greatscientists. The creaking wooden floor and stairs,and the 350 seats have now been removed, to bereplaced with concrete floor, ramps, and new seats.The big beams and wood carving on the ceiling, nowobscured in darkness and dirt, will be preserved.22 THE UNIVERSITY OF CHICAGO MAGAZIN^3 Stepsto aNew KentA three-step program for the renovation of KentChemical Laboratory has been bringing new lifeto this old (1894) building. The second step,now in progress, will involve an expenditure of$870,900 and the removal of the floors in the KentTheater and all of the labs in the west wing. Thenew floors will be concrete there will be new labequipment and ventilating system. $148,777 ofthe total is from the National Science Foundation.**AY, 1962The first step in the renovation, now completed forover a year, involved the renovation of the undergraduate teaching labs in the east wing, some of th wing. This $357,500 project was accomplished entirely with University funds. One of the new I0"and the lecture hall are shown here. The Pr0'first floor offices, and a new lecture hall in the east posed third step involves the central area of Kent-24 THE UNIVERSITY OF CHICAGO MAGAZINEN EWS O F the alumni1909 until 1916 he was head of the department of geology at the University ofOklahoma.01-22ROY E. CODY, '01, is living in Omaha,Neb. He is a retired clergyman.JEANNETTE T. BROOKS, '02, is now living in the Masonic Home in Helena, Mont.MARY E. YOUNG, '02, retired high schoolteacher, is living in Miami, Fla. She taughtin Waller High School in Chicago until1929. She is now enjoying the U.S.A.,especially Florida and North Carolina.CLASS OF 1907Fifty-fifth ReunionBreakfast The Quadrangle ClubSaturday, June 9Contact: Miss Helen Norris5626 DorchesterChicago 37 . FLORENCE R. SCOTT, '07, spent sometime last summer in Europe-under dith-cult circumstances. In May, just two weeksbefore leaving, Miss Scott broke her hip.After an operation and treatment she leftin late July for her trip and spent severalweeks in London and Zurich, doing verywell." At one point she took in eightshows and six dinner parties in Londonduring one three-week period! Miss Scotthas been going to Europe every other yearfor some time but says 1962 is the offyear" so she hopes to attend her 55threunion on campus in June.MAURICE G. MEHL, '11, PhD'14 andCHARLES H. TAYLOR, '07, SM'09 havebeen named to honorary ^einbership mthe American Association of PetroleumGeologists. Mr. Mehl is emeritus professor of geology at the University of Missouri. He is the author of many contributions on micropaleontology and vertebratepaleontology, and has done extensive workon the Mississippian-Devoman boundarywhich has been of interest : to geolojpsteabroad as well as in the United States.He has been emeritus professor since 1958.Mr. Taylor, consulting geologist in Oklahoma Citv was editor of the Associations£Sn from 1917 to 1919. From CLASS OF 1912Fiftieth ReunionSunday, June 10 South Shore County ClubContact: Charles Rademacher2360 E. 68thChicago 49JACOB A. WALKER, 12, JD13, lives inOpelika, Ala., and is a partner in the lawfirm of Walker & Hill.WILLIAM A. WARRINER, 12, and hiswife, FLORENCE GROSS, 10, live inPhoenix, Ariz., where Mr. Warriner is salesconsultant with Phoenix Cement Co.MAUDE H. WINNETT, MD12, specialist in obstetrics and gynecology, still keepsoffice hours daily in her Chicago office at24 N. Wabash. She is a member of theAmerican Board of Obstetrics and Gynecology and fellow in the American Collegeof Surgeons.CLASS OF 1914Annual Reunionat the All-Alumni Luncheon12:30 p.m. Saturday, June 9Reserved TableContact: Erling H. Lunde6708 N. OlympiaChicago 31L. MERCER FRANCISCO, 14, moved tothe San Francisco area last May where hecontinues his writing in the field of marketing and personal selling. He also takesfrequent assignments as a marketing consultant from William B. Logan & Associates, management engineers in San Francisco. Mr. Francisco lives in Pacifica, Calif.CLASS OF 1918Annual ReunionFriday, June 8 The Quadrangle ClubContact: Sherman O. CooperDrennan and Co.7549 ExchangeChicago 49JOHN A. LOGAN, '21, was elected vicechairman of the International Association of Chain Stores, "for life" at a meetingof the association's board of directors inParis recently. Mr. Logan has been anactive vice president and director of theassociation since it was reactivated in1953. Until his retirement in 1961, Mr.Logan had been president and chief executive officer of the National Associationof Food Chains since its organization in1934. On his retirement from that position, Mr. Logan established his own management counseling firm, John A. LoganAssociates, which has offices in Washington, D.C. He also is chairman of theboard of Logan, Seaman, Slater, Inc., afirm which specializes in food industrydevelopment.CLASS OF 1922Fortieth ReunionDinner at Friday evening,the Quadrangle Club June 8Contact: Robert S. AdlerSuite 82733 S. ClarkChicago CARRIE HOFFMEISTER BARLOW, '22,AM'34, of Oak Lawn, 111., is now enjoying retirement after teaching at CalumetHigh School for more than 30 years.WILLIAM J. BRADFORD, '22, and hiswife, MARGARET TUNISON, '21, live inHolland, Mich., where Mr. Bradford ispresident of W. J. Bradford Paper Co.Their son, JUDSON, '51, is a director ofthe company.LEONA FAY BRIGGS, '22, of Valparaiso,Ind., writes that she celebrated her 30thwedding anniversary last year, and adds,"When I realize that I have been in themusical profession for 32 years it is easierto believe that this year will be my 40threunion. Life is so interesting and busythat I don't have time to think of beinga 'senior citizen/ "ROY A. CHEVILLE, '22, AM'23, '25,PhD'42, is minister of the Church of JesusChrist of the Latter Day Saints, and professor of religion at Grace! and College inLamoni, la.RUEL V. CHURCHILL, '22, had both thesecond edition of Complex Variables andApplications, and the Japanese edition ofFourier Series published by McGraw-HillMAY, 1962 25Book Co., in 1960. In 1958 the secondedition of another of his books, Operational Mathematics, was published. Mr.Churchill is professor of mathematics atthe University of Michigan in Ann Arbor.ROGER M. COMBS, '22, is an accountsupervisor with MacManus, John & Adams,Inc., advertising agency in Los Angeles,Calif. Mr. Combs lives in Beverly Hills,Calif.DAVID M. EDGAR, '22, of Berkeley,Calif., has a son, Vernon, who is presentlya sophomore in the U of C College. Mr.Edgar is a retired history teacher. Heformerly taught in Great Neck, N.Y.FRANK E. FENNER, '22, is photographseditor for the World Book Encyclopedia,published by Field Enterprises EducationalCorp., in Chicago. Mr. Fenner lives inBarrington, 111.MATA ROMAN FRIEND, '22, has livedin San Diego, Calif., since 1956, and isenjoying the "perfect climate." She andher husband have traveled extensively andtheir hobby is taking colored slides— theset they took in Russia is their favorite.In 1961 they spent seven weeks in Hawaii.LOUISE APT GALEY, '22, of Del Mar,Calif., writes that her son, JOHN A.GALEY, SM'54, PhD'59, is now with theBettis Atomic Power Laboratory of West-inghouse in Pittsburgh, Pa. His PhD degree was in experimental nuclear physics.WILLIAM V. HOUSTON, SM'22, retiredas president of Rice University, Houston,Texas, in July, 1961, and became honorary chancellor of the University.LEO RICE, '22, '25, is principal clerk inthe Chicago City Department of Buildings,and also practices law and sells insurance.He has worked in civil service for thecity for 29 years.JACK ROSE, '22, secretary-treasurer ofIndiana-Illinois Theatres, Inc., Chicago, isactive in several organizations. He isfinancial secretary of the Covenant Clubof Illinois, property master of the VarietyClub of Illinois, a member of the boardof governors of Israel Bonds, and a member of the board of trustees of ChicagoSinai Temple.WILLIAM R. RUMINER, '22, is insurancemanager for Community Motors, Pontiacautomobile dealer in Chicago. Mr.Ruminer lives in La Grange, 111.JACOB SACKS, '22, SM'24, professor ofchemistry at the University of Arkansas,Fayetteville, spent three months last yearas professor of biochemistry at the University of El Salvador. He went underthe exchange program of the Organizationof American States, and had served in thesame capacity for six months in 1960.DAMARIS AMES SCHMITT, '22, andher husband, Bernadotte E. Schmitt,emeritus Andrew MacLeish DistinguishedService Professor of History at the U of C,do some traveling and participate in avariety of local activities. Their most re-26 cent trip was to Barbados. The Schmittslive in Alexandria, Va.GENEVA TERWILLIGER, '22, who isliving in Chicago, taught in the Chicagopublic schools for 35 years, from 1918-1953. She then did substitute teachingin Chicago and Cook County schools from1953 until 1960.RUTH H. TEUSCHER, '22, retired in1955 and is now living on a 40-acre country place in Wisconsin called "HawthornHollow," where she raises apples. MissTeuscher for 34 years was an English consultant in the Racine Public Schools. During that time she had thirteen bookspublished, all texts for junior high schoolEnglish courses. Miss Teuscher's homeis near Kenosha, Wise.MARY M. WYMAN, '22, AM'31, was recently presented a Distinguished Service toSafety Award, by the Louisville SafetyCouncil. She has been supervisor of safetyin the Louisville (Ky. ) public schools for33 years.23-28EWALD C. PIETSCH, '23, SM'34, retiredas professor of geography at the University of Wisconsin in June, 1961. Duringthe summer of 1961 he travelled throughout West and East Germany. He was aguest of the Society for Cultural Relationswith Foreign Countries of the GermanDemocratic Republic, and there discussedthe exchange of American and East German students. He also visited the universities of Berlin and Gottingen, and theWest German Institute of HumanisticRelations. In Berlin and Essen he visitedmany private schools to learn their methods of teaching geography.MILTON GERWIN, '26, JD'28, and hiswife, DOROTHY GROSBY GERWIN, '26,of Chicago, announce the birth of theirfirst grandchild, Michael David Gerwin,born on December 26, 1961, and the sonof RICHARD GERWIN, '54, '56, SM'57,and his wife, Janet, of Seattle, Wash. Mrs.Gerwin (Dorothy) is first vice-presidentof the Chicago Business Teachers Assn.HINMAN A. HARRIS, '27, SM'28, MD'35,is a staff physician with Robert KochHospital in University City, Mo.BLANCHE HEDEEN, '27, AM'36, is assistant principal of Harper High Schoolin Chicago. She lives in Midlothian, 111.INEZ ELY KEEPERS, '27, retired Chicagoteacher, is living in Rochester, N.Y., whereshe has a beautiful flower garden forwhich she does all the work. She isalso a member of several clubs, including American Association of UniversityWomen. Mrs. Keepers is 84.CLYDE H. KEUTZER, '27, of New York,N.Y., is director of Clyde Keutzer Associates, in New York, and of the Garden School, Belleville, N.J., a school for emotionally disturbed children. Clyde KeutzerAssociates offers voice, speech, music therapy, music consultation and testing, andschool and college counseling.HELEN PALMER KING, '27, of Oberlin, Ohio, in addition to being a ministerswife, has held a part-time job for thepast six years as home visitor under theLorain County Child Welfare Board's program for mentally retarded children. Herhusband is minister of the First Congregational Church in Oberlin.RAYMOND A. KINZIE, '27, JD'29, is alawyer in Chicago.MILTON H. KREINES, '27, of Winnetka,111., is a partner in Milton Kreines Printing and Lithographing, Chicago.PAUL H. LEFFMANN, '27, JD'30, is anattorney in Chicago, and lives in Nortn-brook, 111.ALBERT LEPAWSKY, '27, PhD'31, is *professor in the department of politic3science at the University of California,Berkeley, Calif.IRVING C. LOVEJOY, '27, who is retiredand living in Cedar Rapids, la., was ateacher in Chicago for 33 years prior tohis retirement.WILLIAM P. MacLEAN, '27, AM'29, retired Cicero, 111. school administrator, |snow living in Napa, Calif., where he iactive in civic affairs. He has served °^the elementary school board there and Jnow chaplain of the American Legion "°and president of the Napa Valley Retire^Men's Club.LOUISA L. MAGRAW, '27, is a retiredhigh school business teacher, and lives *Wollaston, Mass. Although retired, snkeeps extremely busy with church ancivic duties plus traveling. Her travehave included trips to Europe, Bermuda,Canadian Parks, Hawaii, and Alaska.ANNA MILLER, '27, is now living &Grey Gables in Ojai, Calif., a nat^n^home for retired teachers established /the National Retired Teachers' Assn' ^lowing her retirement from the Wa IHigh School in Chicago, Miss Miller spe^several years traveling through the wespecially in Colorado, Arizona and ^afornia.FRANCISCO T. ROQUE, '27, a KGUten*fcolonel in the Medical Corps of the • 'Army, is now at the U.S. Army TermingOakland, Calif. Dr. Roque is an assistarsurgeon.ROBERT HANNUM, '28, has been teaching at Central Florida Junior CollegeOcala, Fla., since 1958' when he retirefrom the active ministry in the freS.feterian Church, Weirsdale, Fla. His vv*i 'AMY TAYLOR, '28, is teaching first #*°in Ocala. Mr. Hannum will retire fromteaching in June, but his wife will ctinue teaching for another year.THEODORE J. JENSON, '28, has b#£appointed chairman of the OhioGAZlN*5THE UNIVERSITY OF CHICAGO MA'University department of education. Mr.Jenson has been a professor of educationat Ohio State since 1957, and is an authority in the field of educational administration. He is president of the Ohio Councilfor the Advancement of Educational Administration, and is co-author of a book,Educational Administration— The Secondary School, published in 1961.KENNETH A. NORTON, '28, of theBoulder Laboratories, National Bureau ofStandards, has been awarded the GoldMedal for Exceptional Service by the U.S.Department of Commerce. Mr. Norton^vas honored for outstanding contributionsand leadership in the field of radio propagation research. Chief of the radiopropagation engineering division, Mr. Norton is currently concerned with radioguidance systems for missiles and satellites,long-range radio communications systemsinvolving transmission via satellites, andtropospheric scatter at very low frequencies. He has been in the governmentservice for 30 years, and a member of theCentral Radio Propagation Laboratories ofthe National Bureau of Standards since1946.LEON P. SMITH, AM'28, PhD'30, dean°f the University of Maryland College ofArts and Sciences, has resigned from hisadministrative office in order to teach, andto complete a 30-year-old research project.He will resume full professorship in thedepartment of foreign languages and offergraduate courses in old French and thehistory of the French language next year.He will also continue work on a medievalFrench romance, Partonopeus de Blois, of^hich he has published fragments, andwhich he has been working on since hisdoctoral dissertation in 1930. Mr. Smithwas formerly on the staff of the foreignlanguage department, and dean of studentsat the U of C.80-33LEO ROSTEN, '30, PhD'37, author of a^ew novel, Captain 'Newman, M.D., andspecial editorial adviser to Look Magazine,gave a speech to a recent gathering ofnook reviewers in New York City andincluded the following quotation whichappeared in the Chicago Sun-Times: "The^ost practical things in this world of oursare not dynamos nor mechanisms norcomputers nor aircraft. The most practicalthings are ideas. It is always from somecurious, abstract, 'day-dreaming' eggheadthat our marvelous gadgets come. Thecontempt of practical men for curiousmen, or of realists for just theoriticians,rests on nothing more than ignorance. The0rie thing that curiosity can never be isidle. Now, the free man, the curious man,will always disturb his society, because hewill always confront freshly what is conventional. He will always dare to re-examinewhat seems to others to be obvious. TheWriter and the thinker are engaged in a lifelong struggle to free themselves fromthe prisons of the familiar."ELEANOR GROSSMAN WOLENS, '30,a social worker by profession, is nowteaching English at Mather High School,Chicago. Meanwhile she is working on anM.A. at the University, which she expectsto receive in December, 1962.FREDERICK H. ROBERTS, '31, PhD'34,has been appointed a vice-president ofUnion Carbide International Co., a divisionof the Union Carbide Corp., New York.He will direct technological relations overseas for the company. Formerly Mr. Roberts was vice-president— research, for theUnion Carbide Plastics Co.ESTELLE ANIS, '32, MD'36, is a physician practicing in Cicero, 111. She lives inChicago.THEODORE A. ASHFORD, '32, SM'36,PhD'36, is director of the natural sciencesdivision of the University of South Floridain Tampa, Fla.MORDECAI L. BRILL, '32, is rabbi ofthe Greenburgh Hebrew Center in DobbsFerry, N.Y.NORRIS L. BROOKENS, '32, PhD'37,MD'39, and his wife, RUTH SCHURMAN,'32, live in Urbana, III., where Dr. Brook-ens' is a specialist in internal medicine atthe Carle Clinic.JANE ENSMINGER CLEMENTS, '32, ofChicago, and her husband both teach atSenn High School, where Mrs. Clementsis English consultant to the departmentof social studies in advanced placement.Mrs. Clements' hobby is magic, and shehas performed for charitable organizationsand professionally for a number of years.LLOYD J. DAVIDSON, '32, AM'34,PhD'47, is serving for the seventh year asdean of the faculty and professor of English at Virginia Military Institute in Lexington, Va. He and his wife, Ellen ChubbDavidson, who also attended the U of C,have found their years at^ VMI "very full,enjoyable and satisfying."RUTH ABELLS DOUGLAS, '32, SM'35,of Arlington, Vt., recently received a realestate broker's license. She is adding a realwork to her other projects which includework in clinical psychology, and helpingto manage the Vermont Shop, a gift shop.She says she went to Vermont to enjoya peaceful life and finds herself busierthan ever, but loving it.THOMAS S. ELDER, '32, is an accountantwith the Federal Deposit Insurance Corp.,Washington, D.C. Mr. Elder, who livesin Arlington, Va., has as his hobby, atobacco farm in Maryland.PHILIP FEIVESON, '32, SM'41, of Chicago, has a son and a daughter presentlyenrolled in the U of C College. His daughter, Sandra Jean, is a senior majoring inmathematics and his son, Alan, is a juniorin statistics. Mr. Feiveson is a counselorat Wells High School in Chicago.GERTRUDE LEITZBACH FINNEY, '32,of Humboldt, Kan., is teaching piano. Her RICHARD H. WEST CO.COMMERCIALPAINTING and DECORATING1331 TelephoneW. Jackson Blvd. M On roe 6-3192Since 7878HANNIBAL, INC.Furniture RepairingUpholstering • ReHnishingAntiques Restored1919 N. Sheffield Ave. • LI 9-7180LEIGH'S GROCERY1327 EAST 57TH STREETServing the University Areaand Hyde ParkSince 1934DELIVERY SERVICEPOND LETTER SERVICE, Inc.Everything in LettersHooven Typewriting MimeographingMultigraphing AddressingAddressogreph Service MailingHighest Quality Service Minimum PricesAll Phones: 219 W. Chicago AvenueMl 2-8883 Chicago 10, IllinoisMAY, 1962 27husband, ROBERT, who also attended theU of C on a Rockefeller grant, is a directorof the U.S. Chamber of Commerce andrepresentative in the Kansas state legislature.MARY K. FLYNN, '32, AM'61, elementaryteacher at Charles Carroll School in Chicago, received a classroom teachers' medalfrom Freedoms Foundation, Valley Forge,in 1960.FLORENCE ANDREWS FRAPPIER, '32,of San Francisco, Calif., is director of theSan Francisco Bureau of Family Relations.She took the position in February, 1961,and formerly was a probation officer inthe San Francisco Juvenile Court for 13years.RUTH JAHNKE GARDEI, '32, has beenteaching at Whittier School in Chicagosince 1940. She and her husband, whois a retired automobile dealer, live inChicago.FAY WEINBERG GOLEMAN, '32, ispresently serving on the California Governor's Advisory Committee on MentalHealth, and on the San Joaquin CountyBoard of Public Welfare. Mrs. Golemanis associate professor of education andsociology at the University of the Pacificin Stockton, Calif.LAURENCE F. GREENE, '32, is a surgeon at Mayo Clinic in Rochester, Minn.,and associate professor at the Universityof Minnesota, specializing in urology. Hisavocation is playing the piano and directing a 19-piece band made up almost exclusively of doctors. To show the band'smedical origin, the group is called the"Notochords."ROBERT R. JORGENSEN, '32, is a taxattorney, presently serving as director oftaxes for Sears, Roebuck and Co., in Chicago. Mr. Jorgensen lives in Glen Ellyn, 111.WILLIAM KIR-STIMON, '32, of ParkForest, 111., director of personal counselingservice at the Rehabilitation Institute ofChicago, is the project director for a U.S.Office of Vocational Rehabilitation grant to the Institute. The grant is for a research and demonstration project on rehabilitation of "the more severely disabled."Mr. Kir-Stimon is also chairman of the1962 program committee of the AmericanPersonnel and Guidance Assn., division ofrehabilitation counseling.EDWARD G. KLEMM, JR., '32, insurancebroker of Louisville, Ky., composes musicand has had his works published by threepublishers, one in Vienna, Austria.ROBERT C. KLOVE, '32, SM'37, PhD'42,is assistant chief for research and development in the geography division of the U.S.Bureau of the Census, Washington, D.C.ALAN LIEBERMAN, '32, MD'36, ofElgin, 111., was recently appointed an examiner for the American Board of Psychiatry and Neurology to certify candidates in this specialty from the NorthAmerican continent. Mr. Lieberman has aprivate practice of psychiatry and neurology in Elgin.EDNA BALLARD MACK, '32, AM'47,has been acting director of the division oflibrary education at State University College, Geneseo, N.Y., since September,1961.FLORENCE WILLETT MARABLE, '32,is a reading counselor with School District105 in La Grange, 111.CORELLA N. McKENNA, PhD'32, is aretired school teacher, now living in NewBedford, Mass.JOSEPHINE McBROOM JUNGE, PhD'33,and her husband and son, have decidedto stay permanently in Prague, Czechoslovakia, after a three-week vacation there inSeptember, according to the United Press.Mrs. Junge, a bacteriologist, had been apart-time research associate at the University of Washington medical school, Seattle,and her husband was a research assistantin the University's school of fisheries. Theyand their adopted son went to Europe onvacation, and some time after their proposed time of return, the Seattle Post-Intelligencer, learned from Mrs. Junge by tele phone from Prague that the family haddecided not to return to the United States.FLOYD E. MASTEN, '33, of New York,N.Y., operates a stock brokerage firm,Masten & Co., specializing in investmentsecurities and special situations.DONALD P. McFADYEN, JD'33, of Pom-pano Beach, Fla., is practicing law JnFlorida and in Illinois.Reyfiolds & Co.Members of the New York Stock Exchangeand other principal exchangesta/es /i/etzAiwe wi awm*)UM*XM<f, thatAMOS ALONZO STAGG, JR.&* now izAbociadecl au/ft oa ad wn,111 WEST JACKSON BLVD., CHICAGO 4Telephone: 427-920157 Offices from Coast to Coast 34-35BlilM^ ¦lilll. RICHARD D. PETTIT, '34, MD'37, hasbeen elected president of the medical startof St. Luke Hospital in Pasadena, Cain-Dr. Pettit has served on the staff since1946 when he first entered private practicein the Pasadena area.JAMES A. ATKINS, AM'35, has writtena book, Human Relations in Colorado, published recently by the Colorado State Department of Education. The book wasproduced with the help of the ColoradoAnti-Discrimination Commission which enlisted Mr. Atkins to do the research andwriting of the manuscript. The book Winbe used in secondary schools and collegesin Colorado. Mr. Atkins is a former college instructor, newspaper writer and g«v"ernment specialist in human and publicrelations.FRANK O. HAND, AM'35, of Porterville,Calif., was married on August 7, 196Land is still teaching high school Englishto college preparatory students, and doingsome work in the junior college there.VERNON D. KEELER, PhD'35, has beennamed director of the management-development center and professor of management at the University of San Francisco.He was formerly professor of managementat DePaul University, Chicago, and associated with the Executive Developmentcourses at the U of C. Mr. Keeler is alsoa former professor at the University otCalifornia at Los Angeles, where he organized and conducted many managementdevelopment courses. He is the author otfour books on business and managementprocedures and has been the head of msown southern California management consulting firm for 23 years.CARLETON L. LEE, AM'35, PhD'51, hasbeen elected president of the NationalAssociation of College and UniversityChaplains and Directors of Religious Life-In that post he succeeds ROBERT H-BEAVEN, PhD'54, director of religiousactivities at the University of Rochester.Mr. Lee is director of religious activitiesand professor of philosophy and religi°nat Central State College in Wilberforce,Ohio. He also is chairman of the humanities area for the college. Last fall, Mr-Lee spoke at the Third Annual Meetingof the Association of Coordinators of V&~versity Religious Affairs, held at the University of Kansas City.28 THE UNIVERSITY OF CHICAGO MAGAZINEJESSIE R. PARKER, '35, AM'55, a Chicago high school teacher of Oak Park, 111.,Was in Europe for five weeks this summervisiting France, England and Scotland.ALBERT PARRY, '35, PhD'38, professor°f Russian civilization and language atColgate University, and JOHN B. Mc-CONAUGHY, PhD'43, member of thepolitical science department at the University of South Carolina, both contributedarticles to the October issue of MilitaryReview, monthly magazine published bythe U.S. Army Command and General StaffCollege. Mr. Parry wrote on "The SovietsFirst Rocket Gun" and Mr. McConaughy'jjtopic was "Latin America-Soviet Target."MARJORIE FOULKES RICHARDS, '35,lives in Stamford, Conn., where her husband, Robert, is a consulting engineer,and also a partner in DeLeuw, Cather andAssociates of New York, and vice president of DeLeuw, Cather and Co. ofCh ncago.36-38WILLARD G. DeYOUNG, MD'36, hasgiven up private practice to join the chietmedical staff of our Student Health Serviceand the Department of Medicine. Thisfollowed a little cardiac difficulty in January, 1961, and a seven-month rest. SaysDr. DeYoung, as he returns to the Mid-Way, "It's challenging and rewarding tosay the least."PRESCOTT JORDAN, '36, MD'41, ofOrchard Lake, Mich., has been named tothe Sports Illustrated Silver AnniversaryAll-America for 1961. The 25 former foot-hall stars selected for this honor are menwho have excelled professionally and been"generally effective" in the intervemng 25years since they played college football.Dr. Jordan, now a prominent surgeon andassociate professor of surgery at WayneState University, played as varsity guardfor three years at the U of C, and servedas assistant football coach in 1938-v3y.Dr. Jordan has specialized in cardiovascularsurgery and established the Wayne StateUniversity cardiovascular clinic and research center. From 1955-57 he was assistant professor of surgery at the Universityof Washington, and prior to that assistantprofessor at Wayne State, and a Navysurgeon during World War II.JAMES A. NORTON, '36, PhD'39, research scientist with the AC Spark PlugDivision of General Motors in Flint, Mich.,has recently received a patent for anapparatus for measuring the time amount°f radioactive material deposited on articles.ARCH OBOLER, '36, has written, produced and directed a Canadian-made filmentitled, "One Plus One" which openedrecently in New York City. Leo G. CarrollMay, 1962 plays the leading role in the SelectedFilms, Inc. release which is about theKinsey report.ROY T O'BRIEN, AM'36, and ADAMSCHAAF, '38, completed the two-weekassociate command and general staff courseat the Command and General Staff College,Fort Leavenworth, Kan., in June, 1961.Mr. O'Brien, a lieutenant colonel m theU.S. Army Reserve, is employed at theVeterans Administration Hospital PaloAlto, Calif., and is a member of the 6227thArmy Reserve School in San Francisco.Mr. Schaaf, Army Reserve major, is amember of the XI U.S. Army Corps, andis employed as an insurance analyst witnAssociated Agencies, Inc., in Chicago.DAVID M. SAXE, '36, has joined AtomicsInternational, a division of North American Aviation Inc., as manager of administration. He will be responsible for contract administration, financial and materialdepartments. Formerly Mr. Saxe was deputy manager of the Atomic Energy Commission's Chicago operations office wherehis duties were primarily in administration and contracting in the fields of civiliannuclear power reactors and fundamentalresearch. In 1959, he was temporarilyassigned to AEC headquarters m Washington, D.C, to draft a report to the JointCongressional Committee on Atomic Energy on the future role of the AEC laboratories, and he was given a special AECaward for this work.PERRY L. STARBUCK, MBA'36, of Vestal NY., has been appointed administrative assistant to the manager of admin-istration and planning at ^pF<™Systems Division Space Guidance Center otInternational Business Machines in Owego,NY Mr. Starbuck joined IBM in 1944and' most recently had been manager ofeducation.ROBERT A. STORER, '36, minister of theWinchester Unitarian Church, Winchester,Mass., was awarded an honorary doctorof diVinity degree by Tufts Universityrecently. He was cited as a clergymanand religious counselor for whom manymembers of the faculties of the Universityexpress both admiration and affection.ELEANOR VOLBERDING, AM'36, PhD'45 professor of education at NorthernIllinois University, DeKalb, III, was chairman of the publication committee and co-editor for a recent publication ot the Illinois Curriculum Program, Teaching theSocial Studies. The preface to , to .bookis written by WOODSON W. FISHBACK,PhD'48, Illinois state coordmator ot curriculum.CLASS OF 1937Twenty-fifth ReunionDinner at Friday evening,the Quadrangle Club June 8Contact: Richard Smith5508 HohmanHammond, IndianaHERBERT B. BALDWIN, '37, is plantsuperintendent for Dawes Laboratories, Inc., in Chicago. The firm deals in livestock feed additives.STEPHEN S. BARAT, '37, is purchasingagent for Wm. Wrigley Jr. Co., in SantaCruz, Calif.CHARLES A. BECK, '37, SM'38, MD'42physician in Chicago, is now secretary otstaff at Jackson Park Hospital.EVELYN VAN EMDEN BERG, '37, ofWichita Falls, Texas, has recently beenmade chairman of the local City-CountyWelfare Board. Mrs. Berg's son Charlesis a sophomore in the U of C College.ELIZABETH WESTON BERRYMAN '37,has become managing editor of McCalkmagazine. Formerly she was assistant tothe editor of Good Housekeeping, and feature editor of Glamour. Mrs. Berrymanlives in New York City.MARY TO EMERSON BRANCH, '37, ofOxford, Ohio, has a daughter, SydneyElizabeth, in this year's freshman class mthe U of C College.ALVIN T. BRAUN, '37, is a research professor at the New York State ExperimentStation, Geneva, N.Y., and his wife,EDITH NEIDLE BRAUN, '37, SM38,teaches biology at the Geneva Senior HighSchool.MAURICE E. BURNS, '37, MBA'38,dropped in at Alumni House in late March.In June, 1960, he left his position ascomptroller of Hill Packing Co., in Topeka,Kan., to become budget director of StanleyAviation Corp., in Denver, Colo. TheBurns (she was ANALEE HILL, '38, oncampus), have a new four-level home inAurora, a suburb of Denver.H. MABEL CRABTREE, '37, of Oak Park,III., is teaching junior high school weekday religious education classes for theOak Park-River Forest Council of Churches.HENRY W. CUTTER, '37, JD'40, of Pasadena, Calif., is active in the Tournamentof Roses, Sertona International, and otherorganizations. He has a general civil lawpractice in Pasadena and Los Angeles.JUDSON C. GRAY, '37, AM'37, has beenappointed assistant professor of sociologyat Marietta College, Marietta, Ohio.JUAN HOMS, JR., '37, of Coral Gables,Fla., is sales manager of the Latin American division of Pan American Airwaysin Miami. He has been in that positionfor eight years, and has been with PanAmerican for 23 years.DAVID M. KINSLER, '37, AM'39, who isstaff editorial advisor for Industrial Publishing Corp., in Cleveland, Ohio, gavean address in October to the MichelsonClub in Chicago. His topic was "Writingfor Technical Magazines: the View fromthe Editor's Side of the Desk." TheMichelson Club is an organization of Jewish scientists and professional men dedicated to community service, and is namedfor A. A. Michelson, Nobel-Prize-winningphysicist of the U of C.29WILLIAM S. KLEIN, MD'37, is chief ofstaff of the Veterans Administration Hospital in Baltimore, Md.DONALD F. MULVIHILL, AM'37,PhD'54, has been appointed head of thedepartment of marketing at Kent StateUniversity. Previously Mr. Mulvihill wasprofessor of marketing at the Universityof Alabama. He joined the faculty therein 1940.BERNICE VON HORN POLLYEA, '37, ofChicago, spent the academic year 1960-61on the Urbana campus of the Universityof Illinois as a participant in the NationalScience Foundation Institute and earned amasters degree in mathematics. She ishead of the mathematics department atFenger High School in Chicago. Her husband, GEORGE POLLYEA, ?33, is assistant principal of Tilden Technical HighSchool in Chicago.KIRSTEN RICHARDS VANDERBERG,'37, AM'40, of Sacramento, Calif., is aneditorial assistant with the California StateDepartment of Education. Her chief extracurricular activity is League of WomenVoters. Mrs. Vanderberg's husband ischairman of physics at Sacramento StateCollege.HOWARD A. VERNON, '37, AM'40,PhD'51, is head of the reference and circulation departments at Niagara Falls PublicLibrary, Niagara Falls, N.Y. He has beena professional librarian for eight years.Currently Mr. Vernon is also translatingthe poetry of a member of the FrenchAcademy.JAMES L. WALTERS, '37, is living inSanta Barbara, Calif., where he is presently associate professor of biology at theUniversity of California, Santa Barbara.His wife is a research biologist.ADELINE ROSEBURG WEILAND, '37,SM'38, of Chicago, is busy rearing fouryoungsters, but also finds time for involvement in scouting, PTA, and her spare timehobby, ham radio operation.ELSA WHALLEY, '37, SM'40, PhD'55,is an assistant professor in the Center forHuman Relations Studies, Graduate Schoolof Education, New York University. Shefives in New York City.BRADFORD WILES, '37, is a partner inHofgren, Brady, Wegner, Allen & Stellman,patent lawyers in Chicago. Mr. Wileslives in Glencoe, 111.CHARLES S. WILSON, '37, is sales manager of folding paper cartons for theCornell Paperboard Products Co., in Milwaukee, Wise. Mr. Wilson's wife is MARGARET ARGALL, '41.JOSEPHINE BERGIN WITT, '37, of Chicago, is a retired teacher. Her last assignment was as bedside teacher at Children'sMemorial Hospital.J. DeWITT WORCESTER, '37, has beenbusy working at his tree and shrub nursery(Bay Nursery) in Costa Mesa, Calif., fornearly eight years. He enjoys his ownbusiness and life in California, and would like to see any visitors from Chicago.HERBERT M. ZIMMERMAN, '37, is principal of Forrestville North Upper GradeCenter school in Chicago. Mr. Zimmermanhas recently spent two summers in Europe.He completed his doctor's degree in 1957,and in 1954-55 took a sabbatical year toaccept a fellowship at Harvard University.NICHOLAS G. AMATO, MD'38, has recently been appointed chairman of thedepartment of anesthesiology at GoodSamaritan Hospital, Cincinnati, Ohio. Heis also vice president of the CincinnatiSociety of Anesthesiologists.DONALD B. ANDERSON, '38, andCARL Q. CHRISTOL, PhD'41, both inthe U.S. Army Reserve, graduated duringthe past summer from the senior officernuclear weapons employment course atthe Command and General Staff College,Fort Leavenworth, Kan. Both were trainedfor duty as nuclear weapons employmentofficers at general staff level. Mr. Anderson, a lieutenant colonel, is an industrialrepresentative for the Sherwin-WilliamsCo., in Newark, N.J., and is regularlyassigned as commander of the 76th Division s 418th Regiment in East Hartford,Conn. Mr. Christol, a colonel, is a facultymember at the University of Southern California, Los Angeles, and assigned as director of civil affairs with the 311th LogisticalCommand in Los Angeles.FRED C. ASH, '38, JD'40, has beenelected vice president of Dun & Bradstreet,Inc., New York, and will serve as generalcounsel for the Dun & Bradstreet Group.Formerly Mr. Ash was secretary-treasurerand general counsel of the Reuben H.Donnelley Corp., which merged with Dun& Bradstreet last summer. He joined theDonnelley Corp. in 1957. Previously Mr.Ash had served briefly as assistant to thedean of the U of C Law School and subsequently was a partner in the law firmof Kirkland, Fleming, Martin & Ellis, nowknown as Kirkland, Ellis, Hodson, Chaffetzand Masters.JOHN J. BALLENGER, '38, physicianand associate professor of otolaryngologyat Northwestern University medical school,Chicago, is currently doing a researchproject which seeks to explain the effect ofair pollution on the respiratory tract. Dr.Ballenger practices in Winnetka, 111., andfives in Glencoe.HOWARD B. DURBIN, '38, has beenelected secretary of Commercial SolventsCorp., New York. Mr. Durbin has beenwith the corporation for 21 years, mostrecently managing the stabilized vitaminsdivision.SAMUEL W. JENSEN, '38, is pastor ofthe Holy Trinity Lutheran Church in St.Louis, Mo.WALTER JOHNSON, AM'38, PhD'41,Preston and Sterling Morton Professor ofHistory at the U of C, has been named byPresident Kennedy to the new U.S. Advisory Commission on International Educational and Cultural Affairs. The nine-mangroup was created to "formulate and rec ommend to the President policies for exercising his authority under the MutualEducational and Cultural Exchange Act of1961 [or the Fulbright-Hayes Act] andappraise the effectiveness of programscarried on pursuant to it." Mr. Johnsonis author of several books including, Hou)We Drafted Adlai Stevenson (1955), and1600 Pennsylvania Avenue, published recently.HIRAM L. KENNICOTT, JR., '38, ofHighland Park, 111., has been elected vicepresident of Lumbermens Mutual CasualtyCo., and American Motorists InsuranceCo., both divisions of Kemper Insurance.Mr. Kennicott, formerly second vice president, is supervising underwriter for thenational risks. He has been with theKemper group since 1938 and has servedas a safety engineer, procedures coordinator and underwriting executive.39-41SAUL BELLOW, '39, author of Henderson the Rain King, and winner of theNational Book Award for The Adventuresof Augie March, has been appointed visiting professor of English in the U of yCollege for winter quarter, 1962. &lSappointment is made possible by a granfrom the Esso Foundation. Mr. Bellowlives in Tivoli, N.Y.AL M. GUHL, SM'39, PhD'43, professorof zoology at Kansas State University,Manhattan, Kan., was honored in Februarywhen fellow faculty members selected himto speak at a Faculty Lectureship Banquetin recognition of his outstanding researchin zoology. Mr. Guhl's best-known research, which deals with the social behavior of animals, is on the peck orderamong chickens. He believes that some otthe findings on social behavior of variousanimals can give an overall picture whichwill be applicable to human behavior. Mf-Guhl began his research on chickens whileworking for his doctor's degree at theU of C, with W. C. Allen. The two co-authored an article in 1944 which arousedmuch interest in their project: "SomeMeasurable Effects of Social Organizationin Flocks of Hens," which appeared inPhysiological Zoology.JOHN H. SMITH, MBA'39, PhD'41, returned to his post in September as p*0/fessor of statistics at the American University, Washington, D.C, after spendinga year on the U of C campus studyingmathematics and doing part-time teachingin the Graduate School of Business.IRENE G. BUCKLEY, AM'40, is executivedirector of Cancer Care, Inc., a socialagency in New York City.LILLIAN SHEFFNER GOODKIN, '40,and her family have recently moved toStudio City, Calif. The Goodkins havethree children.30 THE UNIVERSITY OF CHICAGO MAGAZINECHAUNCY D. HARRIS, PhD'40, professor of geography at the U of C, conductedsix eminent Soviet geographers on a four-Week tour of the United States last summer, and later headed a delegation of leading American geographers who touredRussia as guests of the USSR in the fall.Also among the Americans touring Russiawere WILLIAM HORBALY, AM'47, PhD'51, American Embassy attache in Moscow,and EDWARD B. ESPENSHADE, '30,SM'32, PhD'43, chairman of the department of geography at Northwestern University. Mr. Espenshade was awarded ameritorious contributions citation by theAssociation of American Geographers inAugust, 1961.NORMAN A. HOLMES, '40, executivedirector of the Louisiana Weekly Educational Fund, Inc., served the Central Congregational Church in New Orleans asacting minister for seven months in 1961.He is minister emeritus of the church.During the summer of 1961, he and hiswife also accepted an invitation to workat Family Camps in LaForet and EstesPark, Colo. The invitation to work thereWas extended by the Department of Missionary Education of the Evangelical andReformed Church, and Missions Councilof the Congregational Christian Churches.The Louisiana Weekly Educational Fundof which Mr. Holmes is director, is dedicated to supplying necessary funds to aidyoung people in getting specialized highereducation.JOSEPH H. KRIVANEK, '40, of Riverside,HI., has been elected president of thedental staff at Mac Neal Memorial Hospital in Berwyn, 111.EUGENE A. LUENING, '40, recently became minister of the Unitarian congregation in Fort Wayne, Ind. He had formerlyheen minister of the First Unitarian Churchin Memphis, Tenn.WILLIAM L. SLAYTON, '40, AM'43, iscommissioner of the Urban Renewal Administration of the Housing and HomeFinance Agency in Washington, D.C. Inthat position he is in charge of a programinvolving more than 500 cities undertakingnearly 1000 projects, and an authorizationof $4 billion in Federal grants to citiesfor such activities. When SYDNEY H.KASPER, '33, director of public affairsfor the Urban Renewal Administration sentus this information about Mr. Slayton henoted that all of the following U of Calumni are also active in housing andPlanning in Washington, D.C. In theHousing and Home Finance Agency: JACKT- CONWAY, '40, deputy administrator;SIDNEY SPECTOR, AM'48, assistant administrator; MILTON P. SEMER, '39,JD'49, general counsel; ASHLEY A.FOARD, JD'34, associate general counsel;and ROBERT COL WELL, '32, economistin Urban Renewal Administration. In theFederal Housing Administration: PAULcOE, '32, economist; MASON DOAN,AM'40, director of budget division. Othersare CODY PFANSTIEHL, '37, director,Office of Community Affairs and Information, National Capital Transportation Agency; GORDON HOWARD, '34 deputydirector, District of Columbia Redevelopment Land Agency.CARL Q. CHRISTOL, PhD'41, chairmanof the University of Southern Californiapolitical science department and professor of international law, will serve as consultant and professor of international lawat the Naval War College, Newport R.I.,for a year starting July 1. M*.Oms tolhas been a member of the USC facultysince 1949. In 1958-59 he received aRockefeller Foundation fellowship tor research in international law and jurisprudence.PAUL F. LORENZ, MBA'41, was recentlypromoted in the Ford Motor Company togeneral parts and service manager. Hiswife is HARRIET FAWCETT, '42. Theirhome is in Birmingham, Mich.AMY GOLDSTEIN PHILIPSON, '41, formerly of El Monte, Calif., and her familyare in Paris, France for two years whileher husband establishes an office therefor his firm, the Atlantic Research Co.This news is reported by Mrs. Philipsonsfather, MEYER GOLDSTEIN, '12, ofChicago.MELVIN T. TRACHT, '41, has resignedhis position as business manager and assistant treasurer at Illinois Institute of Technology to become business manager andtreasurer of Roosevelt University, Chicago.U2-URICHARD V. ANDREE, '42, has recentlybeen appointed professor of mathematicsand chairman of the department of mathematics and astronomy at the University ofOklahoma in Norman, Okla. He is also aresearch associate in con^ter saeMertthe University. His wife, JOSEPHINEPEET '42 SM'44, is national secretary-treasurer of the National High School andJunior College Math Club.GEORGE D. BLACKWOOD, '42, AM'47,PhD'51, is associate professor in BostonUniversity's College of General Education.He thinks the program there is comparable to the old [U of C] College inits aims and techniques." Mr. Blackwoodalso heads a training program in connection with the Massachusetts state government, engages in community activities anddoes a little writing. He and his familylive in Arlington, Mass., a suburb otBoston.TAMES BURTLE, '42, AM'48, is a senioreconomist with W. R. Grace & Co., mNew York City.RUTH COOPER COOK, '42, SM'44PhD'57 and her husband, Robert, are bothprofessors at the University of Missouri,Columbia. yersatilityFrom a small one-color sheet to awork of thousands of pages, from afull color catalog to a giant display,here one can see the gamut ofprinting jobs. Diversity of productclearly indicates our versatility.Fine skills and varied talents of ourpeople are supported by a widerange of camera and plate equipment,offset presses of several typesfrom the smallest to the largestand a complete pamphlet binderyPhotopressCongress Expressway at Gardner RoadBROADVIEW. ILL COIumbus M420T.A. SidewalksFactory FloorsMachineFoundationsConcrete BreakingNOrmal 7-0433We operate our own dry cleaning plant1309 East 57th St.Midway 3-0602 5319 Hyde Park Blvd.NOrmal 7-98581553 E. Hyde Park Blvd.1442 E. 57th FAirfax 4-5759Midway 3-0607GEORGE ERHARDTand SONS, Inc.Painting— Decorating—Wood Finishing3193 PhoneMODEL CAMERA SHOPLeica-Bolex-Rolleiflex-Polaroid1342 L 55th St. HYde Pork 39259NSA Discounts24-hour Kodechrome DevelopingHO Trains and Model Supplies31MAY, 1962The FRANK E. O'DOWD (MBA'53) Hjof Wilmette, III., has been named Ca ^Family of the Year. Their selection ove .other families in the nation was annc tu .by the Family Life Bureau of the NfCatholic Welfare Conference in WashingDC• .j for theThe O'Dowds were nominated T°hris.honor because of their activity in ,n^o|1(er.tian Family Movement and the Cana ^ence over the last several years. '" ^eand 1955 Mr. and Mrs. O'Dowd were >chairman couple of the Cana C°nt*! 0fofficial marriage education organize j j,the Roman Catholic Church. The O ,|yhave been leaders and counselors m g<econferences for the last 14 years, °n°a,ionnow co-authoring a course in sex edufor Catholic children. ujnesMr. O'Dowd is sales manager at ^Lumber Company's Skokie warehouse. ,O'Dowds, who have eight children, expi ^their theory of child rearing: "If Y° |f,rear your child to love and to give ot ni ^then you have a good chance of raisingto be a mature young person."CHARLES F. DAHL, '42, owner of DahlDrug Store, Viroqua, Wise, is presidentof the Wisconsin Pharmaceutical Assn.DINO J. D'ANGELO, '42% JD'44, is apartner in the law firm of D'Angelo, Dahl& Geocaris in Chicago. Mr. D'Angelolives in Highland Park, 111.PAUL D'ARCO, SM'42, director of industrial relations with Admiral Corp., Chicago, is now living in La Grange Park, III.NANETTE LOWENSTERN DOERN-BERG, '42, of Scarsdale, N.Y., has foursons ranging in age from 16 to 4, so findsherself active in four PTA organizations,plus various other community projects.MURIEL FRODIN ENGLISH, '42, ofBethesda, Md., is busy working for theDemocratic Party at the precinct level,and working on reapportionment and re-districting problems. Her husband is assistant general manager for research anddevelopment with the U.S. Atomic EnergyCommission in Germantown, Md.GWENDOLYN RODDY FERGUSON,' 42,AM'44, of Chicago, announces the birthof the Ferguson's first child, Melanie Ly-nette, born on August 18, 1961. UntilMelanie's arrival, Mrs. Ferguson was anEnglish teacher at DuSable High Schoolin Chicago.THEODORE FIELDS, '42, president ofHealth Physics Assn. (radiation safety),has had the second edition of his recent book on radioisotopes published. Heis active in civil defense, Boy Scouts andother community affairs in Chicago.DAVID L. FISHER, '42, recently spent ayear on the staff of the Institute for Defense Analysis, Washington, D.C, doingprogram analysis for the Department ofDefense. He adds that the U of C is32 one of the sponsors of this institute. Mr.Fisher, who lives in Garden City, N.Y.,is assistant to the engineering manager atSperry Gyroscope Co., Great Neck, N.Y. tea'acl>-GREENE, '42, AM'50, PhD'56, is ^f qing college history courses at theUniversity College.JOHN W. KARN, '42, MD'44, of ^Bend, Ind., has a practice limited to 'pfGILBERT F. FORD, '42, senior accountant wiAccountants, Denver, tjolo., is currently Karn is active in tne i" lying •¦'•!' anZ8active in a number of civic organizations. Assn., and has his own Beechcraft B°n' erHe is treasurer and director of the Rude plane. He flew coast-to-coast last suPark Nursery, a United Fund agency in attending medical meetings./ith Davics & Ryan, Certified Public thesiology in a 5-man medical Sr°uPLjanSuntants, Denver, Colo., is currently Karn is active in the Flying Phy p,Denver, and also treasurer of the SouthDenver Kiwanis Club, and the DenverChapter of Reserve Officers Assn. He ispast treasurer and director of the DenverJunior Chamber of Commerce.JEAN HAMBLY GECKLER, '42, of Glen-dora, Calif., and her husband have recently bought their first home and arereally enjoying life southern Californiastyle, including a swimming pool. Mrs.Geckler works as a secretary with Aerojet-General Corp., where her husband isa space biologist.ALBERT GOLDSTEIN, '42, MD'50, has aprivate medical practice in Pomona, Calif.MARGARET O'BID GULLEY, '42, ofChapel Hill, N.C, is working in thepathology department of the University ofNorth Carolina school of medicine, as administrative assistant to a pathologist there.Her husband is an associate professor ofsociology at the University.RICHARD HIMMEL, '42, interior designer in Chicago, is collaborating in thedesign and construction of a new hotel,the Georgetown Inn, to be built in theWashington, D.C, suburb of the samename. The inn will be elegantly appointedand feature "Old World' hotel services.PAUL B. JOHNSON, '42, PhD'54, is associate professor of history at Roosevelt University in Chicago. His wife, DOROTHY '42, ofTHE SARAH JANE PETERS LAPIN, -.#Los Angeles, Calif., who is a hmn°Z\i0ewith two children, also has a si ^activity in real estate developmenbuilding. Her husband is a space eng"HELEN HOWARD LINK, '42, »teaching French for several years at U eHigh School, is now enjoying a gnjleisurely life doing private tutoring ppursuing her interest in the Ame .Field Service. Mrs. Link and her "u^0js,a professor at the University of 1"live in Urbana, III.ABBIE R. LUKENS, '42, SM'46, M0^is a pediatrician in La Grange, M-lives in Hinsdale.HERBERT S. MANNING, '42, MBA{q0Ais president of J. S. Hoffman Co., ^processor in Chicago. Mr. Manningin Wilmette, 111.JEAN RIHA MATOUSEK, '42, of P£,Ridge, 111., has returned to teaching estaying home for several years to jher two daughters. She is now elllP lipas a substitute teacher at Maine TownHigh School in Park Ridge.RAYMOND McEVOY, '42, AM'48, P^'50, is chief of the market research sec ^with the economics department 0*ijf.Bank of America in San Francisco, u'UNIVERSITY OF CHICAGO MAGAZlN^ROBERT A. MILLER, '42, of Cedar Rapids, la., has been named vice presidentof the Cryovac Division of W. R. Grace& Co. Mr. Miller, who served as generalmanager of Cryovac's western divisionwith headquarters in Cedar Rapids, from1957 through 1961, will now take chargeof the company's sales.MARVIN E. MITCHELL, '42, is vicepresident-sales, with Weil McLain Co.,(manufacturers of heating equipment) inMichigan City, Ind.KENNETH MORRAY, '42, and his wife,BETSY KUH, '43, with their family movedfrom Cleveland to Schenectady, N.Y., lastyear. Mr. Morray is sales manager ofGeneral Electric in Waterford, N.Y. Hisfamily is happy to be back in the east asthey are all ardent skiers and sailors, andfacilities for both sports are convenientlylocated nearby.WILLIAM T. NELSON, '42, researchchemist with Phillips Petroleum Co., inBartlesville, Okla., is active in a chemicalsociety and in community activities including Explorer Boy Scouts and little theater.He also finds time for Canadian canoeWps and mountain-climbing expeditions.MELVIN M. NEWMAN, '42, MD'44, ischief of surgery at National Jewish Hospital in Denver, Colo., and clinical associate professor of surgery at the University°f Colorado Medical School.JAMES B. NIDAY, '42, SM'60, is achemist with the Lawrence Radiation Laboratory in Livermore, Calif. He lives inPleasanton, Calif.DEL HOFFBERG NORD, '42, of Chicago, has a private practice in psychiatricsocial work.ARDIS MOLITOR OBERMEYER, '42, ofPelham Manor, N.Y., still finds "combininga singing career with a musical family offive most rewarding." Her husband is anaccount executive with Sullivan, Stauifer,Cohvell and Bayless in New York City.DONALD R. PETTERSON, '42, and hisfamily have enjoyed living in the Southnow for over three years. They live inGreenville, N.C, where Mr. Petterson isprofessor of geography at East CarolinaCollege. He has been teaching, editingand doing research on Africa, the USSR,and economic geography.BARBARA MITTELMAN REES, '42, ofAtherton, Calif., does painting and ceramicSculpture on a semi-professional basis. Mrs.Bees has three children and her husbandheads Commonwealth Builders in Menlopark, Calif.Baxter k. richardson, '42, jd'48,is a lawyer in Fresno, Calif.ELLA OZERAN ROSS, '42, AM'43, ofChicago, has temporarily retired fromsocial work since she is now "fully employed" with the care of her family whichdeludes two sons. Mr. Ross is an insur-a*ce agent with Continental Assurance Co.,Chicago. NORMAN RUDY, '42, MBA'47, PhD'52,and his wife, PHYLLIS GREENBURG,'43, and three daughters, live in Sacramento, Calif. Mr. Rudy is professor ofstatistics and engineering at SacramentoState College and Mrs. Rudy is teachingthird grade.WILLIAM H. RUSSELL, '42, AM'47,chairman of the department of history atGeneva College, Beaver Falls, Pa., hasbeen promoted from associate professorto professor. Mr. Russell joined Geneva'sfaculty in 1954.MARCIA MERRIFIELD SCHENCK, '42,of Tucson, Ariz., directs the church choirat the Unitarian Church, and in the pasthas been accompanist for the Arizona Boys'Chorus, Tucson Civic Chorus, and soloists.She has also given piano lessons, andtaught music at the State Deaf and BlindSchool.CHARLES W. SCHLAGETER, '42,MD'44, Chicago psychiatrist and his wife,announce the birth of a fourth boy inJune, 1961. He and his family live inEvanston, 111.LYLE W. SMITH, '42, is district coordinator of the Borden Co., New YorkCity. He lives in Brooklyn.AARON BROWN, PhD'43, and his wife,of New York City, recently returned froma trip to Russia and other points inWestern Europe. Mr. Brown was a member of a study seminar to study highschools and teacher education colleges.DAVID MONTAGU, '44, of New YorkCity, recently gave a recital at Town Hallin New York, and was termed "a superiorviolinist," by the New York Times.46-49BERNARD A. GALLER, '46, '47, PhD'55,assistant professor of mathematics at theUniversity of Michigan, becomes actingdirector of the University Computing Center this spring. He and his wife, ENIDHARRIS, '47, AM'50, live in Ann Arbor,Mich.MARVIN C. GOLDMAN, '46, '47, MD'50,has a private medical practice in gastroenterology in Portland, Ore.GERALD S. GORDON, '46, '48, and hiswife, LILLIAN ROSEN, '44, of Engle-wood, Colo., announce the birth of adaughter, Ilise Beth, on January 7, 1961.Dr. Gordon is a physician specializing incardiology and has his office in Denver.JOSEPH R. GUSFIELD, '46, AM'49, PhD54, professor of sociology at the University of Illinois, has been awarded a Fulbright grant to lecture next year at PatnaUniversity in Patna, India. JULIUS B. KAHN, JR., '46, SM'47, PhD'49, associate professor of pharmacology atNorthwestern University Medical School,Evanston, 111., attended the First International Pharmacological Congress inStockholm, Sweden, last year. Amongalumni he saw there was RALPH W.GERARD, '19, PhD'21, MD'25, professorof neurophysiology at the University ofMichigan, Ann Arbor.RAYMOND C. SANGSTER, '46, '47, is aresearch associate with Texas Instruments,Dallas, Texas. Mr. Sangster lives in Piano,Texas.CLASS OF 1947Fifteenth Reunionat the All-Alumni Luncheon12:30 p.m. Saturday, June 9Reserved TablesFor serverations see your May TowerTopics. JANET LIPPMAN ABU-LUGHOD, '47,AM'50, who is now doing free-lance work,has recently taught sociology at the University of Illinois, and at the AmericanUniversity at Cairo. She has also recently"done various research jobs, written twoand a half books, and produced three children." She adds that these have been veryfull years, during which she has come to"appreciate more and more the really excellent education we received at Chicago."Her husband is a research associate atPrinceton University and they live inPrinceton, N.J.FRANCESCA ALEXANDER, '47, AM'50,of Pacific Palisades, Calif., is currentlyworking for her PhD degree in sociologyat the University of Southern California.JOSEPH P. ARCOMANO, '47, MD'49, ofHuntington, N.Y., is a physician specializing in radiology with the North ShoreMedical Group in Huntington.DAVID L. BLUMBERG, '47, and hiswife, LINDA HORWEEN, AM'56, ofGlencoe, 111., announce the birth of a second son, Paul Henry, on May 19, 1961.Mr. Blumberg is president and generalmanager of J. Blumberg, Inc., retail furniture company in Waukegan, 111.CHESTER BOWLES, JR., '47, and hiswife, HOLLY TAYLOR, '48, live in Tiburon, 'Calif., with their family of four sons.Mr.' Bowles has practiced architecture inSan Francisco since 1955.FREDERICK A. BRAUCHER, JR., '47,PhD'54, is a clinical psychologist with theInstitute for Psychological Services at Illinois Institute of Technology in Chicago.Mr. Braucher and his wife announce thebirth of a son, Ernest, on May 24, 1961.MARY C. BULGER, '47, is an intelligenceresearch analyst with the U.S. InformationAgency in Washington, D.C.HERMAN W. CAMPBELL, '47, SM'53, isproduction service manager with WitcoChemical Co., Chicago.May, 1962 33MILTON COOPER, SM'47, is a visitinglecturer and research associate at Northwestern University, Evanston, 111., and isalso employed by the Chicago Board ofEducation as an instructor. Mr. Cooperlives in Skokie, 111.GEORGE M. DAVIES, '47, MD'52, isnow a staff psychiatrist on the in-patientservice of the San Joaquin County MentalHealth Services in French Camp, Calif.Mr. Davies lives in Stockton, Calif.DAVID DENNIS, '47, is now living inBriarcliff Manor, N.Y., where he is technician in operations analysis with International Business Machines Corp., WhitePlains, N.Y. After nearly four years ofworking in California for IBM, he isenjoying his new assignment in DataProcessing Division Headquarters, andrelishing his view of the Hudson Riverfrom a Westchester County hilltop.EDWIN DIAMOND, '47, AM'49, and hiswife, ADELINA LUST, '47, live in PortWashington, N.Y. Mr. Diamond is generaleditor with Newsweek magazine in NewYork City.ELEANOR ZUCKMAN DIESING, '47,AM'51, of Champaign, 111., is busy withtwo small children, but also teaches special education for the multiply-handicappedin the local schools.UNIVERSITY NATIONAL BANK1354 East 55th StreetMemberFederal Deposit Insurance Corporation. MUseum 4-1200BEST BOILER REPAIR & WELDING CO.24 HOUR SERVICELicensed • Bonded • InsuredQualified WeldersSubmerged Water HeatersHAymarket 1-79171404-08 S. Western Ave.. ChicagoPhone: REqent 1-33 1 1The Old ReliableHyde Park Awning Co.INC.Awnings and Canopies for All Purposes1142 E. 82nd StreetOffset Printing • Imprinting • AddressographingMultflithing • Copy Preparation • Automatic InsertingTypewriting • Addressing • Foldinfl___^__MaHingCHICAGO ADDRESS,NG * PRINTINS COMPANY720 SOUTH DEARBORN STREET WAMISll 2-4561 ROBERT M. EDWALDS, '47, '48, MD'53,has been an instructor in the departmentof psychiatry at the State University ofNew York Upstate Medical Center for thepast year and a half. When possible hespecializes in the psychiatric problems ofadolescents and college students. Mr. Ed-walds and his wife, MARY PHILLIPS,SM'49, think they have a modest recordfor married alumni: seven children including four girls and three boys ranging from10 years old to their identical twin daughters who are nine months old. The Ed-walds' live in Syracuse, N.Y.VIRGINIA MAINZER FEAGANS, '47, ofCarmichael, Calif., has retired from kindergarten teaching, following the additionof twin girls, Ann and Amy to the familyin September, 1960. Mr. Feagans teachesat Carson Creek Ranch School in RanchoCordova, Calif.GEORGE W. FRANCIS, '47, is an aviation weather forecaster with the U.S.Weather Bureau in Chicago, and a researchassociate with the Department of Geophysical Sciences at the U of C. Mr. Francislives in Oak Park, 111.DONALD R. GERTH, '47, AM'51, hasbeen dean of admissions at San FranciscoState College for the past four years. Mr.Gerth lives in San Bruno, Calif.DONALD J. GLOTZER, '47, '50, MD'52,is a surgeon at New England Center Hospital in Boston, Mass. Dr. Glotzer livesin Newtonville, Mass.MERILYN COHEN GOLDBERG, '47,teaches in the Los Angeles City schoolsand is working on a degree in psychologyat San Fernando State College. She andher husband, an attorney in Granada Hills,live in Chats worth, Calif.J. THOMAS GRAYSTON, '47, MD'48,SM'52, is professor and administrator inthe department of preventive medicine atthe University of Washington, Seattle.THOMAS H. HAY, '47, is senior material and process engineer with the MartinCo., in Baltimore, Md.CHRISTINE E. HAYCOCK, '47, '48, asurgeon in Newark, N.J., has just becomea diplomate of the American Board ofSurgery.DONALD O. HODGES, '47, is sales manager of Richardson Co. (plastics), in Melrose Park, 111. Mr. Hodges lives in Arlington Heights, 111.RICHARD B. HOERR, '47, is a systemsengineer with International Business Machines Corp., Fresno, Calif.RICHARD S. HOMER, '47, '49, MD'53and his wife, DIANA CHAPLIN, AM'54'live in Northridge, Calif., and have threechildren. Dr. Homer has a private practiceof dermatology in Panorama City, Calif.During 1958-60 he was with the UCLAMedical Center.ROBERT S. HOWARD, '47, of College-ville, Pa., is associate professor of biologyat Ursinus College. He was president of the Society of Natural History of Deb'ware, 1959-61, and is a member of Sign**Xi. His current research is on intertidainsects with special study on earwigs-ANNE RECTOR JEWELL, '47, of Lyn^wood, Wash., is librarian at the city upra^in Mountlake Terrace, Wash. She plans t^return to school soon at the University °Washington for a degree in library science-RICHARD S. KROHN, '47, MBA'50, j>assistant to the vice president— sales, v?1Levi Strauss and Co., apparel manufacturers in San Francisco, Calif.EUGENE R. KUCZYNSKI, '47, '*8> *head of the analytical applications kbo**"tory at Leeds & Northrup Co., in NortnWales, Pa. Mr. Kuczynski lives in Pn1,a'delphia.BETTY ABRAMS LECHTER, '47, of EastOrange, N.J., is again busy taking car^of her family and doing graduate woat Newark State Teachers College, artea trip to Europe last year.HERBERT M. LEIMAN, '47, of Laurence, N.Y., was recalled to active dutyin the U.S. Army last fall. He is a iirslieutenant. Mr. Leiman is an aiiovrie^ h:sHempstead, N.Y., and hopes to resume nlaw practice this fall. He was admittedpractice before the U.S. Supreme Courin May, 1961.WILLIAM LEITER, '47, '48, is a memberof the law firm, Ungerman, Grabel, Unger-man, Leiter & Unruh, in Tulsa, Okla.MARTIN D. LEWIS, '47, AM'50, Pbp'SJis assistant professor of history at BaldwinWallace College in Berea, Ohio.ROBERT S. LICHTENSTEIN, '47, of LosAltos, Calif., has recently begun pnvai*practice as a neurosurgeon in Sunnyva 'Calif. He is also on the faculty of tneStanford University Medical School. V-Lichtenstein took his residency in n&f'surgery at Johns Hopkins Hospital, attesome army service with tours in Formoand Japan.WILLIAM H. LOWERY, '47, is an attorney with Barnes, Dechert, Price, Mye#r& Rhoads in Philadelphia. He lives »Devon, Pa.JEAN HIRSCH PRIEST, '48, '49, MD'53,of Bellevue, Wash., is in pediatrics, specializing in genetic and chromosome re-search. Dr. Priest has two children.RICHARD A. TEFO, '48, MBA'50, is ^m Madison, Wise, where he is agencymanager for Mutual of New York infu£ance. He is currently studying for a Cldegree from the American College of L*Underwriters.ROBERT FARWELL, JD'49, formerlytrust officer of the Continental Illinois National Bank of Chicago, became an associate dean of the U of C Graduate Schooof Business in January. Mr. Far^e^had been with Continental Illinois sinceSeptember, 1955, when he accepted aspecial assignment with them in trust administration and operation. He was electedassistant secretary in 1957, and becameTHE UNIVERSITY OF CHICAGO MAGAZlN^trust officer in 1960. From 1952 untill955, he was with the Citizens of GreaterChicago, first as assistant executive direc-tor» then as executive director. At theGraduate School of Business, Mr. Farwell"olds a newly-created post carrying administrative duties connected with planing. Active in civic affairs, Mr. Farwellls a trustee of Francis W. Parker School,and of the Institute for Psychoanalysis. He¦s chairman of the Chicago Bar Association's Committee for Constitutional Revision, director of the Illinois Associationf°r Mental Health, and treasurer of theChamber Music Guild of Chicago. From1958 until this year, he was president of'he Mental Health Society of Greater Chicago. He and his wife, CAROL YEO-MANS, '46, live in Chicago.STEPHEN H. LEVIN, '50, SM'53, has)°''ned Shell Development Company's fuels"nd lubricants department, Emeryville,Calif, as a research chemist. He formerlyheld the same position at Shell's Houston,Texas research laboratories. He is nowliving in Berkeley, Calif.SHELDON M. GORDON, '51, is manager°* the commercial department at MiltonMeyer & Co., real estate firm in SanFn»ncisco, Calif.ROBERT D. KESTNBAUM, '51, has beenappointed vice president of the RobertMaxwell Co., Bell & Howell's new direct{^ail marketing subsidiary. Mr. Kestn-hauni has been instrumental in developing"ell & Howell's direct mail sales techniques since joining the company in 1959.He is a member of the board of governors°f the Republican Citizens League of Illinois and is on the board of directors ofthe North Side Boys Clubs (Chicago).CLASS OF 1952Tenth ReunionCocktails at Saturday afternoon,'he Quadrangle Club June 9Contact: Arthur M. Solomon5635 Kenwood,_Chicago 37MARTIN M. ARLOOK, '52, is an attorneywith the National Labor Relations Board>n New York City.Enid sharp bierman, '52, '54, ofNew York, N.Y., is an instructor in thePhysics department at Stevens Instituteof Technology, Hoboken, N.J. She hasrecently finished her thesis for a PhD de-Sree in physics from Columbia University.Kenneth c. brundidge, '52, sm'53,^ho is assistant professor of meteorologya' Texas A&M, completed work forhis doctor's degree which he received lastVear, while doing full-time teaching andresearch at Texas A & M for the past sevenVears. Mr. Brundidge misses the U of C, but finds "small-town living is wonderful."HERBERT L. CAPLAN, '52, JD'57, whoselaw office has been appointed Chicagoresident attorney of the Liberty MutualInsurance Co., will now be actively encaged as trial counsel in defense ot negligence claims. Mr. Caplan is the youngestattorney to occupy such a position withLiberty, which is the largest mutual casualty and workmen's compensation insurance company in the country. Mr. Caplanwas admitted to the Illinois Bar in 1957following graduation, and is a member otthe Illinois Bar Assn., and Chicago BarAssn. He is a member of the committeeon civil practice of the Chicago group.EMILEE HORN CARTER, '52, of Winnipeg, Manitoba, announces the birth ota son, Joel, on January 15, 1961. Mrs.Carter's husband is a physician at St.Boniface Hospital, St. Boniface, Manitoba./~ S\ f~/7M SANDRA FRIEND ENGEL,' '52, of SouthKi)_h\ °/ Bend, Ind., and her husband, Howard,U \J O 6J announce the birth of their first child, agirl born in February, 1961. Mr. Engel isa specialist in internal medicine.CHARLES ERICKSON, '52, AM'54, is asystems analyst widi the Stanford ResearchInstitute (division of economic research)in Menlo Park, Calif. Mr. Erickson livesin Woodside, Calif.A. DANIEL FELDMAN, '52, JD'55, is anattorney with die law firm of Isham, Lincoln & Beale, in Chicago. Mr. Feldmanlives in Evanston, 111.SOLOMON I. HIRSH, '52, JD'55, is anattorney with the National Labor RelationsBoard on its litigation section, AppellateCourt Branch. He lives in Arlington, Va.,with an office in Washington, D.C.RICHARD M. JANOPAUL, '52, researchattorney with the American Bar Foundation in Chicago, is currently assistant director of a research project on legal andmedical procedures governing admissionto and discharge from mental hospitals.Mr. Janopaul lives in Homewood, 111.WILLIAM T. KEETON, '52, '54, is assistant professor of biology at Cornell University in Ithaca, N.Y. This year he is incharge of the general biology course with540 students.M. BARRY KIRSCHENBAUM, '52, '53,MD'57, formerly of Chicago, is now serving at Clark Air Force Hospital in thePhilippine Islands as a dermatologist, andcaptain in the Air Force.TONI SODER KUTRAS, '52, of Chats-wordi, Calif., returned to school in California and recently obtained a teachingcertificate. She is now teaching at ResedaElementary School, Reseda, Calif. Herhusband is art director with Adolph's Ltd.,in Burbank.MARY WOOSTER LEHMAN, '52, ofChicago, announces the recent birth of theLehman's fifth child. Her husband, ahousing specialist with the Chicago UrbanLeague, entered the U of C Law Schoollast fall on a scholarship. LYNN JOYCE BRIGHT MARTIN, '52, isa free-lance graphic designer in Chicago.CHARLYNE BOOZE McFARLAND, '52,AM'54, of Washington, D.C, is studyingArabic at Georgetown University on a National Defense Foreign Language Fellowship.WILLIAM R. MEEKER, JR., '52, hasbeen a medical fellow in surgery at theUniversity of Minnesota Medical School,Minneapolis, since 1958. He has spentmost of his residency doing research andgeneral pathology clinical work. Dr.Meeker interned at the University of Minnesota Hospitals in 1957-58, following hisgraduation from the Medical College ofAlabama in 1957.JOSEPH V. MORRIS, MD'52, a specialistin general surgery, has recently openednew offices in Cincinnati, Ohio, with hiswife Gwendolyn, who is a specialist ininternal medicine.TAMES C. PHILLIPS, '52, '55, SM'55,PhD'56, and NIEN-CHU YANG, PhD'52,both U of C scientists, have been awardedtwo-year unrestricted research grants bythe Alfred P. Sloan Foundation. As SloanResearch Fellows, they will be free topursue research of their own choice. Mr.THE NEW CHICAGO CHAIRAn attractive, sturdy, comfortablechair finished in jet black withgold trim and gold silk-screenedUniversity shield.$30.00Order from and make checks payable toTHE ALUMNI ASSOCIATION5733 University Ave., Chicago 37Chairs will be shipped express collect from Gardner, Mass. withinone month.^AY, 1962 35Phillips is assistant professor in the Department of Physics and the Institute forthe Study of Metals, and Mr. Yang is associate professor in the Department ofChemistry and the Ben May Laboratoryfor Cancer Research. Two other alumnialso on the U of C faculty were awardedSloan grants last year and continue thisyear as fellows: WILLIAM LICHTEN,SM'53, PhD'56, assistant professor in theDepartment of Physics, and ELIAS STEIN,'51, SM'53, PhD'55, associate professor inthe Department of Mathematics. OtherU of C faculty members who were namedSloan Fellows this year are Gerhard L.Closs, associate professor in the Department of Chemistry and Jun J. Sakurai,assistant professor in the Department ofPhysics and the Enrico Fermi Institutefor Nuclear Studies.NORBERT T. PORILE, '52, SM'54, PhD'57, and his wife, MIRIAM EISEN, '53,'57, of Patchogue, N.Y., spent last springin Japan as guests of the Society forScientific Promotion of Japan. Mr. Porilegave lectures and collaborated on researchin nuclear chemistry, visiting the Universities of Tokyo and Kyoto. On the wayhome, he lectured at the Weizmann Institute in Israel. Mr. Porile is associatechemist in the Brookhaven National Laboratory, Upton, N.Y.53-61DAVID M. SOLZMAN, '53, and his wife,Mary-Alice, of Omaha, Neb., announcethe birth of a daughter, Nancy Anne. Mr.Solzman is director of the Omaha Planetarium.EMANUEL M. AMIR, PhD'54, has beenpromoted to research specialist in HumbleOil & Refining Company's Research andDevelopment division at Baytown, Texas.He specializes in the synthesis of chemicals from petroleum and in exploratoryresearch directed to the discovery of newraw materials for new plastics.JAMES R. BEERBOWER, PhD'54, associate professor of geology at LafayetteCollege, Easton, Pa., has been named amember of the steering committee for theAmerican Geological Institute's GeologicalEducation Orientation Study. Financed bya National Science Foundation Grant, thestudy will cover curricula, course content,student motivation, faculty developmentand the orientation of geologic education.The steering committee will develop thecontent and plan of the study and assistin working out its ultimate conclusions andrecommendations. Mr. Beerbower hastaught at Lafayette since 1953.WILLIAM F. HILL, PhD'55, is now acting head of the department of psychologyat Idaho State College, Pocatello, Ida. Hewas formerly chief psychologist at theUtah State Hospital in Provo, Utah. C. VIRGIL MARTIN, MBA'55, presidentof Carson Pirie Scott & Co., Chicago, hasbeen named by President Kennedy, to aspecial youth study group. The 21 -mancitizens advisory council on which Mr.Martin will serve is to aid the President'sCommittee on Juvenile Delinquency andYouth Crime. The latter committee isheaded by the Attorney General and wasformed last year to co-ordinate and stepup a federal drive against youth crime.DAVID W. ABELSON, '56, 57, MD'60,is a captain in the U.S. Army, and recentlycompleted the military orientation courseat the Medical Field Service School,Brooke Army Medical Center, Fort SamHouston, Texas.MARTIN E. SHAW, '56, has recently beenappointed brokerage manager for LincolnNational Life Insurance Co., Elmhurst,111. He was also married recently.CLASS OF 1957Fifth ReunionCocktails at Saturday afternoon,the Quadrangle Club June 9Contact: Elenie Kostopoulos1408 E. 57thChicago 37HAROLD F. FINN, '57, '57, has recentlyjoined the staff of the experimental physics department of the University of California Lawrence Radiation Laboratory inLivermore, Calif.CHARLES W. DAY, AM'58, of FordMotor Company's educational affairs department, has been named editor of Educational Affairs, a monthly brochure published by the company for educators. Mr.Day joined Ford three years ago, servingwith its editorial services department before joining educational affairs.HERBERT R. BARGHUSEN, PhD'60, hasbeen named assistant professor of zoologyat Smith College, Northampton, Mass. Hewas formerly a research associate at theU of C.KERRY J. PATAKI, '60, and his wife,KAREN REISER, '61, are living in Seattle,Wash., where they are graduate studentsat the University of Washington. Mr.Pataki is a Woodrow Wilson Fellowand Mrs. Pataki is a Bollingen researchassistant. This summer they leave for ayear of field work in the eastern highlands of New Guinea.JOHN F. CRIMMINGS, MBA'61, is asecond lieutenant in the U.S. Army, andwas recently assigned to the SecondArmored Division at Fort Hood, Texas.Before entering the Army, Mr. Crimmingswas employed by Ford Motor Co., Dearborn, Mich.ELOIS R. FIELD, PhD'61, has beenappointed director of baccalaureate programs at the Emory University School ofNursing, Atlanta, Ga. Miss Field, who iscurrently on the faculty of the Duke University School of Nursing, will join theEmory staff on September 1, as professorof nursing. memorialsANDROS CARSON, MD'90, of DesMoines, la., died on January 14.JOHN V. FOWLER, MD'99, of Chicago,died on September 22, 1961.JOHN D. MANCHESTER, MD'99, ofSan Diego, Calif., died on December 15>1961.GRACE MANNING DOWNING, '01, ofChicago, died on March 6. She was thewife of the late ELLIOT DOWNIN^PhD'01, who was a member of the U of ^faculty for 24 years and died in 1944.Their three children are GEORGE E.DOWNING, '25, of Providence, R.I., M;ELIZABETH DOWNING, '27, MD'32, otChicago, and LUCIA DOWNING HEWITT, '31, of Brooklyn, Mich.MOSES H. ROSS, MD'01, of Glendale,Calif., died on January 12.EDITH HARDING PERRINE, '03, diedon March 9, at the Presbyterian Home mEvanston, 111., where she had lived since1953. Mrs. Perrine was a high schoolteacher for over 42 years.HARRY H. BLODGETT, MD'O7, of Newport Beach, Calif., died on December28, 1961.MEYER G. GABA, '07, SM'09, PhD'14of Lincoln, Neb., died on February 11*MABEL W. PORTER, '07, of LaGrangePark, 111., died on March 21. She was aresident of Plymouth Place, a home forretired people in LaGrange Park.ERWIN P. ZEISLER, '07, of Chicago,died on April 1. He was former seniordermatologist on the medical staff 0*Michael Reese Hospital in Chicago. Before his retirement 10 years ago he wasalso attending dermatologist at CookCounty Hospital and assistant professor at36 THE UNIVERSITY OF CHICAGO MAGAZINEdie Northwestern University School ofMedicine, Chicago. Dr. Zeisler wrotepoetry under the pen name of WalterErwin, and had published a volume entitled, Poems on Pertinent Topics.HARVEY B. FULLER, '08, died on February 25, in Santa Fe, N.M., where hemade his home in recent years. Mr. Fullerwas former president of the H. B. FullerCo., St. Paul, Minn.ETHEL PRESTON, '08, AM'10, PhD'20,died in Evanston, 111., on March 5. MissPreston had retired from the faculty ofVincennes University, where she was head°f French and Spanish in the modern language department, and was enjoying herretirement in the Mather Home in Evanston.CHRISTIAN F. HAMFF, '09, of LaGrange, Ga., died in January, 1961. Hewas a professor at La Grange College.JOHN E. RHODES, JR., '10, of KansasCity, Mo., died on April 10, 1961.CLARA BARTON WRIGHT, '10, died onFebruary 3. She lived in Chicago.WALLACE J. BLACK, JD'12, of Peoria,Ml-, died on January 24.BENTON F. DELANA, JD'12, of Boise,Ida., died on February 22.Martha l. Houston, '12, of Hunts-viUe, Ala., died on February 1.FREDERICH W. ROHR, '12, MD'14, ofChicago, 111., died on February 28.ANNA M. TODD, '12, of Warrensburg,Mo., has died.CLIFFORD W. WELLS, MD'14, of Til-ton, N.H., died on August 6, 1961.OLAVA G. BAKKEN, '15, '17, of Minneapolis, Minn., died on September 19,1961.pOWLER B. McCONNELL, '16, whodied on December 27, 1961, was honoredrecently when a $50,000 gift to the U of Cto establish a scholarship fund in hismemory, was donated by Sears, Roebuckand Co' Mr. McConnell was a formerchairman of the board of Sears, and hada^o served as company president. He hadkeen with the company for 44 years whenhe retired from active management inI960, and became a director of the company and chairman of the Savings andProfit Sharing Pension Fund of Sears,Hoebuck and Co. Employees The scholarship fund, to be called the Fowler B.McConnell Scholarship Fund, will establish undergraduate scholarships for worthystudents who are dependent in whole orpart upon their own efforts to obtain acollege education. The University is empowered to accept other donations andgifts to the fund also. Mr. McConneUserved for almost fifteen years as a trusteeof the University-from 1947 until thetime of his death.HAYDEN E. E. BARNARD '17, MDlftof Chicago, died on March 28. J^senior attending surgeon at ChicagoWesley Memorial Hospital and lived inHinsdale, 111. He was former head of thedepartment of surgical anatomy at tne Northwestern University School of Medicine, in Chicago.HENRY N. WINN, MD'17, of Madison,Wise, died on September 8, 1961.ELSA B. EISENDRATH, '18, of Chicago,died on December 7, 1961.FREDERIC M. THRASHER, AM'18, PhD'26, died on March 27, in Central Islip,N.Y. He was professor emeritus of education at New York University and authorityon juvenile delinquency. His famous bookThe Gang, was a pioneering sociologicalstudy of youth gangs in Chicago duringthe 1920's.RAY W. METCALF, '20, of Inglewood,Calif., died on December 31, 1961.COLIN J. ROBERTSON, AM'21, ofMacomb, 111., died on October 24, 1961.LILLIAN M. TOBIN, '22, of Chicago, hasdied.HALLIE W. HYDE, SM'24, of Minneapolis, Minn., died on April 13, 1961.ROBERT LANYON, '24, of New York,N.Y., died last year.GEORGE W. McCOY, '24, of Asheville,N.C, died on February 11. He was editorof the Asheville Citizen-Times.ELMER S. SCHUTZ, MD'24, of MountainLake, Minn., died on October 9, 1961.ALICE C. WILLARD, SM'24, PhD'26, ofKnoxville, 111., died on January 31.S. PAUL PERRY, MD'25, of Durham,N.C, died on September 8, 1961.SADIE BANKS, '26, died on February 6,in Chicago, 111.RAYMOND W. BARNARD, PhD'26, ofAnn Arbor, Mich., died on March 23. Heretired in 1955 as associate professoremeritus of mathematics at the U of C.He had been on the faculty for 30 years,distinguishing himself in his research onthe Fredholm theory in integral equationswith quartertonic valued functions.RALPH G. SCHOTT, '27, of Fort Scott,Kan., died on December 14, 1961.KENNETH B. UMBREIT, '27, of NewYork City, died on March 28.GRACE GALENTINE, '29, of New Paris,Ind., died in August, 1961.WALLACE MERRIAM, '29, of New Orleans, La., died on January 16.HIRAM D. MOOR, MD'29, of OklahomaCity, Okla., died on July 23, 1961.EDITH BAUM WEITZENHOFFER, '29,of Columbus, Miss., died in December,1961.CHARLES D. LONG, AM'31, of Beards-town, 111., died in August, 1961.LEWIS M. TURNER, PhD'31, of Logan,Utah, died in November, 1960. He wasdean of the Utah State University Collegeof Forest, Range, and Wildlife Management.EDITH D. WRIGHT, '31, of Houston,Texas, died on December 25, 1961.CLARENCE K. ELLIOTT, MD'32, of Lincoln, Neb., died in March.JOHN B. PLASTINO, MD'33, of Spokane,Wash., died on June 6, 1961.WILSON O. KOEHNLEIN, '34, of Aurora,111., died on January 22.EDWARD W. LIEDTKE, '35, of Hinsdale, 111., died on March 31. He wasstandards manager for Spiegel Inc. inChicago, and had served on the standardsand terminology committee of the MailOrder Association of America for morethan 15 years.THERESE C MULLER, AM'35, of SaukCity, Wise, died on January 20.VIRGINIA KUROWSKI, '37, of Chicago,died on January 18, 1961. She was aformer elementary and high school teacher,and a former editor of the Polish ArtsClub of Chicago Bulletin.JAMES R. STOKES, PhD'37, of Milledge-ville, Ga., has died.FRANCES C. THIELBAR, SM'38, PhD'51, of Wynnewood, Pa., died on March21 'She was chairman of the graduatedivision of the University of PennsylvaniaSchool of Nursing, Philadelphia, and hadformerly served as chairman of the department of nursing education at the U of CALBERT W. RECHT, PhD'39, of Denver,Colo., died on January 8.WILLIAM C. CAPPER, '43, of Milwaukee, Wise, died on February 12.BESSIE GAYLES FOSTER, '44, of Chicago, died on October 20, 1961.PHOEBE SIBBALD DOUGLAS, '46, ofMuscatine, la., died in January.JOE D. LANGSTON, '46, of Birmingham,Ala., died on February 26.LLOYD J. KENO, '54, who died on February 17, has been honored by the establishment of a U of C scholarship fund inhis name. Classmates and friends are sending gifts and contributions to the fundfrom all over the country.FRANK L. BROWN, AM'60, author of thenovel, Trumbull Park, and director of theUnion Leadership Program of the U of CUniversity College, died on March 12, inChicago/ Mr. Brown became director ofthe Union Leadership Program in 1961,which provided a two-year liberal artscourse for trade union leaders. He hadformerly been assistant director sinceAugust, 1960. He was a former assistanteditor of Ebony magazine, organizer forthe Textile Workers Union of America,and program coordinator for the UnitedPackinghouse Workers of America. Mr.Brown's novel, which was published in1959 dealt with the racial disturbances atTrumbull Park Homes (a federal housingproject in Chicago) during the mid-1950's.His family was the 10th Negro family tomove into the formerly all-white housingdevelopment, and Mr. Brown was a leaderamong the Negroes who were the targetsof physical attacks at that time. At thetime of his death, Mr. Brown was a candidate for his doctorate degree as a fellowon the U of C Committee on SocialThought.May, 1962 37LOOKING FOR SOMETHING SPECIAL?You're bound to find it at theannual Alumni ReunionJune 8 and 9, 1962EVENTS will include:Weather Eye in Outer SpaceArgonne Laboratories TourThe Role of Writing in CivilizationSocial Welfare in the Midst of PlentyGovernment and Labor PolicyLorado Taft/Midway Studios TourEconomic Growth: Trends & ProspectsThe Community and the WriterThe All-Alumni Luncheon* PROFESSIONAL & CLASSREUNIONS will include:Business, Geography, Law, Medicine, Social ServiceAdministration, Order of the "C," and Phi BetaKappa.The Classes of '07, '12, '14, '17, '18, '22, '37,'52, and '57.'featuring talks by both President ("One Year and 36 Days later-') andMrs. Beadle ("William Rainey Harper Slept Here")