The Universtty of Chicagomagazine . January 1967The Silvain and Arma Wyler Children's HospitalThe University of ChicagomagazineVolume LIX Number 4January 1967Published since 1907 byTHE UNIVERSITY OF CHICAGOALUMNI ASSOCIATIONPhilip C. White, '35, PhD'38PresidentC. Ranlet LincolnDirector of Alumni AffairsConrad KulawasEditorTHE ALUMNI FUNDErrett Van Nice, '31ChairmanHarry ShollDirectorREGIONAL REPRESENTATIVESEastern Office39 West 55 StreetNew York, New York 10019(212) 757-1473Mrs. Edwin E. Vall on3600 Wilshire Blvd., Suite 1510Los Angeles, California 90005(213) 387-2321(Mrs.) Marianne Nelson485 Pacific AvenueSan Francisco, California 94133(415) 433-4050The University of ChicagoAlumni Association5733 University AvenueChicago, Illinois 60637(312) 643-0800 ext. 4291.Annual subscriptions, $5.00:Second-class postage paid atChicago, Illinois.All rights reserved. Copyright 1967 byThe University of Chicago Magazine. ARTICLES2 The Campaign and the HumanitiesRobert E. Streeter4 The Silvain and Arma Wyler Children's HospitalThe newest addition to the Hospitals and Clinics6 An End to Economic EuphoriaBeryl W. Sprinkel9 The Economy in 1967Irving Schweiger12 The Law ReviewCharles BushDEPARTMENTS14 Quadrangle News17 Sportshorts19 Quotes20 Profiles22 Club News24 Alumni News31 Memorials32 University CalendarThe University of Chicago Magazine is published monthly, October through June, by theAlumni Association for alumni and the University faculty. Editorial contributions are welcomed.Front Cover: The facade of the new Silvain and Arma Wyler Children's Hospital, looking up­ward from the main entrance on Maryland A venue (see story on page 4).Inside Cover: A winter view of Botany Pond and the ginkgo tree (center), looking east, withHutchinson Commons and Mitchell Tower in the background.Photography Credits: Front cover, inside cover, and pages 4, 13, 14, and 20 by Stan Karter;pages 6 and 9 courtesy of the Graduate School of Business Newsletter; page 17 courtesy of theUniversity Athletic Department; page 21 courtesy of The Pittsburgh Press; page 3 by U. of C.The Campaign and the HumanitiesRobert E. StreeterLe Division of the Humanities has three main jobs.First, to educate scholars and teachers in the humanisticdisciplines. Second, to collaborate with the College in offer­ing the best possible humanistic instruction as a part ofliberal education, regardless of the student's field of special­ization. And third, to accept special responsibility for theflourishing of the arts in the University community.To illustrate our opportunities at the present time as con­cretely as possible, I would like to single out some activitiesin which the division has made substantial progress duringthe past five years-activities in which, with the level ofsupport which will be made possible by the success of theCampaign for Chicago, we hope to move on to brilliantachievements in the years ahead.The first of these has to do with the activity of this Divisionin what we now call the non-western cultures. In the studyof the languages, history, art, religion, and thought of fourmajor cultures-the Far East, South Asia, the Middle East,and Slavic Europe-our faculty is, I believe, as powerful asany in the United States. This continues a humanistic tradi­tion which goes back to William Rainey Harper and thefounding of the Oriental Institute. We are in a position ofgreat strength. But this strength is costly in salaries, in re­search expenses including travel to and from the far comersof the earth, and library acquisitions; plus librarians skilledin exotic tongues. Much of our strengthening in these im­portant fields has been assisted by short-term foundationand governmental grants, which have been especially avail­able for the past decade. For the long pull, if we are tomaintain the momentum we now have, we shall have tocount upon increased support from regular university sources-that is, from this Campaign.The second promising development that I would like tosketch briefly is the effort to vivify the arts on the campus- without changing the character of the University - bystrengthening the performing arts. As you know, the Uni­versity has never developed or supported conservatory ap-Robert E. Streeter is Professor in the Department of Eng­lish and Dean of the Division of the Humanities. This articleis based on his remarks to a gathering of volunteer Cam­paign leaders, October 14-15, at the Center for ContinuingEducation, an occasion marking the first anniversary of theannouncement of the Campaign for Chicago.2 proaches to music or an art-school approach to art. We donot have a drama school. We do not have a speech school.But we are interested in finding ways to enliven the artisticlife of the campus while maintaining the essential approachesthat seem to us important in working with the arts.In an average eleven-week quarter the Department ofMusic sponsors about twenty-five events of serious musicalinterest. This demonstration by the Department of Music ofwhat can be done has led many of us to believe that similarventures. should be undertaken in the theater and in thevisual arts. Last winter we experimented successfully witha professional performance of Moliere's The Misanthropein the Law School Auditorium, in cooperation with theGoodman Theater of the Art Institute of Chicago. The De­partment of Art is greatly interested in creating a museumwhich would be an attractive center for both permanent andtemporary exhibits, and which would also reinforce theteaching program of that department. All these possiblelines of development in the arts are stymied at the presenttime, however, by inadequate or non-existent facilities. Boththe Music Department and the Art Department are nowlocated in buildings ill-suited for their present purposes.Mandel Hall-our chief center for the performance of music,drama, lectures, and so on-is booked so solidly that re­hearsal time is at a premium. For these reasons, one of ourmost alluring dreams calls for the construction of an artscomplex which would enable us to push forward with excit­ing music, theater, and arts in living relationship with theliberal arts curriculum.As a third example, a distinguished scholarly faculty hasto have the tools of research and the opportunity to usethem. The building of the Regenstein Library, with the facili­ties it will offer for the more efficient use of the University'sbook collections, will be an immense boost to the work ofthe Humanities Division. I can conceive of no event whichwould be more significant. But if the Regenstein Library isto perform the magnificent job for which it is designed, itscollections will need to be maintained and improved aggres­sively and generously. Sometimes, when funds are scarce, itseems tempting to economize by curtailing a costly centralfacility, such as a library. This is an unobtrusive, quiet, anddirect road to academic second-rateness. Funds from theCampaign will be urgently needed to keep the library strong.My fourth point is concerned with individual research.Now individual research needs in the Humanities are usuallyso modest in these days of glittering million-dollar scientificlaboratories that I sometimes find it almost embarrassing totalk about them. For example, a few weeks ago I was ableto approve a small research grant for a professor of Clas­sics, who needed to go to New York for a week to consultsome rare, ancient texts which are important for a book heis writing. When my colleague returned and presented hisaccounting, I observed that he had worked for a week inNew York libraries for a total cost, including travel, hotels,and meals, of $102.00. I looked at this total and I couldn'tbelieve it. Then I examined the fine print and found that hehad travelled to and from New York by bus; he had lived inNew York at the YMCA; and he had managed to eat threemeals a day for six days without spending more than $1.82for any single meal. Now this is an extreme Spartan examplefrom the Department of Classics but, by and large, rela­tively modest sums of money will go a long way in insuringthat researches are completed, significant books are pub­lished, and the University's standing as a center of scholar­ship is enhanced.Robert E. Streeter However, even in Classics there are research costs thatexceed $102.00. I recently spent two fascinating hours withanother classicist studying sketches of the glass mosaicswhich he and some of his associates discovered under waterin a ruined temple at Kenchreai near Corinth in Greece,where they have been working for the last three or fouryears. This is a treasure trove of materials that are importantboth esthetically and historically. And the great find thatthey made this summer was of a large life-size mosaic por­trait of a figure labelled "Homer" in Greek, with some ofthe characteristics we associate with the figure of the Christin later Byzantine art.But here the research tab runs higher. If we can find$100,000, these mosaics can be properly studied and pub­lished in about five years time. If we cannot, there's no tell­ing when these remarkable finds will be fully interpreted.So, you see, our research needs come in all sizes, from$102 to $100,000. At the present time, from Universityallocations, the division spends about $25,000.00 a year onresearch. We need to double this. And we would still expectto make special efforts to fund larger ventures such as theKenchreai mosaics, which we would never expect to besupported by an annual research fund.Finally-most briefly of all, but equally important-we havereached in the number of graduate students a figure whicha few years ago we had projected as not reaching until after1970. We are running into great difficulties with a shortageof student facilities.The Humanities are a reading and also a talking discipline.Students like to get together and continue discussing thingsthat have come up in lectures and classes. But there are fewgathering places.The working facilities for. graduate students are infinitelyinferior to what they were twenty years ago. The stacks inHarper are so crowded that the work desks for graduatestudents have had to be removed. The construction of theRegenstein Library, of course, will be an immense aid here.The completion of the renovation of Cobb Hall will permitthe relocation there of some classes now held in otherbuildings.I think these are terribly important considerations. TheCampaign will make it possible for us to build an efficientand totally attractive center for graduate education in theHumanities. D3The Silvain and Arm:4 Above: The facade of the Wyler Children's Hospital, showingarchitectural details above the main entrance onMaryland Avenue. The building links at right to ChicagoLying-in Hospital, with which it shares some facilities.Above Left: Mrs. Arma Wyler in an early conferenceon the new hospital with President George W. Beadle (right)and Dr. Lowell T. Coggeshall, Vice-President andTrustee of the University. More than $2,000,000 of thehospital's cost came from the Wyler Foundationand Mrs. Wyler; and $1,500,000 came from the Joseph P. Kennedy,Jr. Foundation to establish within the hospital theJoseph P. Kennedy, Jr. Mental Retardation Research Center.Left: The inner court, enclosed on the North andEast by the Wyler Children's Hospital and on the South andWest by Chicago Lying-in. The landscaped gardenincludes a circular tanbark-filled children's play area at left.Wyler Children's HospitalThe conception and design of the Silvain and Arma WylerChildren's Hospital grew from the belief that the child is notonly society's most precious belonging but holds the futureof the human race. Dedicated August 28, 1966, it is one ofthe world's best equipped hospitals devoted exclusively tochildren. The new building is located on Maryland Avenue,between 58th and 59th Streets.The hospital is named for the late Silvain S. Wyler and hiswidow, Arma, whose generous financial contributions playeda decisive role in. completing its funding. Silvain Wyler wasa Chicago businessman who pioneered in the developmentof soups and other food products. At his death in 1963 heleft a substantial sum of money to be used for constructionof a children's hospital in Chicago. These funds, plus a per­sonal contribution from Mrs. Wyler, made possible thecompletion of the new hospital. In addition to the Wylers'financial contribution, Mrs. Wyler's enthusiasm for the proj­ect played an important role in its planning and successfulcompletion.The Joseph P. Kennedy, Jr. Foundation furnished a majorgrant for the establishment in the new hospital of the JosephP. Kennedy, Jr. Mental Retardation Research Center. TheFoundation was established in 1946 by Mr. and Mrs. JosephP. Kennedy in memory of their oldest son, a pilot killed inWorld War II. The Center was dedicated August 31 with aceremonial dinner. Among the distinguished guests wereMayor Richard J. Daley of Chicago, Governor Otto Kernerof Illinois, and Senator Edward M. Kennedy of Massa­chusetts.Other major contributors to the Wyler Children's Hos­pital are: the Country Home for Convalescent Children; theChicago Community Trust; the Hill-Burton Program forHospital Construction, Department of Health, State of Illi­nois; and the Health Research Facilities Program of theNational Institutes of Health, United States Public HealthService. The new hospital also incorporates the two originalpediatric facilities of the· University, the Bobs RobertsMemorial Hospital for Children, and the Home for DestituteCrippled Children, which will be responsible for the hos­pital's operation.The important role of research in the functioning of the new hospital was emphasized in the dedication by a week­long commemorative "Symposium on the Child." The Sym­posium brought to the University distinguished authoritiesfrom the United States and abroad, who explored such majorareas of childhood problems as mental retardation, learningand language, law and social policy, international healthcare, and new aspects of basic research and medicine.A clinical research center in the new hospital, adjacent tothe delivery room at Chicago Lying-in Hospital, is devotedto medical problems of the newborn. A number of researchlaboratories are being equipped to explore such problemsas familial patterns of disease, embryonic defects, virus­caused respiratory infections, neurological diseases, andmental retardation.A Ithough deeply involved in research and teaching, thefirst concern of the staff of the Wyler Children's Hospital isthe treatment and well-being of its patients. The six-storystructure has 100 beds, outpatient clinics, and recreationaland therapeutic centers. The two floors for hospitalized chil­dren include a special nursery for sick infants and two inten­sive care areas, where critically ill children are under twenty­four-hour observation. Each patient's room has a largewindow, and each room has a two-way speaking systemlinking it with the nursing station.The hospital has tried to meet the child's need for confi­dence, security, and a healthy environment. Dr. AlbertDorfman, '36, PhD'39, MD'44, Chairman of the Depart­ment of Pediatrics and Director of the Kennedy Center, says,"we know now that the care of a sick child involves theparents very intimately." Thus, each patient's room has alounge chair which may be converted to a bed for the mother,who may stay overnight, and there is a shower and dressingroom for her on each of the patient floors.There are play areas and recreational facilities throughoutthe hospital, and there are classrooms and a library forschool-age patients. An enclosed court between the newhospital and Lying-in has a landscaped garden with asunkentanbark play area for outdoor recreation.The hospital also has classrooms for the instruction of thenext generation of pediatricians, plus the usual close ties withthe University's other educational facilities and resources. D5An End to Economic EuphoriaBeryl W. SprinkelSeventy months of continuous economic expansionshould be long enough to convince even the most skepticalthat economic policy makers have finally developed themarvelous alchemy for maintaining perpetual prosperity.But alas, disbelievers abound, and not without reason. Fewwould deny that the state of economic and political arts issufficiently developed to prevent a protracted economiccollapse once a decline develops, nor would many denythat \ hyper-inflation can and will be avoided. But betweenthese two extremes there is ample room for skepticism. Thebasic difficulty relates not only to the variability and uncer­tainty of response of the private economy to a change ineconomic stimulus or restraint, but also to the difficulty ofchoosing the proper policies for the developing rather thanthe previously existing economic problem. Economic policymakers, even as you and I, are prone to offer prescriptionsattuned to the past and not the future. And this difficultyappears particularly acute when full employment has beenachieved amidst growing price pressures and politicalelections.Monetary fiscal stimulus was clearly in order from 1960through mid-1965 when labor and capital resources wereunderutilized. One could have hoped for less stimulation asresource utilization approached full employment in mid-1965. But instead the stimulus increased. Increased spend­ing on defense and Great Society programs shifted the cashbudget from a small surplus in the second quarter of 1965to a sizable deficit. And, in fact, the cash budget probablyunderstated the changing fiscal impact since the surge inGovernment orders, which initiated hiring and production,occurred well in advance of cash payment.To compound the difficulty, monetary policy also becamemore expansive. From 1960 to 1965 the money supplyincreased at a fairly stable 3 per cent annual rate, but fromMay, 1965, to May, 1966, it increased 6 per cent. Measuresof bank reserves and total bank credit reflected similartendencies.Several unfortunate consequences followed, largely as aresult of increased policy stimulus. Current GNP began torise at a faster rate. Since resources were in tight supply, in­flation became a serious problem for the first time duringthis economic expansion. For example, consumer prices rose3.5 per cent in the past year while wholesale prices increased3 per cent, compared to 1.3 per cent and 0.4 per cent annual6 rates of increase in the earlier expansion period. As inflationanticipations accelerated and sales and order trends de­veloped strength, there was increased impetus to borrow,and money and credit demands surged ahead. Despite rapidinfusion of reserves and new money, interest rates roserapidly. The easy money policy in the year ending May,Beryl W. Sprinkel, MBA '48, PhD '52, a former memberof the University faculty, is Vice President and Economistand Director of Research for the Harris Trust and SavingsBank, Chicago. He is editor of the Bank's monthly publica­tion, Barometer of Business, Economics editor of the Finan­cial Analysts Journal, and author of Money and StockPrices (1964). Mr. Sprinkel received an Alumni Citationin 1964. This article is the text of his address at the AnnualBusiness Forecast Luncheon, Dec. 7, sponsored by theGraduate School of Business and the Executive Program.1966, engendered a tight money market by increasing infla­tionary fears and thereby stimulating credit demands. Al­though a change toward an easier monetary policy does inthe short run lower interest rates by increasing the supplyof money relative to demand, a continued easy money policytends to stimulate demand relative to supply, particularlywhen inflation develops. Therefore, an easier monetarypolicy resulted in higher rates. The truth of this concept isborne out not only by our recent history but also by modernhistory of most .European countries which have had highrates of monetary growth accompanied by inflation and highand rising interest rates.In early May, 1966, monetary policy abruptly changedgears and since that time the money supply has declined at a2 per cent annual rate. Not only was the long run impact ofan easy money policy continuing to stimulate demand formoney, but the sharp shift toward a tighter policy in theshort run compounded pressure toward higher interest rateswhich peaked in August.Erthermore, during the summer anticipatory horrowingbegan to develop as private borrowers became concernedthat if they delayed making loan arrangements, credit mightnot be available. Federal Reserve officials accelerated thistrend by refusing to raise Certificate of Deposit ceiling ratesin line with rising market rates as had become the custom.In fact, the rate that commercial banks were allowed to payon consumer-type deposits was cut from 51;2 per cent to5 per cent. Therefore, banks were threatened with depositliquidation and the necessity to severely reduce asset expan­sion. To compound the difficulties, Federal Reserve officialsmade clear that they regarded bank loans to business as themajor inflationary culprit. It was repeatedly stressed byFederal Reserve officials that banks must restrict loans tobusiness or run the danger of not being able to borrow at thediscount window. The move by Federal Reserve officials toblame excessive bank loans .to business as the cause of infla­tion was analagous to the tendency of the Council of Eco­nomic Advisers to blame labor and business leaders for thesame difficulty. Both actions reflected increasing tendenciesto substitute administrative actions for market forces under the apparent but, in my opinion, mistaken conviction thatthe free market would not protect the public welfare. Al­though it is always tempting to blame others, excessivelyexpansionary monetary-fiscal policies were clearly the causeof recent inflationary pressures.Considering the unusual pressures placed on the moneymarket last summer, brought about mainly by inept finan­cial policies, it should not be surprising that a near monetarycrisis developed. It is a tribute to the efficiency of a hobbledmoney market that it was avoided. Despite recent signs ofeasing in demand pressures, monetary policy restraint stillremains the order of the day.Nor is inflation the only problem besetting the nation. Thebalance of payments will show nominal improvement in1966 by recording a smaller deficit despite the rising drainof the Viet Nam War. But the data can be misleading.Capital flows have improved partly because of higher short­term interest rates at home but also because of increasedcapital controls on banks and corporate investment abroad.In addition to capital controls, which are contrary to ourbasic objective of encouraging the free flow of capital andgoods, numerous other direct controls exist in the form ofthe interest equalization tax, voluntary quotas, tied loansand grants, the "buy American" policy, and so on.To make matters worse, the one major area of strength inthe U.S. balance of payments is beginning to deteriorate­i.e., the sizable surplus on goods and services account. Ris­ing prices at home, higher domestic incomes, and the indirecteffect of capital controls has reduced the U.S. surplus ongoods and services from $8.5 billion in 1964 to an estimated$5 billion in 1966. Although the U.S. still has sufficientliquidity in the form of gold and foreign exchange to continuerunning a sizable deficit for a few years longer, there is littleprospect that present direct controls will soon be eliminated.In fact, they are likely to be intensified. Once again we arewitnessing the transition from temporary restrictions topermanent controls. The basic difficulty arises from a flawin our present international payments mechanism. All gov­ernments prefer expansionary domestic economic policiesand hence there is no automatic market mechanism forcorrecting the balance of payments once an imbalancedevelops. Furthermore, current attention is directed towardincreasing world liquidity, of which there appears to be asurplus, judged by world-wide inflationary pressures, but7little attention is devoted to improving the adjustment mech­anism between currencies. So long as nations assiduouslyavoid consideration of increased flexibility of exchange rates,more direct controls are to be expected.But concern over the current state of the economy is notlimited to inflation and the balance of payments. For thefirst time since 1960, a convincing although not conclusivecase can be made for a recession within the year. If not forthe anticipated strength in Federal and state and local spend­ing, the argument would be completely convincing. Leadingindicators of economic activity are quite weak, with wellover half contracting. The present pattern is typical ofdevelopments prior to either a leveling tendency in theeconomy or a recession. At a minimum, this evidence sug­gests the rate of rise in the private sector of the economywill slow.Analysis of individual major sectors of the economy failsto disclose hidden strengths. Consumer surveys suggest theconsumer is developing restraint after engaging in the long­est and largest buying spree in U.S. history. Auto salesappear to be headed downward by at least a half-millionunits and probably more. Residential construction is severelydepressed and money market conditions and building per­mits show no indication that improving demographic factorswill exert a stimulus in near-term months.Surveys of plant and equipment spending plans for all of1967 indicate no rise above the current projected rate.Already plant and equipment spending is running 6 per centabove the annual rate for 1966 and surveys suggest a 3 percent to 5 per cent increase in 1967 over 1966. Althoughsome modest increase may occur early in 1967, the recentsuspension of the investment credit is likely to initiate adowntrend in plant and equipment spending in the last half.Inventories have risen over $10.5 billion in the past yearand if sales gains moderate as expected, less inventoryaccumulation can be expected in 1967.But doesn't the sizable expected rise in Federal outlays andstate and local spending amounting to as much as perhaps$19 billion assure continued economic expansion? Perhaps,but not certainly. First,. we must remember that despite therecent trend toward growing government spending, over 75per cent of total spending is still in the private sector. Secondand most important, what can we expect from monetary­fiscal policies in the next few months? To return to my open-8 ing theme, should the basic thrust of policy be directed at awaning inflation induced by previous policy mistakes orshould it be directed at an attempt to provide modest stim­uhJ to � weakening private _economy? The answer appar-.ently isn't obvious. I subscribe to the latter view, but policyis currently directed at inflation. History is replete withevidence that our economy cannot adjust smoothly to abruptpolicy shifts such as occurred in monetary policy in 1965and 1966. Although the economy is probably not yet be­yond the point of no return, historical relations suggestthat continued monetary liquidation for a few more monthswould mean recession in 1967. Furthermore, a rising defensebudget may lead to a sizable increase in Federal taxes withall that means for private anticipations and spending.Although continued monetary restraint would, in myopinion, mean recession, I must assume that for both polit­ical and economic reasons the current policy will shortlybe reversed even though there are numerous examples inthe past where such reasoning proved erroneous. Even ifwe avoid a recession, the economy will surely show lesssteam in 1967. We project a rise in GNP to about $777billion, approximately 5.3 per cent above 1966. At leasthalf the rise will represent inflation, so that real output willincrease well below the long run trend and unemploymentis likely to rise.In such an environment corporate profits will come underpressure as wage rates rise well in excess of productivitygains, Stock prices receded in response to higher interestrates in 1966 and now appear to represent favorable long­term commitments. A further significant upward movementin equity prices awaits some easing in money which maywell develop in 1967. Interest rates have probably alreadyrecorded their highs for this cycle, but so long as inflationremains a serious threat and recession is avoided, a sharp.reduction in interest rates is unlikely.There are times when convictions concerning the futuretrend in economic activity can be formulated with greatconfidence, i.e., at 3 to 1 or better odds. Unfortunately, thepresent is not one of those occasions. For those interestedin adjusting the above expressed outlook as the new yearunfolds, I strongly urge paying especially close attention tomonetary growth in the next few months as well as attentionto the eventual resolution of the current debate concerningfiscal policies. DThe Economy in 1967Irving SchweigerIn 1967, I expect the current economic boom to end. Itwill be a year characterized by downward revisions in salestargets and planned capital investment, by rising unemploy­ment and industrial disputes, and by major changes inmonetary policy. The boom will end not with a crash butwith a materially reduced rate of growth and an economyunbalanced and dangerously sensitive to an unexpected trucein Viet Nam, should it come in the early months of 1967.As predicted one year ago, errors in fiscal and monetarypolicy have led to serious economic strains in 1966. The fullcosts of these errors will become apparent only in 1967 andlater years. Yet an actual downturn in real output-a reces­sion- is not probable in 1967 unless a quick truce in VietN am catches governmental agencies off balance, still seek­ing to restrain an economy whose exuberance is alreadydrained.My estimate is that the Gross National Product will total$778 billion in 1967, about $39 billion more than in 1966.However, a little more than half of this increase will be waterresulting from substantial price rises, and only $19 billion ofthe $39 billion advance will accrue from growth in real out­put of goods and services. The number of unemployed per­sons will rise steeply from very low current levels as one ofIrving Schweiger is Professor of Marketing in the GraduateSchool of Business. He served as an economist for the Fed­eral Reserve System from 1946 to 1954 and has writtenor co-authored numerous articles, chiefly on consumer be­havior. He has been editor of The Journal of Business since1957. This article is the text of his address at the AnnualBusiness Forecast Luncheon on December 7, sponsored bythe Graduate School of Business and the Executive Program. the more serious consequences of a greatly diminished rateof growth coupled with rapid expansion of the labor force.As you may have surmised, this is a relatively pessimisticforecast. Most other published forecasts envision growth ofreal GNP at four per cent or more for the year, which is atleast one-half greater than my estimate. To preclude anynotion that my forecast reflects habitual pessimism, let menote that this is the first such occasion since my forecastfor 1962. My forecasts for 1963 through 1966 were amongthe most optimistic extant.Why do I expect so little real growth in output at substan­tially higher prices?Very briefly: I consider that present monetary and fiscalpolicies have been more effective in shrinking demand in theprivate sectors than is generally believed. and that they willbe more than sufficiently potent unless altered. Full effectsof these policies have been masked by continuing waves ofprice and wage increases and by surveys that ascertain busi­ness investment plans to be still rising. It should be recog­nized that price and wage pressures usually outlast the boomgenerating them and persist well into the subsequent down­turn. With respect to investment plans, these typically under­estimate actual investment during the boom and overstatethem in the contraction.Possibly the greatest divergence of opinion concerns thefuture course of business investment in plant and equipment.Most analysts are relying on businessmen's statements ofintent and are forecasting a gain of five to ten per cent ininvestment spending in 1967. I believe that businessmenare overestimating growth of the economy in 1967, just asfor four years their error has been to under-estimate expan­sion. Illustrative of this current error is the continuing down­ward revision in sales projections of the automobile andhousing industries and presumably of all the supplier indus­tries. Changes in sales estimates can have radical effects oninvestment requirements.Decline in investment expenditures is already evident forprivate non-residential construction as a whole, while spend­ing for industrial buildings (factories) has been on a plateaufor months in terms of dollars, suggesting actual falling off involume in real terms because of rising prices. As the rate ofeconomic growth slows, the compound effects of inventoryreduction, lowered estimates of end-use requirements, rec­ord increases in installed capacity, and the belated and9wrongly timed suspension of investment incentives will con­tribute to a marked falling off in investment expendituresin the latter part of 1967.Instead of a gain in plant and equipment spending in 1967,I believe the yearly total will just about match the $79 billionof spending in 1966. From the fourth quarter of 1966 to thefourth quarter of 1967, I anticipate a decline of about 10per cent.A forecast for 1967 also involves to a greater extent thanusual assumptions regarding three aspects of governmentalpolicy. These are: governmental spending for defense andnondefense activities, tax policy, and monetary policy. Myforecast does not assume a 1967 truce in Viet Nam althoughone could come at any time. I am therefore allowing for anincrease of $11 billion in defense spending in 1967 com­pared with a $9.5 billion rise in 1966. Nondefense Federalspending will be pruned heavily and I anticipate only a verysmall increase in this category. On the other hand, spendingby state and local governments will continue to rise stronglyand should total about $8 billion above the 1966 figure.Prospective federal tax policy is a great mystery to me andpossibly to a few others. But we can split this question intotwo parts: what should be tax policy, and what is likely?The two can be far apart. The Administration committed aserious error in not raising taxes in late 1965 or early 1966when many observers, including this one, predicted thestrains and inflation that would occur without tough fiscaland monetary action. To raise tax rates now after the dam­age to the economy has taken place would be a blunder com­parable to not raising taxes a year ago. In my opinion,economic growth will slow down substantially in 1967 with­out the tax rise. Additional taxes will act as an unneces­sary drag on an economy that is already laboring heavily.The only rationale for a small tax rise that has merit, as Isee it, is to facilitate a general easing of monetary policy.But this assumes an economy expanding so strongly thatit is necessary to moderate overall demand through fiscalpolicy to permit more balanced growth with an easiermonetary policy. I believe that the assumption is incorrectin anticipating so strong an economic advance. I think it isdesirable that monetary policy be eased immediately andin progressive stages because of the long lead time betweenchange in policy and substantial effect upon economicactivity.10 But what will the authorities do? My guess is that therewill be no increases in federal taxes in early 1967 or only anominal increase for purposes of public relations. Monetarypolicy is likely to ease gently in the first half of 1967 but beinhibited from greater relaxation by continuing substantialrises in prices of goods and wage rates. In the second half,obvious weakening in the rate of expansion and rapid in­creases in unemployment are expected to lead to a sig­nificant loosening of the monetary reins.Now, to discuss the household sector. A change in thetone of consumer demand appears to be taking place. Eventhough employment and aggregate and average incomeafter taxes are setting new records, consumer plans formaking major purchases such as houses, automobiles, andappliances are falling. In 1967, slackening in consumerdemand will contribute significantly to a lessened rate ofoverall economic growth. Tight credit is undoubtedly onemajor factor in contraction of the housing and automobilemarkets. When available, easier credit can stimulate addi­tional purchases in time although a lag is likely because ofthe lessened urgency of plans. But more than credit is in­volved. Inflated living costs have reduced the ability and/orwillingness of many consumers to make major new pur­chases.Disposable personal income will total about $435.5 bil­lion, a gain of about 6.2 per cent. Consumers are expectedto increase their total spending for goods and services byonly 5.5 per cent. The difference is accounted for by higherinterest payments and by a small increase in the rate ofpersonal saving attributable to a reduced rate of spendingfor durable goods, primarily automobiles.In recent years, consumer expenditures have risen at sucha torrential rate that nearly all individual markets havebenefited substantially. In 1967, total spending will growonly moderately and gains of individual markets will befewer and more selective. Many product markets will showreduced sales in 1967 in real or unit terms, if not in dollarterms. The most important product with lower sales inprospect is new domestically-produced automobiles. On theother hand, among those likely to show gains in sales areclothes dryers, television sets, and types of housing mostquickly responsive to credit easing, such as mobile homes.S'11es of new automobiles in 1967 are expected to be about700,000 units fewer than in 1966. In round figures, salesto households and other groups are estimated at 8.3 millionunits compared with nine million in 1966 and 9.3 million in1965. However, because of a further loss of market shareto foreign cars, sales of domestically-produced cars willdecline by about 750,000 units between 1966 and 1967 orby nearly nine per cent. Such weakness in a market that hasbeen one of the strongest expansionary factors in total con­sumer spending and in the economy in recent years willtend to limit national economic growth in 1967.Reduced sales for the United States automobile industrymay not be a short-term phenomenon limited largely to1967. A pattern somewhat similar to that of the post-1955period may be developing. Following record sales in 1955,prices of new cars rose substantially in subsequent yearsboth in absolute terms and relative to income. This con­tributed to a significant decline in sales of United Statescars and to huge increases in sales of lower-priced foreigncars. The current period differs in a number of ways fromthe earlier one but there are important parallels. The post-1955 pattern may continue now for some years because carprices will be subject to powerful upward pressures thatare largely beyond the discretion of individual firms.Housing is the industry that has been hurt most severely bya restrictive money policy. Additions to the supply of hous­ing are currently less than increases in demand stemmingfrom growth of population, particularly increase in numberof young people of job-seeking and marriageable age. Theavailable supply of vacant housing units is filling rapidly.Housing prices will be driven upwards unless the supply ofresidential units is increased fairly quickly.Although inadequate measures are likely to be attemptedfirst, such as the Administration gesture of making $250million available for mortgages, more effective measures arelikely to follow. A general easing of credit is anticipated dur­ing 1967 which will ultimately raise the rate of construction.However, because credit-easing is expected to be moderatein the first half, a significant upturn in residential construc­tion activity is not expected before late summer. My esti­mate is that total private residential construction expendi­tures in 1967 will be about $24 billion, more than $2 billionbelow the total for 1966. Because of anticipated loosening ofthe credit reins, the fourth quarter 1967 rate is placed atabout $26 billion.Purchases of consumer durable goods other than automo- biles will set new records in the aggregate although the gainswill be considerably smaller than in recent years. Increasesin income will be partly offset by higher living costs, tightcredit, and a lower rate of household formation. Approxi­mately $41 billion will be spent in 1967 on television, furni­ture, household appliances, and other non automotiveconsumer durable goods. This will exceed 1966 expendi­tures by about $1.7 billion, a gain of not quite 4.5 per cent.Spending for nondurable goods and services, includingfood, clothing, television repair, and medical services isexpected to increase at a slightly faster rate than incomebecause of rising prices and somewhat inelastic demand.Personal saving is expected to rise to about 5.4 per centof disposable personal income from the abnormally low rateof five per cent for 1966 suggested by current CommerceDepartment statistics. The gain in saving will reflect slightlyreduced inflationary pressures and retrenchment in certainareas of expenditure, most notably consumer durable goods.As to disposition of saving, shrinking corporate profits anda lessened pace of inflation will result in a shift from equity­type investments such as mutual funds to fixed claims suchas savings deposits.In summary, the economy in 1967 is expected to grow lessin real terms than in any year since the recession of 1960-1961. Monetary restraint applied forcefully, with modestassistance from fiscal policy, is completing the task of check­ing demand in the private sector of the economy-businessand household. In the absence of a major expansion of thewar, delicate and skillful shifts in governmental policy arenow required to smooth transition to a new balance in theeconomy. It is probable that errors in monetary and fiscalpolicy will occur. A year ago fiscal and monetary restraintswere too slow in coming and too weak to be effective beforemajor damage resulted. In 1967, monetary and fiscal re­straints are likely to last too long in too great strength forthe needs of the economy. Slow growth, higher prices, majorstrikes, rapid increase in the number of unemployed, andgreatly varying trends in individual markets are anticipated.In spite of the complexities and strains, GNP in 1967 isexpected to grow about 2.6 per cent in real terms and by5.3 per cent or $39 billion in the higher prices that willprevail.It will go down in the books as a non-vintage year fortheeconomy. D11The Law ReviewCharles BushThe first issue of The University of Chicago Law Reviewappeared in the spring of 1933 and was dedicated to thememory of the then late Ernst Freund. William Allen Quin­lan was the first editor-in-chief, and among the contributorsto Volume One/Number One were William O. Douglas,Robert M. Hutchins, Walter V. Schaefer, and MaldirnSharp. The first issue carried a disclaimer stating: «TheBoard of Editors does not assume collective responsibilityfor any statement in the columns of the Review." The caveatwas dropped two years later under the editorship of third­year student Edward H. Levi, now Provost of the Univer­sity. Other Review members destined to move on to thefaculty were Walter Blum, Harry Kalven, Jr., BernardMeltzer, and W. Robert Ming, Jr.Charles Bush, the author of this article, is a third-yearstudent in the Law School and Managing Editor, Articles, ofthe Law Review.Generations of University of Chicago students havedreamt of a learning environment in which they are on alevel of equality with their teachers. One of the rare posi­tions where this privilege is attained is on the editorial boardof The University of Chicago Law Review.The Law Review's board of editors operates without fac­ulty interference-and also enjoys a self-perpetuating man­darin bureaucracy. Articles and reviews by students andfaculty reside side by side within its pages, and its editorshave responsibility for editing, rewriting, and even rejectingarticles written by their teachers.The Law Review publishes four issues a year, each consist­ing of 250 to 300 pages of articles, comments, and bookreviews. Articles and book reviews are written by facultymembers at the University or elsewhere, judges, practicinglawyers, or any other persons who can make a significantcontribution to legal scholarship. Although articles typicallysuggest ways in which the law might appropriately bechanged, they may be on any law-related subject.Comments are written by students and tend to be shorterand narrower in scope than articles. Chicago's Law Review,unlike many others, requires the completion of a publish­able comment as a prerequisite for election to the editorial12 board. This is the highest hurdle facing an aspiring editor. Astudent may write ten or twelve drafts and have these readby six or eight editors and one or more faculty members be­fore a finished comment emerges. To such a great extent arethey products of collaborative effort that they are publishedanonymously-although authors may obtain bylined reprints,useful for impressing prospective employers.At the beginning of each academic year the thirty LawSchool students who completed the first year with the high­est grade-point averages are invited to become candidatesfor editorship positions. Those who accept are placed onthe masthead as staff members and set to work writing com­ments and discharging other duties, such as "preliming"topics for comments, proof-reading, and, most dreaded,"cite-checking" -the tedious and demanding researching ofevery citation of authority in every piece being prepared forpublication. Staff members who meet their obligations areelected-generally at the end of their second year-as eitherassociate or managing editors. Associate editors oversee staffmembers writing comments, perform a wide variety of ad­ministrative and promotional functions, and occasionallywrite second comments. Managing editors, the highest pan­jandrums of Law Review management, exercise collectiveleadership over the publication's range of operations.At present, the Law Review has six managing editors,including the editor-in-chief, fourteen associate editors, andthirty staff members. None of these persons holds a sinecure.Managing editors and, in particular, staff members find thatLaw Review work may require twenty to forty hours a week-hours for which no academic credit is given. Despite thesedemands, most Law Review personnel manage to maintaintheir grade-point averages.Of course, Chicago's Law Review, like others, is not with­out its critics. Law Review pieces, it has been said, are onsubjects so narrow as to be nonexistent; they have morefootnotes than words; their style is that of a miser's telegram.Although these criticisms contain germs of truth, they slightthe fact that the narrowest pieces are often the ones mostuseful to practicing lawyers, who often find the careful organ­ization of relevant authorities into logical footnotes to bethe most significant contribution. And the same readers havelittle time for rambling verbosity.Yet, even with a tendency toward pedantry, the LawReview plays an important role within the legal world. It isLaw Review managing editors (standing, from left) Frank Zimring, Charles Bush, James Hunter, and (seated) George Felleman, editor-in-chief.frequently cited in judicial opinions-including those of the.United States Supreme Court. It serves more than 1500lawyer-subscribers. And some of its past articles-such asMalcolm Sharp's Promissory Liability (1939); BrainerdCurrie's Change of Venue and the Conflict of Laws (1955) ;Harry Kalven's and Walter Blum's The Art of OpinionResearch: A Lawyer's Appraisal of an Emerging Science(1956); and past comments such as Search and Seizure inthe Supreme Court: Shadows on the Fourth Amendment( 1961 ) -have contributed significantly to the broadening ofthe horizons of the American legal mind.Even more important, however, is its role in furthering theeducation of future lawyers. David Riesman-an alumnus ofthe Harvard Law Review-has written that "there is nothing in any other professional group which remotely resemblesthe law review, this guild of students who, working harderthan their fellows, manage to cooperate sufficiently to meetthe chronic emergency of a periodical." Through writingcomments, Law Review personnel are forced to think care­fully and analytically about significant legal problems, to de­fend their ideas against unrelenting constructive criticism,and to develop clear, concise writing styles. Through read­ing court advance sheets and about-to-be-published pieces,they are made aware of the latest developments in the law.And, through editing and rewriting pieces written by others,they are given an opportunity to hone skills of argumenta­tion, organization, and expression which will serve themthroughout their legal careers. . D13Quadrangle NewsBarnett on China Policy - A. Doak Bar­nett, Professor of Government and ActingDirector of the East Asian Institute atColumbia University, spoke on Sino­American relations on October 31, as guestof The University of Chicago Center forPolicy Study. Barnett was born in Chinaand lived there for the first 15 years of hislife. He returned there during the N ation­alist-Comrnunist war as a correspondentfor the Chicago Daily News, and he is nQWone of the United States' foremost expertson Far Eastern affairs. He is the author ofseveral books on China, the Far East, andgovernment policy, and has held a numberQf governmental positions,In his talk Barnett called for a "changein posture and policy" of the United Statestoward China. He suggested that our tradeembargo be lifted and that a nonstrategicgoods trade program similar to' that nQW ineffect between the United States and Rus­sia be implemented. He also suggested theacknowledgement of the Communist re­gime as the legitimate government of themainland, the admission of China to' theUnited Nations, and a continued U.S.commitment to' defend vulnerable Asiannations against China while at the sametime steadily reducing QUr military posi­tion in Asia wherever possible."We need to' change our policy nQW toinfluence Chinese policy in the future,"Barnett said. He urged that the govern­ment stress hope for an eventual and mu­tually satisfactory co-existence with China.He said Communist China is nQW in atransitional phase, preparing for the take­over of a new generation of leaders. Onone side of the present internal struggleare the Maoists, who favor a militant for­eign policy and the economic developmentof the country via mass mobilization Qfthe labor force. Opposing them are theyounger "moderates," who urge a prag­matic foreign policy and the use of mate­rial incentives for domestic modernization."My own optimistic hunch is that Maoismis obsolete," he said, and that the moder­ates will win out. Our foreign policy shouldgive encouragement to' the moderates, Bar­nett said.14 75th Anniversary Compositions - .EightAmerican CQmposers have been commis­sioned to' write works to' honor The Uni­versity of Chicago's 75th Anniversaryyear. The compositions, some of whichhave been completed, will be performedduring the 1966-67 concert season at theUniversity.Richard Wernick's Aevia received itsfirst performance at a concert by the Uni­versity Symphony Orchestra on Decem­ber 3. Wernick is an Assistant Professorof Music and conductor of the Orchestra.Easley Blackwood and Ralph Shapey,both Associate Professors of the Depart­ment of Music, also have received com­missions. Shapey has written a Partita forViolin and 13 Players; and Blackwood'swork will be for soprano and chambergroup.The Fromm Music Foundation has CQm­missioned works from Mario Davidovsky,of the Columbia-Princeton Studio forElectronic Music, and from George Roch- berg, of the University of Pennsylvania.Davidovsky has written a non-electronicpiece, entitled Inflexions for 14 Players,and Rochberg has finished Music for theMagic Theatre, a piece for 15 players.These four works will be presented bythe University's Contemporary ChamberPlayers, conducted by Ralph Shapey, theGroup's musical director, at a public con­cert in Mandel Hall on Tuesday, January24, at 8:30 PM.The Women's Board of the Universityhas provided funds for the RockefellerChapel Choir to' commission Nativity byVirgil Thomson. This work will be per­formed in Rockefeller Memorial Chapelon May 7 at 3: 30 PM. The University hasalso commissioned Donald Martino ofYale University and George Crumb of theUniversity of Pennsylvania to write or­chestral works for performance by theChicago Symphony Orchestra during itsspring programs on The University ofChicago campus in 1967 and 1968.Five Nobel Laureates: Prior to their departure for Stockholm to receive their Nobel prizes,Dr. Huggins and Prof. Mulliken were guests of honor at a special Citizens Board banquet,Dec. 1. Three other Nobel laureates attending made possible the unusually distinguished groupin the photograph above. From left, with their prizes and years received, are: Sir John Eccles,physiology and medicine, 1963; Dr. Charles B. Huggins, physiology and medicine, 1966;President George W. Beadle, physiology and medicine, 1958; Robert S. Mulliken, chemistry,1966; Dr. Edward A. Daisy, physiology and medicine, 1943. Sir John Eccles recently becameassociated with the University as professorial lecturer in the Department of Physiology.Citizens Board Chairman - Robert E.Brooker, Chairman of the Board of Mont­gomery Ward & Company, has been ap­pointed Chairman of the Citizens Boardof The University of Chicago. He suc­ceeds Paul W. Goodrich, President ofChicago Title and Trust Company, whohad been Chairman since December 1964.In announcing the appointment, FairfaxM. Cone, Chairman of the Board ofTrustees, said, "Mr. Brooker typifies thedistinction, the spirit of public concern,and the dedicatiori to the University whichcharacterize the membership of the Citi­zens Board."Mr. Brooker has been active in Chicagocivic affairs for many years. He is a direc­tor of the Stein Roe and Farnham Funds,a member of the Board of Managers ofthe YMCA of Metropolitan Chicago, anda trustee of the Illinois Children's Homeand Aid Society, Chicago Wesley Memo­rial Hospital, Illinois Institute of Technol­ogy, George Williams College, and theUniversity of Southern California. He wasappointed to the University Citizens Boardin 1955 and to the Council of the Univer­sity's Graduate School of Business in1965. He also is a member of the VisitingCommittees on the Social Sciences and onthe Divinity School.The Citizens Board was organized in1941, during the celebration of the Uni­versity's 50th Aninversary, by a group ofpublic-spirited and distinguished citizens inthe Chicago community interested in theprogress of the University.Weather Satellites-Commercial air travelthrough storm areas may be made safer inthe future because of meteorological re­search now being conducted at The Uni­versity of Chicago. For the past four yearsTetsuya Fujita, Professor in the Depart­ment of Geophysical Sciences, has beendirecting a continuous program of evalu­ation of meteorological satellite data. Hisemphasis has been on the interpretation ofinformation from satellite photographs ofthe earth and its cloud formations, someof which are storms. The work is being financed by grants from the NationalAeronautics and Space Administration(NASA) and the U.S. Weather Bureau'sNational Meteorological Satellite Center.The program provides NASA with infor­mation to guide the future development ofweather satellites and to help formulatemethods of interpretation of the picturesand data sent back from satellites.The weather satellite's greatest advan­tage is its ability to see and report theweather in a particular location at a cer­tain moment. "The satellite can be usedvery efficiently to detect what is going onnow in considerable detail better than anyother method," Professor Fujita said. Inthe case of large storms, such as hurri­canes, it helps re-routing of air traffic.However, at present it is still necessary foran airplane to fly into a hurricane to de­termine the wind speed. "We are nowworking on methods of determining windspeed by satellite observation that we hopewill reduce this necessary but dangerouseffort," he said. He added that the UnitedStates soon hopes to have aloft a synchro­nous orbit satellite which will remain sta­tionary over the equator in the PacificOcean. 'This satellite will give us continu­ing photographic coverage of the Pacificweather systems as they exist at almostany given moment, permitting better fore­casting for air travel," Fujita said.Congressional Reform-U.S. Representa­tive Morris K. Udall, Democrat of Ari­zona, discussed recent efforts to reformand reorganize Congress at a lecture­seminar on November 21. He was theguest of The University of Chicago Centerfor Policy Study. Udall is a leading advo­cate of Congressional and election re­forms, and has sponsored a bill- whichwould increase the terms of representa­tives from two to four years. He also hasintroduced an election reform bill whichwould provide adequate regulation of elec­tion financing and procedure. Provisionsof this bill would, in part, limit to $5,000the campaign contribution which could bemade by an individual in an effort to electa candidate for Federal office; prohibit contributions from companies having con­tracts with the Federal office; prohibitcontributions from companies having con­tracts with the Federal Government; re­quire each member of Congress to providean annual list of all compensation receivedfor services not given in his capacity as amember of Congress; provide tax deduc­tions for citizens who make campaign con­tributions of up to $1,000; and forbid anynational political party to hold a presiden­tial and vice-presidential candidate nomi­nating convention prior to September 1 ofan election year. Udall said this bill isnecessary to "reduce the enormous wasteof our political campaigns, to broaden thebase of campaign finances, and to removethe cloud of suspicion that hangs over allcandidates and elected officials throughlack of uniform reporting and conflict ofinterest statutes."Cancer Research-High-purity chromiumwire, made radioactive in an atomic pile,has been successfully used in a new experi­mental approach to cancer treatment at theArgonne Cancer Research Hospital, whichis operated by the University for the UnitedStates Atomic Energy Commission. Dr.Melvin. Griem, Associate Professor of Ra­diology, has used the treatment on elevenpatients in the past six years in an experi­mental effort to retard or destroy cancer­ous growths by radiation. The hair-finewire is cut into pieces 3/16 of an inch longand irradiated to produce the isotopechromium-51. Several inches of the wireare then implanted in the patient, using aspecial injection gun designed especiallyfor that purpose. Chromium wire is .usedbecause its half-life (the time needed forits radiation level to drop by half) is 27days-enough to insure an effective dose ofradiation, but not so long that the metalhas to be removed to prevent an overdose.The experiments have proved promisingenough to warrant further tests, Dr. Griemreported. In one case, six years ago, a pa­tient with a life expectancy of six monthswas treated with the irradiated chromiumwire. Today he is leading a normal life.Other cases are still being evaluated ..15Faculty and StaffJoseph J. Ceithaml, Professor of Bio­chemistry and Dean of Students in theDivision of the Biological Sciences, hasbeen elected national chairman of TheGroup on Student Affairs of the Associa­tion of American Medical Colleges.Charles F. Claassen, MBA'65, has beenappointed an Assistant Superintendent atThe University of Chicago Hospitals andClinics. Claassen joined the Hospitals andClinics' staff in July, 1965. He is responsi­ble for the Outpatient Department, theEmergency Room services, and the coordi­nation of several professional service de­partments, including the Blood Bank, Ra­diology, Anesthesiology, Inhalation Ther­apy, and Medical Records. He also is re­sponsible for the coordination and admin­istration of the Employees' Health Service.Emmett Dedmon, '39, Trustee of the Uni­versity and editor of the Chicago Sun­Times, has been named Chairman of theVisiting Committee on the College. TheCommittee serves as an advisory board tothe College, and assists in its programs, anddevelopment. 'Dr. Alfred P. Fishman, a leading author­ity on heart and lung diseases, has beenappointed Professor of Medicine. He wassimultaneously appointed Director of theCardiovascular Diseases in the Depart­ment of Medicine at the Michael ReeseHospital and Medical Center, Chicago.The two appointments become effective onJuly 1, 1967. Dr. Fishman is presently amember of the Columbia/PresbyterianMedical Center in New York City, wherehe is Director of the CardiorespiratoryLaboratory. He also is President of theNew York Heart Association. Dr. Fish­man is the author or co-author of 89 scien­tific papers, a consultant to the White16 House Office of Science and Technology,and a member of the board of directorsof the American Heart Association.Dr. David Moss Gross, MD'64, a resi­dent in urology at Billings Hospital and aprofessionally-trained concert pianist, gavea recital of works by Beethoven, Brahms,and Bach on November 11. He studiedwith Rudolf Serkin and has performed inconcerts at Marlboro, Serkin's summercamp in Vermont. He began his medicalstudies after turning down an invitation totour for a year with cellist Leonard Rose.Dr. Gross' recital was enthusiastically ap­plauded by a capacity crowd in the LawSchool Auditorium.Dr. Charles B. Huggins, the William B.Ogden Distinguished Service Professor ofSurgery and Director of the Ben MayLaboratory for Cancer Research, has beenawarded a Gairdner Annual Award formedical research by the Gairdner Founda­tion of Toronto, Canada. Huggins washonored with the Canadian award, some­times called "Canada's Nobel Prize," forhis work in hormone treatment of prostatecancer. The same research also won forhim the 1966 Nobel Prize in medicine.The prize, which carries a $5,000 mone­tary award, was presented to Huggins byOntario Premier John Robarts at a formaldinner in Toronto on November 18.N aphtali H. Knox has been appointedAssistant Vice President for Physical Plan­ning at the University. He is responsiblefor the coordination of planning for thecurrent physical expansion program of theUniversity and will also recommend longrange plans for the campus. Mr. Knoxserved with the Air Force Academy Con­struction Agency from 1957 to 1959 andwas a city and regional planner in SanFrancisco from 1960 to 1963. He wasuniversity and community planner for thepast three years at the University of Cali­fornia.Dr. Albert B. Lorincz, an authority onmetabolic aspects of malignancy and re­productive physiology, has been appointedProfessor of Obstetrics and Gynecology.He had been professor and chairman ofthe Department of Obstetrics and Gyne- cology at the Creighton University Schoolof Medicine, Omaha, Neb.Arthur Mann, a noted scholar of Amer­ican reform politics, has been appointedProfessor of American History. Mr. Mannis the author of several books dealing withaspects of American urban history, liberal­ism, social reform, religion, and immigra­tion. He had been Professor of History atSmith College since 1963.Hans J. Morgenthau, the Albert A.Michelson Distinguished Service Professorin the Departments of Political Science andHistory and the Director of the Center forthe Study of American Foreign and Mili­tary Policy, has received the Jane AddamsPeace Award for 1966. The award waspresented at the ninth annual dinner of theChicago Committee for a SANE NuclearPolicy on November 12.Dr. Frank W. Newell, Professor of Sur­gery and Chief of the Section of Ophthal­mology at the University Hospitals andClinics, has been named recipient of the1966 Stritch Award Medal, given by Loy­ola University in Chicago.Elder J. Olson, Professor of English anda recent recipient of the Quantrell Awardfor Excellence in Undergraduate Teach­ing, has been appointed a RockefellerFoundation Professor at the Universityof the Philippines for the period October1966 through September 1967.A. Leo Oppenheim, Professor of Assyri­ology in the Oriental Institute, has beenawarded the Gordon J. Laing Prize by theUniversity Board of Publications for hisAncient Mesopotamia: Portrait of a DeadCivilization. The Prize goes to a memberof The_ University of Chicago facultywhose hook, published during the twopreceding calendar years, has lent thegreatest distinction to The University ofChicago Press- list.Dr. Robert G. Page, Associate Professorof Medicine and Associate Dean of theDivision of the Biological Sciences, re­turned in December from a five-week fact­finding tour of Asian medical schools.Financial support for the tour came fromthe Rockefeller Foundation. He visitedmedical schools in Beirut, Lebanon; Jala-labad, Afghanistan; Bangkok, Thailand;Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia; Honolulu,Hawaii; and several other locations. Aspart of the tour Dr. Page attended theThird World Conference on Medical Edu­cation in New Delhi, India, November20-25.Dr. Raymond D. A. Peterson has beennamed Director of Research at the LaRabida/University of Chicago Instituteand Associate Professor in the Depart­ment of Pediatrics. He is an authority onimmunology, the study of the body's re­action to foreign ·substances. Dr. Petersonreceived his MD from the University ofMinnesota, and he has served as a medicalofficer with the U.S. Army. Since 1963 hehas been Assistant Professor of Pediatricsat the University of Minnesota and anEstablished Investigator of the AmericanHeart Association.Mary Petrie, MBA'56, has been electedan Assistant Treasurer of the University.Miss Petrie has served in the Office of theTreasurer since 1942 and in recent yearshas been the Senior Security Analyst.Robert P. Schwab, presently CurriculumDirector at the University School, ShakerHeights, 0., has been appointed Principalof the Middle School of The University ofChicago Laboratory Schools.Herman L. Sinaiko, '47, PhD'61, Asso­ciate Professor of College Humanities, wasone of 33 "super-profs" listed in the Sep­tember issue of Esquire magazine. Theywere selected by student editors as thenation's best college teachers.Robert E. Streeter, Professor of English,and Dean of the Division of the Humani­ties, spoke to Chicago area high schoolstudents on "Alexis de Tocqueville MeetsNatty Bumpo: The Quest for AmericanIdentity" on Saturday, October 15. Hespoke at the first of three Saturday Semi­nars in the Humanities, designed for stu­dents chosen by their high school teachersfor proficiency in the humanities. Approxi­mately 300 students attended the lecture.Frank H. Woods, University Trustee anda Chicago civic and cultural leader, hasbeen named President of the Board ofTrustees of the Art Institute of Chicago. 5partshartsA II-A merican HildehrandCross Country-The varsity cross countryteam completed its 1966 season with a7-won, 4-10st record, and an All-Americanin its ranks. Peter H. Hildebrand, a seniorfrom Chicago, was named to the CollegeDivision 1966 All-American Cross Coun­try Team after placing among the top 15runners at the NCAA College DivisionChampionships at Wheaton, Illinois, onNovember 12. Throughout the seasonHildebrand has been the Maroons' bestrunner and a constant winner. His father,Roger H. Hildebrand, is a Professor inthe Department of Physics and director ofthe Enrico Fermi Institute for NuclearStudies.On October 18 the Maroon team wasdefeated 34-22 at Valparaiso, Ind., despiteHildebrand's individual win with a recordtime of 20:22.0 over the four-mile course.Chicago defeated Wabash College atCrawfordsville, Ind., on October 22 by ascore of 25-33, with Hildebrand andCharles. Stanberry finishing first and sec­ond. In a triangular meet in WashingtonPark on October 29 Chicago beat the Uni­versity of Wisconsin / Milwaukee 21-36and Marquette University 24-31, but lostto the Bradley "Braves" 30-25. The Ma­roon team posted two records in this meet. A five-man aggregate team record of106: 31.7 was set, and Hildebrand set anindividual varsity four-mile record overthe course with a clocking of 20: 11.7.Stanberry's time was 20:53.0 and RobertLaRoque's was 21: 22.0.The varsity squad completed its dualmeet season with a 19-38 win over theUniversity of Illinois/Chicago Circle atWashington Park on November 5. Hilde­brand, Richard Skaloud, Steven Kojola,LaRoque, and Theodore Terpstra finished1, 2, 4, 5, and 7. At the NCAA CollegeDivision .Championships at Wheaton (Ill.)College on November 12 the Maroonsfinished 19th in a field of 40 teams. Hilde­brand's 12th place qualified him for theNCAA University Division Champion­ships in Lawrence, Kansas, on November21. At that meet Hildebrand finished 75thin a field of 199 of the nation's top col­legiate cross country speedsters.The longest race of the season, the Na­tional A.A.U. Junior Cross CountryChampionships, was held in WashingtonPark on November 19 under the sponsor­ship of the University of Chicago TrackClub. Thirteen members of the varsitycross country team competed in the10,000 meter event. Stanberry turned in17the best time for the Maroons, 32: 50.0for the 61;4 mile course, to finish 20th in afield of 87. Six Chicago men representedthe University in the Central AAU 5,000meter Cross Country Championships atRiis Park, Chicago, on Thanksgiving Day,November 24. Medals were awarded toLaRoque, Robert Chaffee, and Skaloudfor their 19th, 21st, and 25th places. Inthe last cross country action of the seasonHildebrand traveled to Los Angeles withthe Track Club on November 26 for the10,000 meter Cross Country Chamnion­ships of the United States. The UCTCteam placed third out of 18. Hildebrandfinished third on the UCTC team, and was29th individually of 165 competitors.Soccer-Chicago lost to Roosevelt Univer­sity 3-2 on Stagg Field, October 19. Roose­velt's winning tally came in the last 12seconds of play. John Ryan and MichaelNemeroff scored the goals for Chicago.Notre Dame beat the Maroons 5-1 onOctober 22. Ryan scored the lone goal inthe first quarter. On October 26 Chicagowas shut out by Wheaton College 6-0.The Maroon squad defeated PrincipiaCollege 3-2 on October 29. Mark Mane­witz and Knight Coolidge scored in thefirst quarter, and Nemeroff booted thewinning goal in the fourth quarter.Lake Forest College came to a snow­covered Stagg Field on November 2 anddefeated the Maroons 6-1, scoring fourgoals in the first 12 minutes. Chicago'ssingle tally was made by Sean Cardenas inthe first quarter. On November 6 the Ma­roons lost to the Northwestern Wildcats3-2 in Evanston. Manewitz scored bothgoals. Injuries in the Northwestern con­test weakened the Maroons, who wereshut out 4-0 by Northern Illinois Univer­sity on November 9. Chicago lost to BallState University on Stagg Field, Novem­ber 12, by an identical 4-0 score. OnNovember 19 the Maroons lost the sea­son's closing game to Illinois 6-2 at Cham­paign. Chicago's two goals were scored inthe fourth period by Nemeroff and Mane­witz. The season's record was 2 wins and9 losses.18 SwimmingJan. 12: UC vs Elgin College, Bart­lett Gym, 3: 30 PM.Jan. 20: UC vs Wisconsin State Col­lege/Plattville, Bartlett Gym, 3: 30 PM.Jan. 27: UC vs George WilliamsCollege, at Downers Grove, IlL, 4: 00PM.Feb. 3: UC vs Illinois Wesleyan Uni­versity, at Bloomington, 111., 3: 30 PM.Feb. 10: UC vs Beloit College, Bart­lett Gym, 3: 30 PM.SPORTS CALENDARFencingJan. 14: UC vs Vanderbilt and Uni­versity of Illinois/ Chicago Circle, atChicago Circle.Jan. 20: UC Frosh vs University ofIllinois/ Chicago Circle, Bartlett Gym.Jan. 28: UC vs Wayne State andCleveland State, at Detroit.Feb. 4: UC vs University of Illinoisand Michigan State, at East Lansing.Feb. 11: UC vs Notre Dame, Uni­versity of Detroit, and Case Tech., atDetroit.Indoor TrackJan. 14: Invitational Relays, Varsityand UCTC, Field House, 1 : 00 PM.Jan. 20: UC Varsity vs DePaul andMcMaster Universities, Field House,7:30 PM.Jan. 21: 13th Annual ChicagolandOpen Meet, Field House, 1: 00 PM.Jan. 28: UC Varsity vs Northwest­ern and Wayne State Universities, FieldHouse, 1: 00 PM.Feb. 4: UC Varsity vs North CentralCollege, Field House, 1: 00 PM. UCTCvs Iowa, Field House, 3: 30 PM.Feb. 9: UC "B" team vs Junior Col­leges, Field House, 4: 00 PM.Feb. 11: Varsity, UCTC, and OpenMeet, Field House, 1: 00 PM.BasketballJan. 13: UC vs Illinois College, atJacksonville, Ill.Jan. 14: UC vs MacMurray College,at Jacksonville, Ill.Jan. 21: UC vs Kalamazoo College,at Kalamazoo, Mich.Jan. 28: UC vs Tulane University,Field House, 8: 00 PM.Jan. 31: UC vs Detroit Institute ofTechnology, Field House, 4: 00 PM.Feb. 4: UC vs Grinnell College,Field House, 8: 00 PM.Feb. 11: UC vs Illinois College,Field House, 8: 00 PM.GymnasticsJan. 14: UC vs Illinois State Univer­sity, at Normal, Ill.Jan. 21: UC vs West Virginia Uni­versity, Bartlett Gym.Jan. 28: UC vs Wheaton College, atWheaton, Ill.Feb. 3: UC vs Minnesota Universityand Northern Illinois University, Bart­lett Gym.Feb. 4: UC vs Eastern Illinois Uni­versity and Eastern Michigan Univer­sity, at Charleston, Ill.Feb. 11: UC vs University of Wis­. consin, at Madison.WrestlingJan. 14: UC vs Lake Forest, BartlettGym, 1: 30 PM.Jan. 17: UC vs University of Illinois/Chi. Circle, Bartlett Gym, 4: 30 PM.Jan. 21: UC vs Knox College, atGalesburg, Ill., 2: 00 PM.Jan. 28: UC vs Concordia TeachersCollege, at River Forest, Ill., 3: 00 PM.Feb. 4: UC vs Valparaiso, BartlettGym, 1: 30 PM.Feb. 11: UC vs St. Joseph's College,at Collegeville, Ind., 4: 00 PM.mUOTESMarxism Outdistanced"In the developed countries of theworld, such as the United States and theUSSR, the newspaper reader finds manycurrent events interpreted in terms of aconflict of ideologies - free enterpriseversus communism. In the underdevelopedcountries, such as Indonesia, essentiaIlythe same events are presented as illustrat­ing a quite different conflict - subjectpeoples versus their recent or presentimperial masters. [I believe] that bothantagonisms are- today superficial andoutmoded. They were congruent with thesocial reality of the nineteenth century,came to their mature literary expressionin the early twentieth century, and by the1950's . were leading that omnipresentghostly existence to which such ideologiesare condemned when history has out­distanced them ..."To cross simultaneously the four co­inciding lines of income, race, culture, andgeography which separate the nationaIlypoor from the middle classes of the worldis today's problem." +Nathan Keytit z; Pro­fessor of Sociology, in «Privilege andPoverty: Two Worlds on One Planet," anarticle in the March, 1966, issue of theBulletin of the Atomic Scientists.History and the CitizenThe historian plays a waiting game.But the citizen cannot wait. The world willnot let him be patient. Today he must acton the meaning of a1i the words uttered bythe Winthrops and Franklins and Washing­tons and Jeffersons, He must draw themoral from what they said-long before thehistorian is ready with an unambiguous,professionally satisfying account of whatthey reaIly meant. The citizen must votetoday, even though he might know moreabout the subject after a decade. The goodhistorian warns against a too-simple moral,a too-clear answer to any question. Thecitizen's duty is to think and feel and actpromptly. The historian who refuses todraw conclusions-until more evidence isin, or because we can never know-is ful­filling his vocation. The citizen who post- pones (until historians have agreed on thetrue original meaning of the MonroeDoctrine) taking a position on his govern­ment's policies in Cuba or in the Domini­can Republic is evading his duty. Thereforehe must draw the best. conclusions he canfrom the incomplete store and the inchoatetradition, and hope that the fuller, truerstory will not disprove him." --Daniel J.Boorstin, the Preston and Sterling MortonProfessor of History, in his Introduction toAn American Primer (UC Press), editedb y Mr. Boorstin.Law vs Life"Law is not a positive good; it is anecessary evil .... we may judge theexcellence of our society not by how muchlaw we have but by how little ...."Law is our attempt to control thechaotic and exuberant spontaneity of life.Law is formal, rigid, analytical, rational.Law is, as we say, a discipline. Life is un­disciplined, irrational, and forever over­flowing the banks and dikes we have builtto contain it. The study of law, I teIl mystudents, tends to corrupt what is humanin us; the ideal lawyer would have lefthis humanity quite behind. We shaIl bewise to stop well short of that bleak goal."-Grant Gilmore, Professor of Law, in"Law, History, and Anarchy," an addressto the annual banquet of The Universityof Chicago Law Review, May 5, 1966.Banning the Bomb and China's Fears"A major motive of the two superpowersin desiring to halt proliferation stemsfrom the belief that deliberate nuclearwar is unlikely and that accidental nuclearwar is likely and may be touched off ina variety of ways, which would be morelikely if nuclear weapons came into thepossession of a number of countries. How­ever, it has been suggested that theChinese image of the danger of nuclearwar is a very different one. The Chinesefocus on the possibility of a deliberateAmerican nuclear attack on China. Suchattack would not be rendered any morelikely by the spread of nuclear weapons and, in fact, in a world in which there area number of nuclear powers, the UnitedStates might be less willing to beginnuclear war against one of them. Hence,insofar as the Chinese connect their imageof nuclear war with their attitude towardnuclear proliferation, they would be proneto believe that proliferation, rather thanimposing any dangers, might in fact makea marginal contribution to deterring anAmerican attack on China or on othercountries, ultimately leading to an attackon China."-Morton H. Halperin, Assist­ant Professor of Government, HarvardUniversity, in China and Nuclear Pro­liferation (The University of Chicago,1966), a monograph forming the basis fora Center for Policy Study seminar inspring, 1966.Small Colleges vs the Spirit of Bigness"Contrary to some opinions, I believethat private liberal arts coIleges play atremendously important role in Americanhigher education-and that they will andshould continue to do so in the future inan even more decisive way. They producemore than their pro rata share of leadersin education and other walks of life. Ihave an hypothesis that says why:"At [many of the nation's great institu­tions] the spirit is one of bigness. Anindividual teacher-scholar tends to besaturated - or even oversaturated - withstimuli from faculty colleagues, visitinglecturers, postdoctoral feIlows, and gradu­ate students. Hence he has relatively littletime or need for the inteIlectual compan­ionship of undergraduates, even when­as at Chicago-classes are small ..."I n the classical liberal arts college thisis much less likely to be the case. Therethe dedicated teacher is more likely toshare his enthusiasm with his students,and in a far larger measure. I know of nomore effective encouragement to truescholarship on the part of students."­President George W. Beadle, speaking atthe inauguration of Paul W. Cook, Jr.,PhD'52, as President of Wabash College,December 3, 1966.19ProfilesEric W. Cochrane, Jr."As a teacher, Mr. Cochrane has effec­tively translated scholarly rigor, com­mitment to clarity of thought .and ofexpression, and a passion for interpretingthe nature of historical method and ex­perience into terms which make hisstudents not simply learners but partici­pants." Thus Eric Cochrane, Professor ofHistory, was cited when he received one ofthe 1965 Quantrell Awards for excellencein Undergraduate Teaching.Cochrane is more modest: "At one timea student taped one of my classes withoutmy knowledge and afterward offered toplay it back for me. He did. After two20 minutes I was so horrified that I madehim turn it off."Much of what I do in class has beenpatterned on a solid, worked-out traditionof teaching here at Chicago, rather thanon innovation. However, I seldom paymuch attention to students who do notwant to' participate or who do not particu­larly care. I spend a good deal of timewith the students who do care, and I amperfectly willing to give them any kindof help they want. Another thing I do­particularly in a course like WesternCivilization, where content is not nearlyas important as method and the way of reasoning-is to skip a subject and forgetabout it if an adequate answer does notemerge from a discussion. I never attemptto impose or suggest what I think is theright solution." The situation is differentin graduate courses, Cochrane says, wherestudents need to know specific opinions ofspecialists on the subject under discussion."The teaching experience which I enjoymost is that with undergraduates in theirlast two years, when the course work isvoluntary. When they come to one of mycourses they generally know me alreadyand a working entente exists among us."Another thing I do is make sure thatstudents write in a style which I feel isacceptable. I am convinced that historyneed not be written unless it has literaryquality. If it does not have literary quality,it will not be read, or those who read itwill do so with considerable pain anddispleasure. So I have a bad reputationfor requiring not one paper, but a papercompletely revised on the basis of mycriticisms, and revised again if necessary."Cochrane was born May 13, 1928, 'inOakland, California. He received his ABin 1949, his AM in 1951, and his PhD in1954, all from Yale University. He studiedin Italy from 1951 to 1953 on FulbrightScholarships and then taught briefly atStanford University. He was drafted intothe Army in 1954, where his knowledge ofItalian led him to a clerical position atNATO headquarters near Paris. Whilethere, his wife, Lydia, earned a degree atthe Alliance Francaise.Following his military service, he cameto Chicago as an Instructor in 1957 andwas named an assistant professor thefollowing year. In 1961 he became anassociate professor in the Department ofHistory and the College. He was appointedto a full professorship in 1966. Mrs. Coch­rane teaches French at the University HighSchool. They have two children, John, 8,and Nicholas, 7, and the family lives at5220 S. Greenwood Ave., near theUniversity.Cochrane "hates" driving automobilesand is frequently seen bicycling aboutthe cornrnunity - even in winter - withbooks, tennis shoes, and racket. He hasone pet dislike about the University-"thepaucity of squash courts.""I once thought that I probably shouldteach at a small, rural college, where lifewould be very quiet and very still, and Ihad certain misgivings about coming here.But I found Chicago quite different fromwhat I had expected it to be." Cochranelists several advantages to life at theUniversity: a surrounding communitywhich is both academic and non-academic,yet offering the full advantages of both;"bright and energetic students" who makethe teaching experience "particularly at­tractive;" and "the availability of books,"particularly in his field, the Italian Renais­sance. "We have two of the most outstand­ing libraries of Renaissance material inthe whole world, and there are few placeswhere you can work as well as you canat Chicago. The University Library andthe Newberry Library [of which he is atrustee] are in very close proximity. Fordetailed research I can go abroad, andthat's another advantage. The Universityschedule is such that I can teach con­tinually all year 'round, and then spenda few quarters abroad every three or fouryears."Cochrane is a corresponding memberof the Societa Colombaria in Florenceand the Accademia Etrusca in Cortona."These two academies were founded in the18th century. When in Italy, I go to theirmeetings. They still have a very nicechocolate hour, which is a purely 18thcentury tradition." His book, Traditionand Enlightenment in the Tuscan Acad­emies (UC Press, 1961), is a study ofsimilar academies in Tuscany."The most important reason for goingto Italy, outside of my research, is to comeinto contact with my friends in the Italianacademic world. They furnish me withUp-to-date information on what they'redoing and what recently has been dis­covered - information which otherwisewould arrive here very late or might becompletely inaccessible. Also, I find theItalian academic world-and a completechange of environment-very stimulating." Beverly Simek Wendt"The next twenty-five years will be inter­esting and fun to live in," says BeverlyWendt, whose past years have been markedby unflagging activity for better educa­tional facilities and for more volunteerwork on the part of college-educatedwomen. Since arriving in Pittsburgh in1951 she has been one of that city's mosteager and outspoken advocates of bothcauses.In her home community of Edgewood, aPittsburgh suburb, Mrs. Wendt has workedfor the Historical Society, the Civic Club,the P.T.A., and the Citizens for ExcellentSchools Committee and has been active inAllegheny County United Fund activities.She is a member of the Borough SchoolBoard, and she has served in several capa­cities on the Pennsylvania School BoardsAssociation.A native of Illinois, Mrs. Wendt receivedher AB from the University in 1948. "Myexperience at Chicago was an intellectualand cultural baptism," she says. She begangraduate work at Chicago, then trans­ferred to the University of Illinois, whereshe received an AM in English literaturein 1951. While at Illinois she marriedRichard E. Wendt, Jr., a member of theelectrical engineering faculty. When theyarrived in Pittsburgh, Mrs. Wendt felt atfirst very much like a "displaced person, awould-be teacher deterred from the profes­sion by dissent from the prevailing philos­ophy and methods of teaching." She quick- ly set to work on the first of many projectsdirected toward "furthering educationalopportunities for all children in theirhomes, communities, and public schools."She believes lack of communication be­tween experts in various fields and betweensuch experts and the general public is oneof the greatest blocks to community actionand social reform. "Americans are readyfor a new sort of leadership by individualsof broad educational and social experience,persons able to discern motives, communi­cate understanding, translate language anddiverse thinking processes, and contributeto creative solutions." The persons she be­lieves should fill this role are the college­educated wives and mothers of the UnitedStates. "College only prepares us for theprocess of continuing education whichshould go on throughout our lives," shesays.Approximately 850 women with similarbeliefs support The College Club of Pitts­burgh, an organization working for theadvancement of education, literature, sci­ence, art, and social service in the greaterPittsburgh area. Mrs. Wendt, a member ofthe Club's board of directors, writes pub­licity releases on activities and programs.She supplies "ideas, personalities and copyon a variety of subjects to Pittsburgh's verycooperative television and newspaper wom­en's staff members, in an effort to influenceand encourage all women within range ofthese media."With two young sons - Buddy, 12, andWillie, 9-a Siamese cat, and a large Vic­torian house to care for, much of BeverlyWendt's volunteer work is done while din­ner is in the oven or after the children areasleep. Her hobby is gardening the rockyhillside around her home, and occasion­ally she speaks on horticulture to localgarden clubs.Mrs. Wendt's observations on her workwith an inter-racial church group charac­terize her approach to community service:"We hope to enable others to unlock theirown leadership potential and realize suc­cess. In surprising numbers, people arewilling to become capably involved in so­cial reform once they learn why and how."21Club NewsPhiladelphiaAlumni and their guests attended a din­ner meeting at The Alpha Club on De­cember 6. Benson Ginsburg, the WilliamRainey Harper Professor of Biology inthe College and Professor in the Divisionof the Biological Sciences, spoke on "Factand Fancy in Animal Behavior."OmahaGeorge J. Stigler, the Charles R. Wal­green Distinguished Service Professor ofAmerican Institutions in the Departmentof Economics and the Graduate School ofBusiness, spoke to alumni at a dinnermeeting o� November 30. Mr. Stigler'stopic was' Advice to Reformers."PhoenixGeorge R. Hughes, Oriental InstituteProfessor of Egyptology, introduced andcommented on the award-winning film"The Egyptologists" at a reception in theAuditorium of the Phoenix Public Li­brary on December 1.DenverRobert E. Streeter, Professor in the De­partment of English and Dean of the Divi­sion of the Humanities, was guest of honorat a dinner meeting at the ConventionCenter in Writers' Manor on November21. Dean Streeter spoke on "The Chang­ing Face of Culture."New OrleansJames E. Miller, Jr., Professor in theDepartment of English and Chairman ofthe University's Council on the Arts,joined New Orleans alumni at a dinnermeeting at the University Center of Tu­lane University on December 2. Mr.Miller spoke on "The Quest Absurd: TheNew American Novel."DetroitAlumni and their guests attended a din­ner meeting at the McGregor ConferenceCenter, Wayne State University, on No­vember 29. Guest of honor was George P.Shultz, Dean of the Graduate School ofBusiness and Professor of Industrial Re­lations, who spoke on "Guidelines, In­formal Controls. and the Marketplace."22 Kansas CityDr. John F. Mullan, Professor in theDepartment of Surgery, spoke on "Neuro­surgery and The University of Chicago"at a dinner meeting at the DowntownerMotor Inn on November 22.HoustonWayne C. Booth, the George M. PullmanProfessor of English and Dean of theCollege, was guest of honor at a receptionat the home of Mr. and Mrs. MauriceKrinsky on November 25. He spoke on"What Is Going On In The College?"CincinnatiPeter H. Rossi, Professor of Sociologyand Director of the National OpinionResearch Center, spoke on "Polls andPolitics" at an evening reception at TheUniversity Club on November 21.PittsburghAlumni and their guests attended abrunch at Stouffer's Restaurant on Sun­day, November 20. George R. Hughes,Oriental Institute Professor of Egyptol­ogy, was guest of honor. He introducedand commented on the film "The Egyp­tologists," and later led a tour of theEgyptian Exhibit at the Carnegie Museum.TulsaJulian R. Goldsmith, Professor andChairman of the Department of the Geo­physical Sciences and Associate Dean ofthe Division of the Physical Sciences, wasguest speaker at a reception in the TerraceRoom of the Tulsa Club on November 30.Mr. Goldsmith spoke on "Diamonds,Pearls, and the Depths of the Earth."TucsonGeorge R. Hughes, Oriental InstituteProfessor of Egyptology, was guest ofhonor at a dinner meeting at the El TanqueRestaurant on December 2. Mr. Hughesintroduced the film "The Egyptologists."New YorkOn November 30, Wayne C. Booth, theGeorge M. Pullman Professor of Englishand Dean of the College, spoke on "WhatIs Going On In The College?" COMING EVENTSLos Angeles: January 20Milton Friedman, the Paul SnowdonRussell Distinguished Service Professor inthe Department of Economics, will beguest speaker at a dinner meeting.Cleveland: January 26Martin Marty, Professor in the DivinitySchool, will speak at a dinner meeting.Washington: January 27William H. McNeill, Chairman and Pro­fessor of the Department of History, willbe guest speaker at a dinner meeting.Miami Beach: February 3Norval Morris, the Julius Kreeger Pro­fessor in the Law School and Director ofthe Center for Studies in Criminal Justice,will be guest of honor at a reception.San Francisco: February 10Milton Friedman, the Paul SnowdonRussell Distinguished Service Professor inthe Department of Economics, will speakat a dinner meeting.Detroit: February 14Philip Hauser, Professor of Sociologyand Director of the Population Researchand Training Center, will speak at a din­ner meeting.Los Angeles: March 6Ralph Shapey, Assistant Professor in theDepartment of Music and a composer andconductor, will be guest of honor at a con­cert and rece�tion.For information on coming events, or forassistance in planning an event in yourcommunity with a guest speaker from theUniversity, contact (Mrs.) Jane Steele,Program Director, The University of Chi­cago Alumni Association, 5733 UniversityAve., Chicago, Ill. 60637, MI 3-0800.Below: Hon, Stanley Mosk and Cecelia Lannon, San Francisco, Nov. 2.Right: Prof. John Mullan (center), Kansas City, November 22.Below Right: Dean Robert Streeter and Leslie Gross, Denver, Nov. 21. Left: Spencer Boise, Prof. Peter Rossi, and Donald Bellstrom, Cin­cinnati, November 21.Above Left: John Merriam, Prof. George Stigler, and William Hill,Omaha, November 30.Above: Prof. Ray Koppelman (standing), Brownlee Haydon, andJames Sheldon Riley, Los Angeles, November 4.23Alumni NeW809Mrs. Harry W. Evard Sr., (Helen Jacoby'09), requests the assistance of formerclassmates in locating her old friend andformer student, Almira Annigers, wholived in Foster Hall around 1908 or 1909.Mrs. Evard lives at 171 W. 44th St.,Indianapolis, Ind.Thomas S. Miller, '09, as a member ofthe President's Fund, was sent a cony ofHarper's University, the recently-publishedhistory of the University by Richard J.Storr, Associate Professor in the Depart­ment of History. Mr. Miller's note ofthanks included some reminiscences of theHarper era: "We were close friends ofall members of the Harper family. In thesummer of 1906, while attending summerschool, I lived at the Harper house. AndPaul [son of William Rainey] was my bestman when I was married."Sidney A. Teller, X'09, recently enlargedthe Sidney and John Teller Brass andCopper Collection at I11inois Institute ofTechnology, in memory of his wife. It isnow the largest collection of its kind. Forhis 50 years of service to Pittsburgh, Mr.Teller recently was honored senarately bythe Graduate School of Social Work, Uni­versity of Pittsburgh; the Young Men andYoung Women's Hebrew Association andthe Irene Kaufmann Centers; and theSenior Citizens Social Club. The GraduateSchool of Social Work of UP annuallypresents the Sidney A. Teller LectureSeries, endowed by Mr. Teller.10Nels M. Hokanson, '10, was selected the1965-66 Volunteer of the Year by theClaremont (Calif.) Red Cross Chapter.·Mr. Hokanson has been on the chapterboard since 1963 and currently is servingas chairman of the building and groupscommittee.17Alfred P. Dorjahn, ' 17, PhD'24, Pro­fessor Emeritus, Northwestern University,is Visiting Professor of Classics in theDepartment. of English, University ofIllinois/ Chicago Circle.24 18Fred L. Soper, MD'J8 (Rush), recentlyreceived the Sedgwick Memorial Medalfrom the American Public Health Associa­tion. An internationally renowned epide­miologist, Dr. Soper is distinguished forhis fight for the recognition of the eradi­cation princinle. The concept was acceptedby the APHA in 1955, and is now theofficial policy of the Pan American HealthOrzanivation and the World Health Organ­ization toward malaria and other diseases.20Earl B. Dickerson, JD'20, president ofthe Supreme Life Insurance Co. and aprominent Chicago civic leader, will havea new library named in his honor at theHarvard/ St. George School, Chicago. JohnJohnson, X'42, president of the JohnsonPublishing Co., has made a substantialgift to the library fund in honor of Mr.Dickerson.22Sidney J. French, '22, Dean Emeritus ofAcademic Affairs, University of SouthFlorida, Tampa, recently received an hon­orary Doctor of Humanities degree fromBoston University. He was cited for his"contribution to notable programs of gen­eral education _ .. [a man] who continuesto search for the ideal in higher education."24A very O. Craven, PhD'24, UC ProfessorEmeritus of History, has been the Distin­guished Visiting Professor of History atPurdue University for the past semester.Mr. Craven is an Honorary Consultant tothe Library of Congress.25Adam D. Beittel, DB'25, PhD'29, a 1966recipient of the Alumni Citation for PublicService, has been named the 1966 Alumnusof the Year by the Baptist TheologicalUnion of UC's Divinity School. He wascited as a "distinguished alumnus of theDivinity School ... a resourceful andeffective teacher both of religion and ofsociology ... and a courageous and un­daunted spokesman for social justice in Fred Soper Nathan Shockcommunities made turbulent by the bitter­ness of racial prejudice and oppression ... "A former president of Tougaloo (Miss.)College, Mr. Beittel is an active member ofmany state, regional, and national humanrelations groups. He is director of the Mis­sissippi Program of the American FriendsService Committee.28A. King McCord, X'28, chairman of theboard and president of Westinghouse AirBrake Co., served as chairman of theOctober, 1966, drive of the United Fundof Allegheny County, Pa. Mr. McCordhas served with the United Fund since1958, and has been a board member since1959.Rufus Oldenburger, '28, SM'30, PhD'34,Professor of Mechanical Engineering andDirector of the Automatic Control Center,Purdue University, Lafayette, Ind., recentlyhas had two books published: OptimalControl (Holt, Rinehart and Winston), aresearch monograph; and Optimal andSelf-Optimizing Control (M.I.T. Press), asurvey of a control area.30Nathan W. Shock, PhD'30, Chief of theGerontology Branch, National Institute ofChild Health and Human Development, isPresident-elect of the International Associ­ation for Gerontology. Mr. Shock is thefirst recipient of the Gerontological So­ciety's Annual Research Award for Con­tributions to Gerontology. He is Editor-in­Chief of the Journal of Gerontology anda member of the U.S. Public HealthService Advisory Committee on Gerontol­ogy.James Sheldon Ralph Johanson31James M. Sheldon, Jr., '31, is Assistantto the President of Rollins College, WinterPark, Fla. His responsibilities include thecoordination of the Public Affairs, Publi­cations, and Development Programs atRollins. Mr. Sheldon served as Assistantto UC President George W. Beadle from1961 until his recent appointment.Leonard Spacek, X'31, chairman of theaccounting firm of Arthur Andersen & Co.,is the new president of British-AmericanChamber of Commerce of the Midwest.32Chester W. Laing, '32, has been electedchairman of John Nuveen & Company,Inc., after serving as its president. Mr.Laing is a sponsor of the UC Club ofNew York.33Phila Abigail Humphreys, AM'33, hasbeen appointed a lecturer in education atOhio University, Athens, O. Miss Hum­phreys has been an elementary supervisorwith the state department of education inColumbus, 0., since 1949 and has taught�t several colleges and elementary schoolsIn various states.Walter Maneikis, '33, AM'36, has beennamed associate professor of English atIllinois Teachers College, Chicago/ South.Mr. Maneikis, whose field of interest isnineteenth-century British literature, hastaught at Western Illinois State, Idaho,DePaul, and Purdue Universities.Alice Mooradian, X'33, governor ofZonta International District IV, was incharge of the district conference of the organization held this past October. MissMooradian is a 1966 recipient of the Alum­ni Citations for Public Service.34Sol D. Gershon, '34, SM'35, PhD'38,assistant director for development in theResearch and Development Division ofLever Brothers Company, recently wasawarded the Medal of the Society of Cos­metic Chemists, the highest award of theSociety. The citation reads in part: "Inrecognition of your academic achievementsincluding the Fairchild scholarship, theMrazek prize in chemistry, and the Manda­bach Award in Materia Medica; in recog­nition of your contributions to the Artand Science of Cosmetics and Toiletriesincluding your treatises on dentifrices,permanent waving, thioglycolic acid, andyour more than 50 other pertinent publi­cations and patents ... "Alina Grimwood, '34, recently joined theMedical Social Service Staff in the Spring­field Regional Office of the University ofIllinois Division of Services for CrippledChildren. Mrs. Grimwood has done exten­sive social work in Cook County, III., andin California.35C. Arthur Berndtson, '35, PhD'40, Pro­fessor of Philosophy, University of Mis­souri, recently represented UC as anacademic delegate to the inauguration ofW. Merle Hill as 13th president of Chris­tian College, Columbia, M'o.Thomas H. Coulter, AM'35, chief execu­tive officer of the Chicago Association ofCommerce and Industry, recently spokeat the first fall meeting of the SuburbanBusiness Management Council of the Elm­hurst (III.) YMCA.37Ralph N. Johanson, SM'37, PhD'39, isthe new Professor and Chairman of theMathematics Department and the Com­puter Center at Bentley College, Waltham,Mass. Mr. Johanson is a former represen­tative for IBM, and has served as seniorscientist for A vco. Corp., and as govern­ment accounts representative for UNIVAC Division of Sperry Rand Corp. He and hiswife, the former Elizabeth Innes, have sixchildren.Oliver H. Lowry, PhD'37, MD'37, is therecipient of the Borden Award for medicalresearch, presented by the Association ofAmerican Colleges. Dr. Lowry, Professorand Head of the Department of Pharma­cology at Washington University School ofMedicine (St. Louis, Mo.), shared theaward with Dr. Janet V. Passonneau, acolleague at Washington University. Thetwo were cited for their major contributionsin nucleotide microbiochemistry of nerv­ous tissues.38Donald Hamilton, '38, author of the MattHelm secret agent series (Fawcett GoldMedal Books), has recently published TheBetrayers, the latest in this group. AnthonyBoucher, in the New York Times BookReview, said that the hero, Matt Helm, is"one of the few credible secret agents intoday's fiction."Ems B. Kohs, AM'38, Chairman of theTheory Department in the University ofSouthern California School of Music, isthe new regional director of the WesternInstitute for Music in Contemporary Edu­cation, a program designed to strengthenmusic teaching in public schools, colleges,and universities. The author of a forth­coming textbook, Musical Form, Mr. Kohsbegan work this past summer on an operabased on Franz Kafka's novel, Amerika.He also will be the host for 16 half-hourTV programs on music education to bebroadcast over KCET, Channel 28, LosAngeles.Volney C. Wilson, PhD'38, a ResearchPhysicist at the General Electric ResearchLaboratory in Schenectady, N.Y., hasbeen named a Fellow of the AmericanNuclear Society in recognition of his "out­standing contributions to the developmentof chain reacting systems and (his) pio­neeri ng researches in the generation ofpower by thermionic converters." Mr.Wilson was responsible for the instrumen­tation and control of the world's firstnuclear reactor at UC in 1942.2539Robert O. Anderson, '39, has been electeda Director of the National Merit Scholar­ship Corporation, based in Evanston, Ill.Mr. Anderson, who lives in Roswell, N.M.,is chairman of the board and chief execu­tive officer of Atlantic Richfield Co., Phila­delphia. He also is chairman of the AspenInstitute of Humanistic Studies, vice-chair­man of the board of trustees of the JohnF. Kennedy Center for the PerformingArts in Washington, D.C., and a trustee ofthe University of Chicago, New MexicoState University and St. John's College.Martha Branscombe, AM'39, PhD'42,former chief social services specialist forProject Head Start of the Office of Eco­nomic Opportunity, has joined the staff ofthe Agency for International Developmentas senior social welfare adviser in the Officeof Technical Cooperation and Research.From 1954 to 1965, Miss Branscombe wasChief of the Social Services Section of theUnit�d Nations, responsible for planningand Implementing UN activities in the so­cial service field. In her new post she isresponsible for liaison between AID andthe Department of Health, Education andWelfare on social welfare matters.James W. Button, '39, a former presidentof Simpson-Sears Ltd. of Canada, and avice-president in charge of merchandisingof Sears, Roebuck and Co., has beenelected to the firm's board of directors.Emmett Dedmon, '39, editor of the Chi­cago Sun-Times and a member of UC'sBoard of Trustees, has been named Chair­man of the University's Visiting Commit­tee on the College. He also is a member ofthe University's Citizen's Board, and theVisiting Committee on the Divinity School.Dr. Theodore K. Gleichman, X'39, aninternist in Denver, Col., has volunteeredunder the AMA Volunteer Physicians forVietnam program for a sixty-day period ofservice in South Vietnamese civilian hos­pitals.Edward J. Ledder, Jr., '39, MBA'54 hasbeen elected Executive Vice-PresidentMarketing Operations, for Abbott Labora�tories. Mr. Ledder, who has been with26 Abbott since 1939, has served as SalesCoordinator, Assistant Director of SalesDirect?r of �harmaceutical Marketing;and Vice-President, Pharmaceutical Mar­keting.41Joseph B. Gittler, PhD'41, is Dean of theFerkauf Graduate School of Humanitiesand Social Sciences at Yeshiva UniversityNew York City. The author of severalbooks, Mr. Gittler is a former dean of thefaculty at Queensborough CommunityCollege, Bayside, N.Y ...Sara Harris, '41, former chairman of theUC Alumni Club in Albany, N.Y., recentlyserved as a co-chairman for the Club'sOct. dinner meeting. At the dinner, Prof.Edward Rosenheim of the English Depart­ment spoke on "The Meaning of a ModernUniversity: Chicago '66."Paul F. Lorenz, MBA'41, formerly vice­president and general manager of Ford'sLincoln-Mercury division, is now vice­president, marketing, for the Ford MotorCo. Mr. Lorenz has been with Ford since1949, and held his former position sinceJune, 1964. Mrs. Lorenz is the formerHarriet M. Fawcett, '42.42, George D. Blackwood, '42, AM'47, PhD51, �f th: facul.ty of Boston University, isteaching In Heidelberg and Berlin Ger­many, during the current academi� year�s part ?f Boston University's program ininternational relations for Army personnel.George T. Bogert, X'42, has become amember of the Chicago-based law firm ofMayer, Friedlich, Spiess, Tierney Brown& Platt. 'Melvin Gerstein, '42, PhD'45, has beennamed professor and chairman of the de­par�me�t of mechanical engineering at the�nI:,ers.lty of Southern California. A spe­cialist In the field of combustion, Mr.Gerstein formerly was president of Dy­namic Science, Inc.Robert F. Inger, '42, PhD'54, a formerCurator �f Reptiles for the ChicagoNatura� HIStOry Museum, is the new pro­gram director of the Environmental Biol- Melvin Gerstein Rolf Weilogy Program in the Environmental Biologyand Systematic Biology Section Divisionof Biological and Medical Scie�ces Na-tional Science Foundation. 'Joh�. G. �orrison, MD'42, a generalpracntioner In San Leandro, Calif., hasbeen named president of the 22 000-member California Medical Associ�tion.A. c?nsul.tant to the Food and Drug Ad­ministration and a member of the medicalfacilities committee of the Bay AreaHealth Facilities Planning AssociationDr. Morrison is also a former chairma�of the board of the California PhysiciansService.Albert C. Stewart, '42, SM'48, planningmanager for new market development inthe consumer products division of UnionCarbide Corp., is the new board chairmanof The New York Urban League.Rolf A. Wei), '42, AM'45, PhD'50, is thene� President of Roosevelt University,Chicago. He previously was Dean of theCollege of Business Administration and hasserved as Acting President since Dec. 31,1964. In accepting his responsibilities Mr.Weil said that Roosevelt has been "tradi­tionally a pioneering institution and I amcertain .that the trustees, and the faculty willbe flexible and innovative in meeting theneeds of the next decade."43Arna Bontemps, AM'43, has been named�isiting Professor of History and of Eng­lish at the University of Illinois/ChicagoCircle. Mr. Bonternps formerly was Di­rector of University Relations at Fisk Uni­versity. The author of numerous books, hehas been awarded the Crisis poetry prize,Lloyd Kozlofi John Sevcikthe Alexander Pushkin poetry prize, theOpportunity short story prize, and theJane Addams Children's Book Award.Robert F. Dale, '43, Regional Clima­tologist, Ames, Iowa, has been named oneof 19 Science and Technology Fellows bySecretary of Commerce John T. Connor.The participants are Federal employeeswho have shown "exceptional professionalpromise. They will spend approximately ayear in training and in jobs which willbroaden their perspectives and enhancetheir qualifications."Sidney Rust Gaarder, '43, Chief of theGrants and Materials Loan Branch of theAtomic Energy Commission, has beennamed one of 19 Science and TechnologyFellows by Secretary of Commerce JohnT. Connor. The participants are Federalemployees who have shown "exceptionalprofessional promise. They will spend ap­proximately a year in training and in jobswhich will broaden their perspectives andenhance their qualifications."Lloyd M. Kozloff, '43, PhD'48, is the newchairman of the Department of Micro­biology of the University of ColoradoSchool of Medicine. Mr. Kozloff served asa research associate and professor of bio­chemistry at UC from 1949 to' 1964, whenhe joined the faculty at Colorado as pro­fessor of microbiology. He is editor of theJournal of Virology and serves on theeditorial board of the Journal of Bacteri­ology.44William C. Ziegert, '44, has been pro­moted to manager of training in themarketing 'department of American Oil Company, executive development and re­gional coordination department, in theGeneral Office, Chicago. He joined thecompany in 1940, and last served as re­tail marketing manager of the Chicagosales region.4SPaul Lambourne Higgins, DB'45, aMethodist minister and the first presidentof Spiritual Frontiers Fellowship, the na­tional organization of churchmen interest­ed in mystical and psychical study, is theauthor of Encountering the Unseen (T. S.Denison & Co., Inc.). The book examinesthe findings of psychical research and someof the claims of the occult and "shows howmany of the supernormal accounts of thebiblical and Christian tradition are beingduplicated today. That there is no sub­stitute for first-hand religious experienceis the book's premise ... "Harold Plotsky, '45, SB'47, MD'49,recently became a member of the Washing­ton (D.C.) Psychoanalytic Society.Shirley H. Wattenberg, AM'45, formerlyfield work supervisor of students, JaneAddams Graduate School of Social Work,University of Illinois, has been appointedan Assistant Professor in the GraduateSchool, Urbana campus. She has also beena caseworker for the Family Service ofChampaign County, Ill.Lois Jacobs Zimring, '45, SM'49, PhD'64, has been named assistant professor ofnatural science at Michigan State Uni­versity, East Lansing. Mrs. Zimring hasbeen an instructor of physical sciences atUC and she was assistant professor ofchemistry at the University of Minnesota.She has had several publications in molec­ular spectroscopy, and she is a memberof the American Chemical Society, PhiBeta Kappa, and Sigma Xi, sciencehonorary.46David M. Held, DB'46, recently wascommencement speaker at Pacific U niver­sity, Forest Grove, Ore., where he wasawarded an honorary degree of Doctor ofDivinity. He is minister of First Congrega- tion Church, Pasadena, Calif., and Presi­dent of the Peninsula Council of Churchesin California. Rev. Held is an active partici­pant on the radio program, "Let's Talk,"sponsored by the Radio, Television & FilmCommission of the Council of Churches inSouthern California.Charles D. Kelso, '46, JD'50, is the newAssociate Dean of the School of Law,University of Miami (Fla.). He previouslywas professor of law at the Indiana Uni­versity Law School. Mr. Kelso recentlywas awarded the honorary degree of Doc­tor of Laws by the John Marshall LawSchool. I47Gerald Handel, '47, AM'51, PhD'62,formerly Vice President of Social Research,Inc., of Chicago, is now working with theCenter for Urban Education, a non-profitresearch and consultation corporationchartered by the Regents of the State ofNew York. Robert A. Dentler, PhD'60, isDirector of the Center, and Barbara Berg­er, PhD'59, Rudolph Haerle, AM'62, PhD'65, Herbert Gans, '47, AM'50, and GladysEngel Lang, PhD' 54, also work with thegroup.Howard W. Johnson, AM'47, President­Elect of the Massachusetts Institute ofTechnology, was awarded an honoraryDoctor of Laws degree from Harvard Uni­versity in June.Gordon A. Noble, '47, SB'49, SM'51,PhD'55, has been promoted to SeniorScientist at Illinois Institute of Technol­ogy's Research Institute, Chicago, wherehe has been engaged in studies of thesurface effects associated with radiationdamage and the physical aspects of chem­ical luminescence. Dr. Noble has beenwith IITRI since 1960.John G. Sevcik, MBA'47, president anda director of the Burton-Dixie Corporationof Chicago, has been elected to the Boardof Trustees of the Il1inois CoI1ege of Podia­try in Chicago. A leading figure in thebedding manufacturing industry for thepast 30 years. Mr. Sevcik received adistinguished alumni award from JohnMarshall Law School in 1966.2748Bernard H. Baum, '48, AM'53, PhD'59,former Director, Organizational Analysis,Continental Casualty and Assurance Co.,has been appointed Associate Professor ofManagement and Sociology at the Univer­sity of Illinois! Chicago Circle. He is aformer professorial lecturer at RooseveltUniversity. He and his family live inEvanston, Ill.Marvin L. Goldberger, PhD'48, theEugene Higgins Professor of TheoreticalPhysics at Princeton University and a fel­low in the National Academy of Sciences,recently received a Merit Award from theAlumni Association of Carnegie Tech inPittsburgh. The Awards are presented for"service and accomplishment in any fieldof human endeavor that brings honor tothe recipient and his Alma Mater." In1961, Mr. Goldberger received the DannieHeineman Award for mathematical physics.Morrie S. Helitzer, AM'48, who joinedMcGraw-HilI, Inc. in 1956, has been ap­pointed to the book company's newlycreated position of vice-president for pub­lic affairs. For the past four years he hasserved as the company's representative inWashington, D.C.Lawrence Howe, JD'48, has been electedcorporate secretary of Bell & Howell,Chicago. Mr. Howe will continue as vice­president, law and administration, a posi­tion he has held since joining the companyin February, 1966.David H. Krinsley, '48, SB'50, SM'50,PhD'56, former chairman of the Depart­ment of Geology and Geography, QueensCollege of the City University of NewYork, is the new Associate Dean of theQueens Faculty.Murray E. Volk, SM'48, has joined thechemicals division of Miles Laboratories,Inc., as marketing manager of the researchproducts department. He was formerlypresident and chief executive of VolkRadiochemical Co., Skokie, Ill., a firm heestablished in 1955 and continued to man­age after its 1963 merger with U. S. Nu­clear Corp. Since August, 1965, he hasbeen a consultant in the isotope field.28 John Patrick Walsh, PhD'48, has beenpromoted by President Johnson to Class1 in the Foreign Service of the UnitedStates. Since 1948 he has served in Ire­land, Canada, Norway, and Iran. He ispresently serving in Washington.49Seth Benardete, '49, AM'58, PhD'55,Professor of Classics at New York Uni­versity, recently gave a lecture on "Hesi­od's Works and Days" at WindhamCollege, Putney, Vt.Michael A. Cann, '49, AM'53, recentlyjoined the Health Services at the Univer­sity of Massachusetts in Amherst as aClinical Psychologist. He has also servedactively as a consultant in RehabilitationPsychology to Goodwill Industries for thepast three years.Robert K. Cox, '49, is the new credit­office manager at the Chicago service cen­ter of Joseph T. Ryerson & Son, Inc. Mr.Cox, who joined Ryerson in 1951, hasserved as credit-office manager at theBuffalo, N.Y., service center, and as theChicago credit manger. He lives in Naper­ville, III., with his wife Irene, and theirthree children.Werner Graf, '49, AM'57, is assistantprofessor of psychology at Roosevelt Uni­versity, Chicago. A native of Chicago, Mr.Graf has taught at Wilson Junior College,and at Steinmetz and Kelly High Schools.Charles R. Greene, '49, SM'50, PhD'52,a research supervisor at Shell DevelopmentCompany's Emeryville, Calif., researchcenter, has been appointed leader of theprocess study team in Shell Chemical CO.'sindustrial chemicals division.H. Maurice Jones, MBA'49, has joinedthe Quaker Oats Company as researchmanager for cereals. He will be respon­sible for the planning and execution ofmarketing research projects in this prod­uct area. Mr. Jones was previously asso­ciated with Needham, Harper, & Steers,Inc., a Chicago advertising agency.Joseph Rosenbloom, AM'49, has beenawarded an MLS degree from Rutgers,The State University of New Jersey. Lawrence Howe Ernest Kanrich50Ernest Kanrich, MBA'50, has returnedto Evanston, Ill., after two years of servicein India as an official of the U.S. foreignaid program. While abroad, Mr. Kanrichsupervised loan operations for the Agencyfor International Development's mission toIndia.Lloyd O. Miller, AM'50, is teaching Eng­lish at New Trier High School East, Win­netka, III. He formerly taught in Athens,Greece, on a Fulbright grant, as well asin Jackson, Mich., and Highland Park, Ill.Carlton Smith, AM'50, has joined thestaff of The American Bankers Associa­tion as assistant director of the PublicRelations Department. Most recently hewas senior associate editor for the MedicalEconomics Magazine.Gertrude White, PhD'50, has been pro­moted to Professor of English at OaklandUniversity, Rochester, Mich.51Warren H. Bacon, MBA'51, AssistantDirector of Industrial Relations, InlandSteel Co., has been elected to the Boardof Directors of the Hyde Park FederalSavings and Loan Association in Chicago.Willard H. Beattie, '51, SM'54, formerlyof Chicago, has joined the staff of the LosAlamos Scientific Laboratory (N.M.) asa physical chemist in the Weapons Division.William R. Shealy, Jr., '51, has received aPhD in the History of Christian Thoughtfrom Drew University, Madison, N.J. Hisdissertation deals with "The Power of thePresent: The Pastoral Perspective of Rich­ard Baxter, Puritan Divine: 1615-1691."Mr. Shealy plans a career in teaching.�Boris Yarotsky B. BoylstonBoris E. Yarotsky, MBA'51, has beennamed Assistant District Manager of Cru­cible Steel Company's Regional Sales Of­fice, Detroit. Mr. Yarotsky, who joinedCrucible in 1955, has served in variouscapacities in the company's Employee Re­lations, Operating, and Executive depart­ments.52Robert G. Moll, MBA'52, has retiredfrom 26 years of military service and hasaccepted a position as administrative as­sistant to the chairman of the Division ofScience and Mathematics at Plattsburgh(N.Y.) State University College. Col. Mollformerly was stationed at Plattsburgh AirForce Base.Paul D. Townsend, '52, has been namedvice president of marketing for RheingoldBreweries, Inc. Prior to joining Rheingold,Mr. Townsend was vice president of mar­keting for H.J. Heinz Co. of Pittsburgh.53Beatrice E. Merkhofer, PhD'53, recentlyWas appointed associate professor at Illi­nois Teacher's College North Branch.Joseph H. Myers, MBA'53, served as vicechairman of the United Community Cam­paign in New Britain, Conn., last fall. Avice president of the Stanley Works, Mr.Myers formerly was vice president of AcmeSteel Co., Chicago.Ronald Lee Rich, PhD'53, has beennamed Professor of Chemistry at Inter­national Christian University, Tokyo, Ja­pan. A former Professor and Chairmanof the Chemistry Department at BethelCollege, North Newton, Kan., Mr. Rich has done research in the field of atomicenergy under fellowships from the AEC,the National Science Foundation, and theNational Bureau of Standards. He is oneof eleven persons to join the faculty ofInternational Christian University last fall.54Harold L. Gano, MBA'54, has been ap­pointed an assistant to the vice chancellorfor business and finance at the Universityof California at San Diego. He is respon­sible for coordination of County Hospitalbusiness operations with those of the newSchool of Medicine at the university. Mr.Gano is a former administrator of ElCajon Valley Hospital.Jerry Gerasimo, AM'54, PhD'66, assist­ant professor of sociology and anthro­pology at Lake Forest (Ill.) College, wasthe recipient of a summer research grantfrom' the LFC Given Fund for FacultyImprovement and from the Shell Assistsgiven by the Shell Foundations. The grantwas used to investigate "methods by whichrecent philosophical treatment of suchproblems as conflict, choice, and freedomcan be brought to bear on general socio­logical thought." While a graduate student,Mr. Gerasimo held a fellowship and wasa research associate at the UC IndustrialRelations Center.Kenyon R. Stapley, '54, has been appoint­ed coordinator of systems planning at theChicago service center of Joseph T. Ryer­son & Son, Inc. Mr. Stapley joinedRyerson in May, 1966, as a senior systemsanalyst. He lives in Lindenhurst, 111., withhis wife, Toni, and their three children.55Allan C. Bates, AM'55, has been pro­moted to assistant professor of English atIllinois Teachers College Chicago/ South.Mr. Bates is doing research on MarkTwain.Benjamin C. Boylston, AM'55, has beenpromoted to manager of personnel forBethlehem Steel Corporation. Mr. Boylstonjoined the corporation in 1955, and mostrecently served as assistant manager ofpersonnel. Manuel Goldman, SM'55, is now assistantprofessor of biological sciences, Universityof Illinois/ Chicago Circle. Previously hewas a microbiologist for the Stanford Re­search Institute, Menlo Park, Calif.William F. Hill, PhD'55, clinical psy­chologist at the University of SouthernCalifornia, is conducting the final phase ofhis "Group Counseling Training Projectin Probation." Through the program, hehas trained approximately 300 probationofficers from various parts of Californiain the techniques of group counseling.Schuyler Johnson, MBA'55, has beennamed Manager of the Industrial Engi­neering and Scheduling division of Camp­bell Soup Company, General Offices,Camden, N.J. Mr. Johnson has been withCampbell since 1958, serving as LaborStandards Engineer; Supervisor, LaborStandards; Staff Manager, Methods Analy­sis; and. Staff Manager, Industrial Engi­neering.Leonard W. Kolb, MBA'55, chief engi­neer with International Harvester, recentlyreceived a bachelor of laws degree fromThe John Marshall Law School.Sydney L. Willis, AM' 5 5, is on a six­month leave of absence from his post asJersey City (N.J.)' director of planning,while he is directing the city's CommunityRenewal Program. Mr. Willis said: "Basi­cally, the CRP is an intensive, in-depthstudy of Jersey City from which will resulta 10-to-20-year program of redevelop­ment, code enforcement, rehabilitation,public housing, beautification, and publicimprovements projects under any and allfederally-aided and state-aided programsthat can fit within the financial, administra­tive, market, relocation and other resourcesof Jersey City." Mr. Willis has headed theJersey City division of planning since itsestablishment in 1961.56John Gragnola, MBA'56, is the new di­rector of research implementation for theAllstate Insurance Companies, based inSkokie, Ill. Mr. Gragnola, who joined All­state in 1958' as consumer manager in themarketing division, served as marketing29research manager from 1964 until his re­cent appointment.Francis E. O'Connor, MBA'56, is thenew senior vice president responsible forthe Public Relations Division of ChicagoTitle and Trust Company. Mr. O'Connoris active in the Chicago and Illinois StateChamber of Commerce, and is a memberof the Chicago and State Bar associations,the Executive Program Club of UC, andthe Chicago Athletic Club. He lives inLake Bluff, Ill.57James Gleason, '57, SM'58, Lt. Colonelin the U.S. Air Force, has retired aftermore than 24 years of service. Col. Glea­son served as deputy director of aerospacephysics at the Navy Yard Annex in Wash­ington, D.C., prior to his retirement.William A. Shack, AM'57, a former re­search associate at UC, is now associateprofessor of sociology at the University ofIllinois/Chicago Circle.Budimir Tosic, MFA'57, recently heldan exhibition of his paintings at his studioin Chicago. Included in the show wererecent paintings of Mexican landscapes.58David R. Leonetti, '58, former directorof the Alumni Association's Eastern Re­gional Office, is now executive director ofthe State Council on the Arts for the stateof Iowa.Robert F. McDonald, MBA'58, has beenelected vice president in charge of financeand administration for The Elgin NationalWatch Company. Mr. McDonald, whojoined Elgin in 1963, most recently servedas treasurer and controller.Alphonso Westbrooks, Jr., AM'58, is thenew District Superintendent for Common­wealth Edison Company's Central Divi­sion, which includes Chicago's loop area.He is responsible for company-customerrelations and coordination between Edisonand community organizations. Since join­ing Edison in 1961, Mr. Westbrooks hasworked with the industrial relations, powersales, sales promotion, and publicity de­partments.30 59Jack M. Schick, AM'59, PhD'61, hasjoined the Center for Naval Analyses ofthe Franklin Institute and has been as­signed to the Institute of Naval Studies,which specializes in problems of long­range Naval interest. Mr. Schick is a for­mer assistant professor of political scienceat Lake Forest (Ill.) College and a formerassistant professor at UC's Center for theStudy of American Foreign and MilitaryPolicy.60John E. Hopper, '60, AM'62, former lec­turer in history at Roosevelt University,Chicago, is now an assistant professor ofhistory at the University of Miami, CoralGables, Fla. Mr. Hopper has been a resi­dent fellow and lecturer at UC, and hasheld a teaching fellowship at the StateUniversity of Iowa.Marvin C. Katz, AM'60, received a PhDin Philosophy from Southern Illinois Uni­versity, Carbondale.C. Clark Kissinger, '60, SM'62, has joinedthe faculty of Mundelein College, Chicago,as lecturer in the Mathematics Depart­ment.Garret K. Vandenburgh, MBA '60, re­cently was promoted to vice president ofAnocut Engineering Co., where he willsupervise overseas activities and handlearrangements for licensing or manufactureoutside of the United States. Mr. Vanden­burgh, who joined Anocut in 1960, spenthis first four years with the company inAmsterdam and Brussels, returning to thiscountry in 1964 as chief engineer.61Nobuya M. Bamba, AM'61, is an instruc­tor in history at Bucknell University,Lewisburg, Pa. For the past four years,Mr. Bamba served as a teaching assistantat the University of California, where heis a candidate for a PhD.Robert M. Battaglin, MBA'61, who hasbeen with Corning Glass Works since 1964,has been named supervisor of planning andpurchasing for the company's new StateCollege plant. Francis O'Connor A. Westbrooks, Jr.62Thomas J. Barrett, Jr., MBA'62, has beennamed product planner for InternationalB. F. Goodrich Company. He is formeradvertising supervisor in Goodrich's cor­porate advertising department. Mr. Barretthas been with the company since 1962.Donald B. Clapp, AM'62, DB'62, aChaplain and 1 st Lieutenant in the U.S.Air Force, recently received the HonorGraduate Award for Class 65-B, OfficerBasic Military Course for newly commis­sioned Chaplains. He has been assigned toKeesler Air Force Base, Mississippi, ATC.Charles S. J. White, AM'62, PhD'64,former assistant professor of Indian Studiesat the University of Wisconsin, is assistantprofessor of religious thought at the Uni­versity of Pennsylvania. Mr. White, whosespecialty is medieval Hindu devotionalmovements, spent a year at the AmericanInstitute of Indian Studies at Deccan Col­lege, Poona, India.63D. Clifford Crummey, PhD'63, recentlywas appointed Director of Urban Work forthe Methodist Church in Northern Cali­fornia.James A. Giles, MBA'63, Colonel in theU.S. Air Force, has entered the IndustrialCollege of the Armed Forces at Fort Les­ley I. McNair in Washington, D.C., for anintensive ten-month course in the manage­ment of logistic resources for nationalsecurity. Col. Giles was previously chief ofthe long range planning division at Head­quarters, 7th Air Division, High Wycombe,England.fllrmorialsDolores Brockett, '03, who had workedas a technician in the UC Zoology Depart­ment, died Aug. 29, 1966, in BeverlyShores, Ind.Harrison Hale, SM'03, of Houston, Tex.,died Oct. 14, 1966.Charles H. Swift, '03, SB'06, MD'10,PhD'13 Associate Professor Emeritus ofAnatom'y, died Nov. 17, 1966, in Chicago.Riley H. Allen, '04, editor of the Hono­lulu Star-Bulletin from 1912 to 1960, diedOctober 2 in Honolulu. Mr. Allen was anearly leader of Hawaii's statehood andequal rights movements. Following WorldWar I, Mr. Allen led a dramatic Red Crossmission to Siberia to rescue more than 750Russian children separated from theirfamilies by the Revolution. Mr. Allen re­ceived an Alumni Citation in 1942.Friends of Mr. Allen are seeking to estab­lish a scholarship fund in his memory atthe University of Hawaii.Mrs. Charles H. Bean (Caroline C. La­mont, '04), died in Temple, Tex., Oct. 27,1966.Joseph H. Johnson, '04, JD'05, of Knox­ville, Iowa, died Sept. 21, 1966.Eva R. Price, '04, of San Gabriel, Calif.,died in August, 1966.Aaron Arkin, '09, MD'12, PhD'13, afounder of the Cook County GraduateSchool of Medicine and Professor Emeri­tus of Rush Medical College, died Nov. 1,1966.Clarence A. Bales, '09, JD'11, of Jeffer­son City, Tenn., died Aug. 9, 1966.Mrs. Mathais J. W. Phillips (AudraKnickerbocker, '10), died Sept. 26, 1966.Henry F. Hammel, X'11, anattorney inJoliet, Ill., died November 22. 1966. Connor B. Shaw, '12, JD'14, of Colum­bia, Tenn., died July 25, 1966.Homer C. Dawson, '13, died Aug. 13,1966.Sadie Overton Davis, '15, of Washington,D.C., died at Walter Reed General Hos­pital Oct. 25, 1966.Herbert C. Otis, '16, a leading Dallas oiland engineering executive, and civic lead­er, died Aug. 15, 1966.E. Grace Rait, ' 16, of Cedar Falls, Iowa,died July 25,1966.M. E. Steinberg, SM'16, MD'17 (Rush),of Portland, Ore., died Aug. 11, 1966.John D. Koucky, '18, MD'20 (Rush), aformer fellow in surgery of the MayoGraduate School of Medicine and a fellowof the American College of Surgeons, diedAug. 5, 1966.Robert S. Landauer, '18, PhD'21, ofChicago, died July 9, 1966.Walter D. Krupke, '19, of Houston, Tex.,died Oct. 23, 1966.Rose Zimmer Riggert, ' 19, of Salt LakeCity, died Sept. 22, 1966.Philip A. Scott, '19, MD'22, of SpiritLake, Ia., died June 14, 1966.Joseph H. Stevens, '19, of Chicago, diedJan. 25, 1966.James A. Butin, MD'20 (Rush), a prac­ticing physician in Chanute, Kan., for 40years, died July 27, 1966.C:l[� W. Rothert, '23, died May 13,1966.Willard J. Graham, AM'24, PhD'34, whoestablished an executive program in thegraduate schools of business at both UCand the University of North Carolina diedNov. 6, 1966, at Chapel Hill, N.C.Earle L. Rauber, '24, AM'25, PhD'30, aretired vice president of the Federal Re­serve Bank of Atlanta and a former pro­fessor of economics at Auburn (Ala.)University, died July 18, 1966.Harry B. Eagan, '26, died Sept. 26, 1966.Earle English, '26, a sponsor of the UCNew York Club, has died.Mayme V. Smith, '26, died Oct. 9, 1966.Eleanor R. Brouwer, '28, of Wauwatosa,Wis., died June 6, 1966.Russell V. Boom, '28, president ofSperry-Boom, Inc., advertising agency,died Sept. 19, 1966, in Bettendorf, Ia. Robert W. Goodloe, Sr., PhD'29, profes­sor of church history at Southern Metho­dist University's Perkins School of The­ology, Dallas, Tex., died Sept. 23, 1966.Lucy E. Smith, '29, of Racine, Wis., diedDec. 29, 1965.William Earl Anspach, SM'31, died May26, 1966.J0110 Reinhardt, Jr., '31, died Oct. 24,1966, at his home in Brooklyn, N.Y. Hewas associated with the Erasmus HighSchool in Brooklyn for 34 years.James M. Stapleton, '32, of Ft. Lauder­dale, Fla., died Oct. 14, 1966.Charles S. Brand, '34, Director of Engi­neering for The Arnold Engineering Co.,Marengo, II 1. , died Aug. 15, 1966.Murray M. Wise, AM'37, of New YorkCity, has died.Robert L. Sharvy, '38, chairman of thephilosophy department at Lake Forest Col­lege (Il1.) , died Oct. 28, 1966.Marjorie Hamilton Sacks, AB'39, AM'40, died November 4, 1966, in Chicago.She was an instructor at NorthwesternUniversity, where she earned her PhD,and she had taught at Mills College inOakland, Calif. She is survived by her hus­band, Sheldon Sacks, PhD' 60, AssociateProfessor of English at UC, and their twosons, Colin Hamilton, 9, and James Philip,8.Philip Burwasser, PhD'47, professor inthe Western Reserve University DentalSchool, died Oct. 30, 1966.Herman Gendel, AM'48, of Chicago,died June 1, 1966.H. Maxine Elliott, AM'49, of Los Ange­les, Calif., died in October, 1966.Gordon L. Goodman, AM'53, PhD'56,Associate Professor of History, Universityof Illinois/ Chicago Circle, died Oct. 1,1966. A Gordon Goodman MemorialFund to support excellence in the under­graduate program in history at ChicagoCircle has been established. Fund corre­spondence should be addressed to the Uni­versity of Illinois/Chicago Circle, Good­man Memorial Fund, 614 University Hall,Attn: J. E. Osborn.Alvin P. Bradford, PhD'55, of Los Ange­les, Calif, died Oct. 3, 1966.31UNIVERSITYCALENDARJanuary 6-February 3Exhibition: The Sculpture of MiriamDrofsky. Lexington Studio Gallery, week­days 9-5; Sat. 10-5; Mon., Wed., Thur.evenings 7 -10.January 10-March 31Exhibition: Notable Recent Acquisitionsof the University Library. Rare books,manuscripts, archive material. Harper Li­brary.January 12Lecture: Stokely Carmichael speaking on"Black Power." Sponsored by StudentGovernment 75th Anniversary SpeakersProgram. Mandel Hall, 8: 00 PM.January 13Concert: Chamber Music Series presentsJanos Starker, cellist, in an unaccompaniedrecital. Mandel Hall, 8: 30 PM.January 13-15Conference: Centennial Alumni Confer­ence in the Field of Ethics and Society.Divinity School.January IS-February 15Exhibition: Works of George Ortman.Renaissance Society Galleries, GoodspeedHall. Weekdays 10-5, Sat. 1-5.January 16Lecture: "Teaching and Learning 1991:The Sciences," by Leopold E. Klopfer,Assistant Professor of Education, Critiqueby Ray Koppelman, Associate Professorof Biochemistry and Master of the Col­legiate Division of Biology. Fifth in aseries of eleven lectures sponsored by theGraduate School of Education. LawSchool Auditorium, 8: 00 PM.January 17Folk and Square Dancing. InternationalHouse Assembly Hall, 8: 00 PM.Concert: Contemporary Chamber Play­ers, Esther Glazer and Easley Blackwoodpresent a recital of the violin and pianosonatas of Charles Ives. Mandel Hall, 8: 30PM.January 19Luncheon: Executive Club Luncheon ofthe Graduate School of Business, Dr. Rob-32 ert G. Page, Associate Professor of Medi­cine and Associate Dean of the BiologicalSciences, will speak on "Your Work, YourWeight, and Your Heart." Pick-CongressHotel, 12: 15 PM..January 20Humanities Forum: dinner and lecture.Third in a series of four. Quadrangle Club.January 20-22Collegium Musicum: Peri's opera, Euri­dice. Ida Noyes Hall, 8: 30 PM.January 23-25Ministers' Week, Chicago TheologicalSeminary. Charles Hartshorne, Universityof Texas, on "Philosophical Resources forChristian Thought." Other lecturers in­clude John MacQuarrie, Union Theologi­cal Seminary: Frederick Ferre, DickinsonCollege; and Quentin Lauer, S.J., of Ford­ham University.January 2475th Anniversary Concert: Mario Da­vidovsky's Inflexions for 14 Players; RalphShapey's Partita for Violin and 13 Players,an untitled piece for soprano and chambergroup by Easley Blackwood, and GeorgeRochberg's Music for the Magic Theater.All works commissioned for the Univer­sity's 75th Anniversary celebration andperformed this evening in world premiere.Mandel Hall, 8: 30 PM.Lecture: Ludwig Von Mises, classical lib­eral economist, will speak on "11 0 Yearsof Marxian Socialism." Co-sponsored byStudent Government 75th AnniversarySpeakers Program and The Whig Society.Breasted Hall, 8: 00 PM.Folk and Square Dancing. InternationalHouse Assembly Hall, 8:00 PM.January 2"6-------Conference: Teachers' Committee forQuality Education. Evening meeting. Cen­ter for Continuing Education.37th Triennial Convention of the Chi­cago Theological Seminary. Inaugurationof President Edward F. Manthei, at 3: 00PM. Chicago Theological Seminary.January 27Lecture: William H. Hutt, member ofSouth African Progressive Party, will speak on "The Economics of Apartheid."Co-sponsored by Student Government75th Anniversary Speakers Program andthe Whig Society. Breasted Hall, 8: 00 PM.January 27-29Collegium Musicum: Peri's opera, Euri­dice. Ida Noyes Hall, 8: 30 PM.January 29Oratorio Festival: Verdi's Messa daRequiem. Rockefeller Chapel Choir andmembers of The Chicago Symphony Or­chestra. Rockefeller Chapel, 3: 30 PM.January 30Lecture: "Teaching and Learning 1991:The Humanities," by Robert E. Streeter,Dean of the Division of the Humanitiesand Professor of English. Critique by Ber­nard Weinberg, Professor and, Chairmanof the Department of Romance Languagesand Literatures. Sixth in a series of elevenlectures sponsored by the Graduate Schoolof Education. Law School Auditorium,8:00 PM.January 30-February 1Conference: Centennial Alumni Confer­ence on Ministry. Divinity School.January 30-February 9Conferences: Cumulative China Confer­ences of the Center for Policy Study. LawSchool Quadrangle and the Center forContinuing Education.January 31Folk and Square Dancing. InternationalHouse Assembly Hall, 8: 00 PM.February 1-5Folklore Society Festival: concerts, semi­nars, folksinging, and folk dancing. Man­del Hall, Ida Noyes Hall, Woodward Com­mons.February 3, 4, 5Aristophanes' Lysistrata presented byUniversity Theatre; $2.00 Friday, $2.50Saturday, $1.75 Sunday; $0.50 discountfor faculty, staff, students of any school.Mandel Hall, 8: 30 PM.February 7Folk and Square Dancing. InternationalHouse Assembly Hall, 8: 00 PM.A unique water-color engravingof The University of Chicago campusSometime around 1919, artist Richard Rummell did anengraving of the University campus, made from a perspec­tive 300 feet above the western end of the Midway.The original copper plate, in perfect condition, was re­cently found by an art dealer in an eastern warehouse, andrestrikes have been made available to the Alumni Associa­tion, to be offered to Chicago alumni.The Chicago engraving, measuring 15 by 22 inches, isbeautifully hand-colored in soft hues with fine importedwater colors. It is available either unframed or handsomelymatted with ivory vellum in an antique gold and blackframe, 26 x 37 inches overall. A folder describing thebUildings represented, prepared by the University Archi­vist, accompanies each engraving.The Chicago engraving makes a distinctive gift, a taste­ful, authentic work whose historical interest will be furtherenhanced as the University grows. r----------------------I1 The University of Chicago Alumni Association II 5733 University Avenue II Chicago, Illinois 60637 II II Please send me _ framed engravings at $55.00 each II II Please send me - unframed engravings at $25.00 ea. II II II Name II Address II II II II II Please make your check payable to The University of II Chicago Alumni Association. Engravings will be II shipped directly from the dealer, express collect. II IL �The man whom Scientific American calls: "anacclaimed savant, a man of letters and high style,of delicate perception and a penchant for Reason"... the 1965 winner of the Viking FundMedal and Award --... a brilliant teacher, a superb writer and ascholar of worldwide renown.CLAUDELEVI-STRAUSShas written his most important workTHE SAVAGE MI DAn important addition to our fall list,this extraordinary book shows the complexity ofknowledge and of its conceptual organization amongso-called primitive peoples. It demonstrates thatprimitive reason is based upon a systematic, logicalorganization as complicated as our scientificclassifications. This is a book whose importance andimplications carry it far beyond the field ofanthropology. This intellectual classic-in-the-makingwill find an eager American audience. NATURE OFHUMAN SOCIETY SERIES. tuc« $5.95UNIVERSITY OF CHICAGO PRESS5750 Ellis Avenue, Chicago, Illinois 60637In Canada: University of Toronto Press