1 The7T"'I issz£ìr.\mt -, (<^5 ,«-*. 1 ÒCJ>% * niversityhicago ^Tro^i^^ DEC 4 - 1963 w)MAGAZINE /? i. x•U2M^ljpi|pllP(|Sli!Pfc"i'J«.". . . As my years increase, the desire growsUpon me to do something for the city whichhas been my home for nearly sixty years . . ."SAFETY IS HIS BUSINESSHe's a vital man in the General Motors picture. He doesn't build a product— he doesn't sell aproduct. But he deals in a commodity infmitely more valuable — the safety of our employes.He is Safety Director of a GM plant — a specialist in safety. He tests, evaluates and demon-strates ali sorts of safety equipment and safety devices. He studies men and machines in motion.He considers the psychological factor in accidents. He is a member of the management teamthat formulates rules of safe practice, and makes sure that they are followed.There is no single statistic of which General Motors is prouder than its remarkable safetyrecord. GM recently received the National Safety Council's annual Award of Honor for the17th time. In the past five years, GM employes have averaged less than one on-the-job injuryper million man-hours. Ali this is convincing evidence that General Motors is a safe place to work.GM represents millions of people — employes, stockholders, suppliers, dealers. None of them ismore important in his role than the plant Safety Director.VOL. LVI NO. 2NOVEMBER 1963Annua I subscription $5.00Single copy 50 centsPublished monthly, October through June.Nine issues per year.HENRY H. HARTMANN, Editor(MRS.) RONA MEARS, Editorial Assistant5733 University Avenue, Chicago, Illinois 60637Telephone: Mldway 3-08O0, Extension 3241CREDITS: The editor acknowledgesthe welcome suggestions, research andother help by alumni, faculty, staff,students and friends. Particular thanksgo to Perrin H. Lowrey, Assoc. Prof, ofHumanities in the College (see page12); Miss Anne Plettinger (see page12); W. Ronald Sims (see page 12);Joshua C. Taylor, Prof, of Art, for tech-nical consultation on Cobb Hall photo-graphs (10-15); Edward A. Maser,Chairman Dept. of Art and James M.Ratcliffe, Asst. Dean Law School forbackground information and help onthe Law School exhibit (20-23); GeorgeR. Hughes, Prof. Orientai Institute fordetails on the ostracon and permissionto reproduce it (20); Lee D. Alderman,Editor Rochester Review for data onpresident Wallis (18-19). Our veryspecial thanks to William V. Morgen-stern, in the office next to ours, whosereadiness for counsel is made use ofconstantly.PICTURES: (12-14) Anne Plettinger;(18) Rochester Review; (20-23) Lew-ellyn Studios; illustration for backcover, also used on page (3) — VirgilBurnett.Published monthly, October through June, by the University of Chicago Alumni Association, 5733 University Avenue, Chicago, Illinois 60637. Annual subscription price,$5.00. Single copies, 50 cents. Entered as second class mat-ter December 1, 1934, at the Post Office of Chicago, Illinois, under the act of March 3, 1879. Advertising agent:American Alumni Magazines, 22 Washington Square, NewYork, New York. ,©Copyright 1963 The University of Chicago MagazinePublished for alumni and friends of The University of Chicago,and ali others interested in the pursuit of knowledge.Published since 1907UniversityhicagoMAGAZINEFEATURESLeaders In EducationA major contribution of The University(TOWER TOP1CS)Cobb, The Old: The NewThe past inspires an ambitious programPerbin H. LoweeyA Look At Higher EducationPresident W. Allen Wallis '35 of RochesterLaw Has Its Day 101820The editors invite manuscripts and suggestions for feature stories from alumni,faculty, staff and students. Topics should be relevant to the pursuit of knowledgeand the exchange of ideas. Details upon request.DEPARTMENTSJust Off the Quadrangles 2Tower Topics 5Around the Midway 16News of the Alumni 24Memorials 30The Cover: Silos Bowman Cobb— see story on page 10The University of Chicago Alumni AssociationPHILIP C. WHITE, '35, Ph.D.'38 PresidentFERD KRAMER, '22 Chairman, The Alumni FundHAROLD R. HARDING, Executive Director • RUTH G. HALLORAN, AdministrativeAssistantJEAN PHILLIPS, Program Director • FLORENCE MEDOW, Chicago-Midwest Director,The Alumni FundEastern regional office: DAVID R. LEONETTI, Director,20 West 43rd Street, New York, N.Y. 10036 Telephone: PEnnsylvania 6-0747Los Angeles representative: (MRS.) MARIE STEPHENS,1 195 Charles Street, Pasadena, Calif. 91 103 Telephone: SYcamore 3-4545 (after 3 P.M.)San Francisco representative: MARY LEEMAN,Room 146, 420 Market Street, San Francisco, Calif. 941 1 1 Telephone: YUkon 1-2955Membership: Open to eraduates and former students of The University of Chicago. One year, $5 single, $6 joint; three years, $12 single, $15 joint; Life, $10)0single, $125 joint (payable in fi ve annual installments ) . Includes Magazinesubscription.1yers utilityFrom 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 piate equipment,offset presses of several typesfrom the smallest to the largestand a complete pamphlet binderyPhotopress| INCORPORATEO¦.IJJI^«tJ!l.l^llJ!lMCongress Expressway at Gardner RoadBROADVIEW, ILL Columbus 1-1420Offset Printing • Imprinting • AddressographingMultilithing • Copy Preparation • Automatic InsertingTypewriting • Addressing • Folding • MailingCHICAGO ADDRESSING & PRINTING COMPANY720 SOUTH DEARBORN STREET WAbdSil 2-4561YOUR FAVORITEFOUNTAIN TREATTASTES BETTERWHEN IT'S .MAOE WITHSwifts^Mll Ice CreamiA product -I Swift & Company7409 So. State StreetPhone RAdcliffe 3-7400 Just Off the QuadranglesWe have not exactly been havingour best year for typographicalaccuracy. Last spring we gaveProf. Nathan Sugarman a name hismother didnt— Norman— and founda "deceased" alumnus living.Editor Hartmann narrowly missedthe disease in letting the Octoberissue go to final page proofs withthat well known word, "alumus," ina headline on the cover. ;We, in the same issue, calmly toldyou of the election of Philip "L."White to the Alumni Associationpresidency. Alas, Phii's middlename is Cleaver, which yields nosuch initial.Perhaps we are approaching theheight of confusion attained bythe radio news commentator whoopened his broadcast by intoning,"Good ladies, evening and gentle-men of the audio radiance."Alumni Foundation renamedErrant typography will, however,have nothing to do with the changedname of the annual appeal foralumni gifts to The University.After 22 years with the same mon-icker, the Alumni Foundation hasbecome the Alumni Fund.The change was born in prac-ticality. The Alumni Foundationnever was a foundation— i.e., neverwas an agency accumulating fundswhich it administered, invested,granted, etc. It has always trans-mitted ali gifts to The Universityin full upon receipt.It is, and always has been, analumni fund— an annual appeal for gifts— and has thus been named exactly that.The Fund structure has not beenchanged. It remains, as it has beensince its creation in 1941, an organi-zational part of the Alumni Association. The Fund board is appointedby the President of The. Universityupon nomination by the AlumniAssociation.Alumni Fund chairmanIt being an odd-numbered year,the Fund also sports a new chairman.Ferd Kramer, '22, will be at thehead in the biennium which willcarry The University to the èveof its semi-sesquicentennial. Mr.Kramer, of Draper & Kramer, is aChicago realtor of considerablestanding and a fine gentleman toboot. His effective work on behalfof urban rehabilitation and rede-velopment has gained him nationalrecognition; he is currently chairman of the board of ACTION, Inc.Mr. Kramer also serves as a mem-ber of the Presidente Committeeon Equal Opportunity in Housing.He succeeds C. E. McKittrick,'20, assistant to the publisher of theChicago Tribune, in the chairman-ship. "Red" McKittrick's friendlygrowl at the other end of a telephone wire has been among thehappier features of our workadayexistence. The excellent growth ofthe Foundation/Fund appeal dur-ing his three seasons in the chair-manship would suggest that youhave liked his style, too.THE UNIVERSITY OF CHICAGO MAGAZINE NOVEMBER, 1963And new Fund board membersThree further appointments tothe Alumni Fund Board were an-nounced by President George W.Beadle. They are Mrs. Eugene W.Simon (Marion E. Elisberg, '39) ofWinnetka, James M. Sheldon, Jr.,'31, of Chicago and Maynard I.Wishner, '45, JD'47, of Evanston.Among Mrs. Simon's claims tofame are her selection, during hersenior year, as Miss University ofChicago at the New York World'sFair. Jim Sheldon, Assistant to thePresident of The University, is wellknown to many of you. MaynardWishner, prior to being appointedvice president of Walter E. Hellerand Company, was a senior partnerin one of tbose law firms whichboast a string of distinguishednames, including his own.Tower Topics withinThis month we introduce yet an-other change in the checkered lifeof Tower Topics, which will cometo you henceforth in a new format,a new frequency, and a new relationto this Magazine.Born a droll newsletter put outby Howard Mort from the ReynoldsClub in 1933, Tower Topics was atfirst a more-or-less weekly publica-tion intended for a locai campusaudience. But its reputation out-stripped Howard's mimeograph.In 1948 it became a printed newsletter for ali the alumni, supplant-ing the old Alumni Bulletin. Threeyears later, it graduated into thepocket-sized magazine format ofthe past decade-plus.Had the name not been pre-empted, Tower Topics might betterhave been called Phoenix. Surelyno University publication has en-dured so many rebirths!You will now get nine issues ofTower Topics each year. One ofthese, the number devoted to theannual Honor Roll of alumni donors,will be sent as a separate publication in any event.The eight regular numbers in thenew schedule will reach you, as anAlumni Association member, as apart of your U. of C. Magazinemonthly from November throughjune.Those alumni who have not matched your acumen by joiningthe Association, and thus do notreceive the Magazine, will getTower Topics as a separate newsletter, as before.Apart from the virtue of reducingthe annual load on your mailbox,this approach frees most of themoney which would have beenneeded to mail some 95,000 copiesper year for use in the publicationitself. We will be able to publishlarger Magazines, from time totime, than would otherwise havebeen possible.Whither thy offspring?We are ready to nominate Mar-gery Goodkind Frank, '38, as theMost Perceptive Alumna of the Yearfor this observation:"Every alumnus has a differentimage of [Chicago], created by hisown experience there. The alumsare amazingly poorly informedabout what the College is like now.I realized, for instance, only theother day that I had never consid-ered it for my three boys becausethe way it was in the wacky, greatdays of the Thirties would be thewrong place for the kind of boysthey are."Mrs. Frank has noticed somethingwhich is true to the point of discomfort. It might be put as a seriesof alumni aphorisms, viz.:• "The University was marvelouswhen I was there, but it's a different sort of place now."• "I just don't keep up with theUniversity as I ought to."• "My youngsters are entirelydifferent from what I was at theirage. They' ve grown up in a different world and have different needs.My university won't do for them."Taken singly, each of these hassome truth. It's only when we en-counter ali three aphorisms wand-ering around in the same otherwise-sober mind that we wonder if NedRosenheim really has been teach-ing Chaos 201 on the sly.Making a syllogism of those threeassertions is just going to get youinto a tussle with Aristotle.But it is possible that a changedUniversity is the righi place for adifferent generation. Gosh, it mighteven be the right place for your own contribution to the youngergeneration.We will moralize only to this ex-tent: clearly the important thing isto aim your kids toward the collegewhich will best challenge and de-velop them. That may or may notbe Chicago; but you owe it to your-self to be sure you're not makingthat important judgment on out-dated facts.If there are things you'd like toknow, our postage budget is at yourcommand. — H.R.H.SEE BACK COVERNOVEMBER, 1963 THE UNIVERSITY OF CHICAGO MAGAZINE 3Take 10...and think!The future stili lies ahead. Even if you arean "old grad," you're stili a relatively younghusband and father. Make the most of it!First of ali, take stock of your family'ssecurity. Is it underwritten with the rightamount of life insurance of the right kinds?Would your wife and children get exactlywhat you want them to receive? A Connecticut Mutual agent will be glad to help youanswer these questions. Actually, he may beable to show you how to stretch your presentlife insurance to provide more money at theright times without increasing its cosi onecent! Talk to him. You'll be glad you did.Dividends paid to policyholdersfor 117 yearsOwned by ita 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 now with CML.Joseph H. Aaron '27 ChicagoEdward B. Bates, CI.U 40 Home OfficeHarvey J. Butsch '38 ChicagoRobert A. Havens '50 AlbuquerquePaul O. Lewis, CLU '28 ChicagoFred G. Reed '33 ChicagoDan O. Sabath '43 ChicagoRichard C. Shaw, M.D. Grad. School Home OfficeRussell C. Whitney, CLU '29 ChicagoNovember 1963 THE UNIVERSITY OF CHICAGOLEADERS IN EDUCATION: A Major Contribution of The University of Chicago"Wherever I travel, I hear of University of Chicago men and women who have made important contributions to higher education . . . as faculty, deans, chancellors and presidents. Sta-tistics should be available to substantiate this impression." With these words President George W.Beadle set in motion a survey which sheds revealing light on the role of The University of Chicagoin the field of higher education.The question arose after the recent inauguration of the University of Rochester's new presidentAlien Wallis (see current UNIVERSITY OF CHICAGO MAGAZINE, page 18) who was formerly deanof Chicago's Graduate School of Business as well as the selection of Dean Alan Simpson, head ofthe College of The University of Chicago as the new president of Vassar College.To date the survey shows that no less than 144 college or university presidents now livinghave University of Chicago associations as former students or faculty. In other countries at leasttwelve institutions are now, or have recently been, headed by persons with academic ties toThe University. As additional names come to light, these will be added to the list which TOWERTOPICS prints in full on the following pages. Readers are invited to send in the names andfurther information about any living person who should be added to this roster of college anduniversity presidents with University of Chicago associations.In addition to the presidents of universities, at least four major American scientific laborator-ies have been or are directed by University of Chicago men. However, these have not been in-cluded in the overall count. They are: Albert V. Crewe, director of Argonne National Labora-tory, who is also associate professor in the Department of Physics and the Enrico Fermi Insti-tute of The University of Chicago; Mervin J. Kelly, Ph. D/19, retired President and former Chairman of the Board of Bell Telephone Laboratories; Edward Teller, director of the University ofCalifornia Radiation Laboratory from 1958 to 1960, who was at the Enrico Fermi Institute forNuclear Studies at The University of Chicago from 1945 to 1946 when he became professor ofphysics at The University until 1949 and again in 1951-1952; and Alvin Weinberg, '35, S.M/36,Ph.D.'39, director of Oak Ridge National Laboratory, who was also a research associate inmathematical biophysics at The University.No single answer can be sufficient in determining why The University of Chicago is makingsuch an impressive contribution to the leadership of colleges and universities. However, theremay be a certain agreement that the causes go back to the very spirit with which The Universitywas founded, and to the then revolutionary concepts of its first president, William RaineyHarper.From the moment that it opened its doors in 1892, The University of Chicago was planned asa "total university," encompassing ali stages of formai education from lab school to post graduate studies, devoted to learning, to research, to wresting from the unknown new glimpses ofknowledge and understanding. Faculty members were expected and encouraged to conductresearch, to write papers, to engagé in the process of learning as well as teaching. Basicresearch by adventurous minds at The University of Chicago has enriched the sum total ofhuman knowledge aiding and spurring the quest for further knowledge. Daily this reservoir ofavailable knowledge finds practical applications in science, industry and elsewhere, touching thelives of ali, while The University's old yet ever new search continues. Little wonder that from thissetting spring the men and women of learning to lead so many educational institutions.Expressing the thoughts of William Rainey Harper, the man who forged a vision into reality,thereby helping to set the pace for higher education in America, and, more recently, abroad:Civilization can surely be spread to a certain extent with the spread of old truths. But it canonly advance with the discovery of the new.Tower Topics: Volume 30, Number 1 • Published by The University of Chicago for its alumni; Henry H. Hartmann, Editor.November 1963 Tower TopicsTHE UNIVERSITY OF CHICAGO'S CONTRIBUTION TO THE LEADERSHIPOF INSTITUTIONS OF HIGHER LEARNING:Former Students —ALLEN, LEROY BANKS, PhD'52, since 1958 President, Bluefleld State College, Bluefield, West Virginia.ANDERSON, GODFREY TRYGGVE, PhD'44, since 1961 President, Lorna Linda University, Lorna Linda andLos Angeles, California.ANDERSON, HURST ROBINS, '39, since 1952 President, American University, Washington, D. C.ASHBY, SIR ERIC, '31, former President and Vice Chancellor, The Queen's University, Belfast,Northern Ireland.ATWOOD, RUFUS B., AM'39, President Emeritus, Kentucky State College, Frankfort.BACOATS, J. A., '23, since 1944 President, Benedict College, Columbia, South Carolina.BARTLE, GLENN GARDNER, '25, since 1954 President, Harpur College (State University of New York) ,Binghamton.BATEMAN, RICHARD M., PhD'48, President, Tri-State College» Angola, Indiana.BEITTEL, A. D., '25, PhD'29, since 1960 President, Tougaloo Southern Christian College,Tougaloo, Mississippi.BENSON, GEORGE STUART, AM'31, since 1936 President, Harding College, Searcy, Arkansas.BERGENDOFP, CONRAD JOHN, PhD'28, former President, Augustana College, Rock Island, Illinois.BOLLING, LANDRUM R., AM'38, since 1958 President, Earlham College, Richmond, Indiana.BOWMAN, GEORGE A., '22, President Emeritus, Kent State University, Kent, Ohio.BOWMAN, WARREN D., AM'22, PhD'30, since 1949 President, Bridgewater College, Bridgewater, Virginia.BRADY, SISTER MARY WILLIAM, PhD'47, since 1955 President, College of Saint Catherine,St. Paul, Minnesota.BRANSCOMB, HARVIE, '21, former Chancellor, Vanderbilt University, Nashville, Tennessee.BRAWLEY, JAMES P., '33, since 1940 President, Clark College, Atlanta, Georgia.BRUNBAUGH, AARON JOHN, AM'18, PhD'29, former President, Shimer College, Mount Carroll, Illinois.University of Chicago: Instructor, 1927-28; Asst. Professor, 1928-35; Assoc. Professor, 1925-36,Professor, 1936-44; Dean of Students, 1941-44.CARLSON, EDGAR M., PhD'44, since 1944 President, Gustavus Adolphus College, St. Peter, Minnesota.CARR, PAUL OMEGA, '35, President, District of Columbia College, Washington, D.C.CHASE, DARYL, AM'31, PhD'36, since 1954 President, Utah State University of Agriculture andApplied Science, Logan.CHEEK, MARY ASHBY, '44, former President, Rockford College, Rockford, Illinois.COLSTON, JAMES A., '57, since 1951 President, Knoxville College, Knoxville, Tennessee.COLWELL, ERNEST CADMAN, PhD'30, since 1957 President, Southern California School of Theology, Claremont,California. University of Chicago: Asst. Professor, New Testament Literature, 1930-38; Assoc. Professor, 1938-39;Professor, 1939-51; Dean, Divinity School, 1943-45; Dean of Faculties, 1943-45; Vice President, 1944; Presidentunder Chancellor Hutchins, 1945-51.COMBS, MAJOR GENERAL CECIL B., '31, Commandant, Air Force Institute of Technology, Wright PattersonAir Force Base, Ohio.ORIMI, JAMES E., PhD'59, President, Aurora College, Aurora, Illinois.CROSS, GEORGE LYNN, PhD'29, since 1944 President, University of Oklahoma, Norman.CRUDUP, JOSIAH, PhD'39, since 1957, President, Brenau College, Gainesville, Georgia.DAVIDSON, CARTER, PhD'30, since 1946 President, Union College & University, Schenectady, New York.DAVIDSON, PHILIP, AM'25, PhD'29, since 1951 President, University of Louisville, Louisville, Kentucky.DAVIS, LAWRENCE A., '45, since 1943 President, Agricultural, Mechanical and Normal College, Pine Bluff, Arkansas.DAWSON, EUGENE ELLSWORTH, '53, since 1957 President, Colorado Women's College, Denver. University of Chicago: Instructor, summer sessions.DRAUGHON, RALPH B., '39, since 1948 President, Alabama Polytechnic Institute, Auburn.EBRIGHT, THE REV. DR. DONALD, PhD'44, former President, Alaska Methodist University, Anchorage, Alaska.ELLER, PAUL H., AM'30, PhD'33, since 1955 President, Evangelical Theological Seminary, Naperville, Illinois.EVERSULL, FRANK LISSENDEN, '20, AM'27, former President, North Dakota Agricultural College, Fargo.FENDT, EDWARD C, '34, since 1959 President, Evangelical Lutheran Theological Seminary,Columbus, Ohio.FERRIN, WILLIAM HOWARD, '21, since 1945, President, Barrington College, Barrington, Rhode Island.FINDLAY, JAMES F., AM'23, since 1940 President, Drury College, Springfield, Missouri.FOSTER, LUTHER HILTON, AM'41, PhD'51, since 1953 President, Tuskegee Institute, Tuskegee, Alabama.GAIGE, WILLIAM C, AM'35, since 1952 President, Rhode Island College, Providence.GAINES, FRANCIS P., AM'14, since 1959 Chancellor, Washington & Lee University, Lexington, Virginia.GATES, EDWARD D., '43, since 1960 President, Beaver College, Glenside, Pennsylvania.GORE, GEORGE W. JR., '24, since 1950 President, Florida Agricultural & Mechanical University,Tallahassee, Florida.GRESHAM, PERRY EPLER, '33, since 1953 President, Bethany College, Bethany, West Virginia.GUINN, JOHN A., '36, since 1950 President, Texas Women's University, Denton, Texas.GUSTA VSON, REUBEN G., PhD'25, former Chancellor, University of Nebraska, Lincoln.University of Chicago: Vice President and Dean of Faculties, 1945-46.HAGGARD, WILLIAM WADE, PhD'37, President Emeritus, Western Washington College of Education,Bellingham, Washington.HAGGERTY, WILLIAM J., AM'38, PhD'43, since 1944 President, College at New Paltz (State Universityof New York) , New Paltz.HALE, WILLIAM H., PhD'49, President, Langston University, Langston, Oklahoma.6Tower Topics November 1963HALVERSON, WENDELL Q., '50, since 1961 President, Buena Vista College, Storm Lake, Iowa.HAMILTON, THOMAS H., AM'40, PhD'47, since 1963 President, University of Hawaii, Honolulu.University of Chicago: Instructor, 1946-48; Assistant Dean of the College.HANSON, CARL ARNOLD, '41, since 1961 President, Gettysburg College, Gettysburg, Pennsylvania.HARDIN, CLIFFORD M., '40, since 1954 Chancellor, University of Nebraska, Lincoln.HATCHER, HARLAN H., '25, since 1951 President, University of Michigan, Ann Arbor.HENDERSON, THOMAS HOWARD, AM'36, PhD'46, since 1960 President, Virginia Union University, Richmond.HILBERRY, CLARENCE B., PhD'30, since 1953 President, Wayne State University, Detroit, Michigan.HILL, JIM DAN, '29, since 1931 President, Wisconsin State College, Superior.HOUSTON, WILLIAM VERMILLION, SM'22, since 1961 Honorary Chancellor, Rice University, Houston, Texas.HUMPHREY, GEORGE DUKE, AM'31, since 1945 President, University of Wyoming, Laramie.HUTSON, HAROLD HORTON, PhD'38, since 1952 President, Greensboro College, Greensboro, North Carolina.IKEJIANI, OKECHUKWU, SM'43, Chairman of Council, University College, Ibadan, Nigeria.ISIDRO, ANTONIO, PhD'34, President, Mindanao State University, Marawi City, Mindanao,Republic of Philippines.JERNIGAN, JAMES C, PhD'49, since Aprii, 1963 President, Texas College of Arts & Industries,Kingsville, Texas.JOHNSON, JOHN BOCKOVER JR., PhD'43, since 1951 President, Milwaukee Downer College,Milwaukee, Wisconsin.JONES, BOB, JR., '33, since 1947 President, Bob Jones University, Greenville, South Carolina.JONES, WARREN F., '20, President Emeritus, Union University, Jackson, Tennessee.KLEINPELL, EUGENE HENRY, AM'31, since 1946 President, Wisconsin State College, River Falls.KRETZMAN, OTTO PAUL, '37, since 1940 President, Valparaiso University, Valparaiso, Indiana.LAVERY, REV. CHARLES J., PhD'50, President, St. John Fisher College, Rochester, New York.LEBEL, THE REV. E. C, AM'31, since 1952 President and Vice Chancellor, Assumption University ofWindsor, Windsor, Ontario.LOWMAN, HARMON, PhD'30, since 1941 President, Sam Houston State Teachers College, Huntsville, Texas.LUH, CHIH WEI, PhD'20, President, Yenching University, Peking, China.LUNGER, IRVIN E., '35, AM'36, PhD'38, since 1958 President, Transylvania College, Lexington, Kentucky.LYON, ELIJAH WILSON, PhD'32, since 1941 President, Pomona College, Claremont, California.MAYS, BENJAMIN E., AM'25, PhD'35, since 1940 President, Morehouse College, Atlanta, Georgia.McCAIN, JAMES ROSS, AM'll, President Emeritus, Agnes Scott College, Decatur, Georgia.McCLENDON, GEORGE M., '28, President, Hinds Junior College, Raymond, Mississippi.McCLUER, FRANO L., PhD'28, since 1947 President, Lindenwood College for Women, St. Charles, Missouri.University of Chicago: Instructor, Sociology, 1923, 1924, 1925-26.McEWEN, ROBERT WARD, AM'31, PhD'33, since 1949 President, Hamilton College, Clinton, New York.McLAIN, RAYMOND FRANCIS, '29, former President and now Chancellor, American University, Cairo, Egypt.McMILLAN, JOHN, AM'26, past President, State Normal & Industriai College, Allendale, North Dakota.MERCER, THEODORE CHELTON, AM'46, President, William Jennings Bryan College, Dayton, Tennessee.MILLIS, JOHN SCHOFF, '24, SM'27, PhD'31, since 1949 President, Western Reserve University,Cleveland, Ohio.MINNE, NELS, '23, since 1944 President, Winona State College, Winona, Minnesota.MITCHELL, REXFORD SAMUEL, AM'25, since 1939 President, Wisconsin State College, LaCrosse.MONTGOMERY, ROBERT N., '27, former President, Muskingum College, New Concord, Ohio.MOYER, DONALD C, PhD'54, President, Eastern New Mexico University, Portales.MULLIN, F. JOSEPH, SM'33, PhD'36, since 1954 President, Shimer College, Mount Carroll, Illinois.University of Chicago: Instructor, later Asst. Professor, Physiology, 1938-47; Assoc. Professor,1947-51; Dean of Students, Biological Sciences Division, 1944-51; Secretary of Faculties, 1948-51;Dean, Professor of Physiology, School of Medicine, 1951-54.NIELSEN, ERNEST D., PhD'51, since 1952 President, Grand View College, Des Moines, Iowa.OLSSON, KARL A., AM'38, PhD'48, President, North Park College, Chicago Illinois.University of Chicago: Faculty member, 1940-42, 1945-46; Instructor and Assistant Deanof Students, 1946-48.OPPENHEIM, SIR ALEXANDER, PhD'30, since 1957 Vice Chancellor, offlciating as Principal,University of Kuala Lumpur, Kuala Lumpur, Malaya.PATTERSON, BOYD CRUMRINE, '23, since 1950 President, Washington & Jefferson College,Washington, Pennsylvania.PEARSON, JAY FREDERICK WESLEY, PhD'32, former President and now Chancellor, University of Miami,Goral Gables, Florida.PPAU, JOHN M., '47, AM'48, PhD'51, since 1962 President, California State College,San Bernardino, California.PLEMMONS, WILLIAM HOWARD, '41, since 1955 President, Appalachian State Teachers College,Boone, North Carolina.RAND, SIDNEY A., '52, President, St. Olaf College, Northfield, Minnesota.READ, JAMES M., PhD'41, since 1960 President, Wilmington College, Wilmington, Ohio.REDDIX, JACOB L., '40, since 1940 President, Jackson State College, Jackson, Mississippi.REINERT, PAUL C, PhD'44, since 1949 President, St. Louis University, St. Louis, Missouri.RICHARDSON, RUPERT NORVAL, '14, President Emeritus, Hardin-Simmons University, Abilene, TexasROBERTS, MILLARD G., '42, PhD'47, since 1955 President, Parsons College, Fairfield, Iowa.SANDERS, MRS. OSCIE ALICE, AM'22, former President, Sue Bennett College, London, KentuckySCANLON, SISTER ANN EDWARD, AM'41, PhD'49, President, College of St. Scholastica, Duluth, Minnesota.SCHWALM, VERNON F., AM'16, PhD'26, President Emeritus, Manchester College, North Manchester, IndianaSMITH, ANDREW C, PhD'34, since 1961 President, Loyola University, New Orleans, Louisiana.SMITH, R. BLACKWELL JR., PhD'41, since 1956 President, Medicai College of Virginia, Richmond.SMITH, SEYMOUR A., '58, since 1958 President, Stephens College, Columbia, Missouri.7November 1963 Tower TopicsSTANGER, ROBERT C, AM'23, since 1957 President, Elmhurst College, Elmhurst, Illinois.TATE, WILLIS M., '45, since 1954 President, Southern Methodist University, Dallas, Texas.THODE, HENRY GEORGE, PhD'34, since 1961 President, McMaster University, Hamilton, Ontario.THRIFT, CHARLES T. JR., PhD'36, since 1957 President, Florida Southern College, Lakeland.TYPER, DONALD M., AM'35, since 1954 President, Doane College, Crete, Nebraska.UENO, NAOZO, '36, since 1960 President, Doshisha University, Kyoto, Japan.UMBECK, SHARVY E., AM'38, PhD'40, President, Knox College, Galesburg, Illinois.VAN PELT, J. R., '28, since 1956 President, Michigan College of Mining & Technology, Houghton, Mich.WALKER, EDWIN RUTHVEN, PhD'39, since 1954 President, Queens College, Charlotte, North Carolina.WHITE, GILBERT F., '32, SM'34, PhD'42, past President, Haverford College, Haverford, Pennsylvania.University of Chicago: currently professor of geography.WHITE, GOODRICH, PhD'27, since 1957 President Emeritus, Emory University, Atlanta, Georgia.WHITE, ROBERT I., '29, AM'31, PhD'45, since July, 1963 President, Kent State University, Kent, Ohio.University of Chicago: Visiting Lecturer, Education, 1946.WIDENHOUSE, PHILIP M., '36, DD'52, since 1958 President, Rocky Mountain College, Billings, Montana.WILLIAMS, KENNETH R., PhD'38, since 1962 President, Florida Atlantic University, Boca Raton.WILSON, OLLIE JAMES, '51, former President, Findlay College, Findlay, Ohio.WOO, YUI HSUN, '22, PhD'25, former Chairman, Chiao-Tung University, Shanghai, China.ZIMMER, ROBERT, PhD'50, President, Allegheny Community College, Cumberland, Maryland.ZURAYK, CONSTANTINE KAYSAR, AM'29, former Rector, Syrian University, Damascus, Syria.Former Faculty —BENSON, GEORGE CHARLES SUMNER, since 1946 President, Claremont Men's College, Claremont, Calif.BRUNBAUGH, AARON JOHN, see "former students" llsting above—CHAMBERLIN, T. C, past President, University of Wisconsin, Madison.COLWELL, ERNEST CADMAN, see "former students" listing above—COMPTON, ARTHUR HOLLY, former Chancellor, Washington University, St. Louis, Missouri.CRONEIS, CAREY, Chancellor, Rice Institute, Houston, Texas.DAWSON, EUGENE ELLSWORTH, see "former students" listing above—GIDEONSE, HARRY D., since 1939 President, Brooklyn College, Brooklyn, New York.HAGIHARA, YUSUKE, since 1960 President, Utsunomiya University, Utsunomiya, Japan.JEFFERSON, HOWARD B., since 1946 President, Clark University, Worcester, Massachusetts.KIMPTON, LAWRENCE A., former Chancellor, University of Chicago, Chicago, Illinois.LANGE, OSCAR, President, Central School of Planning and Statistics, Warsaw, Poland.LOWRY, HOWARD FOSTER, since 1944 President, College of Wooster, Wooster, Ohio.McCLUER, FRANC L., see "former students" listing above —MULLIN, F. JOSEPH, see "former students" listing above—OLSSON, KARL A., see "former students" listing above —PAYNE, WILLIAM KENNETH, President, Savannah State College, Savannah, Georgia.RANDALL, WILLIAM MADISON, since 1958 President, Wilmington College, Wilmington, North Carolina.RENNE, ROLAND ROGER, since 1944 President, Montana State College, Bozeman.SIMPSON, ALAN, as of July 1, 1964 President, Vassar College, Poughkeepsie, New York.WALLIS, W. ALLEN, since 1962 President, University of Rochester, Rochester, New York.WHITE, GILBERT F., see "former students" listing above —WHITE, ROBERT I., see "former students" listing above —WILKINS, ERNEST HATCH, since 1946 President Emeritus, Oberlin College, Oberlin, Ohio.WILSON, O. M., since 1960 President, University of Minnesota, Minneapolis.YUASA, HACHIRO, former President, International Christian University, Tokyo, Japan.IN BRIEFSURGICAL TRIUMPH— Surgeons at The University of Chicago Clinics contributed to surgicalhistory earlier this year when they were able to save the life of a young woman suffering frommassive pulmonary embolism, a large blood clot lodging in the pulmonary artery. This nor-mally cuts off blood circulation to the lungs, resulting in suffocation.Surgeons stood by as the patient was rushed to Chicago from South Bend, some 90 milesaway, her heart beat almost non-existent. In addition to removing the large clot, fifty smallclots in the twig arteries also were removed.The success of this operation at The University of Chicago Clinics gives rise to hope for suc-cessful surgery in such cases, which currently are responsible for thousands of fatalities each year.AMERICAN LANGUAGE— Raven I. McDavid, Jr., associate professor of English at The University,is the editor of a one-volume abridged edition of The American Language, by H. L. Mencken,published on November 18. Mr. McDavid was assisted in the project by David W. Maurer,professor of English at the University of Louisville, and the volume was published by Alfred A.Knopf.8"Working for myselfand Mass Mutualmy firstmillion-dollar yearcarne after only3 yearsexperience!says John E. {Buddy} Leake, Jr., Memphis, Tenti."Three years alter graduating fromthe University of Oklahoma, I foundmyself in the top quarter of my field."In that year, 1959, I sold nearlytwo million dollars of insurance. Everyyear since then has been a highlysuccessful year for me. When Igraduated I had gone into business formyself as a life insurance agent withMassachusetts Mutual."I can't think of any other fieldwhere a man can progress so rapidly.Believe me, I'm in for the long haul !"It occurs to me that there must bemany men who are tired of working for somebody else, and would like toget into business for themselves. In abusiness that requires no investment orinventory . . . where you select thetype of people you want to do businesswith . . . where you profit in directproportion to your own efforts . . . andwhere you have the satisfaction ofknowing that your work is really help-ing people."It seems to me that men like thisshould investigate the opportunities ofselling life insurance with MassMutual. It is a fine company withover 2.6 billion dollars in assets. It is solid, yet progressive. It offers me acareer with a wonderful income andwith plenty of time for Carolyn andour five children."If you're interested in a career likemine, the President of MassachusettsMutual would like you to write him apersonal letter about yourself. Thiscould be one of the smartest things youhave ever done! His name is CharlesH. Schaaff, and you can write to himat the home office in Springfield,Massachusetts."There's always room for good menat Mass Mutual. How good are you?"Some of the University of Chicago Alumni in the Massachusetts Mutual Service:Chester A. Schipplock, '27, Chicago Petro Lewis Patras, '40, ChicagoMorris Landwirth, C.L.U., '28, Peoria Theodore E. Knock, '41, ChicagoLydabeth Watrous, '33, Des Moines Robert H. Bean, '43, ChicagoMaurice Hartman, '38, Chicago Jacob E. Way, Jr., '50, Waukegan Rolf Erik G. Becker, C.L.U., OaklandJens M. Dellert, ChicagoJames J. Lawler, ChicagoJesse J. Simoson, C.L.U., Niagara FallsNOVEMBER, 1963 THE UNIVERSITY OF CHICAGO MAGAZINE 9COBB, THE OLD: THE NEWThe bird of wonder dies, the maiden Phoenix,her ashes new-create another heirAs great in admiration as herself.— Shakespeare, King Henry ViliIf an enterprising sociologist were able to make astudy of everyone who ever attended the University,he might well find that the doors of Cobb Hall areThe University of Chicago's best universal symbol.When The University formally opened on October 1,1892, students waded through sand and over tempor-ary boards, under scaffolding where stonecutters werestili carving the name "Cobb Lecture Hall," in order toget to those doors, and every person who has been inThe University since has probably gone through themmore times than he cares to remember. "I stili getan odd feeling whenever I go through them," one professor who is Chicago bred-and-trained confessed recently, "especially if it's a cold morning and Fm making my eight-thirty class. So many associations." Eachof us, whether he be a member of the class of '96 ora last year's graduate, has such associations, most ofthem of a curiously mixed nature.What personally comes to mind is the slight scarinessof my first registration as a graduate student in 1947which, sure enough, took place in Cobb. I rememberthe long lines of ex-GI's, many stili in field-dress orNavy khaki, trooping up to the Veterans' Office on thethird floor to lay their problems on the desk of a won-derful woman who would, if necessary, fight the wholeUnited States Government to get what they needed.Cobb was not only the first building up; for a verylong time it was the center of The University.William Rainey Harper had his office here (he liked to by Perrin H. Lowreyinterview personally every entering student) and heconducted daily services in the Chapel, "a plain bareroom, except for the magnificent life-size portrait ofMr. Rockefeller," according to a newspaper report ofthe day. That room is of course gone now, and thePresidente Office is on the fifth floor of Administration.But for a great many years so much was in Cobb thatone wonders how ali of it could have been containedunder that high-peaked roof. The University Press wason the first floor, as were the offices of the Registrar,Examiner, Dean of Graduate Students, University Ex-tension, and a host of others. Piled on top of thesewere a staggering number of departments and theirlibraries — Greek, Latin, Sanskrit, French, German,Comparative Philology, Semitic, Divinity and Theology—and of course class and seminar rooms, as well as themain lecture hall. It must have been a rabbit-warren,and a journalist writing for the Chicago Inter-Ocean in1895 was probably quite correct in remarking thatstudents had to look out for the entrances and exits ofvarious distinguished professors, one of whom isdescribed as "rushing frantically through the library,his legs making a vain attempt to keep up with hisbody, which is bent forward at an angle of 40 degrees."Through the years Cobb's functions have changed,naturally, yet it did remain the center of things to asurprisingly recent date. As various departments movedout, other offices, schools and departments moved in,and it is perhaps significant that in this fall of 1963registration in the College took place here, just as itis significant that every room and office is in use aliday long, and the crush of students before and afterclass-breaks is as heavy as ever.But most of us, even if we knew Cobb's history asfirst building up and as center of The University, would10 THE UNIVERSITY OF CHICAGO MAGAZINE NOVEMBER, 1963not think of it as an architectural monument. Accus-tomed as we are to the style of Robie House, ratherthan to the "collegiate Gothic" of the 1890's, we tend tosee buildings such as Cobb as being strange or ornaterather than lovely or impressive. Yet the building wasthe product of one of the city's important architectswho carne to be known as a member of the famous"Chicago School," which included such figures asWright, Sullivan, Adler, and Jenney, and which even-tually changed the architectural face of America.Henry Ives Cobb— who was, by the way, no relation tothe donor of the building, Silas B. Cobb— is not nowremembered in the way Frank Lloyd Wright andLouis Sullivan are, but like them he was one of thepioneers in Chicago architecture when things were ina great state of flux, and his own contributions to the"Chicago School" are significant. He designed suchbuildings as the Chicago Athletic Club, the NewberryLibrary, the Chicago Historical Society, and the Hartford Building. His ten-story Chicago Opera House wasone of the first buildings to use what amounts to a cur-tain of glass on the first two floors, thus revealing to theeye that structural steel caging and not masonry pro-vided the support.It was Henry Ives Cobb who was chosen by Harperand the infant University to do the first buildingsand to make up a pian for the whole campus, some-thing rarely done at that time. He did make the pian,which was a system of quadrangles surprisingly likethe one The University now has (though there are ofcourse great changes in style and differences in location for various parts of The University). He did mostof the early buildings— Ryerson, Kent, Haskell, Walker,Foster, Beecher, Green, Kelly, Snell, Gates-Blake. The Below:View from the top of the Ferris Wheel,World's Columbian Exposition of 1893.Cobb Hall in background right. Thea-tre in foreground was scene of popularperformances by dancer "Little Egypt"who was known for her rich display oftalent.Five cent beer is advertised by cafe inforeground left. Separate picture ofFerris Wheel above.great gate and loggias on the north side of the quad-rangles opposite Stagg Field are ali his designs; theystand as important works of a kind which we tend nowto overlook, accustomed as we are to glass curtainwalls and stainless steel or black metal constructions.Joshua C. Taylor, William Rainey Harper Professorof Humanities in the College and Professor in theDepartment of Art, speaks as an authority on Americanarchitecture, and he talks about "Cobb Lecture Hall"in a way that may surprise. "We wouldn't build ittoday, of course," he said recently, "because we nolonger feel justified in imitating a past style. But thatdid not worry Henry Ives Cobb. He accepted Gothicas a useful vocabulary and used it in a way that wasvery much his own. Cobb Hall is extraordinarily freein its design and astonishingly lively. Most of its vir-tues stem from the architect's own enjoyment of form.He was not interested in 'copy-book Gothic,' nor inthe pious overtones usually associated with the style.Instead he created a plastic kind of building, one thatis characterized by assertive protrusions. The aggress-iveness of the bays, the breaking up of fiat surfaces sothat there are indentations or juttings-out at every turn,are characteristic. Even the ornaments are forceful,though they 're delicate too. And the play of light andshade over the surfaces is always changing— changingwith the seasons as well as within a given day. Becauseyour attention is never allowed to settle on simple fiatareas, and because there are so many deep or shallowindentations, the surface is always alive. The buildinghas its own coherence, and is not simply a compilationof details."Because Cobb Hall was the beginning and center ofThe University, and because of its architectural signi-ficance it is considered an essential and integrai partof The University. However, its internai arrangementsand facilities, so suited to the student needs of the1890's, rendering faithful and Constant service to tourgenerations, no longer meet the standards and needswhich must be served. The University has decided thatCobb Hall shall continue as the center of the Collegeafter the most complete renovation imaginable. Thiswill begin next year, after the School of Social ServiceAdministration moves out and goes to its new buildingon the South Campus. The outer shell will remain thesame, keeping intact Henry Ives Cobb's monumentaidesign, but everything inside, except for the two greatweight hearing walls that form the corridors, will betorn out. The old roof will be completely removed, tobe replaced in Cobb's originai design, using structuralsteel and fireproof materials. Then the rebuilding ofthe interior will begin, one which is designed to add anew auditorium seating 500, a studio gallery, 26 newclassrooms, 29 faculty offices, a new laboratory, eleva-tors, and a coffee shop-lounge. In these facilities willbe housed ali those parts of the College that are nowNOVEMBER, 1963Above: COBB HALL — Opposite Page: William Rainey Harper, first president of TheUniversity, at his desk. Desk and chair are stili in Cobb Hall. Other illustrations showarchitectural details.NOVEMBER, 1963 THE UNIVERSITY OF CHICAGO MAGAZINE 13scattered over the campus, thus bringing together forthe first time in recent years ali the College functions.(Cobb, of course, is now connected to the rebuilt Gates-Blake, which houses the Dean of the College, facultyoffices for College members, and various other Collegeoffices.) Some of Cobb's nice touches will lend the in-teriors a kind of interest that would be impossible inmost buildings. The great bays, for instance, allow thepresent architects, Burnham and Hammond, to getaway from the usuai square classrooms, and will bejust the right size to accommodate the baby grandpianos used in Humanities I.Such a pian seems particularly appropriate in thelight of what one of The University 's most f amousscholars, Thomas Wakefield Goodspeed, had to sayabout Cobb Hall. Goodspeed, writing in 1922 in Volume I of his University of Chicago BiographicalSketches, not only saw what the building had meant toThe University but was prophetic about what it wouldbecome. "Cobb," he said, "proved to be a most important building, for more than a quarter of a centurythe center of University life. As originally constructed,it provided a chapel or assembly room for temporaryuse, taking for this purpose the north third of the firstfloor, a general lecture room that would accommodatenearly two hundred, and offices for the president,deans, and other officials. With the multiplicationof buildings, great changes have taken place in thearrangement of the first floor and the general useof the building. Other changes will be made as laterbuildings stili further relieve the congestion, and thetime will come when its use will be more largelyrestricted to the work of instruction. It has a recordfor general utility which no other University buildingcan ever have." (Italics mine— P.H.L. )Such a pian too, would no doubt please the shade ofthe donor, Silas B. Cobb, whose life Goodspeed de-scribes so well. Cobb was a man of great wealth at thetime The University was being built, but he was alsoexceptionally plain and frugai in his habits, being aself-made man who had come to Chicago in 1833 withnothing at ali. In that year, Chicago was little morethan a fort and a few scattered log buildings, and SilasCobb, a young harness-maker from Vermont, was fortwo days not allowed to land from the ship thatbrought him because he owed the Captain three moredollars for his passage. Some Samaritan finally lent himthe three dollars, and he began work as foreman andcarpenter on a new plank building. When he hadsaved enough, he set up his own trade, and throughthe years prospered. As Goodspeed puts it, "His rulenot to borrow money and not to go in debt stood him ingood stead. . . . He bought what he had money to payfor, so that panics had no terrors for him. He did notbuy real estate to sell. He carne to believe in a greatfuture value for Chicago property."14 THE UNIVERSITY OF Fifth floor (attic) flooring will be re-moved to provide new, high ceilingedart studio for the College; high Windows are being added.The new Quantrell Auditorium willoffer modem assembly facilities withinCobb Hall.And of course when The University began, SilasCobb was to play a major role, one that Goodspeedand Harper believed was cruciai. The new University,which had not yet opened its doors to students, wasengaged in what seemed an impossible task: raising amillion dollars in Chicago in ninety days. Nothing likethat had ever been done before, and Harper and Goodspeed were worried that they wouldn't be able to bringit off. In some unease of mind they went to Silas Cobb,for he was known to like to make his own decisionsand to resent other persons putting ideas into his head.But he immediately said that he would happily give$150,000. He said in a letter to Harper, "As my yearsincrease the desire grows upon me to do something forthe city which has been my home for nearly sixty years.I am persuaded that there is no more important publicenterprise than the University of Chicago." Cobb'ssubscription, Goodspeed maintains, proved the turningpoint in their drive, for with that large gift promised,it was easy to get others to make up the rest of thesum needed.The time has come when Cobb Lecture Hall, whichhas had so much to do with The University, willbe "largely restricted to the work of instruction." Likethe legendary Phoenix that is represented in the greatseal of The University, this grand building will riserenewed from its own ashes, seemingly its old uniqueself on the outside, completely new on the inside, serv-ing future generations of students in the spirit of new-ness which has been The University from the day itopened its doors in this spot in 1892.CHICAGO MAGAZINE NOVEMBER, 1963The Magazink is indebted to Perrin H. Lowrey, AM'48, PhD' 5 6, Associate Professor of Humanities inthe College, for the research and article on Cobb Hall.Photography of architectural details is by Miss AnnePlettinger, who likes to take pictures of campus buildings when she is not busy as an associate technicalspecialist at Argonne National Laboratory at The University. Special thanks to W. Ronald Sims for overallresearch as well as the tracking down of old photo-graphs. — Ed.Around the MidwayJOHN F. KENNEDYStatement by George Wells Beadle,President,The University of Chicago:This is a tragedy. It can be measuredonly in the most personal way. Millionsshare in this grief , but that makes it noeasier to bear.Some of us have had the opportunityto know the President in capacities be-yond his public office and many of us,especially on this campus, have personal knowledge of his contributionsto the intellectual and cultural climateof the nation.For the community of The University of Chicago, its students, scholars,scientists and staff, I express our pro-found shock at these sad events.November 22, 1963 TWO MORE NOBEL PRIZES—Two scientists who have been associ-ated with The University receivedNobel Prizes in November, brìngingthe total of University-related winnersto 21. The Nobel Prize in Physics wasshared by three scientists. One half wentto Eugene Paul Wigner, now professorat Princeton University. The other halfwas shared equally by Mrs. MariaGoeppert Mayer, now professor at theUniversity of California, La Jolla, andby Professor J. Hans D. Jensen of theUniversity of Heidelberg, Germany.Mr. Wigner, an authority on theforces which hold nuclear particles to-gether, was one of the scientists working on the atomic bomb project in theMetallurgical Institute at The University of Chicago. He receives half ofthe $51,158 physics prize.Mr. Wigner joined The University' swartime Metallurgical Laboratory in1942. He worked with the late EnricoFermi and was one of the group who,under the West Stands of Stagg Fieldon December 2, 1942, put the first self-sustaining atomic chain reaction intooperation. In 1945 Mr. Wigner wentto Clinton Laboratories in Tennesseeand later to Princeton University asprofessor.Concerning his work in mathematica! physics, Mr. Wigner' s citationread in part, ''Wigner realized that. . . symmetry proportion must dominate a great many phenomena in thetheory of structure of matter. . . .The symmetry principle has, indeed,proved extremely powerful. Methodsbased on them constitute nowadaysthe chief weapons in the effort tounderstand the physics of the elemen-tary particles/'Mrs. Maria Goeppert Mayer, a University of Chicago faculty memberfrom 1946-1960, shared the other halfof the award with Professor J. Hans D. Jensen of the University of Heidelberg, Germany. Mrs. Mayer did herprize- winning research on nuclear shellstructure when she was. a senior phys-icist at the Argonne National Laboratory which The University operatesfor the Atomic Energy Commission.Mrs. Mayer, now a professor at theUniversity of California, La Jolla, isthe second woman to be honored bya Nobel Prize in physics; MadameCurie of France shared the prize in1903.Mrs. Mayer received the Nobel Prizefor a theoretical model of the nucleusdescribed in a paper published in 1949.In Germany, Mr. Jensen arrived atthe same theory simultaneously butindependently. Later they met to con-sult on various aspects of their work,often on The University campus andat Argonne Laboratory. In 1955 theycollaborated on Elementary Theory ofNuclear Shell Structure, a book ex-plaining their theoretical model and itsfurther development by others.COOPERATIVE STUDY — Threehundred students in seven middle-western states are now enrolled in acooperative program of 37 collegesand The University of Chicago to prepare teachers in the humanities. Halfof the students now are college seniorswho last year as juniors began a curriculum which, because of its superiororganization and direction, could leadto a Master's degree from The University within a year of their collegegraduation. The other 150 are juniors.The conception of Napier Wilt, whoretired last year as dean of the Division of the Humanities, the cooperativeeffort is based on agreement as to acollegiate curriculum that provides thesolid basis for true graduate study afterthe student enters the Master's pro-16 THE UNIVERSITY OF CHICAGO MAGAZINE NOVEMBER, 1963gram. For example, he will be compe-tent in the foreign language of hisfield, rather than starting languagestudy as part of graduate work.Next year, and thereafter, the top50 graduating college seniors fromamong the group will receive a one-year scholarship plus $2,000 for livingcosts from The University. These al-lowances will come from the FordFoundation, which granted $975,000for a five-year period, which The University is to supplement with an addi-tional $282,000 for three years, begin-ning next autumn.GRANTS— A grant of $149,925 wasawarded to The University by TheJohn A. Hartford Foundation, for thedevelopment of a new miniature elec-trical battery-powered surgical staplinginstrument. The project will be car-ried out by a group of surgical spe-cialists from The University workingwith a team of technical experts fromthe Illinois Institute of TechnologyResearch Institute. It is expected totake two years to complete.Because of its speed and simplicity,surgical stapling may help make sur-gery safer by shortening the time ofoperations. Also, staples made of metalsuch as tantalum cause less reactionin body tissues than catgut, cotton orsilk sutures. Although a number ofstaplers have been developed before,they have been either too cumbersomeor designed for only one type of use.The goal of this program is to de-velop an instrument small enough forthe surgeon to hold in one hand andversatile enough to be used for staplinga variety of tissues.—The W. K. Kellogg Foundation ofBattle Creek, Michigan, has awarded$326,490 to The University's Graduate School of Education to expand itsstudies and training in continuing education. Cyril O. Houle, professor ofeducation and authority on adult education, will be in charge of the en-larged program which will centeraround the activities of the University'sCenter for Continuing Education.The new grant covers a four-yearprogram providing funds each yearfor five adult education interns, andtwo research assistants, plus funds forusing the Center as a research base forstudying its conference and adult education functions. HONORS— Dr. Lowell T. Coggeshall, vice president of The University and Frederick H. Rawson Professor of Medicine, was awarded the1963 Abraham Flexner Award forDistinguished Service to Medicai Education, on October 28. The citationand medal were presented at the 74thannual meeting of the Association ofAmerican Medicai Colleges.Dr. Coggeshall was cited "for hiscontributions toward providing betterfacilities for the pursuit of medicineas a science and for the high standardsof excellence that he has demandedof medicai education." From 1947 toI960 Dr. Coggeshall was dean of theDi vision of the Biological Sciences.He is a past president of the Association of American Medicai Collegesand was special assistant to the secre-tary of the Department of Health,Education and Welfare in 1956.— Herman Fussler, director of TheUniversity of Chicago Library, has beenappointed to the Board of Regents ofthe National Library of Medicine, Be-thesda, Maryland. His appointment isfor a four-year period. Mr. Fussler wasnominated for the board by PresidentKennedy and his nomination was con-fìrmed by the U. S. Senate. The National Library of Medicine is the largestmedicai library in the U.S., and pub-lishes the Index Medicus.— John Maclvor Perkins, instructorin the Department of Music, has beenawarded a chamber music commissionby the Fromm Music Foundation ofChicago and the Berkshire Music Center, the Boston Symphony Orchestraisummer center for the advanced studyof music. Mr. Perkin's composition,currently titled Night Music for Soprano and Twelve Instruments, will begiven its premiere performance at aFestival of Contemporary AmericanMusic in Lenox, Massachusetts, in Au-gust, 1964. Ten commission recipientsfor the Festival were selected from afield of 54 composers.LAST NUBIAN EXPEDITION —In October, Keith C. Seele, professorin the Orientai Institute, returned toEgyptian Nubia for what will prob ably be the final expedition in thatregion. Mr. Seele explained that thenew High Dam at Aswan will beginpartial operation in late 1964, and thewaters of the Nile will forever floodthe area, except for a few high placeswhich may remain above water foranother year.He added, "There is every possibil-ity that we will be able to excavatebefore the waters of the Nile rise. Ifwe are lucky we will be able to bringout of the cemetery the last items thatever will be excavated there." TheUniversity expedition is expected toremain in Egypt until Aprii, 1964.Earlier this year Mr. Seele madewhat is considered one of the majorarchaeological discoveries in EgyptianNubia, including alabaster pottery andother objects, some of which are nowon display at the Orientai Institute.NEW PSYCH HEADQUARTERS—A million-dollar program to doubléresearch, teaching and clinic space forthe Department of Psychology hasbegun. The department will be housedin the three-building complex on University Avenue which formerly con-sisted of Beecher, Green and KellyHalls. For the first time in more thana quarter of a century, the Departmentwill have a unified center. for its faculty and their work.The interior of the former women'sdormitories will be converted into lab-oratories, with special facilities, including a data-processing center. Class-rooms, a departmental library, a faculty lounge, and offices for administra-tion and faculty will also be included.The new psychology headquarters willalso house the Counseling Center andwill provide special facilities for thecare and study of small animals, birdsand fish for research and teaching inbiopsychology.The National Science Foundationhas awarded a grant of $490,800toward the total cost of the program.The University has pledged to matchthat sum, and gifts and grants forthe purpose are being sought.(Resident women students are nowaccommodated in new dormitory facilities.)NOVEMBER, 1963 THE UNIVERSITY OF CHICAGO MAGAZINE 17A Look at Higher EducationWhen W. Alien Wallis, '35, former Dean of the Graduate School of Business of The University of Chicagorecently assumed the presidency of The University ofRochester, his inaugurai address included a searchinglook at higher education:Tuition Costs. . . Of the things that are different, perhaps themost striking is the cost of education: Tuition in 1850was $30 a year, room and board $1.50 to $2.00 a week,and incidental expenses $6 a year. Even so, we findPresident Anderson [First President, University ofRochester, inaugurated 1854] voicing one of our 1963concerns in his inaugurai address: "A university isnot a paying establishment," he stated— or, rather,understated. ". . . if the student were compelled topay for . . . education anything like what it costs,those privileges which ought to be the birthright oftalent and industry would . . . exclude at once themajority of ali those who are now enjoying itsadvantages."The "Prof". . . How different the life of a professor is today;and yet, how much the same. Today's professor in amajor university lives only a part of his life with theyoung. More of his life is lived with other scholarsand researchers or with older students, not only can-didates for the doctorate but increasingly post-doctoralstudents and mature people returning for "refresher"courses, surveys of new developments, or subjects theymissed when young. Much of a modem professor's time is spent with people in business, the professions,governments, international organizations, professionalassociations, foundations, publishing houses, and "proj-ects" of ali kinds. Much of his activity consists ofwriting books— mostly not for the young, either— andreviewing the books of other professors; or of writingarticles for technical journals out of which his booksand other people's books will grow, and refereeingarticles written by other people or editing the journals. Much of his time is spent in libraries, in labora-tories, or in social institutions almost anywhere in theworld, making the observations and groping for theinterpretations and insights that will lead to journalarticles; or else discussing with others their observations, puzzles and conjectures.The pressure to keep up with the times is evengreater on today's professor than it was on the professor of the 1850's. Today, though, the pressure tokeep up with the times comes not so much from theyoung as from trying to get ahead of the times. Fortoday professors expect to do more than transmit tothe young the accumulated knowledge and wisdomof the past; they expect to play a major role in dis-covering new knowledge, and in applying knowledge,old or new, to contemporary problems.Ali in ali, today's university professor is a far cryindeed from the romantic recollections of the old"prof" that linger in the reveries of some old "grads"—a sort of bumbling, absent-minded, impractical,gruff-but-good-hearted cousin of Mr. Chips. And the18 THE UNIVERSITY OF CHICAGO MAGAZINE NOVEMBER, 1963activities of today's university professor are an evenfurther cry from the mid-morning breakfast, a classor two in which students recite their lessons, and anearly return home for a cup of tea and a set of tennis—not to mention three months every summer at theseashore or in the mountains— that seems to be pic-tured by some ....Whither the University?. . . Not only is undergraduate education a centraifocus of ali the activities of a university, but it isbecoming almost the only activity of a university thatis not duplicated outside of universities. There aregreat independent libraries, such as the Library ofCongress in Washington, the Morgan Library in NewYork, the Newberry Library in Chicago, and the Huntington Library in San Marino, which provide not onlylibrary resources but support for scholars. There aregreat research institutes, such as Rockefeller in NewYork, Brookings in Washington, and Salk in La Jolla,that support not only research but doctoral study.There are havens, not parts of universities, for ad-vanced scholars and scientists, such as the Institutefor Advanced Study at Princeton and the Center forAdvanced Study in the Behavioral Sciences at PaloAlto. There are other great research institutes thatsupport post-doctoral study, for example, the NationalBureau of Economie Research in New York or thegreat national physical laboratories of Brookhaven,Oak Ridge, Argonne, Los Alamos, and Livermore.Whereas once the advance of knowledge in most fieldsdepended on universities, and on universities alone,now undergraduate teaching is the only universityactivity that depends wholly on universities.Not only are most of the activities of universitiesother than undergraduate teaching now being duplicated outside universities, but universities are gradu-ally losing control over the part of such activities thatis stili carried on within their walls. The role of theuniversity in research is in danger of becoming some-thing like that of hotel keeper for transient scholarsand projeets. Hotels provide rooms, staffs, and sup-porting services for travelers, conferences, parties andbanquets. What goes on in a hotei's rooms dependson outsiders— on the arrivai of guests, conference or-ganizers, and hosts inquiring about the availabilityof services. A hotel's only control over the quality ofthe activities carried under its roof comes from itsW. Alien Wallis, '35, was appointed Professor ofStatistics and Economics, Graduate School of Businessof The University of Chicago, in 1946. From 1949to 1957 he served as Chairman of the newly-formedDepartment of Statistics, Division of Physical Sciences.From 1956 to 1962 he was Dean of the GraduateSchool of Business of The University of Chicago. right to turn away business that is disreputable,shoddy, or immoral, and from its right to solicit business from those who control desirable activities.Similarly, in today's university many of the staff area little like transient roomers, in that they are con-nected solely with some project of research or application, transfer from one institution to another as theirinterests or opportunities change, and never developthe same attachment to the university as do the regularfaculty, who, in a very real sense, are not just attachedto the university— they are the university. Correspond-ing to the parties, conferences, conventions and banquets of the hotel are the research projeets and devel-opmental grants decided upon by outside foundations,research institutes, government agencies, or corpora-tions, who seek the home that will best suit their ownneeds. Even at the universities with the largest endow-ments, outside sources provide much of the supportfor research, scholarship, and graduate programs, fortotal expenditures on these, by private and government agencies, now dwarf the amounts the universitiescan command for them from funds that they control.As universities have lost some of the control overtheir own research and advanced teaching programs,they have lost correspondingly some of their individ-uality, and have tended to become more alike. Asthe fanpy of some foundation is captured by a newdevelopment, the foundation pays for introducingthe new development in many places. Stili other places,moving in the direction from which the wind seemsto bring the scents of dollars, follow suit. When agovernment institute distributes funds for a certaintype of purpose, it keeps an eye on the distributionof Congressional power and interest. Thus, the indi-viduality of universities is being submerged . . .This is happening to universities just when a sim-ilar thing is happening to individuals— when there areincreasing pressures for accepting socially-determinedvalues, for gradually subordinating the individuai tothe group and the group to the nation, and makingthe nation co-terminous with society.This change has crept up on universities almostunnoticed. It will in ali probability continue to growfor some decades— indeed, at an accelerating pace.Fortunately, New York State, whether by good senseor good luck, has relied primarily on grants directlyto students. This preserves and even strengthens theright of individuals to choose among the variouscolleges and universities in the state. Choice by individuals makes for diversity among educational institutions, and enables each institution to tailor its program to whatever particular needs it judges mostimportant and whatever means of meeting those needsit judges most fruitful .... ?NOVEMBER, 1963 THE UNIVERSITY OF CHICAGO MAGAZINE 19LAW"A reckoned solidus has come to me from you,Aaron son of John, as the first installmentof the 2nd year, total one solidus.I, Peter, the headman, assent to this document.I, Psan, son of Basii, — he asked me and I drewup this document."<*Poli tax receipt on an ostracon written in Coptic, circaA.D. 850. Papyrus was scare and expensive and frag-ments of pottery were available substitutes. Lampblack provided the basis for ink. Reed pen or brushwas used for writing. Found near Luxor (ancientThebes), Egypt, by George R. Hughes, professor, Orientai Institute. The Law School was host to anumber of festive activities as itsneighbor along the Midway, theAmerican Bar Association, held itsannual meeting in Chicago for thefirst time since the new Law Schoolwas completed. A law alumni lunch-eon, participation in dedicationceremonies, reception and openhouse were the order of the day.The Law School's magnificentlyequipped Weymouth KirklandCourtroom, which has been usedfor sessions by the Illinois SupremeCourt, was the scene of an interna-tional moot court competition,staged by the American Law Student Association. Students from Os-goode Hall Law School, Toronto,Canada and the University of Colorado School of Law made up theopposing teams.An exhibit consisting of legai arti-facts, documents and books datingback to 1400 B.C. and a special sec-tion entitled "Artists Look at Lawand Lawyers" provided sidelightson law through the ages.20 THE UNIVERSITY OF CHICAGO MAGAZINE NOVEMBER, 1963Has itsdayChance for an informai chat. Foreground left to right: Supreme Courtjustice Tom C. Clark, member ofthe Visiting Committee on the LawSchool; Judge Benjamin Landis, '31,of Los Angeles; Phil C. Neal, Deanof the Law School.Moot Court in session. Chief JudgeSoia Mentschikoff (back right),professor at The University 's LawSchool, presiding.George Washington's copies of two-volume The Attorney's CompleatPocket-Book, London: 1767. Withthe signature of Bushrod Washington on the flyleaf. An affidavitsigned by Laurence Washingtonstates that the volumes are fromGeorge Washington's library. (Bypermission John F. Fleming, NewYork. )SEE NEXT PAGENOVEMBER, 1963 THE UNIVERSITY OF CHICAGO MAGAZINE 21TOP ROW (left to right): Australia, Switzerland, Great Britain, India, Mexico, New Caledonia, Venezuela, Panama, Italy, Japan, Puerto Rico, Brìtish Guiana, Canada, France, Ghana.MIDDLE ROW: Thailand, Malaya, Philippines, South Africa, Brazil, Pakistan, Hong Kong. BOTTO M ROW: Argentina, Norway, Indonesia, Greece, Sweden, NewZealand, Colombia, Nigeria.Meet the ambassadorsAround the world, Union Carbide is making friends for America. Its 50 affiliated companies abroad servegrowing markets in some 135 countries, and employ about 30,000 locai people. ? Many expressions offriendship have come from the countries in which Union Carbide is active. One of the most appealing is thiscollection of dolls. They were sent here by Union Carbide employees for a Christmas display, and show someof the folklore, customs, and crafts of the lands they represent. "We hope you like our contingent," said aletter with one group, "for they come as ambassadors from our country." ? To Union Carbide, they alsosignify a thriving partnership based on science and technology, an exchange of knowledge andskills, and the vital raw materials that are turned into things that the whole world needs. UNIONCARBIDEA HAND IN THINGS TO COMEWRITE for the booklet, "International Products and Processes," which tells aboutUnion Carbide' s activities around the globe. Union Carbide Corporation, 270 Park Avenue, New York, N. Y. 10017,YES, THEY WANT TO KOB THAT ORPHAN (Out, on veut dé-poutller . . . ) Published in Le Charivari in 1845, the legend, trans-ìated, reads in pari: as follows: Yes, they want to rob that orphan, whomI do not characterize as young, since he's 57 years old, but he is none-theless an orphan. ...A LITIGANT WHO'S NOT VERY SATISFIED(Un plaideur peu sathfaìt)HONORÉ DAUMIER (1808-1879) has been called the greatest carìcaturist of alitimes. His penetrating eyes pierced the human facade. With a skill uniquely his own herecorded the foibles of his day. Three Hthographs, courtesy of the Art Institute of Chicago,are reproduced.THE LEGISLATIVE STOMACH (Le Ventre législatif) Daumìer first modeled littleheads of the legislators. The sculpturesque quality of the lithograph is credited to thisprocedure. ENDN EWS OF the alumni13-18BEATY, MRS. ELLYN (ELLYN BROOM-ELL, PhB'13 ) is a volunteer worker withradio station KPFA in Berkeley, Calif.Mrs. Beaty does a fìfteen-minute weeklybroadcast entitled "The Children's BookSampler," which she says takes up manyhours of time, but is interesting and creative work. The program is rebroadcastweekly over station WBAI in New York.Mrs. Beaty's other activities include parttime work at Contra Costa CountyLibrary, and voluntary work with theWomen for Peace.BELL, CHESTER S., PhB'13, JD'15,toured Europe last year with his wife,following the completion of four years asfull-time mayor of Neenah, Wisc. Mr.Bell retired in 1955 from the KimberlyClark Corp., in Neenah. He joined thefìrm in 1942 to organize and head itsinternai legai department. Previously Mr.Bell had practiced law in Chicago.BILLER, HARRISON E., PhB'13, of Cas-talia, Ohio, works in an Ohio-Michiganarea for the Curtis Publishing Co. Previously he was in the Philadelphia homeoffice of Curtis Co., working on the development of procedures of volume promotion of high-grade circulation. Sometime ago Mr. Biller was presented with a40-year service signet and a request tostay with the fìrm. As a result he is "stilion the payroll" and sets his own pace inthe Ohio-Michigan district. Mr. and Mrs.Biller live in a modernized 100-year-oldhome " ( architecture— early jumbledAmerican )" on sixty acres of land.BROOMELL, ELLYN see Beaty-CALLAGAN, LLOYD H., SB13, is retiredand continues to live in Sheridan, 111.Until his retirement in 1954, Mr. Callaganwas a farmer and banker, and served asofficer and director of the First NationalBank of Sheridan and the State Bank of-Sheridan. He was a member of the La- Salle County Board of Supervisors forover thirty years, and also served ascounty school treasurer and trustee ofschools. Later Mr. Callagan becamedeputy to the LaSalle County Treasurerin Ottawa, 111.COCHRAN, MRS. ARTHA MAY (AR-THA MAY McCONOUGHEY, PhB'13)is living in Phoenix, Ariz. Since gradua-tion from the U of C she has traveled toEurope, Asia and Africa, continued herstudy of voice and piano, and spent threeyears in universities studying law. Mrs.Cochran has also worked for the InternaiRevenue Service and taught high school.She is a past matron of the Order of theEastern Star in Chicago, and past president of the Federation of Women's Clubs,Kentucky.KEEFE, HOWARD M., SB13, of Glencoe,IH., is retired, and his only current business interest is a blueberry plantation inMichigan. When he and his wife are nottraveling, Mr. Keefe keeps himself busyaround their home, but adds, "I find myself putting off many 'odd jobs,' becauseif I do everything today I may not haveanything to do tomorrow. AH in ali it'sfun!"LeDUC, CLIFFORD L., PhB'13, AM'14,of Chicago, at the age of 72 enjoys "splen-did health" and plans "to keep very activefor some years yet." Mr. LeDuc is fieldsales manager for a manufacturing metallurgical company of Cleveland, Ohio,with headquarters in Chicago, and alsoheads his own company, LeDuc and Associates. His fìrm specializes in industriaiand commercial building and property,maintenance and improvements and con-tract broking. Prior to 1943 Mr. LeDucwas a Presbyterian minister and held pas-torates in Newark, N.J., Philadelphia,and Chicago.LOTH, ALAN, PhB'13, has practiced lawin Fort Dodge, la., since 1914. He hascontributed articles to Iowa Law Review,Nebraska Law, Review, and InsuranceLaw Journal, and is the author of severalIowa law procedure documents includingthe Iowa Forms for Civil Practice, 1957.McCONOUGHEY, ARTHA MAY seeCochran— FOX, MRS. NICHOLAS I. (EVELYNHATTIS, SB'15) of Chicago, is music ad-visor of the Young Judea Symphony Orchestra of Chicago. Mrs. Fox was hon-ored by the Lake Shore District Hadassahlast fall for her outstanding contributionsto the Chicago civic, cultural and Jewishcommunities, and to Israel. The EvelynHattis Fox Cultural Foundation was es-tablished in 1954, at which time the Cityof Chicago honored her for 25 years ofoutstanding service. Mrs. Fox's nephew,Ronald Hattis, is a student in the U of CCollege.HATTIS, EVELYN see Fox-BAER, ARTHUR A., PhB'18, and his wife,ALICE HOAG, AB'07, of Chicago, recently went on a six-weeks trip to Greece,Yugoslavia and Asia Minor.HOSTETTER, LOIS see Huebenthal-HUEBENTHAL, MRS. FRED (LOISHOSTETTER, PhB'18) of Oak Park, 111.,left the U.S. in June to assume duties assecretary to the treasurer of the Near EastMission of the United Chùrch Board forWorld Ministries in Istanbul, Turkey.Mrs. Huebenthal traveled to Asia lastyear and stopped for a day in Istanbul tovisit the mission offices. She says, "Onething followed another," and now she isgoing back to work in the office for threeyears. In her new job, Mrs. Huebenthalwill commute every day between Europeand Asia by ferry. Uskudar, where shewill live, is on the Asiatic side of Turkey, a 30-minute ride across the Bos-porus Strait from Istanbul ( on the Euro-pean side) where the mission offices arelocated. Mrs. Huebenthal and her hus-band, the late FRED B. HUEBENTHAL,PhB'17, worked together in Chicago formany years in a family real estate business. Since 1960, Mrs. Huebenthal hasbeen with a real estate fìrm in LaGrange,IH. She has been active in church andcommunity affairs ali her life with par-ticular interest in the YWCA where sheserved for many years both in a professional and volunteer capacity. Mrs. Huebenthal also is a member and past president of the West Side Branch of theAmerican Association of UniversityWomen.24 THE UNIVERSITY OF CHICAGO MAGAZINE NOVEMBER, 196319-32GERARD, RALPH W., SB'19, PhD'21,MD '25, of Los Altos, Calif., received anh©norary degree from the University ofLeiden in The Netherlands last Septem-ber. Dr. Gerard is one of only 12 livingholders of Leiden honorary degrees.Among the others are Queen Juliana ofThe Netherlands, and Winston Churchill.GINEITIS, KAZYS, A., SB'19, of Chicago,is a retired tutor and translator of theItalian, French, Russian, Polish, Lithu-anian and German languages.GRAVES, LAWRENCE M., AM'20, PhD'24, professor emeritus of mathematics atthe U of C, is visiting professor of mathematics at Illinois Institute of Technology,Chicago. Mrs. Graves (JOSEPHINEWELLS, PhB'20), also writes that theirson, JOHN L. GRAVES, PhD'56, is assistant professor of biochemistry at theUniversity of Florida Medicai School,Gainesville. Another son, Robert, is associate professor in the U of C GraduateSchool of Business and associate directorof the Institute for Computer Research.CARTER, VIVIAN see Mason-LANDT, WALTER E., PhB'21, of Hartford, Wisc, believes that "going to Europe is a grave mistake because when onereturns from the first trip it is easy toreason why there should be another."Mr. and Mrs. Landt returned to Europein June and did the things this summerwhich they didn't have time to do during10 weeks in 1961.MASON, MRS. WILLIAM T. (VIVIANCARTER, PhB'21) is the author of achapter on education in the recently published book, American Women — TheChanging Image.CLINCH, J. H. M., PhB'24, of Winnetka,111., was elected vice president of MiddleWest Service Co., a Chicago managementand engineering consultant fìrm. He alsocontinues in the private practice of law.Mr. Clinch is former president of theChicago North Shore and MilwaukeeRailway. For the past six years he hasspecialized in utility and corporate management, and served as a consultant inthe fìnancing and operation of corpora-tions. He has been treasurer, secretary,vice president and president of numerouscompanies. Since 1959, Mr. Clinch hasbeen on the faculty of the U of C Graduate School of Business as lecturer andinstructor in business policies.BRIGGS, HOWARD C, PhB'25, of Pasadena, Calif., was appointed district manager for California and Arizona forNOVEMBER, 1963 THE Wabash Magnetics, Inc., producers ofelectrical and electronic components inWabash, Ind. Mr. Briggs has been a salesrepresentative with the fìrm since 1962.Previously he had been with the CollinsRadio Co., first as director of governmentrelations in Washington, D.C., and thenas vice-president and European managerof the company's international divisionfrom 1956.LAIRD, KENNETH, AB'25, of Kenil-worth, 111., was named Chicago's Ad Manof the Year at the 25th annual awardsbanquet of the Chicago Federated Advertising Club in May. Mr. Laird is presidentof Tatham-Laird Advertising Inc., whichwas established in 1946. Previously Mr.Laird was on the editorial staff of theChicago Herald-Examiner and later withWeco Products Co., and the Young &Rubicam and Dancer-Fitzgerald-Sampleadvertising agencies. He is a past president of the Advertising Executives Clubof Chicago and the Chicago FederatedAdvertising Club, and is vice chairmanof the board of directors of the AuditBureau of Circulations and treasurer ofthe Advertising Federation of America.O'LEARY, JAMES, SB'25, PhD'28, MD'31,was named chairman of the newly organ-ized department of neurology at Washington University School of Medicine, St.Louis, Mo., in July. Dr. O'Leary, a faculty member at Washington Universitysince 1928, has served as professor ofneurology since 1946. Formerly the neurology unit was part of the Department ofNeuropsychiatry. Dr. O'Leary is a pastpresident of the American Neurologica!Assn., and has served on the NationalAdvisory Neurologica! Diseases andBlindness Council to the Surgeon General. He was recently awarded a CareerResearch Award of the U.S. Public HealthService. His research interests deal withelectrophysiology, relating manifold as-pects of the electrical activity of the brainto its means of operation.SILLIMAN, ROBERT B., PhB'25, is vice-president of Silliman University in Duma-guete City located on Negros Island inCentral Philippines.KERBY- MILLER, CHARLES, PhB'27,PhD'38, became professor emeritus ofEnglish at Wellesley College, Wellesley,Mass., in June after 25 years on the faculty. His most recent research has beenconcerned with a study of the development of journalism during the first dec-ades following the freeing of the press in1695. Mr. Kerby-Miller's publicationsrange from a criticai edition of The Mem-oirs of Scrihlerus by Pope, Swift andothers, to a detective novel, Candidatefor Murder.STEPHENSON, WILLIAM A. F. see men-tion under Feaver, '61—ROBATHAN, DOROTHY M., PhD'29, retired from the faculty of Wellesley College, Wellesley, Mass., in June, to becomeprofessor emeritus of Latin. Miss Roba-than s fìelds of special interest are litera- ture, topography of ancient Rome, andthe transmission of classical authors inthe Middle Ages and Renaissance. Herpublications include Monuments of Ancient Rome, published after she was aresearch fellow of the American Academyin Rome from 1948 to 1950. Miss Roba-than is second vice president of theAmerican Philological Assn., and is expected to assume the presidency in 1965.TAYLOR, MISS FRANCES, AM'29, formerly social science supervisor in theHammond, Ind., schools has retired. Sherecently took an extended tour of Europe.HERBST, MISS ALMA, PhD'30, was hon-ored in March by the Columbus-FranklinCounty AFL-CIO, Columbus, Ohio. MissHerbst, retired Ohio State University professor of economics, received a plaque inappreciation of her many years of serviceand cooperation with organized labor inthe Columbus area. During her 20 yearsas a full professor at Ohio State, MissHerbst broadened the scope of the uni-versity's interest in labor affairs and co-operated with many projeets and surveysconducted by the labor movement. In1962, she received a Distinguished Professor award at Ohio State, one of fìvesuch awards made annually.FRIEDEMAN, WILLIAM S., '31, of Chicago, is vice president of the Board ofTrustees of the Latin School, Chicago.WEISS, JULIAN D., PhB'31, JD'33, andhis wife (SHIRLEY WARSAW, '34)returned last spring from a trip to Tahiti,the Fiji Islands, and New Zealand. Mr.Weiss is former treasurer of the Los Angeles U of C Alumni Club. Mrs. Weisswas honored last spring at a testimonialbanquet for her work with the PortalsHouse. Mrs. Weiss was founder and forthe past seven years has been president ofthe House, which was the first transitionalhome in the U. S. for ex-mental patients.At the banquet she received testimonialsfrom the Los Angeles County Board ofSupervisors, the City Council of Los Angeles, the Los Angeles Mental HealthAssn., and the Board of Directors of thePortals House.PALMER, DR. ALICE E., SB'32, SM'37,and her husband, Dr. Lawrence Pratt,are medicai educators for the Agency forInternational Development (AID) at theUniversity of Saigon in South Vietnam.Dr. Palmer has been in Saigon sinceFebruary, and her husband joined herthere this summer when he also acceptedan assignment with AID. The husbandand wife team work together in the Uni-versity's Medicai College administering,teaching and helping to improve the medicai services of the College. Dr. Palmer isa specialist in dermatology and her husband is a thoracic surgeon. Until joiningAID, Drs. Palmer and Pratt were bothprivate physicians in Detroit, and livedin Grosse Pointe Park, Mich.TUKEY, HAROLD B., PhD'32, retired onJuly 1 as head of the horticulture depart-UNIVERSITY OF CHICAGO MAGAZINE 25."j /. continued ~»} (jment at Michigan State University, EastLansing. During 1962-63 Mr. Tukey hadbeen on a year's terminal leave prior tohis full retirement. He was honored inMay at a testimonial dinner at MichiganState attended by university and otherprofessional colleagues. An oil paintingof Mr. Tukey which now hangs in theHorticulture Building on campus, was un-veiled at the dinner. Last summer Mr.Tukey was named vice president of theInternational Society of Horticultural Scientists, and recently he returned fromHawaii where he was a technical advisorat the East-West Educational Center atthe University of Hawaii. Mr. Tukey'swork at Cornell University and MichiganState gave him national and internationalrecognition as an authority in plantgrowth regulators, use of radioisotopesand other fields. Currently Mr. Tukey iscontinuing his writing in the horticulturalfield, and is Consulting editor for a num-ber of popular and semi-technical horticultural publications.CARR, LAUREL E., SB'34, was appointedvice-president in charge of technical salesand product development of the Bell Co.,Inc., Chicago manufacturer of chemicalproducts for the automotive industry. Mr.Carr has been with the Bell Co. since1951 and formerly was with MontgomeryWard laboratories.MARVER, ALLAN A., PhB'34, JD'35, ofWilmette, 111., was named president ofGoldblatt Bros. Inc., Chicago departmentstores.26 THE JONES, GEORGE T„ PhD'35, retiredfrom the faculty of Oberlin College,Oberlin, Ohio, in June. He was Dascombprofessor of botany, and had taught atOberlin since 1924. Mr. Jones was alsofaculty advisor of the student NaturaiHistory Club and had led weekly fieldtrips for the past 15 years and annualspring vacation camping trips to Floridafor the last 10 years.DeYOUNG, WILLARD G. see mentionunder Herbolsheimer, SB'36—GEORGE, EVERETT, AB'36, has beennamed to the newly-created position ofmarket coordinator for the Walker Manufacturing Co., Racine, Wisc. Mr. Georgehas been with the Walker company forover 25 years. The new position was cre-ated to meet expanding market conditionsand to improve customer service.HERBOLSHEIMER, MISS HENRIETTA,SB'36, MD'38 and three other alumniwho are also staff members of the U ofC Student Health Service, participated inthe program at the annual meeting of theAmerican College Health Association(ACHA). The meeting was held Aprii23-26 in Kansas City, Mo., and on theUniversity of Kansas campuses in Lawrence and Kansas City, Kan. Dr. Herbolsheimer, who is director of the U of CStudent Health Service, appeared beforethe administrative section of the ACHAto discuss research she has been conduct-ing on proposals for a performance budget. WILLARD G. DeYOUNG, MD'36,addressed a meeting of the clinical medicine section on the doublé blind study onuse of steroids in infectious mononucleosis.MRS. MIRIAM ELSON, AM'42, wife ofALEX ELSON, PhB'26, JD'28, and MISSALICE ICHIKAWA, AM'48, along withanother U of C Student Health Servicestaff member, presented a program forthe mental section on "The RetumingPatient."HORECKER, BERNARD L., SB'36, PhD'39, became chairman of the newly-estab- lished department of molecular biolog>at the Albert Einstein College of Medicine, New York, in July. Mr. Horeckeialso heads a biology research programwhich is being initiated this year at theCollege by the National Institute of General Medicai Sciences. The program'^purpose is to delineate biological structure and function at the molecular andsubmolecular level, and it is expected tomake contributions to the knowledge ofbasic genetics, and the understanding andcontrol of many developmental disordersFormerly Mr. Horecker was professor andchairman of the department of micro-biology at the New York UniversitySchool of Medicine, a position he hadheld since 1959. Previously he was chielof the Laboratory of Biochemistry andMetabolism of the National Institute ofArthritis and Metabolic Diseases.LUKES, GEORGE D., SB'36, joined theCenter for Naval Analyses in Arlington,Va., as technical assistant to the chielscientist in June. The Center managesand directs the conduct of broad studiesof problems in naval warfare and man-power. Mr. Lukes was previously technical assistant to the Special Assistant tothe President for Science and Technology,and from 1952 to 1959 served in theOffice of the Secretary of Defense inseveral capacities. From 1939 to 1952 Mr.Lukes was research meteorologist andphysicist and assistant to the chief scientist at the Signal Corps Laboratories,Ft. Monmouth, N. J.MARSH, MISS GRACE E., SB'36, SM'42,was one of the judges of the CalumetRegional Science Fair in Aprii at Ham-mond, Ind. She is assistant professor ofphysics at the University of Illinois, Chicago, and a chemist with the AmericanOil Co., Whiting, Ind.WOLD, SARA M., '38, is very involvedin church and civic activities in Earlville,111., where she resides. Miss Wold retiredUNIVERSITY OF CHICAGO MAGAZINE NOVEMBER, 1963-j A continued » J§ Iin 1955 after 45 years in the teachingprofession; two years in a rural district,six years in Geneva Junior High, and 37years in Oak Park Junior High.ATHERTON, JOHN W., AM'40, PhD'52,was appointed president of the new PitzerCollege in Claremont, Calif. He began hisduties on July 1 to prepare for the open-ing of the college in September, 1964.Pitzer will be a women's college, thesixth in the Claremont group, with aneventual enrollment of 600 women. Mr.Atherton was formerly dean of the faculty at Claremont Men's College, and hadbeen a professor of English there since1949. He is a specialist in Victorian lit-erature, and has published poetry in theSaturday Review, The New Yorker, YaleReview and American Scholar. Mr. Atherton has been visiting professor of Englishat Amherst, chairman of the faculty atNagano Seminar of American Literaturein Nagano, Japan, and Fulbright lecturerin American literature at Tokyo University of Foreign Studies. He and his familylive in Claremont.CLEWORTH, MRS. MARC M. (MAUDRASMUSSEN, AM'40) of Elgin, 111.,taught a reading workshop this summerfor the twelfth consecutive year at IllinoisState Normal University, Normal, IH.GOODKIN, MRS. REUBEN J. (LILLIANSHEFFNER, AB'40) of Studio City,Calif., has a part time position as adop-tion worker with the Bureau of Adop-tions, Los Angeles County.RASMUSSEN, MAUD see Cleworth-SHEFFNER, LILLIAN see Goodkin-SHERWIN, CHALMERS W., PhD'40,formerly of Rolling Hills, Calif., has beennamed deputy director of research andengineering for research and technology,with the Department of Defense. Heassumed his duties in Washington onJune 1. Formerly Mr. Sherwin was vicepresident and general manager of Aero-space Corporation's Laboratories Divisionin Los Angeles. He became a member ofthe Aerospace Corp. Board of Trusteeswhen the company was formed in mid-1960, and in September, 1960, joined thecompany as a corporate vice president.Before going to Aerospace Mr. Sherwinwas professor of physics at the Universityof Illinois. During 1954-55 he served aschief scientist of the U. S. Air Forcewhile on leave from the University. BRETTHOLLE, FRANK M., MBA'41, received the Alumni Achievement Awardof Westminster College, New Wilmington, Pa., in June. Mr. Brettholle is vicepresident and controller of H. J. HeinzCo., Pittsburgh, Pa. From 1941-46 he wasan instructor at Westminster. Mr. Brettholle is also a member of the FinancialExecutives Institute and the NationalSociety of Business Budgeting.FOX, ALLEN, SB'41, PhD'48, was namedprofessor of genetics at the University ofWisconsin, Madison, effective August 15.Mr. Fox was formerly professor of bio-chemistry at Michigan State University,East Lansing, where he had been since1954. His research interests are in thefield of physiological genetics with em-phasis on protein synthesis. At the University of Wisconsin Mr. Fox will teachthe advanced course in genetics and par-ticipate in the graduate training program.Mr. Fox was on the staff at Ohio StateUniversity from 1948-53, and was a Fulbright professor at Pavia, Italy, in 1953-54.LAMPARD, WILLIAM D., AB'41, waspromoted to full professor recently in theCollege of Education at the Universityof Hawaii, Honolulu. He and his wife,KATHARINE PLATT, AB'42, are busypreparing to leave for a sabbatical inGreece. BOYD & GOULDSINCE 1888HYDE PARK AWNING CO. INC.SINCE 1896NOW UNDER ONE MANAGEMENTAwnings and Canopies for Ali Purposes9305 South Western Phone: 239-1511Since 7878HANNIBAL, INC.Furniture RepairingUpholstering • RefìnishingAntique* Restored1919 N. Sheffield Ave. LI 9-7180RICHARD H. WEST CO.COMMERCIALPAINTING and DECORATING1331W. Jackson Blvd. TelephoneMOnroe 6-31920PP0RTUNITYUNLIMITED!MARKETINGSALESIf you're male, 25 to 33, with a college degree (Master's preferred),graduated in the top one-third of your class and have a background thatequips you for marketing/sales— if you're eager for a career that rewardsability and ambition — this could be your greatest opportunity! One ofAmerica's foremost automotive firms seeks men with the talent and initiativeto advance quickly to management roles in corporate, divisionai and fieldoffices. Applicants who qualify work with top executives to gain valuableexperience; receive challenging assignments right from the start. Previousexperience in field sales, sales or market planning and analysis desirablebut not necessary. Starting salary will be equal to or better than the market.Send detailed resumé of education and experience together with a copy ofcollege transcript and an indication of current salary to:THE UNIVERSITY OF CHICAGO MAGAZINE, BOX 11005733 UNIVERSITY AVENUE, CHICAGO, ILLINOIS 60637AN EQUAL OPPORTUNITY EMPLOYERNOVEMBER, 1963 THE UNIVERSITY OF CHICAGO MAGAZINE1*2-59ELSON, MRS. MIRIAM see mention under Herbolsheimer, SB'36-MUNSON, PAUL L., PhD'42, of Weston,Mass., became professor of pharmacologyin the Harvard School of Dentai Medicine in July. Dr. Munson was promotedfrom his post as associate professor there.Dr. Munson, who joined the Harvard faculty in 1950, is well known for his pro-cedures in the quantitative analysis ofthe effect of certain hormones on thebody (bioassay of hormones). He is active in many professional societies andcurrently serves on the editorial boardsof the following publications: Endocrin-ology, lournal of Pharmacology and Ex-perimental Therapeutics and lournal ofDentai Research.McELDOWNEY, JAMES E., PhD'43, received the honorary doctor of divinitydegree from Simpson College, Indianola,la., in June. Rev. McEldowney was amissionary to India for 24 years teachingat the Léonard Theological College atJabalpur. He pioneered in the development of fllms, radio and other mass Communications techniques for Christian education. Rev. McEldowney is currentlyassociate director of the Christian Association for Radio and Audio-Visual Service of India.STORER, EDWARD H., SB'43, MD'45,is director of experimental surgery at theUniversity of Tennessee College of Medicine, Memphis. Dr. Storer was presidentof the faculty last year, and is seniorauthor of a surgery textbook to be published this year. Mrs. Storer (DOROTHYDUNCAN, AB'43, SM'45) is "helpingthe Republicans bring the two-party system to the South." She ran a strong raceas candidate for the state legislature lastfall. Dr. and Mrs. Storer have three chil-dren, and the eldest will soon be "U ofC age."FINBERG, LAURENCE, SB'44, MD'46,of Baltimore, Md., was appointed chiefof the newly formed division of pedi-atrics at Montefìore Hospital, New YorkCity, in June. Previously Dr. Finbergwas assistant professor of pediatrics at theJohns Hopkins University School of Medicine and associate chief of pediatrics inthe Baltimore City Hospitals. In the nexttwo years the pediatrics division at Montefìore which Dr. Finberg heads, willexpand from 38 to 50 beds and move tonew facilities, as well as acquire an en-tire floor in The Henry L. Moses ResearchInstitute for pediatrie research. Dr. Fin berg is the author of numerous researchpapers, several on fluid balance and saltpoisoning. His knowledge and researchin this field led to his participation in theemergency rescue efforts last year at theBinghamton, N. Y. hospital where a num-ber of infants were accidentally poisonedby salt.REINERT, PAUL C, S.J., PhD'44, president of St. Louis University, St. Louis,Mo., was awarded the honorary degree ofDoctor of Humane Letters by ManhattanCollege, New York City. The degree wasawarded at the College's Charter Cen-tenary Convocation in Aprii. FatherReinert, president of St. Louis Universitysince 1949, has headed a 46 million dol-lar development program there. Alsoactive in professional affairs, he is a member of the special committee appointed bythe Secretary of Health, Education andWelfare to advise federai officials on gov-ernmental programs relating to highereducation, and a member of an advisorycommittee of the U. S. Office of Education. In addition, Father Reinert wasrecently named to the board of directorsof the Midwest Research Institute inKansas City, and to the eight-man boardof the Council for Financial Aid to Education. In St. Louis, Father Reinert serveson the boards of Civic Progress, Inc., andthe City Art Museum.RUSSELL, PAUL S., PhB'44, SB'45,MD'47, has been elected to the Board ofTrustees of Pine Manor Junior College, inWellesley, Mass. Dr. Russell is John Ho-mans Professor of Surgery at HarvardUniversity Medicai School, and chief ofthe general surgical services at the Massachusetts General Hospital, Boston. He isa member of the committee on tissuetransplantation of the Division of MedicaiSciences, National Academy of Sciences—National Research Council; the International Society of Surgery; and the RoyalSociety of Medicine, as well as of severalnational and state medicai societies.CRANE, ROBERT L., SB'47, of CuyahogaFalls, Ohio, was named manager of training for the Goodyear Tire & Rubber Co.,Akron, Ohio, in June. Mr. Crane was onthe faculty of Youngstown College,Yongstown, Ohio, before he joined Goodyear as a squadron member in 1950.LELAND, EARL J., PhB'47, AM'58, spenttwo months this summer studying inIndia on a Fulbright travel grant, andadditional grants from the Board of College Education of the American LutheranChurch and Luther College. Mr. Lelandis assistant professor of history at LutherCollege, Decorah, la. He spent threeweeks at the University of Mysore andthen attended lectures at the International Center in Delhi for two weeks.The remainder of the time was spent intravel study.SPEED, JOHN J., MBA'47, was appointedadministrative assistant to the vice president and general manager of the photoand repro division of General Aniline òrFilm Corp., Binghamton, N.Y. Mr. Speed, who joined the company in 1951, wasformerly operations manager of the com-pany's Ozalid Products Plant in LaHabra, Calif.ICHIKAWA, ALICE see mention underHerbolsheimer, SB'36—BEALE, LATHROP V, AM'48, PhD'62,was promoted to associate professor ofsociology and anthropology at GrinnellCollege, Grinnell, la., in June.KARL, BARRY DEAN, AM'51, was co-winner of the 1963 Faculty Prize of Harvard University Press for his book Executive Reorganization and Reform in theNew Deal, published in June. He willshare a prize of $2,000 awarded annuallyfor the most distinguished manuscriptssubmitted by Harvard scholars to theHarvard Press during the year. Mr. Karlbecame assistant professor of history atWashington University, St. Louis, Mo.,in the fall, 1962. At the time his manu-script was submitted he was an instructorin history and literature and Allston BurrSenior Tutor of Eliot House at Harvard.SUGIHARA, THOMAS T., AM'51, PhD'52, was named chairman of the chemis-try department at Clark University,Worcester, Mass., in June. He joined theClark faculty as an assistant professor in1953 and has also been an associate ingeochemistry at the Woods Hole Ocean-ographic Institution since 1954. A spe-cialist in nuclear chemistry and marinegeochemistry, Dr. Sugihara conductednuclear chemical research in Europe on aGuggenheim Fellowship in 1962. He hasserved on an Atomic Energy Commissionsubcommittee to study standards forwaste disposai from nuclear-poweredships, and in 1960 he delivered a paperat the International Atomic Energy Au-thority conference in Copenhagen.LASKA, ANDREW J., AM'55, of SaoPaulo, Brazil, was named South Americanoperations manager for the Kendall Co.,in June. He also continues as managingpartner of Kendall do Brasil which heorganized in 1959. Mr. Laska joined Kendall in 1949 as a management trainee inthe Chicago division. From 1951-53 hewas manager of the company's Cubansubsidiary and then returned to Chicagoas assistant to the manager of the inter-national division. Mr. Laska is a memberof the U. S. Chamber of Commerce inSao Paulo, and an active worker for thecause of refugees from Communism.GRAVES, JOHN L. see mention underLawrence Graves, AM'20—MAAS, ELMER H., AB'56, AM'59, waspromoted to assistant professor of philoso-phy at Juniata College, Huntingdon, Pa.,in June.PETRILLI, VINCENT, AM'56, has beennamed research director of Young & Rubi-cam's Chicago office.DeVORE, IRVEN JR., AM'59, PhD'62,was named lecturer on anthropology atHarvard University in July. PreviouslyMr. DeVore was a fellow at the Centerfor Advanced Study in the Behavioral28 THE UNIVERSITY OF CHICAGO MAGAZINE NOVEMBER, 1963£~\ W contìnued — T\ SjSciences at Stanford, Calif. He spent ayear in Kenya studying and photograph-ing the social behavior and organizationof baboons, and relates his fìndings tothe problem of the evolutionary origins ofhuman social organization.AKER, GEORGE E., MBA'60, was dis-charged from the U. S. Air Force in July.He and his family are now living inGrafton, Wisc.SMITH, RAYMOND H., MBA'60, wasnamed circulation director of HitchcockPublishing Co., Wheaton, IH. In his newposition Mr. Smith is responsible for theoverall circulation supervision of the company 's eight business magazines and fourdirectories. He joined Hitchcock in 1958in the editorial department and served inthe company 's marketing department un-til being named manager of the directorydepartment in 1961.FEAVER, MRS. GEORGE (NANCY P.STEPHENSON, '61) formerly of Boston, Mass., is now living in South Hadley,Mass., where Mr. Feaver is assistant professor of politicai theory and Americangovernment at Mount Holyoke College.The Feavers were married on June 12and spent the summer in Vancouver,B.C., where Mr. Feaver lectured at thesummer session of the University of Brit-ish Columbia. Mrs. Feaver attended theUniversity of Geneva during 1961-62 andcompleted her master's program at Harvard and Boston Universities the follow-ing year, receiving the degree in June.Mrs. Feaver's father is WILLIAM A. F.STEPHENSON, PhB'27, a governmentofficiai during the Roosevelt administra-tion, Colonel of Engineers during WorldWar II, and later a utility executive andmanufacturer. He is now a member ofthe faculty at Harvard University's Graduate School of Education.STEPHENSON, NANCY see Feaver-McTURAN, LEE B. see mention underLee, JD'63-LEE, REX E., JD'63, and LEE B. Mc-TURNAN, JD'63, have been appointedto serve as clerks to two U. S. SupremeCourt Justices. Mr. Lee who serveswith Justice Byron White, and Mr. Mc-Turnan who serves with Justice Arthur Goldberk, both graduated inJune and went to Washington forone year beginning in July. Phil C. Neal,Dean of the U of C Law School, saidthey continue a long tradition of serviceas clerks to the U. S. Supreme Court OUR TRAVELLING REPRESENTATIVESVISIT MAJOR CITIES FREQUENTLY.TIMES AND PLACES UPON REQUEST. *•»...>already a Brooks Brothers classic...OUR TAILORED NUMBER 2 SUITmade by us in our 2 or 3 button styleAlmost everyone knows Brooks Brothers famousNumber 1 model— our traditional 3-button, single-breasted style with naturai shoulders and soft-frontconstruction. Many men have now discovered ourmore tailored Number 2 model ...introduced by ustwo years ago. Unmistakably Brooks Brothers inappearance, it is designed for the man who hasbroader shoulders and fuller chest than average...and is cut smaller at the waist and over the hips togive better fìt and slimmer lines.This Fall it is made by us in handsome unfinishedand clear-flnishedworsteds,navy serge, oxford greyflannel, and Dacron® polyester-and-worsted in miniature herringbones. Coat, vest and trousers in 2-button or 3-button style. from $135Pricc slightly higher west of the Rockies.ESTABLISHED 1818i^v/Aletvs furntòtunp, fiatò ^llboe*74 E. MADISON ST., NEAR MICHIGAN AVE., CHICAGO 2, ILL.NEW YORK • BOSTON • PITTSBURGH • SAN FRANCISCO * LOS ANGELESNOVEMBER, 1963 THE UNIVERSITY OF CHICAGO MAGAZINE 29continuedjustices by graduates of the Law School.A clerkship with a U. S. Supreme Courtjustice is one of the highest distinctionsfor a law school graduate. About 18such clerkships are available each year.Clerks do research and help to analyzecases pending before the justices.Mr. Lee was a member of the editorialboard of the Law Review published bythe Law School, and has had the highestscholastic average in his class in 1961,1962 and 1963. He is a former mission-ary with the Mormon church and is currently Sunday School superintendent forthe Mormon church in the Chicago area.Mr. McTurnan was editor-in-chief of theLaw Review. While attending HarvardUniversity for his undergraduate degree,he was elected to Phi Beta Kappa, andwas awarded the James Gordon BennettPrize for the best undergraduate thesison contemporary American politics. Hetook a year's leave of absence in 1960-61to attend Lincoln College in Oxford University, England, as recipient of theRotary Foundation Fello wship.Other recent graduates of the LawSchool who have served as clerks tojustices of the U. S. Supreme Court include: ROBERT RANDALL, JD'50,( Justice Stanley F. Reed ) , now associatedwith the law fìrm of Covington and Bur-ling, Washington, D.C. ABNER MIKVA,JD'51, (Justice Sherman Minton), currently with the law fìrm of Devoe, Shad-ur, Mikva and Plotkin, Chicago, and amember of the Illinois State Legislature.ROGER C. CRAMTON, JD'55, (JusticeHarold H. Burton), associate professorof law at the University of Michigan.ROBERT W. HAMILTON, JD'55, (Justice Tom C. Clark), now associated withthe law fìrm of Gardner, Morrison andRogers, Washington, D.C. HAROLD A.WARD III, '52, JD'55, (Justice Hugo L.Black), a member of the law fìrm ofWinterweedle, Haines, Hunter andWard,Winter Park, Fla. PREBLE STOLZ, JD'56, (Justice Burton), associate professorof law at the University of California atBerkeley. DALLIN H. OAKS, JD'57,(Chief Justice E ari Warren), associateprofessor of law in the U of C LawSchool. KENNETH W. DAM, JD'57,(Justice Charles E. Whitaker), associateprofessor of law at the U of C LawSchool. TERRANCE SANDLOW, JD'57, (Justice Burton and Potter Stewart),associate professor of law at the University of Minnesota. GEORGE L. SAUN-DERS, JR., JD'59, (Justice Black), associated with the law fìrm of Gardner,Morrison and Rogers, Washington, D.C. memorialsESHBAUGH, THEODOSIA (formerlyTheodosia Kane, PhB'97), wife of thelate Merle F. Eshbaugh, of Evanston, 111.,died on August 12.KANE, THEODOSIA please see EshbaughGORDON, KATE please see Moore-MOORE, KATE (formerly Kate Gordon,PhB'00, PhD'03), wife of the late ERNEST C. MOORE, PhD'98, of La Cre-scenta, Calif., died on October 5. She wasa retired professor of psychology.VAUGHAN, HERBERT G„ MD'01, ofNorton, Mass., died in June.HATAI, SHINKISHI, PhD'02, died onAprii 19 in Kamakura, Japan. He wasprofessor emeritus of the Tohoku University, Sendai, Japan.SEIDLER, LILLIAN C, AB'02, of Chicago, died on June 16.BAUMRUCKER, OTTILIE (formerly Ot-tilie Zelezny, MD'03), of Chicago, diedon October 3 in Hinsdale, 111. Dr. Baum-rucker was one of the first women doctorsin Chicago. She was on the staff of MaryThompson Hospital for 43 years and hadserved as president of the staff there.GOETSCH, EMIL, SB'03, PhD'06, ofBrooklyn, N. Y., died on May 23. He wasan emeritus professor of surgery.ZELEZNY, OTTILIE please see Baum-rucker—BRUINS, FLORA (formerly Flora Hermann, AB'04), wife of Dirk Bruins, ofFort Myers, Fla., died on December 30,1962.CHRYSLER, MINTIN A., PhD'04, diedon August 16 in East Northfìeld, Mass.,where he had lived for the past sevenyears. Mr. Chrysler taught at RutgersUniversity from 1923 until 1942 when hebecame research professor emeritus ofbotany. The Chrysler Herbarium of Rutgers University bears his name in recog-nition of his contributions to botanicalscience.COWLES, ELIZABETH (formerly Elizabeth Waller, SB'04), wife of the lateHenry C. Cowles who was former chairman of the botany department at theU of C, died on August 1 in St. Louis, Mo.She had lived with her daughter in St.Louis for the past seven years. Mrs.Cowles was a member of the Conserva-tion Club of Chicago, and was active for many years in the movement for con-servation of the Indiana Dunes.ELLSWORTH, ALFRED C, SB'04, diedon August 19 in Normal, 111. Mr. Ells-worth left his career as a mining engineerin 1926 because of ili health. Since thenand until his retirement in 1959, he ownedand operated an appiè orchard in Richmond, 111. While a student at the U of C,Mr. Ellsworth was known as "Shorty"because of his 6'3" height, and was cap-tain of the '03 football team and pitcherfor the baseball team.GETZ, HARRY W., AB'04, of Moline, IH.,died in June. He was chairman of theboard of Williams, White & Co. andMoline Forge, Inc.HERMANN, FLORA please see Bruins-STEWART, ADELBERT T., PhB'04, ofPhoenix, Ariz., died on May 31.WALLER, ELIZABETH please see CowlesWOODS, HALLE D., AB'04, of AnnaMaria, Fla., died on Aprii 14.OZANNE, JAMES R., PhB'05, of Evanston, 111., died on January 11.PALMER, RAYMOND A., PhB'05, diedon July 5 in Pontiac, Mich. Mr. Palmer, aresident of Birmingham, Mich., was former mayor and president of the schoolboard there. Previously he had taught inrural schools in Kalamazoo County, Mich.,and then went into the real estate business in Birmingham.REED, GRACE (formerly Grace Trum-bull, SB'05), wife of the late CharlesW. Reed, died on August 13 in San Jose,Calif. Mrs. Reed lived on a ranch nearChico, Calif., before moving to San Josein 1962 to live with her daughter. Shewas the author of several books includingBright Midnight, The Little Gold Lamp,The Catalyst, and Courage Has Eyes, aswell as stories, series and serials for peri-odicals. She wrote under the name Trum-bull Reed.THOMAS, CARY WOOD (formerly AliceCary Wood, '05), of Scituate, Mass., diedin July.TRUMBULL, GRACE please see Reed-WOOD, ALICE CARY please see Thomas-GRIDLEY, EBEN E, PhB'06, died onJanuary 23.MOORE, HOMER F., '08, of Rockford,III, died on May 4. Dr. Moore was aphysician and surgeon in Rockford for47 years before his retirement in 1959.Since his retirement he had served onthe Rockford Memorial Hospital honorarystaff, St. Anthony Hospital courtesy staffand Swedish-American Hospital Consulting staff, ali in Rockford.NICHOLS, WILLIAM C, MD'08, of Ana-heim, Calif., died on July 11.BITTNER, WALTON S., AB'09, AM'28,of Bloomington, Ind., died on June 23.He worked in the field of adult education,especially correspondence study at Indi-30 THE UNIVERSITY OF CHICAGO MAGAZINE NOVEMBER, 1963una University, Bloomington, from 1914-1959.De WOLFE, JOHN C, PhB'09, JD'10, ofOak Park, 111., died on July 5.BOYD, GRETTA please see Brown-BROWN, GRETTA (formerly Gretta Boyd,PhBTO, AM'34), of Elmhurst, 111., diedon May 25.WILLIAMS, MAYNARD O., PhBTO, diedin Istanbul, Turkey on June 26. Mr. Williams, a noted journalist and explorer,was chief of the foreign editorial staff ofthe National Geographic Society from1930 until 1953. He traveled to the Arcticwith Admiral Richard E. Byrd in 1925,and was the only American on theCitroen-Haardt Trans-Asia Expedition, amotor tour across Central Asia in 1931-32. At the time of his retirement from theSociety, Mr. Williams estimated that hehad traveled 25,000 miles annually for aquarter of a century, and the only placeshe admitted he had not visited were Australia, New Zealand and Alaska. Follow-ing his retirement Mr. Williams continuedhis world travels as a cruise lecturer forthe American Export Lines.DAVIS, OLIVE, PhB'll, of Berkeley, Calif.,died in August. She was a French teacherand dean at Principia College, Elsah, 111.,prior to her retirement. Since then shehad been a trustee of Principia.MILAM, ELEANOR please see Miner-MINER, ELEANOR (formerly Eleanor"Nellie" Milam, PhB'll ), wife of R. ScottMiner, died on August 6 in Bushnell, 111.She had been cared for at The Elms inBushnell since August, 1962, but hadformerly resided in Macomb, 111. Mrs.Miner was a high school and junior college teacher prior to her marriage in1915. One of the survivors is her son,ROBERT S. MINER, JR„ SB'40.KEENAN, ELISABETH A., PhBT2, ofChicago, died on October 24. She was retired as a teacher at Cari Schurz HighSchool. Miss Keenan was a past presidentof the Chicago College Club, a memberof the Women's University Club, andformer secretary of the U of C Class of'12.LONG, HARGRAVE A., PhBT2, of Evan-ston, 111., died on September 8. Mr. Longwas an attorney in Chicago from 1917until 1943 and then a civilian air forcecmployee for 17 years before he retiredin 1960.SIMOND, MAYNARD E., PhBT2, of Wil-ton, Conn., died on October 11. He wasa member of the board of directors ofChas. Pfizer & Co. Inc., investment bank-ers. He had formerly been chairman ofthe Pfizer executive committee and chairman of the board of Pfizer International,but retired from these posts in 1954 and1956 respectively.ALLEN, HALLIE (formerly Hallie Jen-nings, SBT3), wife of Harry B. Alien, ofCozad, Neb., died on November 9, 1957.JENNINGS, HALLIE please see Allen- MILLER, J. ELIZABETH, PhB'13, ofEvanston, 111., died on October 1.ROBERTSON, HELEN (formerly HelenStephenson, AMT3), wife of AlexanderRobertson, of Des Moines, la., died onJune 12.STEPHENSON, HELEN please see Robertson—KISPERT, ROBERT W., SB'14, MDT6, ofGreen Bay, Wisc, died on June 13.MOYLE, HENRY D., JDT6, of Salt LakeCity, Utah, died on September 18 nearOrlando, Fla. He was the second rankingofficiai of the Church of Jesus Christ ofLatter-day Saints, and at the time ofhis death was visiting a farm-ranch homeowned by the church at Deer Creek nearOrlando. Mr. Moyle had been First Coun-selor of the Mormon Church's three-mem-ber First Presidency since 1961, and amember of the presidency since 1959.From 1947 to 1959 he was on the Council of Twelve Apostles. He was also aformer president of the Wasatch Oil Re-fining Co., the Inland Oil Refining Co.,of Spokane, Wash., and the Deseret Live-stock Co. He also helped organize theOrlando Livestock Co., an enterprise op-erated by the Mormon Church.ORNDORFF, MARGUERITE, PhB'17, ofIndianapolis, Ind., died on July 5. MissOrndorff taught in Indianapolis publicschools from 1912 to 1953, most of thattime as an English teacher in junior highschools. Active in many community andprofessional groups, she was past president of the Indianapolis Grade TeachersAssn., the English Teachers Assn., andthe Indianapolis Chapter of the Leagueof American Pen Women.TOWNLEY, FRANCIS R„ SB'17, of Minneapolis, Minn., died on June 28. Whileattending the U of C, he was captain ofthe basketball team in 1916-17 and aUniversity marshall.BICKLEY, EMIL B., '18, of New YorkCity, died on July 1. He was a physicianin New York for many years prior to hisretirement in June, 1960.VEAZEY, SUMNER, SBT9, of Napa,Calif., died recently.WILLIAMS, JAMES L„ MD'19, of Evanston, IH., died on January 30, 1963.GRAUER, THEOPHIL P., SB'20, PhD'26,MD'27, of Chicago, died on September26. He was senior urological surgeon atPresbyterian-St. Luke's Hospital, Chicago,and associate clinical professor at theUniversity of Illinois College of Medicine.Dr. Grauer was also a member of thefaculty of Northwestern University for25 years, and was a past president of theChicago Urological Society.CO ARSE Y, MARGARET (formerly Margaret Thisbe Weller, PhB'21), wife ofJunius A. Coarsey, of Bradenton, Fla.,died on May 10, 1962.WELLER, MARGARET please see Coarsey— POND LETTER SERVICE, Inc.Everything in leffersHooven lypewriting MimeographinqMulrigraphing AddressingAddressograph Service MailingHighest Quality Service Minimum PricesAli Phones: 219 W. Chicago Ave.MI 2-8883 Chicago 10, IllinoisBEST BOILER REPAIR & WELDING CO24 HOVR SERVICELicensed • Bonded • InsuredQualified WeldersSubmerged Water HeatersHAymarket 1-79171404-08 S. Western Ave.. ChicagoUNIVERSITY NATIONAL BANK1354 East 55th Street" ;4 à&iany fané"MemberFederai Depostt Insurance CorporationMUseum 4-1200THE NEW CHICAGO CHAIRAn attractive, sturdy, comfortablechair finished in jet black withgold trim and gold silk-screenedUniversity shield.$30.00Order from and make checks pay-able toTHE ALUMNI ASSOCIATION5733 University Ave., Chicago 37Chairs will be shipped express col-lect from Gardner, Mass. withinone month.NOVEMBER, 1963 THE UNIVERSITY OF CHICAGO MAGAZINE 31BEVINGTON, RACHEL L, *23> o£ Cleveland, Ohio, died on September 3. MissBevington was retired prineipal of Roosevelt Selioo! in Lakewood, Ohio2 a positionwhich she held for more than 15 yearsbefore her retirement in 1945* Previouslyshe had been prineipal and teacher atGarfìeld and Franklin Schools.PHIPPS, GEORGE C., SB?23, AM'24,PhD'34, o£ Chicago, died on Aprii 22,1962.BREWER, WILLIAM F., '24, of Lodi,Calif., died on June 14. Mr0 Brewer wason the faculty o£ Montana State College,Bozeman, for 46 years where he taughtGreek and Latin and later became heado£ the department o£ English. He retiredas professor emeritus in 1942. Later hemoved to Lodi where he xesided fornearly 15 years, to be near his daughterand her family. Mr. Brewer organizedLodi' s first Senior Citizens Club and wasan honorary life member of the Lodi Ki-wanis Club. He was active in support o£legisìation and programs to benefit theadult blind (including the establishmentof the Summer School for the Adult BlindSldewolksFocf©ry Fl©@rsMachine%$\W F@yndati©nsv Concrete Breaking1 m& NOrmal 7-0433\ We operate our owsì dry cleaning plani\ 1309 East 57fh St. 5319 Hyde Park Blvd.j MS dway 3-0Ó02 NO rmal 7-9858\ 1553 E. Hyde Park Blvd. FAirfax 4-5759I 1442 E 57»h MSdway 3-0607GEORGE ERHARDTand SONS, Ine*Pairatìrog — Decorating — Wood Finishing3123 PhoneLake Street KEdzie 3-3186MODEL CAMERA SHOP; Lelcci ¦= BoSex - RoìSelflex - Fol^r@Ici1342 L 55th St. PYcie Park 3-9259| NSA Discounts| 24-foour Kodachrome D@velopingHO Trains and Model Supp!i®$ at Montana State College ), as weil ascrippled children» transient laborers andelderly persons.OORMAN, OLIVIA N., AM'24, PhD'32,o£ Tallahassee, Fla., died on January 8,1958. She was on the staff of FloridaState University in Tallahassee for 32years, during most of which it was theFlorida State College for Women»KNIGHT, BESSIE P., SB'25, of Whittier,Calif., died on July 28, 1962.LeMAY, FLORENCE (formerly FlorenceOverstreet, '25), wife of Paul LeMay, ofFort Worth, Texas, died on July 6, 1962,OVERSTREET, FLORENCE please seeLeMay™WELLMAN, MABEL T.9 PhD?25s died onSeptember 13. She was head of the department o£ home economics at IndianaUniversity, Blooniington, for 24 years.GIESE, STANLEY E., PhB'26, of MichiganCity, Ind., died in March, 1962. He wasformer president o£ the American Casketand Manufacturing Co., Chicago.TREBOW, ARCHIE L., PhR'26, of Chi-cago, died on September 3.CROZIER, VIRGINIA (formerly VirginiaGartside, PhB'27), wife of Ronald G.Crozier, of Greenwich, Gonn., died onSeptember 10.GARTSIDE, VIRGINIA please see CrozierSILVER, LOUIS, JD'2S, of Wilmette, 111,died on October 27. Mre Silver was ownerand president of Gold Coast Hotels Ine,(a finn that controls the St. Clair, East-gate and Croydon Hotels ), and formerpresident of the Hotels Amhassador Inc.Prior io entering the hotel business, Mr.Silver practiced law in Chicago, He pos-sessed one of the world's fìnest privatelyowned collections of rare books and manu-scripts and in 1956 donated 2,000 rarevolumes to the U of C. The rare booklibrary o£ the University^ law school bearshis name. Mr. Silver was a trustee of theNewberry Library and the North ShoreCongregation Israel, and was active inother community projeets as well.MOORHOUSE, GLEN, PhB'30, AM'36, ofWashington, D.C., died on July 23. Mr.Moorhouse was a senior officia! for theCentral Intelligence Agency. He had beenwith the CIA since 1953, prior to whichhe worked with the Economie Coopera-tion Administration in Paris. Mr. Moorhouse is survived by his wife, the formerLENORE CROWLEY, PhB'30.NIELSEN, CHESTER S„ SB'32, PhD?41,of Tallahassee, Fla., died on July 17.KEY, VALDIMER O. JR., PhD'34, diedon October 4 in Brookline, Mass. He wasJonathan Trumbull Professor of AmericanHistory and Government at Harvard University, and an authority on Americangovernment and politics. His book Politics,Parties and Pressure Groups, has been aleading text in the field for two deeades,and his Southern Politics in State and Nation, received the 1949 Woodrow Wilson Award of the American Politica! ScienceAssn. His latest works Public Opinion ardAmerican Democracy^ published in 1961,aiready is considered a definitivo study,Before joining the Harvard faculty in1951, Mr, Key was head of the government department at the Johns HopkinsUniversity and then at Yale University.In 1958 he was president o£ the AmericanPoliticai Science Assn.HUGILL, WILLIAM M., PhD'35, o£ Win-nepeg, Manitoba, died on August 17. Hewas on the faculty of the University ofManitoba from 1920 until his retirementin 1962, serving as head of the department of classics from 1955-62. Mr0 Hugsllwas an executive member of the Mani»toba Misterica! Society and the NationalGeographiea! Society, and was presidentof the Classieal Association of Canada in1960-mMANCINA, FRANK A., AR'36, MBA'38,of Eveleth, Miim., died in ApriiOSTRANBER, HAROLD R„ MD736, o£West Covine Calli, died in August, 1962.AAGESON, HERMAN A., MB'37S ofGconto, Wisc, died on July 3. He hadpracticed medicine in Oconto for 22 years.ROSE, IRVING, MD'37, of Brooklyn, N.Y.,died on june 23. He was director of ra-diology at Coney Island Hospital, a diplomate of the American Board of Radi-ology, and a member o£ several otherprofessional organizations. Dr. Rose wasalso chairman of the doctors' division ofthe United Jewish Appeal, and a trusteeof Congregation Shaari Israel in Brooklyn.DANIELS, HOWARD M., MBA'42, ofHouston, Texas, died during the summero£ 1962. He was on the staff of the department o£ accounting at the University ofHoustoa.POSTELNEK, MORTON S., AM'46, JD'49?of Wilmette, I1L died on September 29.He was a certifled public accountantHANKE, MARTIN E. JR., SB'49, MD'585died in Los Angeles, Calif., on May 6following an aecidental explosion. He wasa physician at Rancho Los Amigos inDowney, Calif., a county hospital Dr.Hanke is survived by his parents and hissister, Sister MARY RACHEL HANKE,SB'44. His father, MARTIN E. HANKE,SB18, PhD'21, is professor o£ biochemis-try at the U of C, and director of theClinica! Chemistry Laboratory at BillingsHospital.LUNDQUIST, ROBERT H., AB'50, SB?55?MD?55, of Chicago, died on July 2. Hewas assistant chief of the cardio-pulmon-ary laboratories at West Side VeteransHospital»EDWARDS, MARJORIE E., AM'52, ofSan Fedro, Calif., died on September 20.PYKA, MANFRED, ABy52, SMS56, PhD'61,died on November 30s 1962 in New YorkCity3 from injuries in a laboratory acci-dent. Mr. Pyka was a physics instructor atPrinceton University,, and a member ofthe American Physical Society.32 THE UNIVERSITY OF CHICAGO MAGAZINE NOVEMBER, 1963New England Life's Eugene Carroll, CLU (Fordham '52), left, with Ben S. Stefanski, President and Board Chairman of Third Federai Savings and Loan Association of Cleveland,Many men change careers to get ahead; this one didn't have to.There was no question in Gene Carroll's mind that he hadpicked the right field for a career. Selling life insurance.But, after a year and a half with an agency in Cleveland,his work had attracted the attention of several other com-panies who expressed interest in his services. This stimulatedGene to look around on his own initiative. He discoveredNew England Life's Clare Weber Agency and liked what hesaw. Says Gene: "I've been a New England Life man sincethe day I entered that office."Gene Carroll specializes in business and personal estateplanning, which brings him into frequent top-level sessionswith prominent men in the Cleveland area.For example, just recently he met with Mr. Ben S. Stefanski,President and Board Chairman of the Third Federai, one of Cleveland's leading financial institutions. Together the)worked out an incentive pian which provides supplementaipension benefìts for the firm's executives as well as financialprotection for their families.Gene likes doing business with men like Mr. Stefanski.And he's proud of the caliber of the insurance he can offerthem. "Our Company's contract is so outstanding" saysGene, "that it gives me confidence to be able to recommendNew England Life to my clients."Does a career in life insurance sound interesting to you?Learn more about this rewarding career as well as the par-ticular advantages of associating with New England Life.Write: Vice President John Barker, Jr., 501 Boylston Street,Boston, Massachusetts 02117. We'd like to hear from you.NEW ENGLAND LIFENEW ENGLAND MUTUAL LIFE INSURANCE COMPANY: INDIVIDUAL AND GROUPLIFE INSURANCE, ANNUITIES ANO PENSIONS, GROUP HEALTH COVERAGESThese University of Chicago men are New England Life represensatives:GEORGE MARSELOS, '34, ChicagoROBERT P. SAALBACH, '39, Omaha JOHN R. DOWNS, C.L.U., '46, ChicagoHERBERT W. SIEGAL, '46, San AntonioHERKNETH!Worthy knyghtesand maydens fair.the play ofhepoòThe New York Pro Musicadirected byNoah Greenbergperformed mRockeieller Chapelsponsored byThe Visitine/ Committeeto the Humanities DivisionCome gather merrily atA MEDIEVAL FEASTserved for alumni and friendsby The Alumni Associationfareceding the performance\ Thursday, January 9, 1964S^irits and Feast:filasi The Quadrangle Clubtymeif- 6:30 f>.m.costageif- $7.70Performance:filas*. Rockefeller Chapeltymeìf. 8:45 p\m.costage * $5.50 $4.40 $3.30Cometh sit by the fyr,in freendly wyse.And drynketh and {estethwith joly compaignye.Rese jutions:The Alumni Association ofThe University of Chicago5733 University AvenueChicago 37. IllinoisMldway 3-0800. Ext. 3241