One of the lovely young ladies pictured above will benamed queen of Interfraternity ball, November 22. Thecandidates are, from left to right: Sue Modell, Zeta BetaTau; Joan Lunde, Psi Upsilon; Grace Pak, Alpha Delta Phi;Norma Schmidt, Phi Delta Theta; Harriet Blackburn, KappaAlpha Psi; Cynthia Gordon, Beta Theta Pi; Barbara Flynn,Phi Kappa Psi; Mickey McSpadden, Phi Gamma Delta, andMaurice Feinberg, Phi Sigma Delta. The candidates werejudged Wednesday afternoon by Mrs. Lawrence A. Kimp-ton, Mrs. John P. Netherton, and Harold Haydon, dean ofstudents in the College. I-F ball will be held in the Edge-water Beach hotel. (photo by ChicagoVol. 67, No. 11 University of Chicago, Friday, November 14, 1958 31Annual open house to take place tomorrowThe doors of 29 world-fam¬ous laboratories at the Uni¬versity will open tomorrowlor 1,000 outstanding high schoolteenagers coming from fourstates for the fourth annual Scl¬ent open house on the campus.The open house will get underway with the launching of twocosmic ray balloons from Staggfield at 1:30 pm.High schools in Chicago as wellas in Illinois, Indiana, Michigan,and Wisconsin have been invitedto view the exhibits at the insti¬tutes for basic research.Su» h demonstrations as a 100-million volt betatron, electroniccomputers, and glass blowing willbe displayed by members of insti¬tute.Last year the crowd of 1500 atPhoenix, at lastPhoenix magazine will goon sale Monday in the book- and was replaced by Pulse maga- 1. The surface of the moon, de¬scribed with photos, by Ewen A.Whitaker of Yerkes observatoryat Williams Bay, Wisconsin. Whit¬aker until recently was with theRoyal Greenwich observatory atHurstmonceux in Sussex, Eng¬land.2. The future MANIAC IIIelectronic “brain’s” arithmeticunit—the wires and tubes thatactually do the computing. WalterOrvedahl, chief engineer of theUC computing laboratory, will de¬scribe how it is being put to¬gether.3. The international plan fordetecting atomic tests will be ex¬plained by Anthony L. Turkevich,professor of chemistry in the En¬rico Fermi institute. He was oneof the scientific advisors to theUS delegation at the meeting thissummer in Geneva, where theplan was formulated.4. A description of how mathe¬matics looks at finite planes by„ a- A. Adrian Albert, professor andmagazine was disbanded in 1938 , . »7 , , , , chairman of mathematics.the Science open house forced theinstitute to decide that tickets willbe required for admission.The program from 2 to 4 pmincludes such displays as: gather¬ing basic data on nuclear phyics,Samuel Allison, professor ofphysics; the role of light in thegrowth of plants, Hans Gaffren,professor of biochemistry; crush¬ing atoms under high pressure,Andrew Lawson, professor ofphysics; microwaves and magnet¬ism, Clyde Hutchinson, professorof chemistry; spectrochemicalanalysis of metals, Norman Nach-trieb, professor of chemistry, andradiation effects on the divisionof living cells, Raymond Zirkle,chairman, committee on bio¬physics.New topics this year include: Over 50 staff members from theresearch institute will be on handand at 4 pm students may askquestions of them in the com¬mons room.The institutes for basic researchgrew out of the scientific organi¬zations which, under the late En¬rico Fermi, produced the world’sfirst atomic pile in the Weststands of Stagg field. At the war’send the University organized its$12 million institutes for peace¬time research in basic physics,chemistry, and biology.Here, in the Fermi institute,and the institute for the study ofmetals, over 110 scientists pooltheir knowledge on problemsoverlapping several fields.They also work with colleaguesin the University’s seven researchhospitals, and assist scientists ofindustry and government. Manyscientists of the institute serve as consultants to the Argonne labo¬ratories which the UC operatesfor the Atomic Energy commis¬sion.Warren C. Johnson, vice presi¬dent of the University and deanof the division of physical sci¬ences, said the open house hasgreat significance for science edu¬cation.“The Science open house is anadditional means of stimulatingan interest in students who are po¬tential scientists and engineers,"he said. “It supplements the workof science fairs, newspaper sci¬ence stories, and teachers.“Its impact is demonstrated bythe large turnout we’ve had inthe past three years. The Scienceopen house evidently has createda tremendous amount of interestamong thousands of high schoolstudents and teachers in the en¬tire Midwest,” he said.Mabley apologizeszine. The latter lasted for aboutfive years. Since the mid-40’sthere have been only sporadic at¬tempts to print a humor maga¬zine. 5. “What is Temperature?” by In the November 7 issue Of ‘‘In criticizing half a dozen Uni-Lothar Meyer, professor in the the Daily News, Jack Mabley versity of Chicago students ... Iinstitute for the study of metals, apologized to the University reflected on the whole studentsThis is only a partial list of the of Chicago for his previous attack j apologizemore than 30 displays to be seen, on a campus literary magazine. ’ sstore, Mandel hall corridorand Cobb hall, announced SelmaMeyer, publisher of the maga¬zine. The issue sells for 25 cents.Included in the humor sectionof the publication is “To Share InModeration” by William Harmon— a story about a moderate manseeking a moderate university ina moderate society; “So YouWant To Be A Chicagoan?”—Kt ‘the’ldiS'ynS'acies'if stii* terday, by presenting the schol with a plaque during luncheon ceremonies in the Palmer of“The University of Chicago isthe city’s greatest cultural asset,"he went on. “Through recent de¬cades it is the institution that haskept Chicago from being picturedin world opinion as totally bar-Chicago Association of Commerce and Industry paid tribute to UC’s business school, yes- baric, dominated by gangsters andUC business school is 60dent life; and “Is It All Neces¬sary?” — discussing one man’sharrowing experience with regis¬tration.The work of three studentWriters comprises the literary sec-<ion, and a battery of feature ma¬terial, with illustrations by Kent _ , ™ „Flannery, Greg Hodgson and Jane ar*d J- Daley, ChancelloiHersch, completes the contents. Lawrence A. Kimpton, and W.Phoenix began publication in Allen Wallis, dean of the business the most distin-House hotel._ guished faculties in the world andThe plaque, honoring the school’s 60th anniversary, was presented by Joseph L. Block, thousands of students who arepresident of the association, in “recognition of the contributions the faculty and alumni have pursuing a course of intellectual, . mc- nu: a ** - toughness that would havethrown me off at the first turn.Also participating inmade to the business life of Chicago and the nation.theceremonies were Mayor Rich- sity for pioneering in a field thatneeded a pioneer; for doing a re¬markable job of planning and exe¬cution, and for adding to the sumtotal of knowledge of all business¬men,” said Block during the pres-entation. rounded by decayReplying to Block, Chancellor “The University also is fightingthe hardest struggle in its exist¬ence. It is resisting a powerfulsurge of slum buildings which, ifunchecked, would leave the Uni¬versity community an island sun-The inscription on the plaquestated: “The Chicago Associationof Commerce and Industry, inhonor of the 6Cth anniversary ofthe school of business of the Uni-the early 1920Vs' aYd produced ”‘^1 who along with Kimpton, versity of Chicago, expresses itsMonthly issues until 1938. It h ’ .. . “ - „lf appreciation for the many notableCached its height in the late ’20s. receive<* the plaque on behaii ot contributions of the faculty andThe staff constantly pulled pub- the University. alumni to industry, commerce and Kimpton stated that the plaquelicity pranks during its heydey. Ezra Solomon, professor of fi- the public service and records its would be placed permanently inPhoenix once published an nance, was the principal luncheon gratitude for the role of the school the business school where it would so many measure a university byissue using perfume In the ink. speaker. Solomon reported on the in the growth of Chicago as a “serve to remind us and our sue- the won-lost record of its football‘You could smell the magazine results of a three-year economic commercial and educational cen- cessors in generations to come of team. ... I can only remind thattor miles,” commented Walter research study of the Chicago ter.” the ties between the city of Chi- from these intellects came the useJeschke, Ida Noyes guard. area which was financed by the “The association salutes the cago and the University which of atomic energy, which is chang-For some unknown reason, the association. school of business and the Univer- bears its name.” ing the course of history,”“The University is an intelleo-tual place.“In this strange society where J■\jfJjLAK: new structures from old foundationsReprinted on this pageand on page 16 is the entiretext of Chancellor LawrenceA. Kimpton's ''State of theUniversity" address deliv¬ered before the Faculty sen¬ate on Wednesday.It seemed only fair a year ago in my annual report to warn you that I proposed tospend more time this year on academic matters than I had yet been able to do. The warn¬ing created an understandable amount of alarm if not dismay. Faculties in general be¬come concerned when the head of their institution “rattles his Phi Beta Kappa key insteadof his tin cup.” And with some justification. If you have, followed my past reports, youare aware of my belief that the primary, though not exclusive, role of administration isto serve the academic life andmind by providing a free en- this year, up 13 per cent at the teach younger students. The Lab-vironment for them to develop undergraduate level and 7.1 per oratory, Nursery, and Orthogenicwithout administrative dictation, cent over-alL schools, along with the MidwestBut, as you know, a considerable g\n-wwn + , Administration center, will be ad-amount of academic demolition IN ORDER to support all these ministered by this new academichas occurred over the past several buildings, activities, new appoint- unjf it js freely admitted thatyears, and the time had come to merits, and salary increases, we this is a strange organizationalrebuild. This has been a year “a^e been forced to raise our hut so, for that matter, iswhen blueprints became buildings, undergraduate tuition to $900 for a university. And it does, with allwith new structures rising from n.ex* yea*"> ana our graduate tui- jtg awkwardness, allow the entireold foundations. ■ same amount, but by University to focus on the prob-a lesser percentage. The fiscal- Jems of training teachers throughI MUST confess, however, to an physical side of our house is in a new entity that wm on ^e oneamount of dismay equal to yours reasonably good order; we need hand properiy reiate itself to theas I have observed how little the more money, of course, but I j^hool systems of our countrycourse of events is shaped by the gather from reading similar re- and on the other. preserve theway the Chancellor chooses to ports by heads of other educa- slandards and quality of the Uni¬spend his time, for, to tell you the tional institutions that this prob- versjt.y.truth, our physical and fiscal af- lem, at least, is not peculiar to thelairs flourished under my neglect. University of Chicago. Frank Chase has been per-We raised over $13,000,000 this The year has been devoted large- shfp ^n^under^is^eadershirf^tyear, a million more than last. The ly, as 1 said earlier, to a remodel- a"d wufwork sucissfullyalumni so appreciated talks from jng 0f our academic house. These he can make anythingmembers of the faculty and ad- annual reports have referred with 1 T4. ... , . . .. ,ministration other than the Chan- almost monotonous regularity to w«rk It wdl be interesting to seecellor that more alumni contrib- the proMem of the^aining of What h'^ory s evaluation of thisuted more money than ever before teachers particularly at the high HlOVe W1 • .• u V<My tr cexcept in the context of the cam- S'Z01 levelTheproblem both he reo^anizatl°" baars ^ltnes"paign. And perhaps this is the and nationalfv is quknUta ° °Ur4 dater™natl.cn to s°lve anplace to mention the campaign, and^JuaUteSvefanVwe aS, ^portant and vexing problem.since this marked its third and jjj spite of our distinguished past 11 is a strange phenomenon thatfinal year. It closed quietly, chief- jn ^is field, currently making al- * university primarily concerned]y because we were unable to most no contribution. Even in with graduate teaching and re¬make head or tail of the result. Illinois, for example, where we search should have such a lively,We set out to raise $32,779,000 might be expected to look best, H **®t hysterical, Interest In theover a three-year period, and dur- only two per cent of those who bachelor’s degree. Our problemwere newly certified as high comes about, I suspect, becauseschool teachers in 1955 were prod- w<* did not have a normal child-ucts of the University of Chicago, hood.The reasons for our dereliction Most well-reared universities be-are complex, but these are some gan as colleges and got the under-of them. In certain areas we lost graduate program well establishedinterest in the master’s degree before they took on advancedexcept as a consolation prize for training. Because we began as athose who couldn’t manage it to graduate and professional center,the PhD. w’e have been struggling ever^ , since to find the proper place andPERHAPS even more impor- function for undergraduate edu-ing this same period $64,655,508 in tant, we abandoned our old school cat|on During the first fortycash and pledges came to the Uni- of education as a center of recruit- years we managed somehow rely-versity. But-and here we feel merit and training of teachers, in 0’n a variety of loose th0ughhke the child under the lavish and located this function in an all- interesting arrangements but inChristmas tree completely sur- University committee for the 3931 we moved decisively’ towardrounded by presents but not the preparation of teachers. Like so th creation of a cpnarate under-ones he asked for—the budget is many other changes made at the eraduate entitv comDlete with itsstill unbalanced, the book acqui- University of Chicago, the new pwn teaching faculty^and generalsition program is unfinished, the organization was theoretically per- curriculum Bv divorrin? under-law building is not paid for, wo foot; its only weakness was that 8raduate education from the Uni-dont have a cent for a mens it didn’t work. What is every- versity however this move cre-dormitory or married students’ body’s responsibility is nobody’s ated more problems than it solved,housing, and our needs for the responsibility, and in spite of pe-neighborhood, including a new riodic changes in the personnel THE COUNCIL action of 1953high school, are still unmet. There and leadership of the committee, did have the virtue of reassociat-is a happier side, however; if we shortly there were no teachers to ing the two, but upon an arm’s-didn’t get all of exactly the pres- train. In the meantime, the new length, hostile, negotiating basis,ents we wanted, we did still get department of education devoted A new undergraduate programan awful lot of presents. Sixty-six itself almost exclusively to re- was created by hastily putting to¬per cent of our faculty had salary search and gradually lost contact gether two discrete blocks ofincreases this year of more than with and impact upon the schools work, one drawn from the College,$385,000, and seventy-three per and the schoolmen of the country, the other from the Divisions, withcent will receive increases next This is not a happy situation, but both groups shaping the size ofyear of over $440,000. In addition it is not an easy one to correct. their blocks by their skill in pokerto salary increases, there are four T h nf -duration and Power politics. It was out ofnew endowed professorships. that train the teachers and gen- *b? feneral dissatisfaction withSINCE THE last grim austerity erate the curriculum for the sec- 1S JuxtaP°sllion of differ-/ imrr , X , , . , ..n»nent kinds of courses, standards,year of 1955, the total budget of ondary schools are upon the whole .. .the University has increased a pretty shabby lot, very often and even objectives that the coun-*7 000 W and $5 000 000 of this divorcaS from th. main tody ol a .S™- «*° asked for the? ’ ’ ’ _? *o,uw,wu 01 mis . .. , ... ... appointment of an executive com-has been devoted to instruction the university and with dubious ... undergraduate educaand research. It was hard to part standards and frail content. We u e graduate educawith such distinguished and be- <*>uld tolerate no revival of a cir- * , . _loved figures as Garfield Cox, (us on the Midway, however large rfie committee consisted of fourPaul Cannon, Paul Hodges, Elea- the crowds and alluring the side persons from the College, fournor Humphreys and Harold Urev shows. The problem was perceived from the Divisions, and one from- all losUhis year Through retire* and attacked by Maurice Seay, the professional schools; it wasment—but we can hope that the former chairman of the depart- presided over by the Chancellor;113 new people who joined us will ment, but he understandably chose and it was given extensive powersin turn approximate them in schol- foundation life as more reward- to straighten out this academicarly and scientific stature. and Frank Chase, his succes- mess*More building is going on now *°r’ «u‘ried the problem through AFTER ENGAGING for a re-along the Midway than since J** wbftt we hope is a good solu- Spectable period in the broad,Rockefeller and Harper’s plans “on. loose, philosophical rambling thatcoincided with the World’s Fair The department of education faculty committees engage in, itof 1893. Some ten new construe- will continue its existence as a settled down to the tough organi-tion programs have reached vari- graduate teaching and research zational problem of how to obtainous stages of planning or eomple- department of the division of the a single faculty, representative oftion during this year, and we now social sciences, but most of the the entire university, and respon-possoss new facilities ranging members of this department will sible for the entire bachelor’s de-from a very low temperature become members of a new school gree. It early decided to tiptoelaboratory to a very high speed of education, the dean of which around the Bachelor of Sciencecomputer. During a period of will be chairman of the depart- degree, for the simple and straight-business recession, the value of ment. The new school, which will forward reason that those shaggyour endowment increased by $11,- be devoted to the training of teach- fellows in the departments of000,000. and the canny Parker ers. It will confer only the mas- Physics, Chemistry, and Mathe-Hall managed to earn 6.2% on the ter’s degree in teaching, and sub- matics snarl menacingly whenbook value of our endowment ject matter will be presented by their grim clutch on the contentthrough complex transactions those who normally teach it in of their degrees is in any wayranging from United States gov- the departments, though it may threatened. The final recommen-ernment bonds to Havana harbor, receive new configurations spe- dation, therefore, concerned onlyEven our enrollment increased eially adapted for those who will the Bachelor of Arts degree and2 • CWTC A G 0 * M A t 0 0 N * Nov. 14, 1958 Chancellor Lawrence A. Kimpton'we did not have a normal childhood4the general education content ofthe Bachelor of Science degree.The recommendation was a goodone, for the excellent reason thatit really pleased nobody and noneof the parties at issue won a bat¬tle. But through some miracle ofthe patient and persistent persua¬sion of the executive committeethe-proposal was recommended bythe committee of the council andpassed by the council by a vote ofthirty-eight to four.As a result, a new faculty is tobe created, drawn from the entirepresent constituency of the Col¬lege, with an approximately equalnumber of persons from the Divi¬sions. This new faculty, organizedlike any other, is to have exclu¬sive sovereignty over the AB de¬gree. The present College thusloses its autonomy, and the De¬partments lose control over thespecialized component of their de¬grees, but the Bachelor of Artsdegree now comes under the pur¬view of a single academic groupbroadly representative of the Uni¬versity.Initially—though the new fac¬ulty is not permanently bound toit—the degree is to assume a pat¬tern of two years of general edu¬cation, a year of free and guidedelectives, and a year of depart-men tal specialization/ this pre¬scription relating to eorftent ratherthan to chronology. The old Col¬lege is requested to reduce itsthree-year program to two years,and the departments are askedto get their offerings into con¬formity, including the establish¬ment of a suitable pool of elec¬tives.THERE IS to be a single aca¬demic Dean of this new unit toprevent confusion among the fac¬ulty, a single undergraduate Deanof Students to reduce confusionamong the students, and it is tobe called the College, which willcertainly confuse everyone.But this change, if it is to besignificant, must go beyond aCouncil vote. Revolutions, withall their upheavals and changes inthe locus of power, do not neces¬sarily change the hearts amiminds of men. This fundamentalreorganization of our Universitywill be no more than some newwords in our Statutes without theeffort, good will, and cooperationof us all. The old College mustreally give up its isolation andbecome a functioning part of theUniversity.The Divisions must not regardthis move as a heaven-sent occa¬sion to go down and clobber theircolleagues in the general courses,or—an even more serious andlikely alternative—must not ne¬glect their responsibilities really to participate in the formationand operation of a new under¬graduate program. The reorgani¬zation provides us with an oppor¬tunity to bring the genius of ourentire University to focus uponthe Bachelor of Arts degree.NOT EVEN reorganization andgood will, however, will resolveall our undergraduate problems.The future of the College at theUniversity of Chicago is not solelybound to curriculum. As our tui¬tion goes up, as the number ofcity junior colleges grows, as theUniversity of Illinois builds inChicago, it becomes increasinglyclear that our future lies in a resi¬dential college. At present somefifty per cent of our undergradu¬ates are from the Chicago areaand only thirty-four per cent ofour college students reside in thestudent dormitories. We cannotlive with these percentages. Wemust recruit more students frombeyond our area; we must pro¬vide more housing for them; andalong with a better curriculum wemust provide a richer extracur¬ricular life.Our professional schools, whichfive years ago were in seriouscondition with the exception ofemidcine, improved throughoutthe year. Medicine remained re¬markable, the Law school increas¬ingly gained the stature and repu¬tation it deserves, and our youngtheologians of the federated theo¬logical faculty turned down moreoutside offers than were receivedby any other part of the Univer¬sity, Business made the mostspectacular showing — nineteennew faculty appointments includ¬ing the appointment of GeorgeStigler to the new Charles R. Wal¬green professorship: a gift of wellover a million dollars from theFord foundation; a new buildingfor the Industrial Relations cen¬ter; and a successful new programof association with the industrialcorporations of the Chicago area.The gains of our School of SocialS. rvice administration and Gradu¬ate library school were less spec¬tacular, but they both showedgrowing strength, and particularreference should be made to thenew George Herbert Jones pro¬fessorship in Social Service ad¬ministration contributed to theschool by the Chicago communitytrust.(see “LAK,’4 pafcelG).»v. ;v/ »V. ■ \.; v.* C'’ * y-■• ‘Yy Y ; > *;HP redevelopment plan approvedby Mary Finkle“Chicago now stands on thethreshold of a great experi¬ment. It will be handled with,c humanity it needs.”Following these words fromh i c a g o ’ s Mayor Richard J.>aIoy. City council voted 44 to 0,it Friday, in favor of the $38Ition Urban Renewal plan foryde Park - Kenwood.The formal vote-taking was in carrying out this plan, thecouncil might be more hesitantin approving future plans.”Concerning the general opinionof the project, held by those ina position to vote for or againstit, a recognition of the humanfallibility of the plan’s agents,together with acknowledgementof their tremendous resourceful¬ness, was voiced by aldermanReginald DuBois: The city, through the commu¬nity conservation board, hasalready begun negotiations withthe a federal agency, the urbanrenewal administration of theHousing and Home Financeagency, for what is called a ‘‘loanand grant contract.” This wouldprovide three fourths of themoney for the project and wouldspecify the areas and eligible forloan under the so called” 220 mortgage insurance statute.The $30 million in loan for pri¬vate individuals to renovate struc¬tures not included in the planbut located in the renewal, area,pledged by number of Chicagobusinessmen, can then be pooledfor distribution under that sta¬tute. Until federal approval isobtained—which might be a mat¬ter of months—the plan cannotbe activated. I "I like the job I gotthrough reading the ChicagoMaroon want-ads/'might be called only a cele- ‘‘No one wants to go on recordbiation for the foresighted plan- as being opposed to such a cour¬ts, whose work had progressed ageous and noble plan. I am goingfor i hankless months. For the to be for it because it is solidculmination of their ideal — the despite its shortcomings.” (Du-climax of the realization — had Bois was expressing regret thatcome earlier than the formal the council could vote either ‘‘yes”balloting. Even while the stormy or “no” and could make nopublic hearings late in September changes, only recommendations.)were to all appearances tearing The “shortcomings” to whichthe plan assunder with contro- he referred are chiefly: notversy. all but the most pessimistic enough public housing in the(^visionaries believed that it opinion of many, and the disloca-per-could not fail to meet the ap¬proval of the city officials.But the work has only begun.A-s alderman Patrick P. Petronesaid at the vote-taking session,"the community conservationfcoard is responsible to the citycouncil, and unless care is used tion of a large number ofsons although it is thoroughly appeals,understood that painstakingefforts will be taken to relocatethem all comfortably.The next question that natur¬ally comes to mind is: where doesthe plan go from here? Regional court competitionchallenges law studentsThirty-seven law students from schools in Illinois, Indiana and Wisconsin are engagingin the Regional Moot court competition in Chicago yesterday, today and tomorrow. RufusL. Cook, Robert Doan and Michael Padnos are representing UC.The arguments are held in the federal and county courthouses before a group of 36Cook county and Chicago judges. A panel of justices from the Illinois, Indiana andWisconsin supreme courts will hear the final round of arguments tomorrow evening at theUS seventh circuit court of determining the winner of each New York as a means of enabling. . round of the competition. The law students throughout the coun-In the pairing of teams for written briefs have been reviewed try to match their courtroom abit-jor t^e pas(. week ky Dwight W.the first round of competitionyesterday at the Cook countybuilding UC was matched againstNotre Dame.Written briefs as well as oralarguments will be considered inCar registration hits 2000 Fawcett, James W. Goff and Leo,Herzel and H. Blair White, allpracticing Chicago attorneys.The teams winning first andsecond places in the regional com¬petition will represent this areain the national competition, sched¬uled for December in New York.Last year the University of NotreDame and Loyola placed first and ities against one another. Ninety-two law schools from coast tocoast have entered teams in thisyear’s debates.The fictitious case to be argued,United States versus Akkro corpo¬ration, concerns an indictmentagainst a corporation for violat¬ing the federal anti-corruption actby expending corporate funds inconnection with a senatorial elec-Alxnit 2000 students have registered their cars this year, Mrs. Ruth O. McCam, assistant second* respectively, in the region- tion campaign. The appeal to thedean of students, reported.‘ There arc no exact figures on car registration,” added Mrs McCarn, “because the campusguard’s office is still busy processing and alphabetizing the cards.”The dean advised that “students who have not registered their cars yet should do so in theguard’s office, at the rear of the University Press building.” There is no charge for registra-At Mif* h#»<rinnin<r nf vantages for car drivers. “It will “the committee is still incomplete,'school vear Mrs McTarn nl facilitate the recovery of stolen tration, faculty, and student body.Miiuoi ye<u, mrs. ii, a.s cars minimize car theft, and give because Joel Rosenthal, as presi--l nr» n rtf ♦ hrt rvn fb i nr rt rt i t. ... * ST al competition. The University of Supreme Court of the UnitedPennsylvania was the winner ofthe national competition.The national competition is con¬ducted each year by the younglawyers committee of the Associ¬ation of the Bar of the City of States raises questions of currentinterest relating to the participa¬tion of corporations, unions andother organizations in politicalaction and involves a determina¬tion of Constitutional issues.chairman of the parking committee, announced that “the in¬creasing gravity of the parkingproblem in the University neigh¬borhood has made necessary aprogram of automobile registra¬tion”During central registration allstudents were given an applica¬tion.Application for registrationmust be made when any studentstarts using a car in the campusarea, “it is the student’s responsi¬bility to keep the registration upto date at all times,” Mrs. McCarnhas stressed.J Failure to register a student-owned or student-operated car en¬tails a fine of $5.Mrs. McCarn explained thatregistration will have distinct ad-Adler to writebooks columnMortimer J. Adler, pro¬fessor of philosophy of lawduring the Hutchins adminis-ration, is writing a weekly col¬umn on “Great ideas from thegreat books” for the Chicago Sun-Times.Each week Adler, who is nowdirector of the Institute for Philo¬sophical Research in San Fran¬cisco, answers, in terms of theopinions of great writers, a read-f’s letter concerning a “question -•4 general interest,” the Sun-Times says of his column.Readers whose letters are an¬swered by Adler receive a 54-volume set of the “Great booksof the Western world.” The .setcontains, says the Sun-Times, “443orks by 74 authors, spanning30 centm ies of thought.”Letters to Adler should be ad¬dressed to Mortimer J. Adler, careof the Chicago Sun-Times, Sun-'l imes Plaza, Chicago 11, Illinois.The CoiletteLAUNDERETTE1449 I«t 57th St.MU 4-9236 the University a basis for plan¬ning additional parking facilities.”The parking committee consistsof representatives of the adminis-“However,” said Mrs. McCarn, dent of Student Government, hasnot yet nominated the two studentmembers and because one of thefaculty members had to resign onaccount of other commitments.”No blazer, no go Ellen Coughlin Beauty Salon51 OS Lake Park Ave. Ml $-2000SPECIALISTS IN HAIR STYLINGAND PERMANENT WAVINGOpen Mon. - Sat. — 9 a.m. -11 p.m.by Larry CohenThe athletic department re¬fused to take cross countryrunner Ned Price on a trip toCravvfordsville, Indiana, becauseho did not wish to wear one of thenewly-bought maroon blazers.The trip, to run against Wabashcollege on Tuesday, November 11,was apparently the first time thatthe matter of the blazers hadcome up.The athletic department boughtthe blazers, which have “Univer¬sity of Chicago” written on thepocket, to improve the appear¬ance of its traveling teams. Themoney came from a special con¬tribution by some alumni.When Price arrived at Bartlett gymnasium Tuesday morning toleave for Crawfordsville he wastold by cross country coach TedHaydon that the athletic depart¬ment had decided that wearing thejackets was compulsory. Pricespoke with the coach for a fewminutes then unpacked his equip¬ment and left.Haydon said that it was not upto him to decide whether or notPrice could go but that it was aruling of the athletic department.Haydon added that as far as hewas concerned no other discip¬linary action would be taken.Without Price, the cross coun¬try team was shut out by theWabash squad.(See ‘Price’ page 12) EAST END PARKSHOPPE1650 east 53 streetIP DRESSES and HATSIP COORDINATES; LINGERIEHOSIERY •I1 GIFT ITEMSfa 4-9635The East End Park Shoppe is presenting a fashion show for the FlorenceKaminsky Cancer Research Society ot The Del Prado Hotel, Saturday,November 15, 12:30 (luncheon showing).editorialSU could be active groupwith campus supportSolitary, standing on the northwest cornerof Kimbark, Ida Noyes is fast living up to itsreputation as “the magnificent mausoleum,”largely due to Student Union’s sudden demise fromthe campus scene.No C dances have been attempted (usually at thistime of year at least three C-danees have takenplace) and last year’s moderately successful “Cam¬pus hangout” has not ‘hung’ out yet this quarter.We were beginning to wonder if loyal old studentUnion had given the UC students up for sociallylost when we were informed of a Student Union"board meeting” to take place this week. We canonly hope that though the Union’s functions havepot been the most well attended student activitiesstudent opinion on campus, perhaps with the “new blood” on itsboard Student Union will again make the Cloisterclub more than a room for feeding our youngfriends from the lab school and make Ida Noyes abit more than a ghost town.The Maroon understands well that SU's burdenof responsibility was carried by just a hard-work¬ing few last year—and it is certainly difficult toproduce a constant stream of social events withlittle man power and less campus support.We therefore . . . remind students on campus, in- ;eluding members of the fraternities, gil ls clubs andother campus groups, that they are welcome topitch in and help breathe some life into StudentUnion which surely could and rightly should bean important and enjoyable part of campus life. Oatonpis.i&fa,{By die Author <4 "Ratty Ro%tnd the Flag, &oyf "and"Barefoot Bag with Cheek.”}ANYONE FOR FOOTBALL?When Pancho Sigafooe, sophomore, pale and sensitive, first sawWilla Ludowic, freshman, lithe as a haael wand and rosy as thedawn, he hemmed not; neither did he haw. f*I adore you,” hesaid without preliminary.“Thanks, hey,” said W7illa, flinging apron over her faremodestly. “What position do you play?”“Position?” said Pancho, looking at her askance. (Theaskance is a ligament just behind the ear.).“On the football team,” said Willa.“Football!” sneered Pancho, his young lip curling. “Footballis violence, and violence is the death of the mind. I am not afootball player. I am a poet!”“So long, buster,” said Willa.“Wait!” cried Pancho, clutching her damask forearm.She placed a foot on his pelvis and wrenched herself free.“I only go with football players/’ she said, and walked, shimmer¬ing, into the gathering dusk.Is football worth the injuries?A student is in the hospital with a lacer¬ated kidney. When he is discharged, he willhave spent ten weeks in Billings and will haveto spend many more weeks convalescing.The reason for Bill Spady’s injury is ratherUnique in the past 20 years around the Uni¬versity. He received it in a football scrim¬mage.One begins to wonder whether football isworth the effort if students are going to besubjected involuntarily “to die for Chicago.”During the three-year history of the currentfootball class, there have been a number ofinjuries. At the historical first scrimmageheld two years ago, a student received a badcut below the eye. Last year, a broken armwas one of the major injuries. This year,Spady became the victim. These accidents are not uncommon in foot¬ball. It appears that a coach’s favorite excusefor lasing a game is that half of his team iseither on the sidelines or in the hospital.Pro-football persons like to point to thefamous UC-Michigan game of 1905 (Chicago2 - Michigan 0) as the height of the Maroonfootball glories. They seem to forget thatthis game led to the permanent blindness inone eye for one of Chicago’s gridders.The University’s philosophy of “participa¬tion, not spectatorship” would tend to sup¬port football’s return, as a sufficient numberof men have turned out these past threeyears to warrant a team.With all these injuries, though, is it worth jit?Gary MokotoffStudent opinion on tenure?Tenure is quite an impor¬tant word to a teacher. Untilhe reaches that majestic pla¬teau, he has no assurance thathe will be rehired when his ap¬pointment expires. Instructors are hired from year to year. As¬sistant professors are appointedfor seven years. Associate pro¬fessors and professors have apermanent tenure.The decision as to who should have tenure is made by the vari¬ous faculties. This is as it shouldbe. However, the faculty memberssee only one aspect of an instruc¬tor. Many times the students aresurprised to learn that a teacherwhom they considered excellentis not given tenure. Perhaps thefaculty did not realize how gooda teacher he was; perhaps he was !not a good politician. Whateverthe reason the faculty has lostmany good men and women.The new College faculty will. |for the first time, be considered ,on their research and publishingsas well as on their teaching abil¬ity. Perhaps, in the shuffle, teach¬ing ability will be forgotten jaltogether. If this happens, the jCollege, as we know it, will bejust one step short of oblivion, jI should like to propose a wayby which an instructor or assist¬ant professor’s teaching abilitycan be considered when his tenureis being decided. This can be doneby having the students’ viewpointpresented to the proper authori¬ties. This viewpoint can be trans¬mitted via responsible students—the logical group being the Stu¬dent Aides who are appointed bythe Chancellor (primarily foracademic achievement and sec¬ondarily for service). The aidescould, formally or informally, pollthe students and compile a list offaculty members, not on tenure,considered by the students as ex¬tremely good teachers.This does not propose that stu¬dents should say which teachersshould get tenure. Nor does itpropose that the students dictateto the faculty. It simply suggeststhat a student media be createdby which the faculty can hear thestudents’ opinion about theirteachers. Even if the studentsare not listened to, no one canobject if (hey express their opin¬ions. And who knows, they mighthave something interesting to say.norman lewak(ev the author of «Must round theOR rn BEfiRFOOt Boy U)ITH PiQueFLIP-FLOP BOX OR ICE PACK?YES. IT'S TROfc - I'M PiqUEb! A/OTonly because we got feet like aBERR,WHICH ITSEU IS A SEftlDUSHANjhORP BOT AlSOMCRUSE I'VEBEEN RuiNED AS ftuMTER SHOCE T\JlSTARTED WORKING FORTHE rtOLE-BURROW the oral fixation rye developedCAUSES ME to GNftU) THE AStER/S KKEY OFF hY TYPE WRITER-AND Th£TAT00S on MY HANDS ITCH (NSOFFER-RBLV. MY GIRL FRIEND, PHYLLIS PIORRIREFUSES EVEN TO &E SEEK) WITHK)0U) 1UT MY WRdTNG HAS SUFFERED MOST \H m\> HAS BECOME SO CRAMPED (HUT)HEV11 EVEN U3RHE CA)T ANYTHING ASiWPLE "WE GROCERY U5T, THE WORDICtE-BURROW evlNIYRlly works15 DRY IN....AGAIN AND AGA/N.... .10LE-BORROW...an ....MOLE-BWo).. HERE... MOLE eOftfCUJ... IT COMESlOVi....WOl£-B0RMW~.. POSHING GOT....m jjURUDUl.-ttNTNCESOf GREAT....lOlE-BURttHO-..-Most.. AND.... FORCING THE • • • • MOLE - BURROW.....CHARACTERS OUT OF THE MOLE-CAJRRoW ... PANELS INTO THF MAGftlS.M01E -BURROW MoLE-fclJRRoU....AND THEN 1....M0LE- BORROW-...WITH MY MOtf - BORROW... RNDTHWHE fVSKtD ME WOOlD MOlJE-fUWOW.AND FIRST I PUT MY MbLE-BURROW...WAS(HOLE-BURROW like....MAD BURROW.•• fUtf-BVflftW tC >vML PERFUME. - m HIS fGARy/flL,WPS GOING UKE....^ n fLclM&E-fcVRROLL.ftND ~ 'IHOlt-BURROW1 Sfllt MOLE*BURROW 1| v| |TAMES ibWE-BURRolO..... JAND THANK PHYIUS MORRIS TOO FOR REFUSING TO BE -SEEN So"'MV utnnr V m (VV I IV V IV nc -*LCW A)THAT IT WASN'T NECESSARY TQ flflgTHfR CHARACTER4 • CHICAGO MAROON • Nov. 14. 1958 Panclio went to his room and lit a cigarette and pondered hisdread dilemma. What kind of cigarette did Pancho light? Why,Philip Morris, of corns!Philip Morris is always welcome, but never more than whenyou are sore beset. When a fellow neetlH a friend, when (he heartis dull and the blood runs like sorghum, then, then above ali,is the time for the mildness, the serenity, that only Philip Morriscan supply.Pancho Sigafoos, his broken psyche welded, his fevered browcooled, his synapses restored, after smoking a fine PhHip Morris,came to a decision. Though he was a bit small for football (aneven four feet) and somewhat overweight (427 pounds), he triedout for the team—and tried out with such grit and gumptionthat he made it.Pancho’s college opened the season against the ManhattanSchool of Mines, always a mettlesome foe, but strengthenedthis year by four exchange students from Gibraltar who had beensuckled by she-apes. By the middle of the second quarter theMiners had wrought such havoc upon Pancho’s team that therewas nobody left on the bench but Pancho. And when thequarterback was sent to the infirmary with his head drivenstraight down into hie esophagus, the coach had no choice butto put Pancho in.Pancho’s teammates were not conspicuously cheered as thelittle fellow took his place in the huddle.“Gentleman,” said Pancho, “some of you may regard poetryas sissy stuff, but now in our most trying hour, let us hark tothese words from Paradise Lost: ‘All is not lost; the uncon¬querable will and study of revenge, immortal hate, and couragenever to submit or yield!’ ”So stirred was Pancho’s team by this fiery exhortation thatthey threw themselves into the fray with utter abandon. Asa consequence, the entire squad was hospitalized before the half.The college was forced to drop football. Willa Ludowic, nothaving any football players to choose from, took up with Panchoand soon discovered the beauty of his soul. Today they are seeneverywhere—dancing, holding hands, nuzzling, smoking.Smoking what? Philip Morris, of corrisl ® ism m»> «>ui».n• • •And for you filter fanciers, the makers of Philip Morris giveyou a lot to like in the sensational Marlboro—filter, flavor,pack or box. Marlboro joins Philip Morris in bringing youthis column throughout the school gear.1411 E. 53rd FA 4-5525 — HY 3-5300Cafe EnricoFeaturing — Complete Wine List andHors d'oeuvre TableCheese Smolt12“. .1.25 Combination Small12"2.00Sausage . .1.50 Mushroom .1.75Anchovy . .1.50 Shrimp .2.00Pepper fir Onion . . . . .1.35 Bacon & Onion .1.75Free Delivery on All Pizta to t c Students:>»g :Kass shows 'willingness to believe rumors'Cantankerous, gossip-basedcriticism of a University of¬fice such as we read last weekletter of Leon Kass, is notthe kind of thing to startle anyonewho has seen a few issues of theNor is it startling to theObserver of local mores to find aStudent in medical school holdingactive membership in the studentorganization that “orients” neweditors column undergraduates: O-Board is opento graduate and professional stu¬dents with time and inclination forsuch an unusual (not to say mor¬bid) hobby. One gathers theseare generally recent alumni ofthe College—no doubt incomplete¬ly oriented to post-College life.But when medical student Kass,a member of O-Board and presum¬ably a fairly senior one, publicly announces his willingness to be¬lieve rumors of skulduggery inthe admissions office and scornfor undergraduate admissionspolicy as he pretends to under¬stand it (medical school admis¬sions, with Kass in, is presumablya different kettle of fish) thencertain questions arise. HaveKass’ first year clients been orien¬ted by him to believe that they areMaroon editor blasts KassMr. Kass has once againchosen to point out the al¬leged “sterilities of the Uni¬versity” and more preciselywhat he considers the sterili¬ties of the Maroon, an organ¬ization about which he knowspitifully little judging fromthe complete inaccuracy ofeach of his statements printedon this page.MR. KASS, renowned forhis deliberate exaggerationsbecause he feels that he mustawaken the students to thedreadful things that are hap¬pening to the University,claims in his letter that theMaroon is not varied or in¬tellectual enough, though inreality the Maroon has thenational reputation of beingone of the most high level col¬lege newspapers produced.Mr. Kass need only rummagethrough our vast collection ofexchange newspapers fromevery other college in theUnited States and severalfrom abroad to be convincedof the high caliber of his Uni¬versity’s newspaper.With the exception of theHarvard, Michigan and Min¬nesota papers, Mr. Kass willhave a difficult time findingmany papers to compare withthe content and intellectualfcvel of the Maroon.YES, MK. KASS, we docarry information on studentactivities and other pertinentevents occurring on campus.In case you have forgotten, orin the event that you neverreally knew, the main func¬tion of any newspaper is toinform its readers, and wehope that we are doing justthat.Mr. Kass, the “great con¬versation” is still going on,although you are not a partof it.In paragraph 2 Mr. Kasscomplains that our standardof excellence has changed . . .and we agree, our standardshave gone up. We neverclaimed that our 36-page pa¬per “guaranteed greatness,”but we are intensely proud ofthe fact that we were in aposition to attempt a news¬paper of this size, a rarity incollege journalism, and we areProud that we can continuePutting out the largest androost complete issues possible.Regarding Mr. Kass’ com¬plaint about the omission ofthe welcoming address of thechairman of Orientationboard, surely you know, Mr.Kass, that it is traditional inthe Maroon that the presidentStudent Government wel¬comes the new students tocampus in our pages. We onv. ^ ^Iaroon fed sure that youhao ample time during “Ori¬entation week” to “reflect**your new student charg-uP°n the “ingrained intel¬ lectual spirit of our Univer¬sity.” In our opinion all thechairman of Orientation boardsaid in her speech was “hello.”NOW ON to Mr. Kass’ big¬ger assumptions . . . the Ma¬roon editors are apathetic,says he . . . we are portrayedas rather feebleminded soulsthat play on the third floorof Ida Noyes each week. Mr.Kass accuses last year’s edi¬tor of not writing more thanfive editorials and accusesthese seemingly underworkedstudent leaders of not think¬ing. In defense of Mr. Moko-toff, Maroon editor, vintage1957-58, may we say that byactual count of editorials pub¬lished in last year’s paper, Mr.Kass is proved wrong. Marooneditors do a bit more thanplay at putting out the paper;we have opinions and try topresent them in a responsibleand adult fashion when theneed arises, which is usuallyevery week on publicationdate. Editorials based on ele¬ments of rumor and alarm,that Mr. Kass seems to be sofond of, do not meet the stand¬ards of the Maroon.IN REGARD to Mr. Kass’last point . . . “perhaps theyshould attend the student edi¬tor’s conference sponsored byNSA” . . . may we remind ourdear uninformed friend thatto keep in contact with other“enthusiastic, informed andconcerned student editors” theMaroon was one of three pa¬pers that founded the Big Tennews service last year, an in¬formation bureau that provid¬ed a flow of newrs to almostevery other college newspaperin the country. The Maroonnoted for its tradition of lead¬ership has been asked to con¬duct instructional seminars atthe Associated Collegiatepress conference to be held inChicago this weekend, also.Still insist we’re unthinkingMr. Kass ... if so may weinvite you to join the presenteditor during her 55-hourweek and her executive staffduring their 40-hour weekand see if you can get awaywith iust “contemplating yournavel.”Now to Mr. Kass’ assump¬tion that the Maroon because“it is currently subsidized” bythe University, is a “companyunion newspaper.”The Maroon has never beentotally self supporting, al¬though in the past threeyears, the very years that Mr.Kass so thoroughly loathes,the Maroon has earned 92 percent of the finances necessaryfor the publication of a largenewspaper ... a figure thatamounts to more than $28,000yearly. The Maroon’s smalldeficit if there is one, is ab¬sorbed by the University at the end of the year. May Iremind Mr. Kass that his ownfavorite organization, Orien¬tation Board is a Universitysubsidized organization, andfollowing Mr. Kass’ logic sure¬ly must be a group of “com¬pany union tour leaders.”Come now.THE MAROON in its 67-year history has been intense¬ly proud of the fact that it hashad no University control oradministrative censorship. Itis almost unique in the worldbecause of this one factor, andthere is no one quality aboutthe Maroon that we w'ouldfight longer or harder tomaintain. Anyone who reallyknows the Maroon, is awareof the fact that we have ar¬gued successfully against anyattempts on the part of theUniversity to control or havea dominant voice in the Ma¬roon’s policies. The Maroonstaff and its editor are proudof this fact and feel the re¬sponsibility of upholding thedignity of the newspaper andthe integrity of the Univer¬sity all the more because of it.When the issues are valid,true and clearly defined, theMaroon will, and is anxious to,take a definite editorial stand— for or against, but the Ma¬roon will not stoop to Mr.Kass’ level for the sake ofcontroversy. We will continueto maintain and raise thestandards of responsibilityand the tradition of freedomthat others have worked sohard to establish.IN ANSWER to Mr. Kass’next three points the factsare . . . when in 1951, Mr.Strozier suspended the Ma¬roon editor, the staff and stu¬dent body did no such thingas “rally in protest.” Theypromptly impeached the edi¬tor . . . w hen in 1956-57, theMaroon editor realized on hisown that he had made anerror in judgment, he stoodup like a man and admittedhis mistake . . . and was allthe more respected on campusfor having done so . . . then,at last count the Maroon^ staffnumbered 42 . . . they may beyoung and they may be un¬trained but they’re new', freshand willing to learn . . . howmany members did you sayO-Board had . . . and howmany more years are theygoing to evade the fact thatHutchins is gone and Kimp-ton is Chancellor.THANK YOU for writing tous Mr. Kass ... you just gaveus the welcome opportunity ofrestating our aims and desiresfor ourselves and the Univer¬sity . . . and we invite you toread on in the letters columnfor what others whose opin¬ions wre value highly have tosay about the Maroon.Rochelle Dubnow here only as a result of faulty whether or not the board is offi-admissions policy? Do old man cially aware of it? (Orientees,Kass’s misanthropic opinions rep- unite! Nothing to lose but theseresent O-Board orthodoxy? How stains on your collective reputa-much of this sour talk are new tion.)undergraduates actually getting, Richard MaddixKass blasts MaroonThe Maroon was once a great newspaper and a contro¬versial one. It w'as the extracurricular continuation of the“great conversation.” It reflected the diversity of opinionsand the enthusiasms for thoughtful discussion characteristicof this University’s traditions, haps they should attend the Stu-It had excellent coverage of dents editor’s advisory conferenceall aspects of University and com- sponsored by NSA where theymunity life ... all being broad will meet enthusiastic, informedenough, t think, to include aca- and concerned students who finddemic and educational issues. To- the time to think as well as editday’s Maroon is little more than The Maroon is currently sub-a chronicle of student activities sidized by the University, al¬and a register for members of though there was a time when itnew honorary societies. was self-supporting (and I mightThe Maroon’s own standards of add, published daily). The sub¬excellence have changed. The edi- missiveness of the Maroon editortor seems to feel that “the first and staff to administration poli-36 page issue in its 67 year histo- cies and personnel can possibly bery” guarantees greatness; she explained by this financial tie.commits the same fallacy as those Perhaps the Maroon is a companywho sacrificed an excellent edu- union newspaper. When Deancatio for a four year degree. I Strozier suspended the Maroonmight point out that this very editor several years ago, the staff36 page issue omitted the welcom- and student body rallied in .pro-ing address of the chairman of test. Two years ago the same Mr.the Orientation board, a speech, Strozier severely threatened thewhich more than any that were then editor for printing a highlyprinted, reflected the ingraied in- controversial Gadfly, and the edi-tellectual spirit of the University, tor, staff behind him, publiclyThe current editor and her two apologized in the next issue. Nopredecessors have been quite con- protests registered,tent to edit their chronicles and But this last statement, coupledare not even ashamed of their with the dire shortage of staffa p a t h v toward the problems members on the Maroon, leads mewhich face the University. Does to believe that perhaps the steril-the Gadfly column excuse the edi- ity of the Maroon is a reflectiontor from his responsibility? Last of a greater sterility, that perhapsyear’s editor may have written more than the Maroon has de-as many as five editorials. Have caved.UC editors no opinions? Then per- Leon Kas*Thank youIn behalf of the University Col¬lege I want to express apprecia¬tion again for the exceptionallyfine coverage of events at theDowntown center. You are thefirst Maroon editor to assignmembers of your staff to the Uni¬versity college beat; their report¬age of lectures has been every¬thing we could have asked for.I am not praising you simplybecause you have been generouswith space for University college.There I simply agree with yourgood judgment. Where I thinkyou deserve campus-wide recogni¬tion is in your over all capacit3T aseditor. I have w'atched the Maroonfor many years; a long time ago Iwas on the staff myself. I cansay categorically that the paperhas never been better and moreuseful than It is now under youraegis.So this is goodbye and thankyou.Mark ReinsbergUniversity College•I have been a more or lessfaithful (or perhaps I shouldsay persistent) reader of theMaroon for an almost uninter¬rupted twelve years, as undergrad¬uate student, graduate student andemployee. During this time, I haverarely seen an issue as generallyinteresting and informative astoday’s (November 7, 1958).For what they are worth, Iwould like to offer my congratula¬ tions to you and the Maroon staff,and to express an earnest hopethat you can keep up to thisstandard.Joan W. MooreCommittee on humandevelopment•I have read the first twoissues of the Maroon withgreat admiration. It seems tome they are excellently done, andI like the sprightly quality aboutthem. I congratulate you uponyour excellent journalism. . . .Lawrence A. KimptonoFor the second time thisquarter I have been happy tofind our campus newspapercontaining not only a considerableamount of interesting informa¬tion, but many genuinely stimu¬lating articles as well. Wonderful!A toast to the entire staff is inorder. . ' .Joseph Geiser•Congratulations on thesheer awe-inspiring magni¬tude of the Maroon. I foreseethe day when it w'ill look like theSunday New York Times if thiskeeps up. Not only was it big. buttechnically it was flawless . . .quite a rarity. ... I wish your ad¬ministration continued success..John LyonHarvard Law schoolSTERN'S CAMPUS DRUGS61st & EllisWho sex we don't change our menu . . .We now have home-made pork sausagemade hot rolls. See it and believe it. home-For SI.25 you getGolden fried chicken, fried freshto your order, with salad bowl,potatoes vegetable, roll, coffee,tea or milk. For $1.00 you getA full half pound Stern's specialstript steak, with grilled onions,salad bowl, french fried pota¬toes, roll and butter.Nov. !4, 1958 • CHICAGO MAROON • 5m G AD FLYUniversity non-discriminatory files impracticalAgain this year, the ques¬tion of the University’s dis¬criminatory housing files hasquite properly arisen. As a gradu¬ate student since 1953, I knowhow deeply many students feelabout this matter.This fall, it happens I can con*tribute some miscellaneousthoughts on the controversy, forI just recently completed twomonths’ employment with the stu¬dent housing office as sole personin charge of the disputed files.Not only did I maintain and de¬velop the files, but I also visitedwell over 100 dwelling units sug¬gested for listing in those files.IN PREVIOUS letters to theMaroon on this topic which I haveseen, the more theoretical andhigh principled aspects of the con¬troversy over the discriminatoryfiles have been well aired; but themore factual and pragmatic as¬pects have not received due con¬sideration.The University administrationhas maintained that discontinu¬ance of discriminatory listingswould prove impractical. Well, ina real sense, that is true—fromthe standpoint of the studenthousing office. For all practicalpurposes, the policy change Wouldmean an end to the office’s aid tostudents seeking privately ownedhousing. There are just too fewinterracial buildings. But, it mightbe asked, wouldn’t some ownersof presently all-white buildingsdecide to take in qualified Negroesif that was the only way to getinto the University’s files? No,that is most unlikely, at least solong as the Hyde Park-KenwoodCommunity conference maintainsa large file of Hyde Park apart¬ments divided into white and Ne¬gro categories. Owners would listthere and students would seekhousing there.THE TENANT referral officeof the Community conference di¬vides its files for the reason,among others, that it will notembarrass Negroes by sendingthem to all white buildings. Ofcourse, there would be no tenantreferral office at all if only mixedbuildings were listed.The informed student will knowthat the most powerful agenciesin the community—of which theUniversity is the most prominent —are very fearful that Hyde Parkwill become too solidly Negro.The tenant referral office is, inpart, one of many efforts to keepa really interracial Hyde Park. Achief weapon in this campaign isthe University’s own real estateoperations. The University-backedSoutheast Chicago commission isdoing a number of things in thisdirection — as we should wellknow.Well, where do we come out?T feel there are legitimate reasonsfor believing that discontinuanceof the discriminatory files wouldremove one (relatively minor)device for helping keep the com¬munity truly interracial. Never¬theless, I think they should benon-discriminatory (thereby vir¬tually ceasing to exist). Why?MYr BASIC reason boils downto this. We are on very thin moralice in claiming the right to aninterracial community when Ne¬gro citizens are unable to moveinto virtually all decent parts ofthe city and excluded altogetherfrom the suburbs. I have visitedthe miserable dwelling units avail¬able to Negroes, at exorbitantrent. I am convinced that theamount of good quality housingopen to Negroes must be dras¬tically increased as soon as pos¬sible. The large all-white areasof Hyde Park are potentially asignificant and value incrementto the Negro housing supply.Oh, I know the argument thata stable interracial community inHyde Park will prove an inspira¬tion and a model to other partsof the city, etc. There is certainlytruth in that assertion . . . yet, wemust often choose among alter¬natives none of which are satis¬factory. I personally favor drop¬ping the goal of a thoroughlyinterracial Hyde Park unless theUniversity and other communitygroups now pushing the inter¬racial goal put at least as muchmoney and energy into the openoccupancy housing fight. (Thisproposed legislation could makeunlawful the refusal to rent apart¬ments because of race, color andreligion. It is already in effect inNew York City. Its passage herewould greatly reduce the chiefcause of blight and slums—over¬crowding necessitated by rentgouging.) IN RECENT years, the Univer¬sity has spent many tens of thou¬sands of dollars for helping pre¬vent a predominant percentageof rental units in Hyde Park be¬coming available to Negroes. Ipropose that at least one-half ofthe University’s current outlaysfor that purpose be channeled in¬ stead into a well-conceived strug¬gle to pass the open occupancyordinance within the next fewyears. I suspect other influentialinstitutions and groups wouldrally to the cause.Student Government ought totake a big hand in this. I don'tthink the great difficulty of evergetting this proposal through the City council, or the fear of thegreat debate attached thereto,should deter the University. Hutshould it choose to shy away fromthis controversial open occupancyfight, then I would be very inter¬ested in knowing how the Univer¬sity justifies its large-scale pro.gram to keep Hyde Park infer,racial.more letters to editorUCer advocates new lawThe letter in last week’sMaroon criticizing the man¬ager of the Tropical hut forh i s discriminatory employmentpractices only serves to empha¬size the need for a fair employ¬ment practices law in Chicago.The lack of such a law is espe¬cially intolerable in a city as largeand diversified as this.At present Aldermen du Pres(sic) and Holman are working inthe City council for the passageof an ordinance guaranteeing toevery citizen, regardless of race,religion, or place of origin, theright to secure employment solelyon the basis of his ability.I am certain that the greatmajority of students in this Uni¬versity and residents of HydePark in general support the actionof Aldermen du Pres (sic) andHolman. However, without clearand decisive evidence of popularsupport, these men are hamperedin their efforts to put an end todiscriminatory hiring practices.Meanwhile, such practices con¬tinue unabated. The ancient anddishonorable custom of putting“the Negroes here and the whiteshere’’ is unworthy of a civilizedman in the 20th century society;it is more the characteristics ofsuch throwbacks as the governorof Arkansas.It w'ould seem to me that soundbusiness practice would compelthe owner of an establishment insuch an integrated community tostop activities such as the man¬ager of the T-hut is now engagedMore people keep going backfor Camels than any othercigarette today. The Camelblend of costly tobaccos hasnever been equalled for richflavor and easygoing mild¬ness. Today as always,the best tobacco makes thebest smoke.By-pass the fadsand fancy stuff ..,Have a realcigarette -have a CAMEL/ ' Wkj‘If he should get by you, Emma,double back for the Camels! ”6 • CHICAGO MAROQN • Nov. 14# 1958 BtynoM»Tob. Co. .Wintton-Salem, N. C. in. But if even common sense can¬not make a man realize the harmhe is doing to the community and,potentially, to his own business,then law7, in the interests of thepublic welfare, must do the job.These unfair employment prac¬tices were previously unknow’n tothe student body and the commu¬ nity as a whole. Now that theyaie known—and publicized—it ie-mains for those in the Hyde Paikarea) which let us not forget, in¬cludes the University) to expressthrough concerted action theirview’s concerning racial disei imi-nation.William GlowcMore Shapiro at UCThe great interest shown in the Joseph Randall Shapirocollection loaned to dormitory students was rather exciting,but how many of the students who saw the exhibit in IdaNoyes and perhaps were lucky enough to get paintings know that anequally excellent exhibit is showing at the Renaissance society inGoodspeed hall? (Yes, Culture Vulture, you have mentioned it, but.. )Although these works—also entirely from the Shapiro collection -are not to be loaned to students, they present a valuable sample ofcontemporary works that should be seen by all students. Mr. Shapirospent a great deal of time hanging this exhibit to get the maximumdecorative effect on each wall; even this small detail is an interestingaspect of the exhibit.You have only today and tomorrow before this exhibit closes, soplan to spend a half-hour or so in Goodspeed hall, where you won tbe bothered by guards, humanities 1 students, or countless marblesteps —it’s well worth the five minutes walk from the dormitory.Claire Jean GoldsmithStaggs retirement unjust"To the Doily Maroon" . . .I helped furnish material for the Time article about Mr.Stagg. I certainly agree that Mr. Stagg was “ungraciouslyretied.”His contract, w'hile Mr. Harper was in charge, read “as long as youare willing and able.” Under Mr. Hutchins, the “willing” was elimin¬ated.A professor usually welcomes retirement from teaching so that hecan devote ail his time to research and writing. An athletic coach isin an entirely different situation.Chicago had a great group of freshman football players in 1932with Jay Berwanger as their star, they ran all over the varsity teamin practice. Mr. Stagg pleaded for one more year to have an oppor¬tunity to coach a team w'ith good players. With him as coach In 3933,we might well have had a championship team, and then it wouldhave been very difficult for Mr. Hutchins to finally get rid of foot¬ball.At the age of 80, Mr. Stagg’s College of the Pacific team was oneof the best in the nation and he was voted “coach of the year.”C. K. McNeil '25international house'sAround the Worldsemi-formal dance• fridoy, November 21 • Al Peters orchestra• 9 pm to 1 om • $1 per personMEXICO CITY COLLEGEWinter Quarter .... Jan. 2 to March 18Spring Quarter March 19 to June 11Summer Quarter .June 22 to Aug. 28Latin AmericanWorkshops June 22 to July 31Special Summer Session . June 22 to July 31Approved for VeteransInformation: Dean of AdmissionsMexico City CollegeMexico 10, D.F.profileBruno Beftleheim: Love is not enoughWith an enrollment of 40children between the ages ofsix and 15, the Sonia Shank-man Orthogenic school, UC’s resi¬dential treatment center for emo¬tionally disturbed children, is aunique example of modem psy¬chotherapy technique.The school, located at 1365 E.60th street, is one of the labora¬tory schools of the University. Itis a residential institution devotedto the study and rehabilitation ofemotionally disturbed children,and to the training of graduateStudents and professional personswho wish to specialize in treat¬ment of such children.The school attempts, by itssmall size and large number offaculty (the student-staff ratio isone:one) to create a homelikeatmosphere in which there is nopersonal anonymity and institu¬tionalism. and to make sure eachchild receives a maximum of per¬sonal attention.The students live in "family-sized'’ groups of six or seven, inorder that they may obtain theadvantages offered by living witha peer group. Each student’s ac¬tivities are planned in detail,based on the results of repeatedpsychiatric and psychologicalevaluation and daily s*off con¬ferences.Training and treatmentOnly those children are ad¬mitted to the school who the stafffeels are of at least potentiallynormal or above average intelli¬gence, and who can benefit fromthe special environment offeredby the school.In addition to the activities oftraining and educating the stu¬dents and training of the staff,the school also engages in re¬search into the causation, treat¬ment and prevention of primarybehavior disorders of childrenneeding institutional or "environ¬mental’’ treatment. One of thecurrent projects is a five-year in¬vestigation of childhood schizo¬phrenia and its treatment, fi¬nanced by the Ford foundation.Principal of the Orthogenicschool since 1944 is Bruno Bettel-heim, who is also a professor inthe departments of education,psychology and psychiatry. Bet-telheim was born in Vienna, Aus¬tria, in 1^03; in 1938 he receivedhis PhD from the University ofVienna. Between then and thetime he came to the US in 1939,he spent a year in the concentra¬tion ramps at Dachau and Buch-enwald.From Buchenwald to UCBettelheim came to UC as a re¬search associate for the progres¬sive education association. Exceptfor a brief period spent as anassociate professor of psychologyat Rockford (Illinois) college, hehas been here since.He is a prolific writer; amonghis most famous are Dynamicsof Prejudice (with Morris Jano-witz), Love Is Not Enough, andTruants from Life (both aboutthe activities and methods of theOrthogenic school), Symbolic Wounds, and Harry—a study inrehabilitation, which is requiredreading for the social sciences 2course in the College.Commenting on the presentAmerican concern with juveniledelinquency, Bettelheim stated:"There is very little evidence thatthe problem is vex-y much worseor better than at any other time.”Asked what he thought werethe probable cause of delinquency,he replied: "We have cut downon outlets for individual differ¬ences. A young man can nolonger "go West.” We expecteverybody to fit into the narrowconfines of American middle-classlife. On the other hand, however,the molding factors, such as tradi¬tion. religion, and the home, haveall been weakened.”Opportunities for 'misfits'biscussing possible methods forcuring and preventing juveniledelinquency, Bettelheim empha¬sized: "Our society is not willingto spend the money necessary toprovide opportunities for the"misfit.” Locking them up willnot solve the problem. What isneeded is something on the orderof a Civilian Conservation corpscamp where their energy can beused constructively and wherethey don’t have to compete withthe ‘nice boys,’ whom they hateanyway.”“We expect too much from ouryounger generation. Previously,a few from each generation wereexpected to “go West”; today, weno opportunity for them to dothis and expect instead that theyshould all conform.”Questioned about the presentuses of personality and IQ tests,he asserted: "Personality testsare highly specialized and forlimited purposes. Specific testsanswer specific questions; themore specific the question, themore accurate the answer. Masstests cannot be used to discover‘personality,’ partly because the‘test behavior’ of the individual(an important factor in evaluat¬ing these tests) cannot bo ob¬served and recorded.Mass tests too general"The IQ tesf is only a predic¬tion, within broad ranges, of suc¬cess in present day schools.”"Mass tests, such as used bylarge corporations when hiringexecutives, enable you to pickmen according to a uniform scale.However,” Bettelheim stressed,"no man who docs not want to bean ‘organization man’ has to be.Those who feel deprived of theirindividual freedom, and complainabout it, usually put a very lowprice on it. If, to gain their per¬sonal freedom, it will be necessaryto accept a small reduction insalary, they will sacrifice theirfreedom.”Replying to a question on edu¬cation in the US, he suggested:"The trouble with American edu¬cators is that they want to achievecontradictory goals. They wantto form in the child a firm convic¬tion of the Christian, American,middle-class ethic, and at the same time develop the traits of origi¬nality and critical thinking. Youcan have one or the other, butnot both.”'Too big'"Neither can an individual highschool produce a satisfied manuallaborer and a qualified collegestudent at the same time,” hecontinued. "I myself feel that wecan never find a completely cor¬rect answer to this complex prob¬lem of the high school curricu¬lum, but we must examine itcarefully.”"More attention to the indi¬vidual student,” Bettelheim added,"in other words, smaller highschools—would help. In large in¬stitutions there are no advantagesto be gained from the size unlessindividual differences are annihi¬lated. Therefore, small schoolsare the best solution.”"Americans,” he went on, "havea fascination with bigness. Wit¬ness the increase in salary andprestige as a principal movesfrom a smaller to a larger highschool. We can have efficiencyin our institutions, or we can pro¬duce human beings, but we can¬not do both.”Asked to express his opinionson the state mental hospitals,Bettelheim said: "A serious fault in our state mental health pro¬grams is that they want to takecare of everybody at the sametime. You can do no constructivework in a large institution—themaximum effective size for ther¬apy is about 100 patients.”Need more money"Nor,” he added, "is there aproblem with shortage of trainedpersonnel. There is just a short¬age of money to pay attractivesalaries. Increase the salaries suf¬ficiently and you can get the per¬sonnel.”Returning to a previous point,he emphasized: "Human beingscannot be dealt with successfullyas masses. Education and psycho¬therapy are individual things.”In coverage of a Bettlemheimlecture of last year the Maroonsaid of Bettlemheim, “The sub¬ject was the treatment of the psychotic child . . . but this wasnot evident during the first hourof his talk. Bettlemheim literallymade fools of his audience,hounded questioners till theyclarified themselves sufficientlyand took great offense whensomeone implied that he setsnorms or ‘plays God’ for his chil¬dren. No information changedhands during this period of time,in which the doctor repeatedlyasserted, ‘my efforts tonight willbe to understand your questions,not to answer them.’"He spoke not of cases, but ofchildren; not of psychoses, butof personal tragedies and prob¬lems . . . and as the lecture endedwas overheard saying to a col¬league: ‘They can ask questions:what is this? what is that? Butthey haven’t lived with the suffer,ing. They haven’t seen the heart¬break.”* John MillsThe Qreen Door Book Shop1451 EAST 57TH STREETHY 3-5829 Chicago 37, III.Quality paperbacks — Fine children's booksSpecial orders filled promptlyThe case of the typing paperthat erased without a trace — or,% •EATON’S CORRASABLE BONDTypewriter PaperWRiGHTLAUNDRYCOMPLETELAUNDRY AND DRYCLEANINC SERVICE1315 EAST 57TH STREETMl 3-2073 It’s a cinch to "rub out” typing errorsand leave no "clues”, when you useEaton’s Corrasable Bond Paper.Never smears, never smudges — be*cause Corrasable’s like-magic surface...erases without a trace! (A flick of thewrist and a pencil eraser puts thingsright!) This fine quality bond papergives a handsome appearance to allyour work. It’s a perfect crime not touse it! Erasable Corrasable is available in all the weights you might require-fromonionskin to heavy bond. In convenient 100-sheet packets and 500-sheetream boxes. A Berkshire Typewriter Paper, backed by the famous Eaton name.EATON’S CORRASABLE BONDMade only by EatonEATON PAPER CORPORATION PITTSFIELD, MASSACHUSETTSNov. 14, 1958 • CHICAGO MAROON 7All eligible for aid CLASSIFIEDTTVip mip?tinn nf lpaal nn hv Student f!nvprn.The question of legal aid, as taken up by Student Government in the last issue of the Maroon, has been cited as errone-us, by the Legal Aid bureau, 63rd street and Kimbark avenue.According to the bureau, anyone is eligible lor legal aid providedMs family finances warrant the granting of it.Eligibility is based on the financial need as determined by thefamily budget in relation to the family’s net income, the bureau said.Aid starts at $78 plus rent and special needs for the single unem¬ployed person and progresses along a graduated income scale withrespect to the number of dependents and the number of wage earn¬ers in the family.Special cases, such as medical care, child care, support of relatives,alimony, and extraordinary expenses are taken into consideration.Hie Legal Aid bureau has limitations in handling certain typesof cases. For rentUniversal Army Store _Headquarters for sport and work wearHooded parka jackets — hooded sweatshirts — Ivy league corduroytrousers — wash & wear Ivy league trousers — luggage & trunks1144 East 55th st. DO 3-957210% reduction with this coupon 1% room furnished apt. for students.Reasonable, near campus. PL 2-9641.2 Vt ROOMSCheerful, newly decorated, attractivelyfurnished apt. Safe, fireproof deluxeelevator bldg. Doorman. Night watch¬man. Maid and linen service available.Reasonable monthly rate.VERSAILLES APARTMENTS5234 Dorchester PA 4-02004 rooms furn. apt. with private bath—also 2 rms. Clean, near Int hse, UC, IC.BU 8-9424.Silver-seeking-scope. Guaranteed to leadto pocket full of silver dollars. CallP. Morris.NORTON APARTMENTS. 4835 Lake ParkAvenue. Pleasant 1'2 to 4 rooms, all withprivate kitchen and bath; parking. $68-$100 monthly. Open occupancy. Mrs.Sadler on premises. Unlimited number of silver dollars.Price — dirt cheap. Contact MysteryMarlboro Man.1954 Continental house trailer, 36 ft,2 bedroom, air conditioning, close IC,40 min from Unlv. Write or see; Lot 136,14115 South Western, Blue Island, Ill.Dictaphone (memory training incl. un¬derpillow speaker). $208 new, for only$120. Bl 2-2785, ext. 2874 days, eves,Hyde Park YMCA.Wantedii PROGRESSIVE PAINT & HARDWARE CO.'Hyde Park's Most Complete Point & Hardware Store'Wallpaper — Gifts —- Tools Rented — HousewaresUC DiscountMY 3-3840-1 1154-58 E. 55th st. 2*4 rm. unfurn. apt. avail. Dec. 1. $62.50.1003 E. 53rd. MI 3-9440. 8-10 am or 10-12pm wkdays, anytime wkends.For saleNeed to sell beautiful black woolen fit¬ted winter coat, brand new have out¬grown size 14. From Bonwit Tellers.Originally $110, will sell for $45. CallGalatia Halkldes. DO 3-6428 or MI 3-0800,ext 3936 and leave message. Also, dresses.GET SATISFYING FLAVOR...'' \ No flat”filtered-out"flavor!No dry "smoked-out"taste!1 ,i See howPall Mall'sfamous lengthof fine tobaccotravels and •gentles the smoke—makes it mild —but does notfilter out thatsatisfying flavor! HERE'S WHY SMOKE ^RAVELED* THROUGH FINE TOBACCO TASTES BESTIMju get Pad Mallfc famous length of O Ml Mali's famous length travels O Travels it over, under, oround andthe finest tobaccos money con buy 6 ond gentles the smoke naturally. U through Pol! Mall's fine tobaccos!Outstanding . and they are Mdd!Product of J&nvu&an iJu&ie/zo-^onyxtiruf/ — Jv&ueeo- is our middle nameCHIC A GO MAROON • Nov. 14, 1958 ServicesEXPERT TYPING—Term pa^T7n^r;tatlons, thesis. Reasonable. Pick im s,delivery. HU 3-8012 after 5:30 pmS EWING—A Iterations, hems, curtninZCall MU 4-3941. ns’FREE. Theft &, damage lns_ for i vr‘with ea. new English bike. MI 3-9098 ’Guided tours of campus polntlng outfavored locations of Marlboro MysteryRide Phila. Leave Nov 25 or 26; returnNov 30. Share usual. Call Angela: MI2-8859.Ride wanted to L.A. Dec. 19 or 20. Willshare driving & expenses. Dick Fried¬man. Ext. 1047.Wanted: Just one silver dollar. Hasanybody seen the Marlboro man?Wanted for part time development proj¬ect, electronics man, experienced in FMcircuitry, design and construction of re¬ceivers and transmitters, amateur back¬ground helpful. Please phone Tannen-baum, FA 4-9556 for interview.Ride to So. Calif, on or about Dec. 20.Willing to drive & help pay expen. BarryGoldstock, 3328 East House. BU 8-6610. ,Group leaders wanted. Work one to fiveafternoons and/or evenings per weekwith groups of youngsters. Call: JewishCommunity Centers of Chicago, SouthSide Center Mr. Horowitz, ES 5-7501. PersonalsIF YOU DESIRE PERFUME for your¬self, for gifts, or to earn extra moneyplease send $1 for five test fragrancesto MONDIQUE FRERES. PERFUMERSTO PERFECTIONISTS. 550 FIFTH AVE¬NUE NEW YORK CITY.Lost: Zarf with complete set finjansReward. Contact Jim Dalton, 127 A. B-j!Must sell! Zarf and finjans. Good condCheap. Contact Tel Dalton, 127 B. B-J,MM. Where will the Marlboro mysteryman strike next? l.r.All students who have participated inthe experiment for International livingplease contact Joseph Gray Immediatelyat MU 4-0837 or University ext. 1291.N. S.: Finally discovered the derivationof “Hangout”—“Han,” Old English for“place to get,” and “Gout,” an Illnessbrought about by overindulgence In richfood and drink. Let’s try It. S U.To Anyone Too Dull to Catch the Mean¬ing of the Other Personals on This Sub¬ject: 8tudent Union Is having the grandopening of the new Hangout this nextFriday night, with a new, Improvedmenu, entertainment, and lots of extragoodies. Watch this rag for final infor¬mation.Al: Why weren’t you wearing yourGolden Horseshoe this week? Joe.Joe‘ I was afraid to wear It. I don’twant sheriff Sain raiding the GoldenHorseshoe casino at Gaslight Oayetles,January 10. 1959. Al.Briefcase containing Phd thesis lostoutside Hutchinson commons, Nov. 13.Would person who found it please re¬turn contents to University informationor contact PI 2-5697. Reward will begiven.TAhSAM-W*1CHINESE - AMERICANRESTAURANTSpecializing inC4NTOWSE ANDAMERICAN DISHESOpen Dally11 A.M. to 10:30 P.M.ORDERS TO TAKE OUT1318 East 63rd St. BU 8-9018Listen to WFMT for thefinest in classical music. . . and for informationabout thePeterson Movingand Storage Co.1011 East 55th StreetBUtterfield 8-6711Keep On YourToes WithNow that you’ve got yourselfinto college, let safe, handyNoDoz tablets help you get out.Harmless NoDoz helps youkeep alert through long, latecramming sessions ... keepsyou on your toes during exams.NoDoz tablets are safe as coffeeand much more convenientErfEUROPELEASE a NEW CarPURCHASE a NEW Car*Rent a Late Model CarVOLKSWAGENSJMCA RENAULTHILLMAN PORSCHEMERCEDESI "with Repurchase Plan available!... or bring it home with you.The pleasant, economical way totravel in Europe. We make all ar¬rangements for the Plan you prefer.Write for full detailsUNIVERSITY TRAVEL COHarvard S‘q., Cambridge, Mass■ Bicycles, Parts, Accessoriesspecial student offer►►>►►>>►► <<<<ACE CYCLE SHOP |1621 .. 55th st. ; Big Car BillsGot You In Hock?_60 RAMBLER for 59-and SAVE!"s sI New RAMBLER AMERICANSuggested delivered price at Kenosha. Wisconsin for 2-door| sedan. State and local taxes, if any, automatic transmission' and optional equipment extra. first car with PERSONALIZED COMFORTWhile other cars grow bigger, bulkier, more gas-thirsty. . . Rambler retains its compact size . . . costs less tobuy... less to drive... offers new Personalized Comfortnot found even in high-priced cars. Sectional sofa frontseats glide forward or backward independently forgreatest driver and passenger comfort. . . reclining seatbacks . .. adjustable headrests. See it now!Rambler for '59—The Compact Car With The Best of Both • Big Car Room • Small Car EconomyMODEL CAMERAAuthorized LeicaDealerMSA Discount1342 E. 55th HY 3-9259K'.‘ f?...Competition now open for Hutchins comingf —Jf _ JL Jf M JF • Memorial services for Robert Redfield, professor of anthro-two graauate fellowships rux,t°R^e^eckVilte“^at7:30pm’. t Robert Maynard Hutchins, former Chancellor of the University,UC will participate in two new graduate fellowship programs recently announced by the will be among the speakers at the service.National Science foundation. These programs are in addition to the NSF’s regular pre- Hutchins came to the University as president in 1929, when Red-doctoral fellowship program and differ from it in that students submit applications directly field had just moved from instructor of assistant professor ofto the participating institution for preliminary screening and application forms are varied, anthropology. From this time, the two men were associated in acti-The application deadline is December 15, 1958. vities both in and out of UC.These fellowships will be awarded for study in the mathematical, physical medical bio- These included wartime efforts to develop policies for peacefullogical and engineering sci- —— - 1, . . adaptation of atomic energy and to avert the impending cold war;‘Airier anthrnnnlnrrv a * a * a a -kt a* . « . „ , . „ the Commission on the Freedom of the Press; the Committee toINLETS , r *dv“c?d National Science loundat.on fel- Frame a WorW Constitution; and the board of editors of Encyclo-psychology (excluding clinical training in these fields and who lowship covering any part of the pae()ia Britannica. «psychology), and from the fol- have been admitted to graduate same period of tenure. Additional other speakers are: Sol Tax, who will be present as one of Red-lowing social isciences where Status by a participating institu- information concerning coopera- fieid’s students, as a colleague in the University and as a fellowthey eon or P . f . 1 n or w 0 will have been prior tive graduate fellowships and the anthropologist; Alfonso Villa-Rojas, who was a schoolteacher in thedards of scientific inquiry by ful- to beginning their fellowship summer fellowships for graduate Yucatan Maya village of Chan Korn when Redfield arrived therefilling ‘^ requirements of the tenure. Beginning with the aea- teaching assistants and applica- in 1930; and william R. Ming, Jr., former professor in the lawbasic scientific m s - f emit year 1959-60 (summer quar- tion forms are available in the school, who worked with the anthropologist several civil rights casesjeetivity, verifiability and general- ter 1959), these fellowships will office of the divisional deans of between 1947 and 1951.itv,** geography, mathematical be available for either three- or students, Room 305, Administra-eeonomics, econometrics, demog- four-quarter awards. The annual tion building. The completedraphv, Information and communi- (four-quarter) stipend for cooper- forms must be submitted prior tocation theory, experimental and ative graduate fellows will be Deoember 15 1958 Award, willquantitative sociology, and the $2,200 in addition to tuition and ^ecember 15> 195«- Awaidshistory and philosophy of science, fees. Fellows electing tenure of ^ announced on March 20, 1959.Also included are interdisci pi in- an academic year will receiveary fields which are composed of three-fourths of the annual sti-overlapping studies among two pend.or more sciences. Awards will be The second of the new NSFmade to individuals who intend programs provides summer fel-to obtain advanced training in one lowships for graduate teachingof the medical sciences directed assistants during the summer oftoward a career in research or 1959. The objective of this newteaching. activity is to provide support toNational Science foundation co- selected teaching assistants of. . , „ ,. high ability in order to enableoperative graduate fellowships ,hem dcvote fu„ time thcirwill be awarded to US citizens own scientific studies or researchw ho have demonstrated ability during the summer months.US citizens who will have had,at the beginning of their fellow¬ship tenure, not less than oneacademic year of experience asteaching assistants and who havethe status of full-time graduatestudents in the aforementioned MimeographingFast service — Low ratesVan's Bookstore1555 E. 57H.HY 3-5787 or PL 2-7218 1322 ACASA BOOKSTOREGood Used BooksCarefully selected Imports of cards, giftschildren's booksreliable typewriter serviceE. 55th HY 3-9651Pelikan speakerat Lutheran meet"Man — both saint and sin¬ner” is the title for today’s scientific fields are eligible to ap-Lutheran meeting at 7:15 pm through the University forin Chapel house these summer awards. SummerJaroslav Pelikan, associate pro- Kraduate teaching assistant fel-fessor in the federated theological lows will receive stipends betweenfaculty, will be the speaker. As a $50 and $75 per week in additionstudent, Pelikan was an officer in to tuition and fees,the national student movement of * . ,(he Lutheran church and a mem- In an>’ 8,ven award period anher of the UC student group in individual may apply for only onethe 1940’s."The meeting tonight is, ofcourse, open to members of allfaiths. The Lutherans do not at¬tempt to guarantee, however, thatcoming to their meetings resultsin a UC professorship,” said theReverend Martin Graebner, groupadviser. CARMENS MOVERSUsed FurnitureDesks, Bookcases,Typewriters1214 E. 53 MU 4-900.3 10% Discount to UC Students and PersonnelAll Laundry and Dry Cleaning ServicesCOMPARE THESE LOW MET PRICES8-LBS WASHED & FLUFF DRIED . . . 59*10-LBS. FLAT WORK ’I”DRESS SHIRTS ■■ 22‘QUALITY DRY CLEANING — RAPID SERVICE — REASONABLE PRICESFREE PICK-UP AND DELIVERYPhone PLaza 2-9097UNIVERSITY QUICK LAUNDRY1024 E. 55th St.jpfillHIV; jWIIt|< mf ■ {j u BOOKSTORE 5802 ELLISAVENUEStarts Friday, November 14, 8:30 a. m., for a limited time onlyGalling All Students and Faculty to a SpecialSavings of 50% to 70% —Brand-new editions from leading publishers • • .Scores of other titles available but due to space limitations unadvertised|. LORD BYRON — COLLECTED CONVERSA¬TIONS—His Very Self and Voice, ed. toy E. J.Novell. “The most notorious and graceful talkerin Europe” as recorded by Shelley, Coleridge.Lady Byron, Leigh Hunt, Countess Gulcolliand other contemporaries. 676 pp.Pub. at $7.50 Sale $1J. THE POOR MAN’S GUIDE TO EUROPE, byDavid Dodge. How to get the very best out ofyoar vacation for the least amount of money—thousands of hints. Illus. 1956 edition.Pub. at $3.50 Sale $13. DICTIONARY OF MYSTICISM, ed by F.Gaynor. The essential terms of spiritualism,occultism, mysticism, etc.Pub. at $5.00 Sale $1.984. POPULAR MATHEMATICS, by Denning Mil¬ler. The eight mathematical branches fromarithmetic to calculus are here explained foractual enjoyment, as well as practical under¬standing and application. 616 pages, profuselyillustrated. Orig. pub. at $5.00 Sale $2.985. Dante’s THE DIVINE COMEDY, tr. by L. G.White. Luxury gift edition with 69 full-page8>ixl0'2" Dore engravings.Pub. at $6.50 Sale $3.98 30. THE DIALOGUES OK PLATO, from theclassic Jowett trans., ed. by W. C. Greene. 535pages—18 famous dialogues importing a clearpicture of Plato’s genius, the timeless qualityand unity of his thought.Pub. at $3.50 Sale $1.9831. THE FATHERS OF THE WESTERNCHURCH, by R. Payne. St. Paul to ThomasAquinas—dramatic life stories of the men wholaid the foundations of western thought.Pub. at $5.00 Sale $1.9832. PORTRAIT OF G. B. S., by Feliks Topolski.Bland, earnest, puckish, savage, world-weary,insatiably curious—George Bernard Shawcaught In every mood by an outstanding con¬temporary artist. 43 magnificent plates in alimited edition. Pub. at $12.50........Sale $1.9833. DICTIONARY OF ANTHROPOLOGY, by C.Wlnick. 10,000 complete, authoritative entriesIncluding information on the types and sites,customs, beliefs and achievements of earlyman. as well as definitions of all essentialanthropological terms. 579 pp.Pub. at $10.00 Sale $3.98PORTFOLIOS OF COLOR PRINTSAT INCREDIBLE SAVINGSFantastic savings on ready-to-frame, decorative color prints! A choice collection ofbeautiful Americon and European reproductions in handsome portfolios.6. FARM ANIMALS by Leonard Weisgard. warriors and* hunters, seafarers and farm-These large, brightly colored scenes cap- ers. 12"xl6".ture all the adventure and delight of farm Pub. at $6.00 set of 6 — now $2.98life and are just superb for the nursery or u> CHARLES M. RUSSELL-WATERCOL-plaj room. 13 x 16 .. S1 00 ORS OF THE OLD WEST. Exciting palnt-bpeciai. set or e — now $i.w lng<5 pf Ufe on the open plalns by the fa_7. CIRCUS ANIMALS by Leonard Weisgard. mous “cowboy artist” who has won belatedAll the color and excitement of the great- recognition as the equal of Remington,est show on earth, marvelously captured 20"xl6". Pub. at $7.50....set of 6—now $2.98for children of allf??8'e^ofe - now $1 00 13‘ JAPANESE COSTUME PRINTS by Kuni-opeciai. set oi now sada. A striking foursome of gorgeously8. CHINESE BIRD PANELS. Exotic birds costumed female figures personifying theand blossoming boughs in gossamer colors seasons of the year. 9x1334".against a beige, silk-grained background. Pub. at $2.50 set of 4 — now $1.00typifying ail that we find irresistible inOriental art. 10>i" x22". 14. PICASSO LINE DRAWINGS. Art andPub. at $6.00 set of 4 — now $2.98 artists as interpreted by the master in bothhis neo-classic and abstract styles. White9. SIX PICASSO PAINTINGS. Striking por- on black prints. 13"x20".traits and still lifes selected from his Pub. at $4.00 set of 4 — now $1.98is on ^ x 0 • nf „ _ nnw jj, w blend of unadorned simplicity and emo-Fub. at $b.oo set or o now tlonal sensitivity. 13"x20\10. STILL LIFE TREASURES by Henk Bos. Pub- at *400 set of 4 — DOW $1.98The sparkling gloss of fruits, the beauty is. Utrillo’s Montmartre Scenes. Full ofof time-honored pewter and china — all are sunlit warmth and beauty — great favor-captured with nostalgia, superb lighting ites With interior decorators. 17"xl4".and color. 12"xll". pub. at $12.00 set of 4 — now $2.98Pub. at $4.00 set of 6 —now $1.98 17. Eight French Posters: Picasso, Matisse,11. ANCIENT CHINESE CAVE PAINTINGS. Miro, Leger, Chagall. Directly reproduced“Primitive” art — yet so subtle and sophis- from the original lithographs. 16"x20".ticated In conception and design! Scenes of Pub. at $8.00 set of 8 —now $2.9818. DICTIONARY OF EUROPEAN HISTORY,compiled by Wm. S. Roeder. Concise, reliableInformation on the events and personalitiesfrom 500 A. D. to the present.Pub. at $6.00 Sale $1.9819. SHORT DICTIONARY OF MYTHOLOGY, byP. G. Woodcock. Over 1,000 clear, complete en¬tries. covering all the important classical andmythological figures encountered by the gen¬eral reader. Pub. at $3.75 Sale $1.9820. THE MAN WHO ELECTED LINCOLN, byJay Monaghan. The fantastic shenanigansCharles Ray of the Chicago Tribune employedto clinch Lincoln’s nomination in 1860.Pub. at $4.50 Sale $1.4921. FROM ONE CHINA TO THE OTHER—144photographs by Henri Cartier-Bresson. A mon¬umental human document of the transitionfrom Nationalist to Communist government inChina. Text by Han Suyin. 8V'xll".Pub. at $10.00 Sale $2.9822. George Moore—A STORY TELLER'S HOLI¬DAY. The classic collection of Irish folk tales—the quintessence of Moore’s celebrated combi¬nation of audacity in things sexual and geniusIn things literary. 529 pp. Pub. at $3.50. .Sale $123. A SHORT HISTORY OF EXISTENTIALISM,by Jean Wahl. The doctrines of Kierkegaard,Heidegger, Jaspers and Sartre clearly described.Pub. at $2.75 Sale $124. DICTIONARY OF RUSSIAN LITERATURE,ed. by W. E. Harkins. Essential information onevery phase, including Russian criticism, phi¬losophy, journalism, theatre and history. Longbiographical and critical essays. 439 pp.Pub. at $10.00 Sale $3.9825. MENTAL HEALTH, and the Prevention ofNeurosis, by Dr. J. Flescher. Complete, non¬technical guide to every aspect of normal andabnormal, child and adult psychology. 608 pp.Pub. at $5.95 Sale $2.9826. A COMPARATIVE PATHOLOGY OF THENEUROSES, by L. Eidelberg. Case histories re¬vealing the consistent determining factors Inany given neurosis; defense mechanisms usedto justify neurotic behavior or perversions.Pub. at $4.50 Sale $1.9827. DICTIONARY OF SOCIOLOGY, ed by Hen¬ry P. Fairchild. 3,600 essential, up-to-dateterms used in the social sciences.Pub. at $6.00 Sale $2.9828. TREASURY OF PHILOSOPHY, by D D.Runes. Nearly 1,300 pages covering the wholespan of recorded philosophical thought andwriting—each selection accompanied by a bio¬graphical sketch. Pub. at $15.00 Sale $5.8829. Pocket Book of CHEMICAL TECHNOLOGY,by V. Stannett & L. Mitlin. Essential chemicaland chemical engineering data—extensive glos¬sary, illus., many charts.Pub. at $4.75. , .Sale $1.49 34. SUCCESS IN PSYCHOTHERAPY, ed. byWerner Wolff. Ten leading psychologists dis¬cuss the reliability of Rorschach tests andother controversial issues.Pub. at $4.75 Sale $1.9835. A Pictorial Treasury of THE AMERICANWEST—With more than 1,000 drawings, photosand prints. By Lucius Beebe & C. Clegg. Agraphic panorama of the wild and woolly westwith a lively, informative text. 8"xll".Pub. at $10.00 Sale $5.8836. Leonardo da Vinci on THE ART OF PAINT¬ING. Available for the first time in 50 years—chapters on drawing, perspective, anatomy,light, color and other vital aspects of tech¬nique with his illustrations. Intro, by A.Werner. Pub. at $4.75 Sale $2.9837. The Works of OSCAR WILDE. 1,120 pages—nearly everything he wrote! 115 stories, plays,poems, essays and letters.Pub. at $4.95 Sale $2.4938. THE HISTORY OF MATHEMATICS, byJ. E. Hofmann. Fascinating survey, connectingmathematical progress with the growth of in¬tellectual Ideas. Pub. at $4.75 Sale $139. A SCIENTIST WITH PERRY IN JAPAN:The Journal of Dr. James Morrow, Perry’sAgriculturalist. First publication of the fasci¬nating, authentic record Inadvertently omittedfrom Perry’s official Expedition Narrative of1856. Illus. Pub. at $4.00 Sale $1.9840. MATHEMATICAL TABLES AND FORMU¬LAE, by F. J. Camm. Essential for the homereference shelf. Pub. at $2.75 Sale $1.4941. THIS IS OUR WORLD, by Louis Fischer. Afamous authority takes us to the principalcountries, introducing the leaders, revealingthe Issues, and talking to “the man la thestreet.” Pub. at $5.00 Sale $1.98 42. PABLO PICASSO—110 Fine Plates. An im¬ported quality paperback catalog representing50 years of Picasso's graphic art.Pub. at $3.00 Sale $1.4*43. THE ART OF ASIA—91 Plates. Fascinatingsurvey of Oriental art, from prehistoric Hlttltesculpture to India’s sophisticated contempo¬rary painting. Magnificently illustrated. ByH. Rublssov. Pub. at $6.00 Sale $1.9844. World's Greatest Short Stories — THEGOLDEN ARGOSY, ed. by V. H. Cartmell andC. Grayson. A fabulous anthology of our mostpopular short stories—unabridged, all-time fa¬vorites! 656 pages. Pub. at $6.00 Sale $1.9845. BROOKS ADAMS, by Arthus F Beringause.The brilliant theorist and historian whose po¬litical and economic concepts remain vital to¬day. Pub. at $6.00 Sale $1.9846. IRRESISTIBLE THEATRE, by W. Brldges-Adams. The magnificent pageant of Britishtheatre, highlighting the glories of the Eliza¬bethan stage. Illustrated. 460 pp.Pub. at $6.00 Sale $2.9847. MODERN GERMAN PAINTING, by H K.Roethel. 80 Illustrations, 60 in Full Color. Lav¬ish collection of the paintings and graphic artof the Expressionists as well as all the indi¬vidual great artists from 1900 to the present.9»/2"xl2y,". Pub. at $7.50 Sale $4.9848. Red Smith’s VIEWS OF SPORT. Laugh-filled anthology of the famous columnist’smost entertaining and incisive articles. Illus¬trated throughout with satiric drawings.Pub. at $3.95 Sale $149. Correspondence of STEFAN AND FRIDE-RIKE ZWEIG, trans. and ed. by H. G. Alsberg.Three decades of touching, celebrity-studdedletters between the famous literary couple.Pub. at $5 00 sale $150. DIRECTIONS IN CONTEMPORARY LIT¬ERATURE, by P. M. Buck. Jr. A fresh, unifiedapproach to the work of 13 famous modernwriters, showing how each tries to solve themost imponderable problems of modern life.Pub at $3.50 sale $1.4951. EARLY ENGLISH CHRISTIAN POETRY,by C. W. Kennedy. Brilliant modern versetranslations, with commentaries, of 13 poemsby Cynewulf. Caedmon, others.Pub. at $5.25 Sale $1.9852. THE QUEST OF ALAIN-FOLRNIER. by R.Gibson. A study of the posthumously famousFrench writer and his only novel—“The Wan¬derer”—a modern classic. Photos.Pub. at $4.00 Sale $1.4953. THE TWO FACES OF MAN, by Joost A M.Meerloo. Two biological-psychological and clin¬ical-psychiatric studies—one on the concept oftime, the other on man's basic ambivalence.Pub. at $4.00 Sale $1.9854. Martin Buber Retells THE TALES OF RAB¬BI NACHMAN. Trans, by Maurice Friedman.The classic symbolic fables of Hasidism recre¬ated by one of the great spiritual figures ofour era. Pub. at $3.50 Sale $1.9855. Complete Handbook of MINERALS FORATOMIC ENERGY, by R. D. Nininger of theAEC. How-to-prospect for uranium, thorium,and beryllium, covering everything from theknown and probable incidence of these min¬erals here and abroad to governmental controlson them. Pub. at $7.50 Sale $3.9856. Paul Nash, Henry Moore, Edvard Munch—MEANING AND SYMBOL IN THREE MODERNARTISTS, by G. W. Dlgby. Superb photo-illus¬trations and brilliant explanations of 57 mas¬terpieces. Pub. at $7.50 Sale $2.9857. FIESTA IN SEVILLE—140 Photographs byBrassai. Holy Week and the Fair—one of theworld’s greatest photographers captures theage-old phenomenon in magnificent scenes.Text by Hendy de Montherlant & D. Aubier.8>/2"xU". Pub. at $7.95 Sale $3.9858. Italian Renaissance Art—THE QUATTROCENTO, by A. Stokes. With 104 superb collo¬type reproductions of paintings, statuary andarchitecture. A brilliant study analyzing thecentral fire of the Renaissance.Pub. at $6.25 Sale $2.9859. MEN OF GOOD HOPE: The American Pro¬gressives, by D. Aaron. The lives, ideas and in¬fluence of Emerson, Thorsteln Veblen, BrooksAdams, Woodrow Wilson, F. D. R„ et al.Pub. at $4.50 Sale $1.9860. STUDIES IN PSYCHOANALYSIS, by Lud¬wig Eidelberg. 17 studies, by one of the fore¬most living Freudians, ranging in topic fromthe analysis of perversions to the nature of wit.Pub. at $5.50 Sale $2.9861. CHARLES DICKENS AND EARLY VICTOR¬IAN ENGLAND, by R. J. Crulkshank. VictorianEngland, with its “common people” as thecentral figures, is here recreated through theeyes of its greatest chronicler.Pub. at $5.00 Sale $2.98 62. THE POLITICAL THEORY OF JOHN CCALHOUN, by A. O. Spain. An illuminatingstudy of the 19th century political giant andspokesman for the South.Pub. at $3.50 Sale $14963. WITH THE BIBLE THROUGH THECHURCH YEAR, by R. Beron. The stories ofthe Bible beautifully retold within the frame¬work of the liturgical year. Il"x8’, with manycolor Illustrations, psalms and prayers, im¬primatur. Pub. at $4.95 Sale $i.<j*64. A Treasury of English Literature—THEHIGH HILL or MUSES, ed. by Hugh Klngs-mlll. 142 selections from the works of 86great writers—Chaucer. Donne. 8hakespear»,Milton, Shelley, Dickens, Wells, et al.Pub. at $6.25 Sale $15*65. Henri Pirenne’s HISTORY OP'EUROPEfrom the Invasions to the XVI Century. Themonumental work that altered traditional his¬torical outlooks. Pub. at $7.50 Sale $3.9*66. THE HISTORY OF HERODOTUS. The fa¬mous Rawllnson translation of the Immortalwork on ancient history relating Greek life andcustoms in vivid detail. 544 pages.Reduced to $2.9*67. TREASURY OF WORLD LITERATURE, edby D. D. Runes. A huge. 1.450-page collectionof the world's literary treasures! 300 entriesrepresenting every genre.Pub. at $15.00 Sale $5.8*68. GEORGE WASHINGTON IN AMERICANLITERATURE, by W. A. Bryan. How belles-lettres, oratory, and biography of 1775-1863period transformed a soft-spoken man into anAmerican symbol. Pub. at $4.00 Sale $2.9*69. LEAVES OF GRASS: One Hundred YearsAfter. William Carlos Williams. David Daichesand others discuss Whitman's life, work, andinfluence on American letters. Ed. by M Hin¬dus. Pub. at $7.50 Sale $19*70. VALUES AND PERSONALITY', by DiWerner Wolff. The theories and techniques ofexistential psychology pnd experimental depthpsychology. Case histories.Pub. at $4.75 Sale $1.9871. CHICAGO, WITH LOVE, by Arthur Meek¬er. The turbulent turn of the century on thefabulous Gold Coast, recalled in sparklingtales. Illus. Pub. at $4.75 Sale $1.9872. THIS IS MY BEST HUMOR, ed. by WhitBurnett. A 552-page anthology of laughterand wit — 80 of the world's top living humor¬ists present their own favorite stories, verse,essays and cartoons. Pub. at $5.00 Sale $1.9*73. ENCYCLOPEDIA OF MORALS, ed. by VFerm. 50 distinguished scholars contribute tothis brilliant consolidation of the multitudi¬nous facts and ideas connected with morals.Thousands of entries. 682 ppPub. at $10.00 Sale $3.9874. FRENCH PAINTING —151 Large Plates.12 in Full Color. By Basil Taylor. Magnificentreproductions and brilliant text recreate thedevelopment of one of the world's greatest arttraditions. 83,4x12". Pub. at $8.50 Sale $2.9875. THE DREAM OF SUCCESS: A Study of theAmerican Rags-to-Riches Myth, by Kenneth S.Lynn. A brilliant young critic analyzes Theo¬dore Dreiser, Jack London and other greatwriters to reveal how “success worship" haspermeated American life and letters.Pub. at $4.00 Sale $1.4976. St. Francis to Schweitzer—PATHWAYS TOTHE INNER LIFE, ed. by G. A. Barrois. An¬thology of spiritual writings by men andwomen of great faith through the centuriesPub. at $5.00 Sale $1.4977. BOUILLABAISSE FOR BIBLIOPHILES, ed.by Wm. Targ. All about bookmen and thebook-world — a feast of bookish wit and wis¬dom. tales and lore by renowned writers andcollectors. Handsomely Illustrated. 6V3x93*".510 pp. Pub. at $10.00 Sale $3.9878. ELEMENTS OF PSYCHOANALYSIS, ed. byH. Herma and G. M. Kurth. A. A. Brill, KarlMenninger, Franz Alexander, Anna Freud et alcover the basic facts and concepts of psycho¬analytic therapy. Pub. at $J.75 Sale $1.9879. PICTURE HISTORY OF THE U.S. NAVY —I,200 Illustrations. By Theodore Roscoe & FredFroeman. A magnificent collection of photo¬graphs, paintings, rare maps and charts. Textand captions vividly describe all TJ.S. navalencounters, battles, vessels, and personalitiesfrom the Revolution to the 20th century.9!ixl2>4". Pub. at $12.50 Sale $5.8880. NUCLEAR PHYSICS, Introductions to, byW. Heisenberg. Atoms, molecules, radioactivity,transmutation, etc. 52 illus.Pub. at $5.25 Sale $1.9$81. After Chekhov — THE FRENZIED POETS,by O. A. Maslenikov. A searching study of thelife and work of Anarey Bieiy and his leader¬ship of the Russian symbolists.Pub. at $3.75 ; Sale $1.4982. RECURRENT DISLOCATION OF THESHOULDER, by Dickson, Humphries, AsO’Dell. A comprehensive discussion. Pro¬fusely illus. Bibliography.Pub. at $4.50 Sale $1.0083. ARTHRITIS AND RHEUMATISM: TheDiseases and Their Treatment, by c. L.Steinberg, M.D. Symptoms and diagnosis;drugs, hormones, orthopedic and otherforms of treatment; physical therapy, self-help devices, etc. 124 plates.Pub. at $10.00 ....Sale $1.0084. PATHOLOGY IN GENERAL SURGERY,by P. W. Schafer. 495 magnificent plates,nearly all in full color — comprehensive,systematic explanations of the nature andorigin of 180 surgical diseases. 7;2xl0‘/2",573-page volume.Pub. at $20.50 Sale $4.98 MEDICAL BOOKS, TOO!85. HANDBOOK OF DIGESTIVE DISEASES,by John L, Kantor and Anthony M. Kaslch.Every aspect of the gastrointestinal dis¬eases. 658 pp., 148 illus.Pub. at $8.00.1 Sale $1.9886. PRACTICAL THERAPEUTICS, by M. E.Rehfuss. 938 pages, hundreds of Illustra¬tions. graphs, tables and diagrams. 800pages on Treatment of Specific Disorders.Pub. at $15.00 Sale $4.9887. ANTIBIOTICS. Ed. by G. Irving. Jr. &H. Herick. Authoritative study of the devel¬opment and use of penicillin, streptomycinand later antibiotics.Pub. at $6.75 Sale $1.9888. PREOPERATIVE AND POSTOPERATIVECARE, by W. J. Tourlsh, M.D. & F. B. Wag¬ ner, M.D. Handy reference for the studentand professional. 338 pp. 87 Ulus.Pub. at $6.00 Sale $1.9889. UTEROTUBAL INSUFFLATION, by I. C.Rubin. A diagnostic method of determiningthe tubal factor in sterility, 453 pp., 159illus., blblio.Pub. at $10.50 Sale $19890. ATLAS OF GENITO-URINARY SUR¬GERY, by P. R. Roen, M.D. Detailed sur¬vey; 162 Illus.Pub. at $10.00 Sale $1.9891. Diagnosis and Treatment of CARDIO¬VASCULAR DISEASE. Two volumes, ed. byW. D. Stroud, M.D. 2,020 pp.. 808 Illus., 5color plates. A number of authoritativewriters combined to place Its views on rec¬ord. Pub. at $25.00 Sale $7.95 1►10 • CHICAGO MAROON • Nov. 14, 1 $58by Albert PodellThe paradoxical story ofhow Siberia once becameRussia’s land of freedom andopportunity was explained in arecent lecture by Leopold Haim->sf,n. associate professor of history.Maimson’s lecture was the thirdin the current series of four on•■the frontier experience in Rus-s, ii and American history” at theDowntown center.Haimson began by clarfylng hisstand in relation to the two lec¬turers of previous weeks, AveryO. Craven and Philip L. Wagner.As for the Turner thesis expound¬ed by Craven, Haimson did agreethat a society which undergoes a“frontier experience” and has torebuild itself periodically doeshave a special way of develop¬ment. But he did not agree thata frontier experience” would pro¬duce similar results in differenthistorical contexts. He added thatthis contention would be graphic¬ally illustrated by the Russian“fiontier experiences.”From Wagner’s lecture, Haim¬son built and expanded on theidea that Russia had several dis¬tinct ‘‘frontier experiences” andalso on the idea that “there arevariations in the nature of thefrontier in different periods in thesame historical context.”Two main movementsHaimson concentrated on theluo main Russian frontier move¬ments, the one to the North andNortheast in search of “furs, fish,and freebooting,” and the south¬ward movement into the steppesin search of farmland.He characterized the northwardmovement as “a loose, relativelyanarchic form of colonization withlittle control from the center andwhich remained so for a longtime,” while the southern move¬ment “was distinguished by linesof organized settlement and bymuch closer control from Mos¬cow-.”It was important, Haimson com¬mented, to understand why theMoseovite state showed so littleinterest in the northern expansionand sn much in the southernwhere it “tied to control the popu¬lation movement, to Incorporate once Russia's land of freedomthe settlements, and to imposethe duties of the state on the set¬tlers.”The lecturer felt that there weretwo major reasons for this dif¬ference. First, the movement tothe steppes of the South had,from the reign of Ivan the Ter¬rible to the middle of the 16thcentury, become “a veritable tor¬rent.” As many fled to this prom¬ising, fertile frontier the centeritself became denuded. The mili¬tary service class needed to havethese southern settlers pay taxesand cultivate a portion of theirlands to support the militaryestablishment.Protection for the SouthSecondly, Haimson added, inthe South the state power wasthreatened by the Crimean Tar¬tars who, as late as the 16th cen¬tury, would raid deep into Mos¬cow. The state wished to set up aline of defensive bastions acrossthe Russian steppe to stop theseraids.Men were needed to man thesemilitary posts, he said. These menwere rewarded through the grant¬ing of a conditional- land tenurewhereby the state would givethem land for their services andprovide peasants to cultivate theland while they were on duty. Thesouthern peasants were needed,therefore, to cultivate the land forthose in the military service.This was the system, the speak¬er added, which flourished insideRussia, and the government triedto reproduce it on the southernfrontier. “The Moscow govern¬ment tried harder and harder tobind the southern settlers and toprevent the centrifugal tendenciesfrom manifesting themselveswithin the state.”Serfdom dominantHaimson said that these actionstouched off sparks of revolt inthe South and that these revoltspressed into the center of Musco¬vite society where masses of serfsand other bound and dissatisfiedelements revolted.The state retaliated against therevolutionaries with even morepressure and, the speaker con¬cluded, a vicious circle began outof which an authoritarian societyeventually developed on the south¬ ern frontier region. Serfdom cameto be the dominant form of socialorganization on the southernfrontier and not, Haimson re¬marked, “the liberty and the glori¬ous frontier spirit of Turner.”In contrast, the speaker showed,the northern frontier movementfor long retained its original char¬acter of looseness and freedom.“The state showed little inter¬est in imposing a tight organiza¬tion on this region,” Haimson saidand he felt that this was so be¬cause the two distinguishing fea¬tures of the southern frontier ex¬pansion were absent in the North.There was no large volunteermovement across the frontier intoSiberia, and those searching fora better way of life chose otherzones to colonize. In fact, Haim¬son grinned, the Siberian regionseemed so unattractive that thegovernment of Russia began us¬ing it as a place to which to de¬port criminals and did, between1823 and 1863, send some 360,000of them to Siberia.Freedom in the NorthHere, he pointed out, is the great paradox of the Russian ex¬pansion. Those going to thesteppes in search of freedom anda better way of life were soonensnared in the centralized andauthoi’itarian net of the Russiangovernment But, since thesestrong organizing features werenot exported to Siberia where thegovernment showed little interest,and since the government felt noneed to establish serfdom in Si¬beria, those who had been sent toSiberia (and the few who hadgone there voluntarily) “had afar more free and independentsociety than those in the South.”Conscientious leaders in thegovernment encouraged thebreaking down of the peasantcommunes which were felt to beof a retrogressive character. Landownership was given to the peas¬ ants. The state kept title to theland, but the peasants did own it.It was hoped that the peasantswould become less revolutionaryif they had such a stake in theexisting order.Rough-and-ready equalityThe government desired to cre¬ate a more modern property-minded, and individualistic societyin Siberia. It encouraged a formof rough-and-ready social equalityin which there were no large land-owners, for only fhose cultivatingthe land could have possession ofit, and a landed aristocracy couldnot arise.”And so, concluded Haimson,“upon the less promising soil andin the traditional prison had theTurner frontier vision, more thananywhere else in all of Russia, achance to be realized.”tonight doc film7:159:15 THE m OF ST. PETERSBURGadmission 55csoc sci 122ALEXANDER’SRESTA URANT1137 East- 63rd st.Where good food is servedot popular prices andwhere a steak getsthe tender attentionthot is deserving ofchoice Mid-westernbeefOpen 24 hrs. MU 4-5735Do You Think for Yourself ? (SEE WHAT THIS TEST TELLSYOU ABOUT YOURSELF!ms)l * JWould you turn down an unusualopportunity if it would alter apreconceived plan for the future?Do you feel your education wouldsuffer if books and notes wereallowed at examinations?Do you think that a public officialshould do what the voters want himto do, even though he personally mayfeel it is wrong?Can you honestly say you enjoya game or sport as much whetheryou win or lose? VES□ noDVES □ noDVES Do you instinctively feel a qualmwhen you walk under a ladder?When introduced to important people,do you act a role which is quitedifferent from the real you?It someone wanted to hypnotize you,would you refuse to let him try?Would you feel that you should leavea formal affair if you found youwere wearing clothes that weredifferent from everybody else’s? VESVES on□ noDon□~nFamiliarpack orcrush-proofbox. Do you let other people tellyou what filter cigarette isbest for you, rather thanmaking up your own mind? VES onThe fact is, men and women who make uptheir own minds—who think for themselves—usually smoke VICEROY. Their reason?Best in the world. They know only VICEROYhas a thinking man's filter and a smokingman's taste.*If you have answered “NO!” to six of theabove questions—you are a man who thinksfor himself! e> 1958. Brown * Williamson Tobacco Corp.The Man Who Thinks for Himself Knows - ONLY VICEROY HAS A THINKING MAN’SFILTER , , , A SMOKING MAN’S TASTE!Klov 14 1 • CHICAGO MAROON • 11~un blazer less trackster(Continued from page 3)Two other members of thecross-country team planned tospeak to Walter Hass, UC athleticcKrector, about the compulsorywearing of th# blazers.Hass said that since the teamwas representing the school andwas sponsored by the athletic de¬partment, that the departmenthad the right to give certain in¬structions as to what the teammembers should wear. He alsonoted that the matter might betaken up again in the comingstaff meeting. Hass said that this reaction by in other team members was notPrice and the animosity generated anticipated. Sports calendarList college courses 15by Don TonjesMost educational institu¬tions eschew neurotic ele¬ments, some tolerate them asconcommitant with creativity, andone that frankly cultivates themis Chicago’s College of Complexes.The College’s “classes” are heldeach evening at 9 pm in a beatnikbistro on the near North Side..The “curriculum,” just released for the month of November, announces the “official neuroses” ofthe institution. 17My Name is Ralph J. Wood Jr.Representative I am the local representative of theSun Life Assurance Company ofCanada, one of the world’s greatlife insurance companies. 1 believeI can be of service. May I call uponyou at your convenience?RALPH J. WOOD Jr., ’481 N. LaSalle StreetChicago 2, IllinoisFR 2-2390 RE 1-0855SUN LIFE OF CANADA Advertising itself as “the play¬ground for people who think,” thecollege actually devotes most ofits courses to serious lectures anddiscussions on current—and notso current-asocial issues. In addi¬tion, jam sessions are held everySunday, with jazz by the Acetones.“Hypnotismus,” “The integra¬tion crisis,” “Booze, bums, andbroads,” “Delinquency,” and “Per¬sonality and potentiality” are top¬ics for the early part of themonth. Later, “The backwardnessof belly socialists,” "The diseaseof liberalism,” and “American la- 1819 NOVEMBERCross country; NCAA College championships at Wheaton.Midwest Conference championship, Washington park, 11am.Pro football practice, San Francisco 49ers, Stagg field,2:30 pm.Hockey practice, women's varsity, 3:30 pm.Volleyball practice, women's varsity, 3:30 pm.Trampoline, women only, 3:30 pm, Ida Noyes hall.Social dancing, coed, 4:15 pm, Ida Noyes hall.Bowling, coed, 5:15 pm, Ida Noyes hall.Intramural basketball, 7 to 10 pm, Bartlett gymnasium.Touch football, fraternity champions versus house cham¬pions.Hockey practice, womens varsity, 3 :30 pm.Volleyball practice, women's varsity, 3 :30 pm.Badminton, coed, 6:45 pm, Ida Noyes hall.Bowling, coed, 7 pm, Ida Noyes hall.Swimming, coed, 7:30 pm, Ida Noyes hall,intramural basketball, 7 to 10 pm, Bartlett gymnasium.Touch football, divisional champions versus fraternity-house league champions.willbor vs. America’s basic lie”be discussed.Among the scheduled speakersare a representative of theNAACP, a policeman, a grapholo¬gist, and a trade unionist. At a“post-Thanksgiving quiz” a bottleof “non-Puritanical grog will beawarded to the Pilgrim whomakes most progress.”The curriculum announcementstates that the integration crisiswill be discussed on November 7by Gerald D. Bullock, regional di¬rector of the National Associationfor the Advancement of ColoredPeople. Harriers end seasonwith loss to WabashThe cross-country team closed its season Tuesday by losingto Wabash college, 15-50. The meet was held at Wabash.Wabash took the first seven places, Warren Hall winningwith the time of 21:02. The first Chicago finisher was DaveHouk, who ran the four-milecourse in 23:29. Preston Grantws tenth with a time of 24:21. BobPerschke was twelfth, Tom Clarkplaced thirteenth, Gary AugustineENGLISH: slow train engineENGLISH; eN<*um 0f GivingTHINKLtSH: POUONOTWE j.*. *-««,*&*,**. finished fifteenth, Larry Cohentook 6th, and John Young was17th.“Wabash is the Indiana Collegechampion. The Wabash team isthe best in their history,” CoachTed Haydon noted. They finishedbehind Notre Dame and Indianain the meet between all the Indi¬ana colleges. (Notre Dame andIndiana are not Included in theIndiana College championship.)Last Saturday the University ofChicago Open Four mile run washeld at Washington park. PhilColeman of the UC Track clubtook first with the time of 20:06.5.The first six finishers were allmembers of the Track club. HalHigdon was second with a 20:54clocking, and Frank Hedgcockwas third, with the time of 20:55.The first fifteen finisher receivedLucky Strike presents medals.Hare a WORLD of FUN ITravel with fITAUnbelievable Lew Cost—the funniest, easiest way yet to make money!MAKE *25! Europe60 0ay% JzZ" ham $645Orient*5 Oaya J**, ham $998Many lourt includetollaga t'adit.Also low-cost trips fa Mexico$169 up, South America $699 up,Hawaii Stud/ Tou,- $549 up andAround the World $1798 up.Aik Your Travel Agent332 $•. Michigafl he.» i«. Chicago 4, HA 7-2557PUT IN A GOOD WORD ANDSpeak English all your life and what doeait get you? Nothing! But start speakingThinklish and you may make $254 Justput two words together to form a new (andmuch funnier) one. Example: precisionflight of bumblebees: Swarmation. (Note:the two original words form the newone: swarm ^-formation.) We’ll pay $25each for the hundreds and hundreds of new Thinklish words judged best—andwe’ll feature many of them m our collegeads. Send your Thinklish words (withEnglish translations) to Lucky Strike,Box 67A, Mt. Vernon, N. Y. Enclosename, address, college or university, andclass. And while you’re at k, light up aLucky. Get the full, rich taste of fine to¬bacco, the honest taste of a Lucky Strike. a SwinglineStapler nobigger than apack of gum!98«(Including1000 staples)Get the genuine articleGet the honest tasteof a LUCKY STRIKE SWINGLINE “TOT”Millions now in use. Unconditloianally suivers, fasaranteed. Makes bookcrafts, mends, tacks, eta Avail*able at your college bookstore.SWINOLINI“Cub" Stopltr $1.29<£> * r.-r*..• CHICAGO MAROON • TkArf 6f J&ett&ufiiean ft oer mi&ftt nempNov. 14, 1958 t0N0 ISLAND CITY. N|W YORK, NjJkmmmmLovely to look at, delightful to see and ...by Sheldon GarberHew traveling clothes havebeen issued to the varsityteams.-We’re going places,” said ath-Hie director Walter L. Hass,-and we’re dressed to win.”The maroon sports coats withwhite letter emblem emblazonedOM the front, were described bythe Office of Press Relations as-natty”Traveling bags are new, too,and in the same colors.Hass said that the maroon colormotif has been restored to all theathletic awards — sweater coats,jackets, blazers and blankets.He added that the University isexploring new schedule possibili¬ties among Eastern schools msuch major sports as basketball.At home, more major athleticevents are being staged on theHyde Park campus, Hass said.However, the athletic directorstated that this is no time to talk about the return of big time foot¬ball to Chicago. It was abolishedm 1939.”1 love football,” Hass said,“and I’d like to have it back as agame, but I don’t want it on abig time basis.”“A strong balanced athletic pro-grom is the big objective on ourcampus,” he said. "We re aftergood representative teams in allactivities—teams that give every¬one who wants to a chance toplay.”“We believe In sports for thesake of education,” he said, “notsports for the sake of sportsalone.”“And as far as I know, thatpolicy isn’t changing,” he added.Hass is the third athletic direc¬tor in the University’s 66-yearhistory. Amos Alonzo Stagg andT. Nelson Metcalf are his pre¬decessors. Hass who captainedthe 1932 University of Minnesotafootball team, came to Chicagofrom Carleton college, Northfield,Minnesota, where he was athleticdirector. Hass said, “The UC athleticprogram is designed to allowevery student to participate insome form of athletics, on any ofthree levels: instructional, intra¬mural and varsity."Approximately 75 per cent ofthe undergraduate student bodycan be expected to take part inthe program, going by past rec¬ords,” he said. “This means ourathletic facilities will be in almostconstant use throughout theschool year.”Football classes — part of thephysical education program at theUniversity — have been resumedfor the third consecutive year.Hass said 36 turned out for prac¬tice, including 16 freshmen.“The boys are provided regula¬tion equipment and are taughtthe fundamentals of the game,”Hass said. “Later in the season,we arrange for a few scrimmageswith, say, junior college teams.That’s as close as we get to actualcompetition.”On the varsity level, Hass said,intercollegiate schedules are de¬Three intramural tourneysdraw to close this weekby Dan CosgroveThe intramural tennis tournament drew to a close this week with Goar and Younkerversus Roskin and Friedman in the doubles elimination, and Berail versus Roskin and Goarversus Friedman in the singles finals.The swimming finals will be concluded with second floor East qualifying eight men, andthird floor East qualifying six men in the house league. Psi Upsilon qualified nine men andDelta Upsilon qualified six men in the fraternity league.The past week saw lots of signed to furnish competition withteams of comparable strength.The University has varsitysquads in eleven sports: baseball,basketball, cross country, fencing,golf, gymnastics, soccer, swim¬ming, tennis, track and wrestling.“We are building our scheduleswith the aim of playing good four-year schools,” said Hass. “Andwe hope to provide one or twohighlights a year by bookingwhat we consider to be majoropponents. This policy may beexpanded in the future.He pointed out several changesin varsity schedules for the 1958-59 season.The Maroon basketball teamfaces four new opponents, on an18 game schedule. They are:Northern Michigan college ofMarquette, Michigan (away, De¬cember 6); The United StatesMerchant Marine academy ofKings Point, New York (at home,February 7); Wayne State uni¬versity of Detroit (at home, Feb¬ruary 13); and New Bedford Insti¬tute of Technology, of New Bed¬ford, Mass, tat home, February24).Four different schools alsowere added to the 1957-58 basket¬ball schedule, for a total of 8changes in two seasons. Previ¬ous newcomers—all back again—are Grinnell college, Knox college,Lawrence college and Ripon col¬lege.Last season’s Maroon cagers—coached by Joseph M. Stampf—tallied eleven victories and sevenlosses. Hass said this was theUniversity’s best basketball rec¬ord in more than two decades.The “B” and freshman basket¬ball team—formed for the firsttime last season—plays an elevengame schedule for 1958-59. Other new opponents for Ma¬roon varsity squads include:Wayne State university in base¬ball; Indiana tech in soccer; West¬ern Michigan in swimming; De*Pauw university and Wabashcollege in wrestling; and the Uni¬versity of Illinois in fencing.In addition to regularly sched¬uled contests, the University willhost special athletic events duringthe year, said Hass.One such event is the NationalAAU Senior 10,000 Meter cham¬pionships, to be held for the sec¬ond straight year at the Univer¬sity on December 7. Hass saidUC is the first Midwest universityin history to act as host for thenational meet.Another special event is an in¬vitational collegiate tennis tour¬nament, to take place duringMarch. Hass said the tourney ieexpected to attract many of theBig Ten universities, and leadingMidwest independents.The University also is host tothe Chicago Intercollegiate chanv-pionships in swimming and ten¬nis, held in cooperation with otheruniversities and colleges of theChicago area. These meets willbe staged in March and May, re¬spectively.Along with colleges, a largenumber of Northern Illinois andIndiana high schools will use UCfacilities for various sports tour*naments, said Hass.“I doubt if any university in thenation uses its athletic facilitiesmore than we do,” he commented.“For example, on one weekend—that of February 6-7—we have atotal of nine college teams hereto compete with us in seven dif¬ferent events involving fivesports.”begiaction on the Midway as theTouch football season drewnear completion. The upset of theweek was Phi Kappa Psi, defeat¬ing the Psi Upsilon “A’’ squad,12 6. However, Psi Upsiion's honoris being upheld by its “B” teamwho leads the league with sixwins and no losses, Phi Kappa Psiand Psi Upsilon “A” are tied forWrestling squadlins workoutsBolstered by six returninglettermen, the varsity wres¬tling squad has begun work¬outs for the season. Coach DaleBjorklund will again guide theteam.Veteran matmen include MikeSchilder, weighing in at 137; DeFranco at 147; Hugo Swann andHarnisch, for the 147 spot, Rubyin the 167 pound class; and TerryRrennan, holding down the heavy¬weight anchor spot.In the opinion of Bjorklund, thesquad needs considerable practiceto prepare for its season.Top event of the year for thegrapplers will be the Universityof Illinois Invitational tourna¬ment at Champaign, December 26.Schools from throughout Illi¬nois will participate in the event. second place with four wins andone loss apiece.The College houses remaindominated by Coulter with its 6-0record, followed by Mead at 5-1,and first floor East at 4 2.North house leads the divisionalleague touch football with a 4-0record, followed by Mathews at3-0, and Linn at 2-1.Games last week:November 5Coulter 13 DoddEast II 20 Dodd "B”Mead 1 East IVSalisbury 13 VincentNovember 10North 12 Physical ScienceChamberlin 6 Hitchcock November 11Psi Upsilon "B’* 1 Zeta Beta Pi 0Phi Kappa Psi 12 Psi Upsilon “A" 6Beta Theta Pi 12 Delta Upsilon 0Phi G'mma D’lta 1 Phi Sigma Delta 0 S/Ae ijtfAAttwiCaptures yourpersonalityas well asyour personAKKCoulterEast IIVincentMeadDodd "B" 0 NorthNovember 78 East I0 Salisbury6 East IV♦ 13 East II.1 Dodd ''A’Dr. KURT ROSENBAUMOptometristEyes ExorrtinedGlosses FittedContoct LensesVisuoJ Troining1132 E. 55th St.HY 3-8372Come, all ye Greeksto Hie first oll-Greck otfair ot the year.a little beer — a little dancing — a little foodsinging.Nov. 15 8:30 pm5554 Woodlown ore.Come see our new house ond by the woy —bring e doterjCuciiie JShetland Crew Neck Sweaters8.98beige, 9*®^ r€cl1507 east 53rd st. mi 3-0898 Complete Steak Dinner$1.29HANK'SRIB tr STIAKHOUSE1301 E. 47th ST.We Deliver — CallKE. 8-2022 Out of this world!Space travelers—be on the alert! Makesure there’s a cargo of Coke tuckedaway in the rocket! You may not beable to buy your favorite sparklingdrink on the moon . . . but that’s justabout the only place you can’t. Sowhen you’re ready for the big lift, besure the cheerful lift of Coca-Colagoes along! r friiil 1m T('iL * ASIGN OF GOOD TASTEBottled under authority of the Coca-Cola Company byr The Coca-Cola Bottling Company of Chicago, Inc.Nov. 14. 1958 • CHICAGO MAROON • 13M oming events on quadranglesFriday, 14 NovemberLut day to register lor an R.fiK workshop jam session, with guest«.Reynolds Club, 3:30 pm.Undergraduate math club. 3:30 pm,Eokhart 307. Morris Frledell: '‘The fas¬cinating Fibonacci numbers."tmtheran student group meeting, costdinner. 6 pm. Discussion 7:15 pm,Shapel house. 5810 Woodlawn avenue.(•The Christian man—saint and sin¬ner.” professor Jaroslav J. Pellkan,Federated Theological faculty.Record dance, 7 pm, Internationalhouse. Admission 50 cents.Lecture series: ‘‘Film study,” 64 EastLake street, 7 pm. "Russian motionpictures.” Henry Breitrose. depart¬ment of radio-TV-film, Northwesternuniversity.Doc film, ‘‘The end of St. Petersburg.”7:15 and 9:15 pm, social science 122.Scientists representing theMIT Lincoln laboratory willvisit the campus on Decem¬ber 9, 1958.Their object is to discussLincoln's activities and theopportunities offered therefor professional developmentand graduate study.The laboratory is a re¬search and developmentcenter established by MITin 1951 at the joint requestof the Army, Navy and AirForce. Students who wish tolearn about permanent orsummer appointments at theLincoln laboratory shouldregister for interviews at thePlacement office. Approaches to Judaism. Irving S.White, Rabbi and psychologist. Spon¬sored by Klllel foundation.Department of Romance languages tea,3 to 4 pm, Wleboldt hall commons.Admission free.Coffee hour, basement of West house.New Residence halls. Dancing, musicfood, companionship, between thehours of 9 and 11 pm.Series admission $2, single admission55 cents.Methodist theological fellowship. 7:30pm, Swift hall commons. "John Wes¬ley: Puritan or Armlnian?” presentedby Woody Cole, student In Theology.Discussion and refreshments follow.Saturday, 15 NovemberEnglish class, 10 to 12 noon, Interna¬tional house room B.Recorder society meeting, 10 am, IdaNoyes east lounge.Concert band rehearsal, 1 pm. Mandelhall.Methodist couples club. 6:45 pm, 5631Dorchester avenue. Discussion of book"Miss Lonelyhearts” by NathanielWest.Radio program: "Impetus,” WBBM. 7:45pm. Joseph J. Schwab. WilliamRainey Harper professor of naturalsciences In the College, and guest ex¬perts discussing the most Influentialbooks of our time.Dewali festival of India, 8 pm. Interna¬tional house. Admisison 75 cents. Pro¬gram of Indian dancing, music, food.Radio program: "The sacred note.”WBBM, 10:15 pm. A program of choralmusic by the University of Chicagochoir, Richard Vikstrom. director;Heinrich Fleischer, organist.Sunday, 16 NovemberRoman Catholic masses, 8:30, 10 and 11 am. DeSales house, 5735 Universityavenue. Sponsored by Calvert club.Concert and coffee. International house,10 am. Coffee 10 cents.Rockefeller memorial chapel service, 11am. Reverend Bryan de Kretser, visit¬ing associate professor of missions,Federated Theological faculty.Channing-Murray liberal religious groupsupper and discussion, Fenn house,5638 Woodland avenue, supper 6:15pm, cost 50 cents. Discussion 7:15 pm.Dr. William Offenkrantz, assistantprofessor of psychiatry. "The impor¬tance and meaning of psychology inmodern life.” Call Don Meyer, MU4-5009 by Saturday.Chamber music workshop, 7:30 pm, IdaNoyes library.Methodist graduate fellowship. 8 pm,Chapel house, 5810 Woodlawn avenueDiscussion on "Letters to a Niece,"by Friederich von Hugel, led by FredCarney, Methodist chaplain.Radio program: "Faith of our fathers."WGN, 7:30 am. "Why seek the livingamong the dead?" The ReverendW. B. J. Martin, visiting professor ofhomiletics, Federated Theological fac¬ulty.Monday, 17 NovemberEnglish class, 6:30 to 8:30 pm. Inter¬national house room B.Cap and Gown staff meeting. 7 pm. IdaNoyes.Movies, International house east lounge,8 pm, admission 50 cents.Tuesday, 18 NovemberPre-med club general meeting, 4:15 pm.Abbott 101. Two medical studentsspeaking.University symphony orchestra rehear¬sal, 7 pm, Mandel hall. Record concert, 8 pm, Internationalhouse home room.Folk dancing, 7 pm, International house.Admission 50 cents.Christian science meeting, 7:15 pm,Thorndike Hilton chapel.Sketch class, 7:30 pm. Lexington hall.Live model wtlh Instruction In draw¬ing. Fee 50 cents, materials to be pro¬vided by student.Hi-Fi concert, 8:30 pm. Internationalhouse.TV series: Children Growing, WTTW.9:30 pm. “Your child goes to the hos¬pital." Maria Piers, child care pro¬gram, Institute of psychoanalysts, andLee Wilcox, associate director of edu¬cational broadcasting.Gates hall coffee hour, 10 to 12 pm,Gates hall.Wednesday, 19 NovemberLecture: "The Interiors of stars,” 3:30pm, Eckhart 133. Speaker: Dr. HelmutAbt. Third In series by faculty ofYerkes and McDonald Obesrvatorles.Lectures in contemporary social psy¬chology. 4:30 pm, Rosenwald 2.,Speaker: Solomon Asch, SwarthmoreCollege.TV series: Atomic Primer, WTTW. 6:30pm. "The atom and space.” Harold C.Urey. Martin A. Ryersor. distinguishedprofessor emeritus of chemistry, andHelmut Abt, assistant professor ofastronomy, Yerkes observatory, dis¬cussing what the study of atomicscience means to a man’s study ofthe universe.University glee club rehearsal, 7 pm,Ida Noyes theater.Carillon concert, 4:30 pm, Rockefellerchapel.Organ recital. 5 pm. Rockefeller chapel.Heinrich Fleischer, university organ¬ist. United Christian fellowship vesper,,7 pm, Thorndike Hilton chapel.Country dancers, 8 pm, Ida NoyesEnglish class, 6:30 pm. Internationalhouse, room B.Thursday, 20 NovemberEpiscopal holy communion, 11:30 amBond chapel.Communication club lecture: "Journal¬ism In the south,” 7:30 pm, Socialscience 201. John H. O'Dowd, dean ofstudents at University CollegeFlorence Hnmmersley Walker memoriallecture: "Religion and social work ••8 pm, Breasted hall. William H. Rob¬inson, representative, Illinois statelegislature.Hi-Fi concert, 8:30 pm. Internationalhouse.Radio program: Viewpoint, WMAQ. 9:0.1pm. “Sixty years In business," W Al¬len Wallis, dean, School of business,and Alec Sutherland, director of edu¬cational broadcasting.Friday, 21 NovemberJazz workshop jam session, with guests,Reynolds club. 3:30 pm.Jazz workshop Jam session, with guests,Reynolds club, 3:30 pm.Record dance, 7 pm. Internationalhouse. Admission 50 cents.Lutheran student group meeting, costdinner, 6 pm: discussion 7:15 p m"Man—mind, body, personality,” Rev¬erend Norman Wldlger, doctoral can¬didate, Divinity school. Chapel house,5810 Woodlawn.Thanksgiving Oneg Shabbat, 8:30 pm5715 Woodlawn avenue. A recital ofAmerican and Jewish folk songs byFrank Hamilton Sabbath service, 7:45pm. Sponsored by Hlllel foundationUniversity concert, 8:30 pm, Mandelhall. Leonard Shure. piano Works ofSchumann, Beethoven, and SchubertWedekind drama formerly bannedIn our frequently-porno-graphic age, we seldom re-F»int: "Turksib (1928)” 64 East Lake member the days of uncen-Fireside conversation: 8.30 pm. 5715 sored censorship when such worksWoodlawn avenue. "Method and spirit as the Book of Common Prayer,of reconstructionist Judaism,” last in ,, , . T1 .series of five discussions on Modern aH Of Plato, and Ibsen S Ghosts♦♦♦♦+♦♦♦♦++♦♦♦♦♦♦♦+♦♦♦♦♦♦♦,•♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦+♦♦♦+♦♦+♦♦+♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦+♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦.4Chicago's Most UnusualMotion Picture TheatreAgain reminds all College Students of theSpecial Student Rates always in effect atEV ERY DAY Of THE WEEKINCL. FRI. & SAT. EVENINGS 75JUST SHOW CASHie* YOU* 1.0. CARO Phone DE 7-1761SPECIALSTUDENTSAT* Sacha Guitry'*''Lovers andThieves" were all prohibited. Traces of thegood old days still have to be elim¬inated, however. Only recentlywas Wedekind’s Spring’s Awaken¬ing released from the ban imposedupon it by the superior adminis¬trative court of Prussia.In its official revocation of theban in the Prussian administra¬tive circular, the court made thefollowing evaluation of the play:'The content of the piece canbe summarized as follows: Weare shown the impact made onyoung, unsophisticated creaturesjust entering the period of sexualdevelopment, by the realities ofexistence and the forces govern¬ing it, in particular the awaken¬ing of their own sexual awarenessand the demands made on themby life, especially by their school.KGDL KROSSWORD No. 7 “They are defeated in the strug¬gle which develops chiefly becausethose who might most be expectedto give them guidance, their par¬ents and teachers, fail, as the poetsees it, out of unworldly ignor¬ance and prudery, to instructthem and point the way with sym¬pathy and understanding.‘Taken in this light, and inview of its message and content,it is impossible not to recognizethe piece as a serious work; ittreats of serious educational prob¬lems, problems frequently in theforefront of general interest, andtries to formulate a positive at-titudte to them. Nor is there anysign that where unseemly actionsare depicted .this is one in sucha way as to present them assomething acceptable or worthyof imitation, nor even to arouseor gratify the prurience of theaudience. “Tne theater going public willbe unable to withhold its sym¬pathy from the main protagonistsand their tragic fate, nor its inter¬est in the development of the storyand the problems whereof ittreats. In any case, it is impossibleto see how the aud'ence could de¬rive from it any impulse to conduct offensive to the police or topublic morals."This remarkable work trans¬lated by Eric Bentley will be pre¬sented by the University TheatreNovember 21-23 and November28 30 in the Reynolds club theatre.Tickets are now on sale at theReyno’ds club desk: general admis.su n, $1.50; studcr.t prices (before November 20 nlv), $1. AMperfotmances will begin at8:30 pm.Ozzie ConklinACROSS1. Sura6. Get into the —10. Harden11. Evergreen12. Native ofsecond largeststate -*13. Palo14. Helps15. Cabbage dish16. Nest (Fr.)17. The Pres.18. Impassive22. Said “yes”25. There’s afilter on theof King-SizeKool26. Period of time27. Squabble30. Just takes onebad one34. Culturalsubjects(2 words)38. Type of light39. Kind of wave40. Caesar’slanguage (abbr.)41. See Koolbackwards43. King-Size IKool has afilter . 444. Seaweed |45. Give out46. Potential fish47. Comrae il -48. Units ofreluctance49. Squiggly letter50. Ash, forinstance DOWNBig men fromancient stateHalf of aquarter(2 words)Penguin’scostumeI smell(2 words)They makespectaclesof themIn Germany,they’re bad. Kools’ penguinVolume a bsorbedTalked catGirl’s nameOpposite ofoutputClerical degreePoet HousmanKing Arthur’smen sought itAbsorbedTriterCar “jewelry”Draw backFromto postAmerican,National orWomen Voters’The Press isthe FourthBox for cuttinganglesGood-hyto amigosParts of necksKnights (abbr.)Back thers 1 2 3 4 51012141616 19 20 p26 127 28 2934 338 BH3941 *1 f45 I48 J 1 ARE VOU KODLENOUGH TOKRACK THIS?" 6 7 8 9111315m24 november 17Dark Riverinternational house movies• assembly room, 8 pm• monday evenings• 50c3036 37 3! 32 3340What a wonderful difference when youswitch to Snow Fresh KOOL! At onceyour mouth feels clean and cool . . .your throat feels smoothed, refreshed?Enjoy the most refreshing experiencein smoking. Smoke KOOL . . . withmild, mild menthol... for a cleaner,fresher taste all through the daylAnswer on Pg. 15.KOOL GIVES YOU A C HOICE - REGULAR 'OR KING-SIZE WITH FILTER!0 1953, Brown & Williamson Tobacco Corps Switch -from•fo Snow FreshKODLfilterMILO MENTHOLKINO-SIZEQgwetted I ,Nov. 14, 1958 Marking the 25th AnniversaryofAMERICAN-SOVIETDIPLOMATIC RELATIONSRockwell KentSoviet Embassy Speakerfamed artist just returned from the USSR speoks on"Our Friends the Russians"Dr. Rudolph Ganzhead of Chicago Musical College discussesCultural exchange as a basis for better relationsMandel A. Termanchairman of Chicago Council of American-Soviet Friendshipspeaks directby phone from Moscowalso: Folk songs by Osborne Smithfree refreshments32 W. Randolph St.Saturday, Noy .15Hall C-1 8:15 p.m. 90*Culture VultureThe culture vulture who ruled this restless roost before me spent at least half his introductions dissertation on Robie house,and quite rightly, too. I can do no less. What are they doing to this noble building! What possible misconception of logic hasinduced the owners to undertake this current project! Isn't it enough to threaten to tear the building down, do they have toclean it, too?t One week ago Robie house presented a maroon, wine-colored, sober face to the world passing; today it is as shiny and aspink and white as a happy, blushing, shining women's club pledge.WSat, I ask, is wrong with dirt? Students at this University have a long and lingering familiarity with dirt, in all its aspects.And to whence has the Robie house dirt go.ie? I will tell you, it has been washed down the sewers of a cleaner Chicago.Speaking of dirt, this brings to mind the question of cultu re in Chicago and in what manner our extracurricular activitiesare fulfilling their functions.On campusTheatreOrto week from tonight, Univer¬sity Theatre will present the pre¬miere of Eric Bentley’s new trans¬lation of Frank Wedekind’s trag¬edy of sex, Spring’s Awakening.The Daily News, to arms!This long, complex, epic con¬struction has been seen very in¬frequently and then in very poor,expurgated translations. In anycase, as far as our informationgoes, the six performances UTwill present will mark its firstproduction of any kind in the city.Although the play's treatment ofsuch a subject as the growingawareness of sexual drives inadolescents is treated tastefully,theme of the play has served tofrighten off many producers.Spring’s Awakening will beperformed next Friday, Saturdayand Sunday, and again the follow¬ing weekend. What price glory?-$1 for students and faculty and$150 for others. Student-facultytickets will not be sold after No¬vember 20.Tickets are on sale at the Rey¬nolds club desk. All performancesstart at 8:30 pm in the Reynoldsclub theatre.Also, Blackfriars has finally se¬lected a book for their next show.The book, an anthropologicalstudy of decadent Southern life,written by Don McClintock, willhave music composed by WilliamMathieu. But this is way in thefuture.Concerts and recitalsA week from tonight the UCconcert series will present Leon¬ard Shure playing Schubert, Schu¬mann and Beethoven. Studentsmay get in on either a single ad¬mission or a series ticket, the onepriced at $1, and the other at $6.The five remaining concerts inthe series will all be small ensem¬ble or chamber music groups.This will be Shure’s only appear¬ance in Chicago this season.This, then, is a concert not tobe missed by anyone holding oneof the 1066 tickets available. Thepoint being, these 1066 tickets areselling out comfortably quicklyas far as the music department isconcerned. Many people are allready to settle into their comfort¬able chairs; go, thou, and do like¬wise. UC concerts are presentedin Mandel hall, starting at 8:30pm.Sunday the UC choir will pre¬sent, under the direction of Rich¬ard Vikstrom, Bach’s great butseldom performed B Minor Mass.The long and famous work willbe voiced in Rockefeller chapel,starting at 3 pm. Admission isfree.Ait exhibitionsTomorrow is the last day that the Shapiro exhibit will be onview in the Goddspeed galleries.If you have not yet seen thisshow, by all means make the at¬tempt. The collection of water-colors, drawings and collages con¬tains works by Matisse, Klee,Kadinski, Kokoschka, Miro, Cha¬gall, Leger and other validly fam¬ous artists. The hall will be openuntil 5 pm today and from 1 to 5pm tomorrow.A new show has just started inthe Lexington studios. One roomcontains oil paintings by GeneNewmann, a former UC studentand Lexington studio-ite. Hispaintings contain at once a strongconception of form and designand a riotous sense of color.In a second room, a series ofphotographs by McKin Marriotthas been hung. These pictures,taken in 1950 and ’51 while Mar¬riott was spending a year of socialand archaeological study in Kar-han Garki, India, have a mostamazing stylized structure. Onephotograph of Indians bathing inthe Ganges possesses this qualityso strongly, the impression is cre¬ated that the bathing men arereally Hindu sculpture. This showwill run for two weeks.We also have a picture hangingin the Maroon office. Though youmay never get out, we’d like tosee you. Come up and see us sometime.LecturesHutchins will be on campusSunday evening, speaking inRockefeller chapel. Beyond adoubt, the auditorium will betotally full, to the greater gloryof god. Notice we don’t defineterms here. If you want a seat,as will everyone else within a 20-mile vicinity, the key would be togo to the morning service andstay. You might miss lunch bydoing this, but you’d pick up theBach B Minor along the way.This afternoon at 3:30, RichardWordsworth of the Old Vic com¬pany will give a reading of Shake¬speare in Breasted hall. Admis¬sion is free.Thursday, November 20, JohnO’Dowd, dean of students at theDowntown center will address theCommunications club on the sub¬ ject of a free press in the South.O’Dowd is well-qualified to speakon this subject, being a formereditor in South Carolina. Thepaper which he edited was one ofthe two in the state which sup¬ported the Supreme Court’s segre¬gation decision. From that mo¬ment until he came north, O’Dowdled a rather hectic and harriedlife. This lecture, which will as¬suredly be controversial, will beheld in Social Science 201 at 7:30pm. It is free and all students areinvited.Off campusTheatreOne of the finest social trage¬dies of our era has just completedit’s first year downtown—My FairLady, that bitter, ironic depictionon the tragedy which is our so¬ciety. Have you ever seen a moreeffective moment on the stagethan when the poor, prolitarianflower girl, Eliza, is brought, bymeans of trickery and duplicity,into the meaningless bourgeoisenvironment of Henry Higgins—a place where, instead of workingproductively or even thinking pro¬ductively, people sit around dis¬cussing climatic conditions on theIberian peninsula.Is there a more poignant mo¬ment in the whole of theatre thanwhen Eliza, her spirit broken, isreduced to that confusion whichactually permits her to ‘willingly*remain in this socially decadentworld.The music for this show, stillplaying at the Shubert, possessesthe same subtle, mocking style asthe tear-jerking book. Flower-girls of the world, unite!Tonight and tomorrow, the OldVic will do Henry V, Sunday thecompany will close with a produc¬tion of Twelfth Night. If you haven’t got tickets by now, don’ttry. Auntie Mame is still playingat the Erlanger, and Billy Buddwill continue at the Goodmanuntil Sunday.A new theatre is opening Tues¬day, the American Cavalcade thea¬tre which will present Arthur Mil¬ler’s The Crucible. This newrepertory group, operating underthe guidance of Arthur Peterson,will play at the Eleventh streettheatre, located just off Michiganavenue. Ticket prices run from$2 to $4 depending upon whereand when. The house is darkMondays and Fridays. There issupposed to be something luckyabout the number three, afterPlayright and Studebaker we cancertainly hope that this group isa commercial success and lasts.Motion picturesThe program at the Hyde Parkthis week includes The Goddess,the film by Paddy Chayevsky anda French import, Julietta. Thislast work, directed by Marc Al¬legret, approaches its subject mat¬ter in a rather fairy-tale fashion which provides for a very refresh¬ing and blithe evening of enter¬tainment. Along with these twowill be a new Mr. Magoo cartoon.The Hyde Park is certainly oneof the finest art theatres any¬where and is certainly the onlyregularly reputable theatre inthis part of the city. What withits programming and its studentprices, it is one of our most valu¬able assets. The theatre did ex¬perience some problems duringthe interim while Rose Dunn wasabsent, but she has returned, andthe theatre is again on its wayto being one of our finest posses¬sions.However, it is not enough tosimply look at the Hyde Park adsprinted here in the Maroon andthink to yourself ‘how lucky weare’; if this house is to remainand maintain its standards, it israther important that people go.Coming up are a one day run ofthe Bolshoi ballet film and aweek’s screening of StreetcarNamed Desire.KODL ANSWERT O T A L ***** VOU HOM. s W 11 N U R E KfUCK TV**?* p 1 NT E X A N A L TA B E T S S L □N 1 □ L Wi 1 mDr. N. J. DeFrancoOPTOMETRISTHY 3-53521138 E. 63 ■E]Ra ;pHiuS^haaHauaasmmum□IIb anaapBBfl11 MidwestArmyStoreIvy corduroy pants $3.99New Paisley Ivy league shirts inbeautiful new shades $2.99New flap pocket flannel dress pants,I.L. styling $4.99this od only842 E. 63rd st. DO 3-5881HSwitch -from Motsto Snow Fresh KGDLdark theatredark & madisonopen 7 o.m.late show 4 o.m.College Student PriceSOc at all timesjust present your student identifi¬cation cord at the box office.Sunday Film Guild Programs forNovember16th "the golden age of comedy""o nite ot the movies"23rd "the reluctant debutante”"a certain smile"30th "l« parisienne""scandal in sorrento"different double feature daily —..write for a free program guide See Russia yourselfthis summerThitisRtd Swart, Moecow. Y*u can be thtrt this vary tummtr.MAL'PlNTOUlt Ruttia by Motorcoach ToursJoin this maupiHtour group in Helsinki or.Warsaw any weekJune through August 18-day motorcoach tour visiting Helsinki, Lenin-erad, Novgorod, Kalinin, Moscow, Smolensk, Minsk, Warsaw (or inreverse order). 1519, complete from Helsinki or Warsaw.MaupintouR Grand European Ruisia Circle TourJoin a limited number of college students and young adult in¬structors this summer on a 72 day exploration tour directed by Amen-can university leaders. Experience in person Old World cultures . . .visit 12 countries ... see 14 soviet cities . . . enjoy a Black Seacruise. And, for the first time, explore country villages on overlanddaylight trips. $1697, complete from New York.Each gioup is limited so early reservations are recommended. See y ourtravel agent <ot mail coupon for the new macpintour folder on Russia.MAUPiNTOliRS, 101 Park Avenue, New York 12, New YorkPlease send me your brochure describing these tours: ,□ Grand European Russia Circle P Russia by Motorcoachmama•ddret*city/aut«school MMHMMt«aaaaaaM*«**M little 'pahXltMjJMlab? paWij 53 tul gt^teetplicn* NO-7 9Q7iStudent admission vote SOcupon presentation of IDStarting Friday, November 14“THE GODDESS”Time listed: "Playwright Poddy Chayefsky and actress Kim Stanleydeliver a roaring diatribe against the (Williom James') Bitch Goddess:SUCCESS.. . . Chayefsky has sketched a ferocious caricature of the AmericanWay of Life . . . the heroine, Chayefsky declares, "represents an entiregeneration that came through the Depression with nothing left but ohope for comfort and security. Their tragedy lies in that they neverlearned to love, either their fellow humons or whatever God they have!"Actress Stanley's playing is atriumph ... so intense that thesense of her physical presenceseems to dissolve in the shimmerof creation.— and Playwright CHAYEFSKY'S satire. . . has bigness and generousanger ... at his best he has onearthy weight and vigor that sug¬gests a more amenable Von Stro¬heim, o pocket Zola.MARCALLETGRET'S H Julietta yy with JEAN MARAISDANY ROBINA gay, refreshing, funny little French film . . . imaginatively directedin a stylized tairy tale sort of atmosphere.And for more refreshment . . ."The EXPLOSIVE MR. MAGOO"COMING SOON: "Mystery of Picasso," Robert Bresson's "A Man Es¬capes," the extraordinary French mystery "Demoniac" (in the tradi¬tion of "Diobolique"), on December 3—a one-day showing of TheBOLSHOI, and on December 12, "A Streetcar Named Desire."Nov.'14,1958 ■’ • C H f C’AG O■ i. Yi . . .. ..... , - MAR OO N • iy Ht! :'f11 1s£}, v.1I—LAK delivers Sfate of University address(from page Z)BUT GRADUATE education atour University also has its majorproblems. Our graduate trainingand research programs, particu¬larly in the humanities and thesocial sciences, are beginning to\ hurt by two serious inadequa¬cies-—our library and fellowships.The first is far more importantand costly. The University hasalways prided itself on weatheringthe depression of the thirties with¬out cutting academic salaries; butit cut every place else, and par¬ticularly the acquisition programof the library, since this was rela¬tively painless. For reasons I donot altogether understand, thelibrary budget was never reallyrestored as times improved, andthe cuts of the early fifties im¬posed a double liability. It is stilla fine library, although more be¬cause of purchases in the firstquarter of this century than inrecent years, and the parsimonyof acquisition has begun to havethe cumulative effect of real de¬terioration. We were able to in¬crease the budget of the Librarythirteen per cent this year overlast year, and a further increasewill occur next year. But this isby no means all our problem.As a structure to house the col¬lection, Harper library has cometo the point where, almost literal¬ly a book must be got rid of fora new book to be added. It is coldComfort to console ourselves withthe fact that collections of otherinstitutions are inadequatelyhoused. The problems of obtain¬ing a large capital gift for an ex¬pansion of Harper or a new build¬ing altogether and of providingan even more generous operatingbudget for the library have be¬come matters of major concern tothe faculty, administration, andBoard of trustees. I am not with¬out hope that some genuine prog¬ress may be made on these prob¬lems during the next severalyears.THE SECOND inadequacy ofour graduate program is the num¬ber and size of our fellowships, ifwe are seriously to compete withuniversities of comparable stature.A strange phenomenon of ourtimes is that students pursuingthe PhD degree must be paid top .rsue it, but there is no point ingrowing moralistic about thissince it is a fact. The sciences arereasonably well taken care ofthrough federal and industrial fellowships and teaching and re¬search assistantships.I am reliably informed that nograduate student In chemistry haspaid his own way for years, butsuch is by no means the happysituation in the humanities andsocial sciences. Since there isnothing so frustrating to a facultymember as to lose a good graduatestudent or instruct a bad one, wemust elevate our fellowship sti¬pends to compete for the best,I should mention one furtherproblem at the graduate and re¬search level that has been broughtsharply into focus by the sudden,sad, and untimely loss of WalterBartky, vice president in chargeof special scientific programs.Since the late war we have oper¬ated certain large scientific proj¬ects, including the ArgonneNational laboratory, that are im¬portant to the defense and wel¬fare of our. country. It has longbeen felt that these programswere never properly relatedto the scientific thought andactivity of our University and, inthe case of the Argonne, to the•esearch of the Midwest. WarrenC. Johnson, dean of the divisionof the physical sciences and chair¬man of the general advisory com¬mittee for the Atomic Energycommission, has taken Mr. Bart-ky’s place. Mr. Johnson’s back¬ground uniquely prepares him tointegrate our scientific responsi¬bilities, and the first results aremost promising.Finally, there is the ever presentthreat to students, faculty, andthe very life and future of ourUniversity—the neighborhood. AsI gathered my thoughts on thistopic in July when this report wascomposed, I found them dismalthoughts indeed, and if I now re¬peated what I then wrote I wouldnot only depress but mislead you.At that time we had gained somenew, powerful, and unexpectedenemies to our gigantic urbanrenewal program, and our friendsstill had to rise and be counted.Mr. Zeckendorf seemed hopelesslybogged down in difficulties withzoning regulations and the Rede¬velopment plan, and our localwasteland stretched out bleak andunrelieved. In these circumstances, you willforgive me, I hope, if I peek be¬yond the shroud of gloom thatenveloped us at the end of the lastacademic year and behold the sunthat even then was trying to breakthrough. Mr. Zeckendorf, withthe aid of the remarkable JulianLevi, somehow cut through hisred tape, and houses, apartments,and shopping centers are spring¬ing up all over the place. After aseries of bitter local and city hear¬ings that seemed to stretch outworld without end, the City coun¬cil unanimously approved theUrban Renewal plan that willbring $40,000,000 of public moneyinto our area and an equalamount of private financing.There will be new parks and play¬grounds and schools, new dwell¬ings and traffic patterns andshops; and out of slum and blighta new city will arise.THERE remain problems, ofcourse, but these also will besolved; the tide has turned for us,and out of our success will emergethe pattern of rebuilding Chicagoand indeed much of urban Amer¬ica. Surely this is the place andtime to pay tribute to the leadersof our community, to the news¬papers of our city, and particular¬ly to our mayor, Richard J. Daley,who have remained, amid all thefrenzy of opposition, steadfastlyloyal to the ideal we ourselveshave had of rebuilding a greatand stable community that mayprovide a model for our city andfor our nation.Our community is not only oneof homes and streets and shops;far more important, it is a com¬munity of scholars dedicated tothe life of the mind. And this com¬munity too has had its plan, itsdemolition, its rehabilitation.Over past years we have de-voted ourselves to the criticalexamination of our academic con¬struction and have found it inade¬quate. There followed a period ofplanning, with its excitement andinnovation, and then the dreary,dusty task of pulling down theold to create foundations for thenew. Now we are stalling to re¬build. I hope you share my pridein these new and promising struc- raMortgage InsuranceEducational InsuranceConnecticut Mutual LifeJoseph H. Aaron, '275524 S. Everett Ave.RA 6-1060 Ml 3-5986 Goin1 home over vacation?HOBBY HOUSERESTAURANTwe specialize inRound-O-Beef and WafflesOpen from Down to Dawn1342east 53 st.Thanksgiving WEEKENDspecialHOTELSHORELAND$18.50 for 4 nights per per¬son; double occupancy forparents of U of C students.Thanksgiving DINNERspecial$3.35With oil the trimmings , , ,HOTEL SHORELAND5454 South Shore drivePL 2-1000 GOING BYGREYHOUND* ISBASIC ECONOMICS!• Lowest fares of all publictransportation;O Frequent departures! Quick¬est time to many cities!• Air-conditioned comfort;picture-window sightseeing;fully equipped restroom;on all Scenicruiser Service*schedules! Compare these low, low fares!New York, N.Y.. . $42.15 *Springfield, III.... 7.30St. Louis, Mo 11.00Indianapolis, Ind.. . 9.45Minneapolis, Minn. 14.70Cleveland, Ohio... 17.65’•‘Round trip fare, plus taxiIT’S SUCH A COMFORT TO TAKE THE BUS...AND LEAVE THE DRIVING TO US1GREYHOUND TERMINALFinancial 6-5000 . . the College, which will confuse everyone"tures as they arise. They havebeen thoughtfully planned andthey arise out of periods of deepdiscouragement, when all seemedlost save the courage of our Uni¬versity. Those who build discoverthat cost goes far beyond initial estimate, both in money and theagony of delay and compromise.But as the new buildings arise, theanalogy ends. No academic struc¬tures will ever be built which willlong satisfy the dreams and aspi-rations of our University.Randolph fr Clark WESTMINSTER SALEBach B Minor Mass.... $6.87 Handel Concert! Grotsi. . $9.16Bach St. Mathew Bach BrandenburgPassion .,.$9.16 Concerto $4.58Verlios Requiem $4.58 Prokofiev Romeo fir Juliaf $4.58All Single Records ... $2.29"Disc 1367 E. 57ON FRIDAY, DECEMBER 5a UCRL staff member will be on campusto answer your questions about employmentopportunities at the Laboratory.Our scientists and engineers, with outstandingachievements in the field of nuclear research, arecurrently at work on diversified projects such as;-• Nuclear devices• Sasic particle physics• Nuclear powered ramjet propulsion systems• Controlled thermonuclear reactions(now unclassified)• Engineering and scientific application of nuclearexplosives to mining, excavations, and powerThe finest facilities, and encouragement to exercisecreative thinking and imagination, are offered quali¬fied graduates interested in research careers.Call your placement office for an appointment.UNIVERSITY OECALIFORNIA RADIATIONLABORATORYttrknlty and Uvarmara, California16 • CHICAGO MAROON • Nov. 14, 1958