UC law student questions Humphrey on tvGreg Machyowsky from the UC law school talks with Sen¬ator Hubert Humphrey (Democrat), of Minnesota, and RuthHagy after their appearance on Ruth Hagy's "College NewsConference" Sunday, January 4, over the American Broad¬casting company television and radio networks.In response to questions from Machyowsky and other stu¬dents, Senator Humphrey was sharply critical of the adminis¬tration's budget. He called it "a sick budget" which wouldpermit four and one-half to five million persons to remainunemployed."College News Conference," the only national panel inter¬view program conducted by university students, is presentedevery Sunday afternoon.UC merits nat'l meritOut of 1,866 popular choices, National Merit Scholarshipwinners and their parents this year indicated the Universityof Chicago as one of their top college preferences. Three listsof choices were made—one indicating the parents* choice, one list ofcolleges preferred by boys, and one list of colleges preferred by girls.UC rated among the top twenty on all three lists in an article pub¬lished on December 18 in the Chicago Tribune.What factors enter into a choice of college for these scholarshipwinners? The reason given most frequently for the selection of aschool was that they believed it to be “the best college,” or the onewhich had a high ranking department in which they planned to study.Also listed as reasons for college selections of a school were aca¬demic standing, recommendation of friends, closeness to home, liberalarts orientation, small size and desirable location.The Merit studies of how our most highly intelligent teen-agers(-and their parents) select a college seem to point up several otherimportant conclusions:Different types of colleges and universities tend to attract differenttypes of students, who have characteristic patterns of abilities, voca¬tional goals, educational values, personalities, and family back¬grounds.College student bodies differ from school to school in academicabilities, and also in personalities and values, and these studentpopulations are subject to differing parental pressures aimed towarddifferent goals and achievements.This concentration of high ability students in a small number ofcolleges and universities tends tb increase the achievemenfs of these1lew schools and to lower the standings of institutions not so popularwith intellectually talented young people. ChicagoVol. 67, No. 16 University of Chicago, Friday, January 9, 1959 e^§31Solomon predicts nat'l economic boost in '59Ezra Solomon predicted re¬cently that the gross nationalproduct at the end of 1959 willhit a $180 billion level.That would push up the meas¬ure of the nation’s overall eco¬nomic pace by approximately 45billion dollars over this year'sperformance, he said.Solomon, a professor of financein the business school, said the1959 upswing depends ort the con¬sumer and he expects the con¬sumer to come through with astepped-up rate of spending nextyear. achieve past standards of livingor some growth in these stand¬ards — and this generally takesplace during an upswing in em¬ployment—the economy will wit¬ness a rapid growth in sales.Revision in equipment“This, in turn, will warrant up¬ward revisions in business equip¬ment spending and the rate of in¬ventory accumulation in 1959.‘The chances are high that thiswill happen.“If it does, a reasonable set ofguesses for 1949 would be as fol¬lows: of industrial production will aver¬age about 147 points; and finally,we will witness a new peak of in¬tensity in the conflict between thetwin goals of maximum employ¬ment and price stability.”Solomon presented his forecastto a joint meeting of the Ameri¬can Economic association and theAmerican Statistical association.The two groups met at the Pal¬mer House Sunday, December 28for an “economic outlook lunch¬eon.”Predicts dipA year ago, Solomon predicted ‘Whether we have a complete oronly a partial return +o normalcapacity output in 1959 dependslargely on the rate at which con¬sumers expand their purchaseswithin the next few months.”Solomon said that the tradi¬tional view which makes con¬sumption “a passive factor” ineconomic analysis no longer ap¬plies.“In fact,” he said, “the rate ofconsumer spending is probablythe strategic factor which willdetermine what income itself willbe in 1959.”In view of the role of consumer spending in leading the recoveryin 1958, Solomon said that “it isnecessary to treat changes in con¬sumer spending as an active andindependent force in the economyrather than as a more-or-less pas¬sive factor ...”Analysis explainedSolomon made his analysis bybreaking down the total spend¬ing anticipated in 1959 into threecategories:1. Government spending, netforeign investment and non-resi-(see “Solomon,” page 5)Normal in '59As 1959 begins, Solomon added,physical output of commoditieshas not yet recpvered from the1958 recession, but by the end ofnext year the nation should beproducing at “normal full-employ¬ment capacity.”In his seventh annual year-endforecast, Solomon said a backlogof personal and private needs hasbeen building up the past twoyears.In fact, he stated, the trend ofreal per capita consumption waslower in 1958 than it was in 1956.He said he expects the log jam tobreak in 1959.Solomon’s reasons and his keypredictions are:“Assuming the consumer doesexert his purchasing power to re¬ “Aggregate consumption willrise about $19 billion to $309 bil¬lion.“Business equipment expendi¬tures will rise about two billiondollars to $24.5 billion, and about$3 billion of inventories will beaccumulated.$473 billion gross“Total gross product will aver¬age $473 billion for the year.“By the final quarter of theyear, gross national product willbe back to normal full-employ¬ment capacity at about $480 bil¬lion.“This forecast has the follow¬ing implications for other aspectsof the economy in 1959: long-terminterest rates will rise above thelevels reached during the 1957boom; the federal reserve index the dip and the timing and degreeof the upturn in the nation’s busi¬ness life which occurred in 1958.He began his discussion of con¬ditions in 1959 before the two eco¬nomic groups with this statement:“It is clear that the businessrecovery which began in April(1958) will continue during 1959.“What is not clear is the speed,extent and composition of thegrowth that can be expected be¬tween now and next December.“Although the dollar flow ofproduction, income and expendi¬ture has already surpassed thepreceding peak reached in thethird quarter of 1957, the physicalvolume of activity is still signif¬icantly below normal full employ¬ment capacity. f v’ mmUC frats start rushInterfraternity Council has announced the beginning of thewinter rushing season, which will begin January 12. Thefollowing is a schedule of smokers:Monday, January 12 Beta Theta PiDelta UpsilonTuesday, January 13 Alpha Delta PhiZeta Beta TauWednesday, January 14 Phi Delta ThetaPsi UpsilonThursday, January 15 Kappa Alpha PsiPhi Sigma DeltaFriday, January 16 Phi Gamma DeltaPhi Kappa PsiMonday, January 19 Zeta Beta TauPsi UpsilonTuesday, January 20.. Phi Delta ThetaKappa Alpha PsiWednesday, January 21 Phi Sigma DeltaPhi Gamma DeltaThursday, January 22 Phi Kappa PsiBeta Theta PiFriday, January 23 Delta UpsilonAlpha Delta PhiEach smoker is held at the fraternity house, between 7:30and 10 pni.•.(left to right) Robert Pollack, Leon Despres and JeromeKerwin are pictured at last Sunday's "petition party." Petitionsfor Alderman Despres were turned in at the party which kickedoff his campaign for re-election to the city council from theHyde Park area.Kerwin, dean of students in the division of social sciences atUC is chairman of the committee to re-elect Despres. Pollack,a graduate student at UC is co-chairman of the committee.Other University figures at the open house were MaynardKrueger, associate professor of social science in the College andRabbi Maurice Pekarsky of Hillel foundation. (photo SrUkif newsbitsMarvin Meyers wins Dunning prizeMarvin Meyers, chairman ofthe social sciences 1 staff andassociate professor of socialsciences in the College was namedthe recipient of the Washingtonsward of the John H. Dunningprize presented by the AmericanHistorical association at its an¬nual meeting.The Dunning prize, which isswarded in alternate years for amonograph relating to Americanhistory, went to Meyers for hisbook The Jacksonian Persuasion:Politics and Belief, which was pub¬lished by the Stanford universitypress in 1957. The book presentsa reinterpretation of Jacksoniandemocracy, based upon a study ofcontemporary political argumentsand of contemporary observationsof Jacksonian society. Attention is given to figures like Jackson,Van Buren, Tocqueville, and Feni-more Cooper.Directory outThe Advance and Placementinstitute has announced therelease of its annual world¬wide Summer Placement direc¬tory.The directory lists thousands ofsummer jobs in the US and 20foreign countries.Copies of the directory may beobtained by mailing $3 to the Ad¬vancement and Placement insti¬tute, Box 99K, station G, Brooklyn22, New York.Low prof speaksWilbur G. Katz, professor at UC law school will give alecture entitled “Is capitalpunishment ever justifiable?” Thelecture, sponsored by the Method¬ist foundation, is open tothe publicand will be held in the ChapelHouse, 5810 South Woodlawn at8 pm Sunday.BE PREPARED FOR WINTER DRIVINGWINTER SPECIALTUNE UP s6!0»• Anti-Freeze• Snow Tires• Rood ServiceHeavy Duty Battery C 95SPECIAL ! ! ■ JHarper Super ServiceDealer in Sinclair Products5556 HARPER PL 2-9654 sketch by IIret* Little gallery showsThe Little gallery, 1358 E.57th street, is presenting“Hyde Park rebuilds” a photoand art exhibit.Photographs by Mildred Mead,wife of Dr. Sidney Mead of fed¬erated theological faculty, anddrawings by Vi Fogle Uretz, wifeof Dr. Robert Uretz, biophysicistat UC will be exhibited during themonth of January.Mrs. Uretz is currently art di¬rector for the WFMT Fine Artsguide and a free lance artist. Shehas for ten years specialized inphotographing the city and itschanges.The Little gallery is open dailyexcept Sunday, from 1 to 5:30 pmand Wednesdays from 7 to 9 pm.Choral group meetsThe first meeting of thecampus’ newest choral groupwill be at 2:30 pm, Sunday, inthe music building, according to the group’s organizer. Rob e-r*tTucker.The group, as yet unnamed, willperform mainly Renaissance mu-sic, Tucker said. Some Baroqueand modern works will be sung atthe group’s discretion, he adde<J,Science discussionUC’s Science Fiction dubwill present a discussion thisWednesday at 8 pm on second-floor Ida Noyes, centering on the¬ories of the origin of life frominanimate matter and is entitled... "Then there was life.”Club formingGreek students club willhold its first meeting of thequarter at International housecafeteria, January 13.Students interested in joiningthe club should meet at 6 pm lordinner.STERN S CAMPUS DRUGS61 st fir EllisNew outside illuminationto guide your wayFor $1.25 yon getGolden fried chicken, fried freshto your order, with salad bowl,potatoes, vegetable, coffee, teaor milk with home made hotrolls. For $1.00 you getA full half pound Stern's specialstript steak, with grilled onions,salad bowl, french fried pota¬toes, roll and butter. YMCA teachesHyde Park YMCA, 1400 E.53rd street, will offer coursesranging from income tax prob¬lems to weaving in its informalevening study series, beginningJanuary 19.The courses are open to all menand women at a charge of $10 percourse. Further information maybp obtained by calling the "Y” atFA 4-5300.Dr. N. J. DeFrancoOPTOMETRIST1138 E. 63 HY 3-5352OMING TO University of ChicagoWEEK OF January 12YOUR NEW DIMENSION IN MOTORING LAIift}BYSTUDEBAKER^ This is the ideal car for campus life and off the campus, too. Costs littleto buy, little to run. Only 14Yz feet long, parks where others can’t. Seats sixin comfort. Minimum overhang and virtually no “dead” weight providesexceptional handling qualities. Choice of engines: (both require only low-costregular gas) “6” or “8”. With 4-barrel carburetor and dual exhaust option,the V-8 Lark really moves, Models available are 2-door, 4-door, hardtop,station wagon. Many options, too, including reclining seats...perfect for vaca¬tion trips. See this honey of a car on your campus. Watch for The Lark..2 • CHICAGO MAROON • Jan. 9, 19591. ZVVRct*** , «.*Rental collection drawingto be held January 22Hl!1 undergraduate UC students are eligible to draw for paintings in the Shapiro “Art To&ye With” collection currently on exhibiton in Ida Noyes hall.Undergrad students living in dormitories or other housing, including fraternities, apart¬ments and pre-fabs may draw for a painting on January 22 at 8 pm in Ida Noyes’ main foyer,j^oseph R. Shapiro will be present to conduct the drawing.In order to be eligible for the drawing, applications listing five preferences must be filledout before January 22. Appli- .zROMJfnDeadline announcedl*be dean of students in the College and the registrar haveestablished a deadline for withdrawal without penalty fromyt.erai studies courses.The deadline established for the winter quarter is Februaryfor the spring quarter, May 22. If a student finds it neces-gatty to withdraw before either of these dates, this may be doneby securing his adviser's approval and bringing his withdrawalaerds to the Registrar's office prior to the deadline.After the deadlines, withdrawal requires the approval of thedean or assistant dean of students in the College. No with-drawafs from general studies courses will be permitted afterthe cfose of the quarter.SG campaign begins cations are available at theIda Noyes desk.Fifty paintings have been addedto the collection loaned to theUniversity last quarter byShapiro.A 50-cent rental fee to coverinsurance costs is charged perquarter.On the evening of January 20 apanel discussion featuring severalof the artists in the exhibit willbe held at Ida Noyes. The time ofthe discussion entitled, "TheArtist and His Work” will be an¬nounced next week. This year, as in the last three summers, Student Governmentwill sponsor a chartered flight to Europe at reduced cost tostudents, faculty, employees, and their immediate families.The share per person will be approximately $320 for theround trip. The plane will leave New York a few days after thespring quarter ends, which is June 13. The plane will returnfrom Europe in the early part of September in time for the faWquarter. *<■>The point of destination and return from Europe will be an*nounced, as will the exact dates. All persons interested in sucha flight should file their applications with a deposit of about$75 before the end of March.For information call Erich Klinghammer, extension 3274,or come to the Student Government office between 12 and 1 :30pm from Monday through Friday. Evenings and weekends callDO 3-8158.On Monday, January 12, ahvo-week campaign will be in¬itiated by the UC South AfricaDefense Fund_.committee.This committee, under thesponsorship of Student Govern¬ment and the Divinity Schoolcouncil, was formed in order toraise money for the South AfricaTreason Trials Defense fund. Itsfaculty advisor is Dean JeraldBrauer of the federated theologi-oat faculty.In its campaign at UC, theSouth Africa Defense Fund com¬mittee will have a pictorial dis¬play outside of the C-shop onWednesday, January 14 and 21,from 11 am to 2 pm. Other infor¬mation about South Africa will beavailable at that time. There willbe several speakers during thecampaign to increase understand¬ing of the situation. Students willbe canvassing the dormitories for contributions on Wednesday, Jan¬uary 14 and Thursday, January15. Money can also be sent to theUniversity of Chicago SouthAfrica Defense Fund committee,Ida Noyes.For further information seethe signed editorial, page 4.The CollegeLAUNDERETTE1449 ia«t 57th St.MU 4-9236 Camp Land 0’ LakesEagle River, Wise.A Well EstablishedBeautifulCamp for Boys and Girl*NEEDS FOLLOWINGSTAFF FOR 1959 SEASONATHLETIC COACHPHYSICAL ED. SENIOR orTEACHERNURSE (R.N.)GENERAL COUNSELORS withATHLETIC or WATER SKILLSMen and Women Over 20Apply to:Camp Land O’ Lakes2737 West LuntChicago 45, III. HOBBY HOUSE RESTAURANTwe specialize inRound-O-Beef and Waffle*Open from Down to Down 1342east 53 st.PROGRESSIVE PAINT fir HARDWARE CO."Hyde Park's Most Complete Paint & Hardware Store"Wallpaper — Gifts — Tools Rented — HousewaresUC DiscountHY 3-3840-1 • 1154-58 E. 55th *t. CLEARANCE SALE!v . •Reg. $12.95 corduroy sport coats. .... $8.88Reg. $5.95 corduroy trousers. .... $4.88Reg. $4.95 & $5.95 lamb's wool sweaters $3.88Reg. $4.95 ivy league shirts $3.88D & C Clothes Shop744 E. 63rd St. MI 3-2728“ft* the Neighborhood for 40 Years’*Hour*: 9 o.m. - 8 p.m., Mon. - Fri. — 9 a.m. - 9 p.m., SaturdayA PURE WHITE MODERN FILTERIS ONLY THE BEGINNING OF A WINSTON TIts whats up front that countsift.J. RCYNOIO*TOBACCO CO.WINSTON-SALEM. N.tkup front...fine, flavorfultobaccos, specially processedfor filter smokingWINSTON TASTESGOOD ItKEA CIGARETTE SHOULD /Jan. 9, 1959 • CHICAGO MAROON • 3Winston puts itsFILTER-BLENDf I* I; the Chicago maroon— 1892Issued every Friday throughout the University at Chicago school year and intermittently during the summer quarter,by the publisher, the Chicago Maroon, Ida Noyes hall, 1212 E. 59th Street, Chicago 37, Illinois. Telephones: Ml 3-0800,extentions, 3265 and 3266. Distributed without charge on campus. Subscriptions by mail, $3 per year. Office hours: 1 to 5,Monday through Friday. Deadline for calendar material, 4 pm, Tuesday; deadline for advertising and editorial material,3 pm Wednesday before publication.Adi unsigned editorial matter on this page represents the official opinion of the Chicago Maroon editorial board. 8ignededitorial material represents the Individual opinions of the authors.Chairman explains fundFrom January 12 to January 24 the UC South Africa Defense Fund committee will beasking students for money to support the South Africa Treason Trials Defense fund. Thefacts behind the campaign should now be known to everyone. Two years ago 156 persons inthe Union of South Africa were arrested and imprisoned with the charge of treason. Their actual offenseWas to draw up a Charter of Freedom which said:We, the people of South Africa, declare for all the country and the world to know—That South Africa belongs to all who live in it, black and white, and that no government canjustly claim authority unless it is based on the will of all the people.That our people have been robbed of their birthright to land, liberty, and peace by a form ofgovernment founded on in justice and inequality,That our country will never be prosperous or free until ah our people live in brotherhood,enjoying equal rights and opportunities.The accused would never have been brought to trial had not money begun to come in from all overthe world to pay for their defense and support their families in their absence. The Treason Trials De¬fense fund has been successful in achieving the acquittal of 91 defendants provisionally, although trea¬son charges have been reinstituted against some of them. The others are soon to be brought to trial.The purpose of the campaign at the University is two fold. First, we want to raise money. But justas important, it is our intention to create greater awareness and understanding among the membersof this university community of the situation in South Africa and the issues involved in that situation.One may well ask why be bothered at all. We suggest the following reasons-:1. The continent of Africa will very soon.be as important to the world as Asia is now. The futureof democracy in South Africa will help determine the future of democracy on the whole continent;the future of democracy on the continent of Africa will help determine the future of democracy in theworld.2. If we in this country claim to be true to our own heritage, we must support freedom whereverit is threatened. Our example in South Africa has thus far not been consistent with our so-called dem¬ocratic ideals. (While we struggle with integration in Little Rock we support the color-bar in SouthAfrica.)3. As human beings we feel a concern to relieve the suffering and insure justice for fellow humanbeings wherever they are.Although the situation in South Africa has received very little publicity in the newspapers in thiscountry, we feel that it is an issue of the gravest importance to this country. We cannot afford to beindifferent to it.Ruth DunnChairman, UC South Africa*• Defense Fund committeeThe Maroon announces the election of Gordon Briggs and Roziland Conklin to its editorialboard for the winter quarter. Other members of the board are: Rochelle M. Dubnow, chair¬man; Donna Davis, Lawrence D. Kessler and Neal Johnston.Issued every Friday throughout the University of Chicago school year andintermittently during the summer quarter, by the publisher, the Chicago Maroon,Ida Noyes hall, 1212 East 59th street, Chicago 37, Illinois. Telephones: MI 3-0800,extensions 3265 and 3266. Distributed without charge on campus, subscriptionsby mail, $3 per year. Office hours: 1 to 5 pm, Monday through Friday. Deadlinefor all material 3 pm, WednesdayEditor-in-chiefRochelle M. DubnowManaging editor Associate editor Business managerDonna Davis Neal Johnston Lawrence D. KesslerAdvertising manager Gordon L. BriggsNews editor Lance HaddixSports editor Dan CosgroveCalendar editor Marge SchwarzLecture editor Rosemary GalliProfiles Robert Lavine, John MillsArtists . .Ron Burton, Rick Ellis, R. David SilverCirculation manager Joon HelmkinPhoto co-ordinator Les KiteAssistant culture editor Qzzie ConklinPhotographic staff Jerome Buchman, Karl Figlio,Morris Newman, John McMahon, Tom FentonEditorial staff: Harold Bernhardt, Joel Ashenfarb, Tom Cablk, Shelley Stolo-wich, Robert Lovine, John Mills, Ozzie Conklin, Peter Jocobsen, LindaMorrison, Marge Schwarz, Bob Brown, Don Tonjes, Al Podell Three Facesof CripplingBirth Defects Arthritis PoloJOIN THEMARCH OF DIMESrOWAf/D G RlAJfR VIC TO/flfS 881Captures yourpersonalityas well asyour persouphotographerBU 8-08761457-9 E. 57th St. TAKEAM-YMNCHINESE - AMERICANRESTAURANTSpecialising inCANTONESE ANDAMERICAN DISHESOpen Daily11 A M. to 10:30 P.M.ORDERS TO TAKE OUT1318 East 63rd St. BU 8-9018 Bicycles, Parts, Accessoriesspecial student offer►►i| ACE CYCLE SHOP1621 e. 55th st.ACASA BOOKSTORE Have a WORLD of FUN!Travel with tITAUnbelievable low CostEurope60 Days .i’i* ItM $645OrientGood Used BooksCarefully selected Imports of cards, giftschildren's booksreliable typewriter service1322 E. 55th St. HY 3-9651HICAGO MAROON • Jan. 9, 1959 65 Day* ,£L. fraw $998Many tourt includecollege credit.'Also low-cost trips to Mexico$169 up, South America $699 up,Hawaii Study Tour $549 up andAround the World $1798 up.Ask Your Travel AgentITA 332 So. Michigan Av«.WQSIO travel, INC. (hicago 4, HA 7-2111 I have recently returned from a tour of 960,000 American col¬leges where I made a survey of undergraduate dating customsand sold Zorro whips. 1 have tabulated my findings and I amnow prepared to tell you the simple secret of successful dating.The simple secret is simply this: A date is successful whenthe man knows how to treat the girl.And how does a girl like to be treated? If you want to know,read and remember these four cardinal rules of dating:1. A girl likes to be treated with respect.When you call for your girl, do not drive up in front of thesorority house and yell, "Hey, fat lady I” Get out of your car.Walk respectfully to the door. Knock respectfully. When yourgirl comes out, tug your forelock and say respectfully, "Goodevening, Your Honor.” Then offer her a Marlboro, for whatgreater respect can you show your girl than to offer Marlborowith its "better mdkinsfine flavor and new improved filter? Itwill indicate immediately that you respect her taste, respect herdiscernment, respect her intelligence. So, good buddies, beforegoing out on a date, always remember to buy some Marlboros,now available in soft pack or flip-top box at your friendlyvending machine.2. A girl likes a good listener.Do not monopolize the conversation. Let her talk while youlisten attentively. Make sure, however, that she herself is nota good listener. I recollect a date I had once with a coed namedGreensleeves Sigafoos, a lovely girl, but unfortunately a listener,not a talker. I too was a listener so we just sat all night long,each with his hand cupped over his ear, straining to catch aword, not talking hour after hour until finally a policemancame by and arrested us both for vagrancy. I did a year and aday. She got by with a suspended sentence because she wasthe sole support of her aged housemother.S. A girl likes to be taken to nice places.By "nice” places I do not mean expensive places. A girl doesnot demand luxury. All she asks is a place that is pleasant andgracious. The Tomb of the Unknown Sokker, for example. OrMount Rushmore. Or the Taj Mahal. Or the Bureau of Weightsand Measures. Find places like these to take your girl. In nocircumstances must you take her to an oil-cracking plant.4- A girl likes a man to be well-informed.Come prepared with a few interesting facts that you eandrop casually into the conversation. Like this: "Did you know,Snookiepuss, that when cattle, sheep, camels, goats, antelopes,and other members of the cud-chewing family get up, theyalways get up hind legs first?” Or this: "Are you aware,Hotlips, that corn grows faster at night?” Or this: "By theway, Loverhead, Oslo did not become the capital of Norwaytill July 11, 1924.”If you caif slip enough of these nuggets into the conversationbefore dinner, your date will grow too torpid to eat. Some mensave up to a half-million dollars a year tins way.® IMS MmTo the list of things girls like, add Philip Morris Cigarette«,Girls, men—everybody, in fact, likes mild, natural PhilipMorris, co-sponsors with Marlboro of this column.1411 E. 53rd FA 4-5525 — HY 3-5300Cafe EnricoFeaturing — Complete Wine List andHors d'oeuvre TableCheese Small12"1.25Anchovy .* 1.50Pepper fir Onion 1.35Free Delivery on All Pizza to VC Students Small12"Combination 2.00Sausage 1.50 Mushroom 1.75Shrimp ...2.00Bacon fir Onion....... 1-25C. Hodgson steps down from SU positionGre££ Hodgson has re¬signed as chairman of thestudent union board aftermore than a year’s service in thatcapacity and approximately, twoyears’ membership on the board.Hodgson stepped down, he said,"because the union is now run¬ning as an active, valuable or¬ganization, and someone who’sbeen through so many crises withit as I have tends, to become re¬actionary and stereotyped, sucha person, since he’s had so muchtrouble just getting a job done, isno longer accustomed to thinkingbroadly and creative.”Hodgson became active on Stu¬dent Union even before he hadbecome a student. He arrived toolate for fall quarter entrance, butremained on campus until Mid¬ year. He took charge of Washing¬ton promenade, a major all-cam¬pus formal dance, just two weeksafter his officially becoming astudent.Reminiscing, Hodgson said thatthese were days when there wasa Student Union board in nameonly, and that most of the re¬sponsibility for the programmingand staging of dances, parties, etc.,fell on the shoulders of two orthree people.“These were the ones we coulddepend on,” he said. “They wereprimarily interested in laying thefoundations for a Union thatwould have broad campus support,a Union that had experimentedwith various things and been ableto separate the wheat from thechaff.“These people were constantly imposed upon to give their timeand energy in vast quantities, un¬til it was pretty embarrassing forme to even mention a forthcomingUnion affair to them. This may allsound like treacle, but it’s abopttime they were eulogized. JudyJohnson, Herb Gorr, and the stu¬dent activities office personnelnearly went nuts trying to keepthe Union on its feet. The Hang¬out, today a magnificent successand potentially even better, wastheir brainchild.”Hodgson is now on the pub¬licity staff of the new StudentUnion board, the area in whichhe was originally interested andthrough which he was drawn in¬to the Union.New chairman of the StudentUnion board is Nancy Cox, [“She was duly and properly elected,”]Hodgson said. “I can’t say thesame of myself I was the onlyguy who thought he had thetime.”The board, at present, consistsof: John Mills, vice chairman;Ruth Prelowski, publicity; JohnBrink, “Night of Sin” chairman;Dick Mintell, member-at-large.There are other positions to befilled on the board, such as busi¬ness manager, secretary, treasur¬er, Washington promenade chair¬man, etc. These positions will befilled by invitation. Interested per¬sons, however, may contact anySU board. His qualifications forthe job will be discussed at thenext meeting, the beginning ofnext quarter.“The people we have,” says Hodgson, “are great. They’re real¬ly devoted to a genuinely all-cam¬pus Union. I think this is the yearfor which we’ve been working.We’ve got beyond selfish, partisancontrol of the organization, awayfrom these people who used theUnion for petty politics. I don’tknow about you, but I think thisis a good thing.”Solomon makes predictions for '59(from page 1) Utility construction — likely to what the consumer does; a rapiddential construction—all of which stay at 1958 level. rise in consumer demand willare independent of what consum¬ers do in the short-run.2. Business investment inequipment and inventory—thesedepend in part on what the con-sumer does in the next fewmonths.3. Consumer spending itself, in¬cluding outlays for private resi¬dential construction.Highlights of his findings for1959 in the three areas include:Federal, state and local spend¬ing— up by about $16 billion com¬pared with 1958.Non-residential construction —off about $1 billion compared withthe peak year of 1957.HP theatre showspoetry exhibitionCurrently on display in thelobby of the Hyde Park thea¬tre are eight poems writtenby five young Chicagoans. Theeight texts have been illustratedby Stamford Williamson, a com¬mercial artist who has employedthe ancient art of calligraphy ordecorative writing.Edward Morin, a teacher atLoyola university and spokesmanfor the group, who call themselves“The Chicago Poets” stated thathe considered the group “anassembly of individual talents try¬ing to meet the public with ourwork.” Besides Morin the groupincludes Margaret Deimer,George Jackson, David Rubin,and Charles Busch.The Chicago Tribune stated:“The five poets are a long wayfrom the “Beat Generation.” Theirpoems are published by maga¬zines devoted to avante gardeliterature, rarely read by the gen¬eral public.’26tii of July'subject of speechThe Politics club will spon¬sor a speaker from the “26thof July” movement in Cubaheaded by Fidel Castro, at 7:30pm in Social Sciences 201 nextWednesday. The speaker will givea lecture-discussion on the aimsand views of the victorious Cubanrebels. He is scheduled instead ofAdolf Sturmthal in concession tocurrent student interest. Sturm¬thal will speak on economic andpolitical aims of Poland and Yugo¬slavia later in the quarter. Business investment in equip- send funds spent for these itemsment—hard-hit by the 1958 reces- up rapidly.sion, these areas Will depend on Business inventories — part ofThe Maroon's ace money-makers (I to r) Lawrence Kess¬ler and Gordon Q. Briggs display proudly one slightly bruised1913 "advertising trophy" awarded to several champion"ad-getters" in the days when there were "several" ad-getters (and in the days when the Maroon could affordextravagances like trophies).Larry and Gordon remind their public that the businessoffice is open daily from 1 to 5 and that they are alwaysready, willing and able to take your money (for ads, ofCourse) . (photo by Buchman)Sermon schedule toldThe presidents of two seminaries and the head of the Na¬tional council of churches will deliver sermons at the Univer¬sity during the winter quarter.They are among nine theologians and ministers who willspeak at Sunday services at Rockefeller chapel.The non-denominational services begin at 11 am.The preachers scheduled for the winter quarter are:January 11 — the Reverend J. Coert Rylaarsdam, profes¬sor of Old Testament theology, federated theological faculty.January 18 — the Reverend Paul Tillich, Harvard univer¬sity.January 25 — the Reverend Harold Bosley, pastor, FirstMethodist church, Evanston.February 1 — the Reverend Theodore Gill, president, SanFrancisco Theological seminary.February 8 — the Reverend Nathan Scott, associate pro¬fessor of theology and literature, federated theologicalfaculty.February 15 — World Student Day of Prayer: Dr. HowardSchomer, president, Chicago Theological seminary.February 22 — the Reverend Edwin T. Dahlberg, president,National Council of Churches.March . 1 — the Reverend George A. Buttrick, chaplain,Harvard university. the reduction in inventories ofpast year will remain permanentbecause of improved practices. Ifinventories are stabilized in 1959,that post - recession shift alonewill add $6 billion to the flow ofproduction; but if inventories arestepped up because consumers arebuying more, the increase offunds generated by added inven¬tories could rise to $12 billion in1959.Housing—more houses will bestarted in 1959 than in 1958 andresidential construction expendi¬tures will hit a record dollar levelof $19 billion.Consumer durable goods—ex¬penditures in this area will riseabout $6 billion, half of which willbe financed by net credit exten¬sions.Flying Maroonsenter flying meetThe Flying Maroons, anaviation club in its secondyear of existence here at UCwill participate in a flying meetto be held at the University ofIllinois, May 8 and 9. The meetwill include such events as “poweron and off, spot landings, naviga¬tion, and bomb drops.’The club will hold its first meet¬ing of the year in iu,< Noyts onJanuary 22 at 7:30 prn to planits activities. Pilots and non-i-LIotsalike may attend. Membership inthe club is open to anyone wdiohas had solo-flight experience.There are no dues.Last year the UC “birdmen”captured sixth place in navigationas well as the “Kibitzer’s trophy”at a flying meet held at McCol-lister college, St. Paul, Minne¬sota. According to Philip Cole¬man, the club’s president, meetswere given coverage by aviationmagazines.Injured Cubansin need of bloodBefore the success of theCuban rebels, many Cubanswere killed or injured. Allthose Americans who are willingto donate blood to the injuredrevolutionaries may do so atMichael Reese hospital bloodbank, at Ellis avenue and 31ststreet, or contact the Cuban con¬sulate at 30 E. Oak Street, SU 7-6444.The provisional revolutionarygovernment of Cuba announcedthat the blood was needed.TERRY’S PIZZAFree 11C Deliverysmall 1.00 large 1.95medium 1.45 x-large 2.95giant — 3.95chickon — shrimp — sandwiches1518 e. 63rd MI 3-404525c discount on aN pizzas, Mon, Tu, Wed, Thurs, only,with this coupon at the all campusOpen HouseGaslite Gaietiesnine pm — Saturday, jan. 10 — 5625 woodlawn ©v Come—let'sgambleJan. 9, 1959 -• CHICAGO MAROON • 5Hh* \ft Sports calendarJANUARYSwimming; Northwestern vs. varsity; Bartlett pool, 7 pm.Track; UCTC Invitational Relays, fieldhouse, 2 pm.Basketball; Grinnell vs. varsity, fieldhouse, 8 pm.Wrestling; varsity vs. Beloit, Beloit, Wisconsin.Swimming; Southern Illinois vs. varsity, Bartlett pool, 2 pm.IMBK; fieldhouse and Bartlett, 7:30-10 pm.Intramural managers; house; 4 pm, Trophy room.Basketball; St. Procopius vs. varsity, at St. Procopius.IMBK; Bartlett and fieldhouse, 7-10 pm.Intramural managers; fraternity, 11 am, Trophy room.Basketball; "B“ vs. Roosevelt, at Roosevelt.IMBK; Bartlett, 7-10 pm.Intramural managers; divisional; 4 pm, Trophy room.IMBK; Bartlett and fieldhouse, 7-10 pm.Swimming; George Williams vs. "B," Bartlett pool, 3:30pm.IMBK; fieldhouse, 7-10 pm.Track; Chicagoland Open; fieldhouse, 2 pm and 7:30 pm.Strong waters run deep...m ' UC still holds chess titleWofeh forregular specialson Liquors by Dan CosgroveDuring the winter interim,as most students were tryingto forget the University andeverything that goes with it, fourhardy students journeyed 1oCleveland to defend the NationalIntercollegiate Chess champion¬ship which the University held.Hobion Kirby, captain of theteam and first board, herded team¬mates Mitchell Sweig, PeterKneip, and Larry Staver onto theCleveland bound bus on December26. On December 31, Kirbyherded them back onto the bus—with the championship.Chicago defeated second placeHarvard 514 to 4*4 in the lastmatch to win the meet with fourwins and two draws, match scor¬ing on the Swiss system, thusbecoming the first team in thelast quarter century to win thechampionship twice in a row.This last triumph was the sixthin a row for the Chicago team,the other championships beingtwo Midwest Intercollegiatechampionships, two Greater Chi-1003 east 55th st. Small Cheese .... 95cSmall Sausage . $1.15NICKYS1235 E. 55 MO 7-9063 cago championships and The twoNational Intercollegiate cham¬pionships.UCTC hosts meetsBack on the campus, Uni¬versity of Chicago Track clubcontinued its busy season asit hosted two large open meets,the Sixth Annual Holiday Trackmeet, and the UCTC Open Trackmeet.The usual parade of stars re¬turned to the fieldhouse for theHoliday meet as 166 competitorscrowded the thirteen events.Among the familiar names werePhil Coleman, and Ira Murchison,Olympians; Ron Etherton of Pur¬due, A1 Jacobs, Ron Gregory, andMel Spence. Perhaps the best per¬formance of the afternoon wasthat of Frank Loomis, ex-varsitystar now making a comeback inthe low hurdles.In the UCTC Open, A1 Jacobs,UC sprint star; Hosea Martin,freshman Preston Grant, Walt“Petunia” Perschke, and Pete Mc-Keon turned in fine performances.Another returning star of the Uni¬versity sports world, MitchellWatkins appeared on the trackand gave hints of better thingsto come.Teams! Teams! Teams!Intramural head Chet “Fa¬ther Divine” McGraw an¬nounced that due to hisWant a »[*<*»’ P"v'"w „™yu q»aMyhIor”thto limited '- tot youwlf this »in'm" “ykso?„rientation training <^am,y»n'U^e 4 commitment. The \■..»^ tzsza*.r *‘•“VomKee-Mi,o«. »»> Mg is the day to madgrar;.'^Th«e. no obligation. faSULA^,,„E COULD BE VOU», • ladv was a collegeN°!. She handles the responsibih-semor. ‘ executive in one oflkS organizations. Todaythe world s larg _ * an otficer in theshe’s stationed in Paris .Women’s Army Corps.| Her professional and social life is • • *^ exciting'. • • happily balanced.On duty, .hisand ’radili0"al ,mV"weekends pins 30;day amm* P^rbonnc. Or make ashe'll attend evening1 . a holiday on the Frenchskiing trip to St. Mon -- f find a world of fun.Riviera. Whatever Ac_*». ^ ^ ^ pari, „°'KChXetrenSfriW, Honolulu, Tokyo .. • -»^ York or Los Angeles ^ ^ ^But wherever th.s '0“"g ^a,y«or\d of opportunity. Be-her passport to a wonder executive ... an oHtcercause she began her career ain the Women’s Army P executiveShe could 1m you ■ •; *™s 1°' Bon the Champs Elysees.CfTHE ADJUTANT GENERALDepartment of tho ArmyWashington 2 5. D. C„ ATTN: AGSN-LPlease tell me more about a world-traveling,executive career in the Women’s Army Corps. ingenious methods of instillingthe fervor of sport into the bloodof students, mainly that of pester-ing students and hawking in thesteps of Bartlett, he has procureda great number of entries in thebasketball leagues, 42 to he exact.As if he didn’t have enough onhis hands, McGraw “warned” thatthe handball single eliminationtournament would begin on Jan¬uary 19 along with the all-univer¬sity table tennis singles tourna¬ment.Varsity cagers winWhile McGraw is fidgettingat his desk, Joe Stampf, bas-betball coach, leans back inhis chair across the office anddreams of the day when he'llhave ten players as poised andefficient as Mitchell Watkins,When Gus Pearson begins to “hit”again, when John Davey's ankleheals, and when Clarenee Woodsfails to drop passes and kick theball.Last Tuesday when the varsitytrounced Illinois Professionalschool 75-54. The quarter-filledstands cheered at the cheers ofour vivacious cheerleaders other¬wise known as tho gargoyles -Joette Knapik, Judy Berry, andMarge Brown.Junior YearinNew YorkAn unutval awe-yearcollage program 8Write forbrochure to:i Dean F. H. McCloshey| Washington Squarei Collage1 New York University! New York 3, N.Y.SKI FUN BARGAINWilmot $1.501 Vi hr. lesson 3.004.502.50YOU SAVE 2.00Regular totalOur clubWed Tows $1.50 day& $1 night $2.50& Entry & 1 Vi hr.lesson 2.50Sat Ski 9 am to1 1 pm—ONLY 5.00Beginners wear JeansRent skis, boots, poles: $4-$5Reservations: Dave Jaecks, Snell21; or Rob N. Howell, '25. HY3-3535, U. of C. Ski Instructor,55-56.(Family ski tutoring $30 a day)SteamshipRound Trip*340 up - frequent sailingsThrift Round Trip by AIRSHANNON$399.60 LONDON$444.60 PARIS$480.60Rates to othar destinations onapplication. By using stop overprivileges, your entire transporta¬tion in Europe may be containedin your air ticket.CARS available on rental, purchaseor repurchase guarantee basis.Choice of Over 100 >Skate now, pray later(left) Festival of the Arts chairman, Mike Kindred andcheerleader Joette Knapick trip the light fantastic underthe North stands last Tuesday.Skating privileges are provided without charge for: (1) Studentson the quadrangles upon presentation of identification card. (2) Mem¬bers of the faculty and full-time employees upon presentation offaculty identification cards and employee ID-cards. (3) Husbands,wives and children (14 years and over) of students, faculty, and full¬time employees upon presentation of athletic privilege cards obtain¬able at the physical education office in Bartlett gymnasium. Studentsand staff may bring guests at a charge of fifty cents per session.Skates may be rented at the rink for 75 cents per session.The rink is open during the following hours: 4:00 pm Mondaythrough Friday. 3:00 pm to 5:30 p.m. Saturday and Sunday. 8:00 pmto 10 pm Monday through Saturday. 1000 am to 12 noon Saturday(children). 2:00 pm to 3:30 pm Sunday (family groups only).The skating flag will fly above the North Stands on all days therink is open.All members of the university community interested in forming »skating chib should contact the Student activities office.(photo by Fig Ho)starts Friday, Jan. 16thnew IMPERIAL COCKTAILLOUNGE & RESTAURANTPicadilly Theater Building1435 Hyde Park blvd.proudly presentsJIMMY ISLE and his famous Dixieland bandEllen Coughlin Beauty SalonSIHS Take Park Ave. ' Ml 3-20G0SPECIALISTS IN HAIR STYLINGAND PERMANENT WAVINGOpen Mon. - Sat. — 9 a.m. - II p.m.The Qreen Door Book Shop1451 EAST 57TH STREETHY 3-5829 Chicogo 37, III.Quality paperbacks — Fine children's booksSpecial orders filled promptlymm m» Fifty-Seventh at Kenwood =UNUSUAL FOOD (DELIGHTFULATMOSPHEREPOPULAR= PRICES |^iiiwHiiHiiiHmiiiminiiiiiiiiiiiiiimiiimiiHiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiimmiiiiiiiiiiHiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiTyou areWELCOME Ever meet a pessimist?Qt41507 east 53rd streetmi 3-9898DRESSES and SPORTSWEARSKIRTSBLOUSESCOORDINATESSWEATERS He sees the world through dark glasses. He just knows that he’llwind up in a job he doesn’t like, that he’ll be underpaid, thathe’ll get lost in the crowd. But realistic men know these thingsdepend largely on their own decision in ch >o..ing a career.Realistic men look for companies .hat provide sound train¬ing, advancement opportunities, challenging work, stimulatingassociates and good pcv, These are the fundamentals that insuresuccess and progress b- a career.The Bell Telephone Companies offer these fundamentals tohard-working, ambitious rea!.;c.*3 majoring in the arts, the sciences,business or engineering. Get the whole story regarding telephonecareers. Talk with the Bell interviewer when he visits your campus.Ask him about training, advancement opportunities, salary, jobsecurity. We think you’ll like what you learn.You can also get information about telephone careers by read¬ing the Bell Telephone booklet on file in your Placement Office.BELT* TELEPHONE COMPANIESJan. 9, 1959 # CHICAGO MAROON • 7MoleVjlLeiCHEER? CHEER!Oi»e »COE'At IN V*>R.AMOTHEA GfiLfl.fiscal vw! THE GRDS5 HWONHLPRODUCT |5GAllOPnfcAND CONSUMER5fEHDlWG (S GR6UINGBTTHt WttEOFSI*BIUIOH POOBAS AmNEAR? EISENHOWER WILLBfllfiVtCE THE BUP6E1.%n BILLION CDfiMhG(N ftN^ Vf MLUONROWflNG OUT !MoRt (NoNEYCIRCULATING ISRlWftYS SOW A HARD¬SHIP ON THE CHItpREM Pritchett is poli-sci chairmanMONEV zippingHERE RNJ> fv^NEVZIPPING THERE —-THE AIR WILL BEJUST THICK WITHTHE SWELL OF FAST-, MOVING MONEY!TO, £5 theCWIDRIHTHfcruSuffer? /THIS CHATTER. ABOUTL CHttPWEK, FELLA ~ WITH AU THAT MONEYEINCULPT/NG HBOUT, JUSTTHINK HOW IHANV MORE ^TIIHES CHILDREN'S FEELINGSWILL be hurt when theirFATHERS TFU-THm TO GETTHAT COIN GOT OF THEIRfXOOTH BECRUSE THERE’S(yJOTELWNG WHOSE HRfl&SIT'S 8E.EN INI A %LOW TOCDPITAUSM?YOU BET!MONEY SHOULPSTAY STATION IMLy,AND SANITARY V C. Herman Pritchett hasbeen appointed to his secondterm as chairman of the de¬partment of political science.The appointment was announcedby Chauncy D. Harris, dean ofthe division of the social sciences.Pritchett served as chairman ofthe department from 1948 to 1955and then resigned to work on re¬search projects.He succeeds Morton Grodzins,who now is on a year’s leave ofabsence at the center for advancedstudy in the behavioral sciences atStanford, California.Pritchett was recently namedthe Ford research professor ingovernmental affairs for 1958-59.In October of last year he gavethe Gaspar G. Bacon lectures onthe Constitution of the UnitedStates at Boston university. Thelectures were published in thebook: The Political Offender andthe Warren Court.Last November, he delivered theDillon lectures on law and politicsat the University of South Dakota.He will give the 1959 Guy Stanton Ford lectures at the University ofMinnesota.Pritchett received his under¬graduate education at Millikinuniversity at Decatur, Illinois, andhis PhD in political science atUC.From 1934 to 1937 he did socialand economic research on the staffof the Tennessee Valley authority.Following a year with the publicadministration committee of theSocial Science Research council,he was in England for a year ona i>ost-doctoral fellowship. He came to UC in 1940.In 1948 Pritchett was a staffmember of the task force on Reg.ulatory agencies of the first Hoo¬ver commission. He is politicalscience adviser to the Encyclopae¬dia Rrlttuinica, book review editorof the Midwest Journal of Politi¬cal Science, and former memberof the editorial board of the Am¬erican Political Science Review.He is the author of numerousarticles and his treatise. The Am¬erican Constitution, will be pub¬lished in 1959.Tillich lectures hereDr. Paul J. Tillich, profes¬sor at Harvard university,began a month-long lecturingvisit in Chicago this week.Tillich, who in 1953 was namedone of Harvard’s top three schol¬ars, had fled Nazi Germany in1933, took an instructoral posi¬tion at Union Theological semi¬nary, later taught at Columbia.Now at the age of 72, he is aUniversal Army StoreHeadquarters for sport and work wearHooded parka jackets — hooded sweatshirts — Ivy league corduroytrousers — wash fir wear Ivy league trousers — luggage fir trunks1144 East 55th st. DO 3-9572reduction with this coupofl.^.^^_ minister of the Evangelical andReformed church.“The Kingdom of God and history” will be the title of a lectureseries to be given by Tillich atUC. This series will include 16lectures and is given in a program which brings the theologianto campus every other year.The lectures are scheduled forMonday, Tuesday, Thursday andFriday at 11:30 am in MandelHall.Also on Tillich’s schedule is aseminar for graduate students in“Problems of a philosophy oflife.”Get Them Hot atNICKYSPIZZERIA1235 E. 55thThinklish; YEQGHEADJUNE CASTLEBERRY. LONS BEACH STATE COLL.*JEnglish: INDIAN BARHEN*'*English thin STEA* English: WEIRDLY SHAPED ASH TRAYThinklish translation: In modem circles, theplain round ash tray is considered square—nobutts about it. Today’s ash trays resemble any¬thing from a Ming vase to a coach and four—the only word for them isdeceptocle! To the discriminat¬ing smoker (anyone who enjoysthe honest taste of a LuckyStrike), we offer this fashionnote: 25-lb. ash trays are verybig this year.MAKE *25Start talking our language—we’ve gothundreds of checks just itching to go!We’re paying $25 each for the Thinklishwords judged best! Thinklish is easy: it’sa new word from two words—like those onthis page. Send yours to Lucky Strike,Box 67A, Mt. Vernon, N. Y. Enclose name,address, college and class.Get the genuine articleGet the honest tasteof a LUCKY STRIKE ARISTOCRATSHOE REPAIRProfessional Dyeingand Refinishing ofShoes and Handbags9 Colors matched 9 Toes cut owt• Vamps lowered • PlatformsremovedEQUIPPED TO REPAIR LADIES’NARROW HEELSHeels changed — Any style —Any colorBackstraps Removed and Springe-lators inserted — Shoes stretched— Zippers repaired — Orthope¬dic work.O'Sullivan'sRubber ProductsFAirfax 4-96221749 East 55th St.6-9/ha suave porterEngl ish: PAPER F0R boxing fansThinklish: SLENDERLOINRICHARD COLLINS. WILLIAM t MARV©at e»., Thmkthh; GRIPlomat“KlU VASSEUR. „0AN •” ..... A.— ' Thinklish: 1ABUOIDpAViOlUMt.lWACACOUW*Product of l//<& J^nttieccm c— 'Jv&xeo- is our middle name8 • CHICAGO MAROON • Jen. 9, 1959 OhUwdlVWwj/r^flease sendee(HANK’S W8 MX/SWhere I can betWECUED R/gf)fComplete Steak Dinner$1.29HANK'SRIB & STEAKHOUSE1301 E. 47th ST.We Deliver —- CallKE. 3-2522Coming events on quadranglesFriday, 9 JanuaryLutheran student group meeting, costdinner. 6 pm. discussion 7:15 pm. "Theulory of men,” Dr. George Farrell,Chicago Lutheran Seminary, May-wood. speaker. Chapel house, 5810Woodlawn avenue.K cord dance, 7 to 11 pm, CDE, Inter¬national house, charge 50 cents.Hoc umentary film, "From Tsar toLenin,” sponsored by Politics club.Social sciences 122, 7:15 and 9:15 pm.Admission students 50 cents; general$1; politics club members, 25 cents...John Wesley Hermaneutics,” a paperby Robert Jewett, Methodist Theologi¬cal fellowship, Swift Hall commons,7 :30 pm.Sabbath open house, 8:30 pm, 5715Woodlawn avenue, sponsored by Hil-lel foundation. Sabbath service 7:45pm.Religious service. Federated theologicaliaculty. Bond chapel, 11:30 am.Lecture series, "History and the king¬dom of God,” Federated theologicalfaculty, Mandel hall, 11:30 am, Mr.Tillich.1 rcture series, "Pharmacology andphysiology-series,” University college,64 E. Lake street, 6 pm. "Mescaline,and ritualistic drugs.” E. M. K. Gell¬ing, professor emeritus of pharma¬cology.Social action committee meeting,NAACP, Ida Noyes hall, 4 pm.Saturday, 10 JanuaryMethodist couples club, potluck supper,5631 South Dorchester avenue. 'Evolu¬tionary Ideas — and some questionsthey raise about man,” presentationsby Tom Humphreys and Roy Curtiss.Radio program, "The Sacred Note,”WBBM. 10:15 pm A program of choralmusic by the University of Chicagochoir, Richard Vikstrom, director;Heinrich Fleischer, organist.English'Class, International house, roomB, 10 to 12 noon.Sunday, 11 JanuaryRoman Catholic masses. 8:30. 10 and11 am, DeSales house. 5735 Universityavenue, sponsored by Calvert club.Folk dancing, 7:30 pm, 5715 Woodlawnavenue, sponsored by Hillel founda¬tion. Beginners and advanced wel¬come.Chamber music workshop, Musical so¬ciety, 7:30 pm, Ida Noyes library.Methodist graduate fellowship, 8 pm.Chapel house, 5810 Woodlawn avenue,' Is capital punishment ever justifi¬able?" presentation by Professor Wil¬ber G. Katz.Lecture - discussion: “Crisis In worldpopulation,” Philip M. Haucer, chair¬man, department of sociology. 7:30pm, apartment 1815, 2901 S. Parkway.Sponsored by Chicago ethical society.Radio broadcast, "The Sacred Note,”10:15 pm, over WBBM. A program ofchoral music by the University choir,Richard Vikstrom. director; HeinrichFleischer, organist.Monday, 12 JanuarySouth African defense fund campaignbegins on campus to collect funds forthe defense of South Africans being tried for treason, for disobeying theapartheid laws of their country Fundswill be collected in dormitories, InMandel Corridor, "C” shop, and maybe sent to University of Chicago SouthAfrican defense fund, care of IdaNoyes hall.Class in elementary Hebrew. 4 pm, 5715Woodlawn avenue, sponsored by Hillelfoundation.English class, 6:30 pm, Internationalhouse, room B.Movie, “Brief Interlude,” (Swedish),7 and 9 pm, International house, Eastlounge. Admission 50 cents.Tuesday, 13 JanuaryLecture, "Family dynamics in a Mexi¬can village,” Judd 126, 2:30 pm. Pro¬fessor Oscar Lewis, department ofsociology and anthropology of theUniversity of Illinois. Rocket society meeting, 7:45 pm, Eck-hart 207.Lutheran Theological fellowship, 8 pm,Chapel house. J. Coert Rylaarsdamwill speak on the Euckarlstic focus.Record concert, 8:30 pm, Internationalhouse, home room.Folk dancing, 8 pm, International house,assembly hall, admission 50 cents.Lecture on South Africa for the Uni¬versity of Chicago South African de¬fense fund committee. Social sciences122, 8:30 pm. Dr. Homer Jack, FirstUnitarian Church of Evanston, biog¬rapher of Gandhi.Wednesday, 14. JanuaryClass in elementary Yiddish, 3:30 pm,5715 Woodlawn avenue, sponsored byHillel foundation.Lecture-discussion: "The consequencesof Taclal discrimination in the USA.” Classics 16. 4 pm, sponsored byNAACP. Speaker; George Rawlck.Carillon concert, 4:30 pm, Rockefellerchapel.Organ recital, 5 pm, Heinrich Fleischer,University organist.Lecture series: "The foreign policy ofRussia,” 64 E. Lake street, 6:15 pm,"Geopolitics of Russia,” Ladls K. D.Kristof, lecturer. University College.English class, 6:30 pm, Internationalhouse, room B.University glee club, rehearsal, 7 p«n,Ida Noyes theater.Politics club discussion, 7:30 pm, socialsciences 201 Speaker from the Cuban"26th of July” movement.Parapsychology club meeting, 8:30 pm,Ida Noyes library; preliminary re¬port on E. S. P„ learning-experiment,series A.Coffee hour, 9 to 11 pm, West housebasement, 5825 Woodlawn avenue.CLASSIFIED ADSFor rentFor saleWanted Wanted2304. B flat clarinet. Call extFurnished rooms. $25-$40 per month.Phi Kappa Psi, 5555 Woodlawn, PL 2-9704. , .Furn. rooms for rent in fraternityhouse. Winter & spring quarters. Rea¬sonable rates;; lunch & dinner served.PL 2-9477, ashk for Mr. Edidin.2 Vi ROOMSCheerful, newly decorated, attractivelyfurnished apt. Safe, fireproof deluxeelevator bldg. Doorman. Night watch¬man. Maid and linen service available.Reasonable monthly rate.VERSAILLES APARTMENTS5234 Dorchester FA 4-0200Skylite studio rm. for, girl, DO 3-2320.Spacious rms. in elegant residence nearlake & IC. Available for students orbusiness girls. MU 4-7844.Two sleeping rooms—men only. Cleanand very quiet. $5 and >8 per week.MU 4-8493.Apt.' to share—4 rms., 2 bdrms.. prlv.bath. $35 per mo. Female. DO 3-6345. ServicesSEWING — Alterations, hems, curtains.Call MU 4-3941.Typing: theses, etc. Crisp, HE 6-0924.One twin-size bed. with springs, mat¬tress & legs. Almost new. $40. MI 3-8680.Trained statistician wanted to do ananalysis. Call Fri. evenings after 6 orBun. after 12. BA 1-8070. THE OLD TOWNSCHOOL OFFOLK MUSICinvites you to attend four lecturesin a series beginning Fri., Jon. 16thru Fri., Feb. 6 — 8 pm.“The Roots ofAmerican Folk Music”by Prof. Robert C. Cosbey, cur¬rently heord on WBBM in "This isFolk Song."Series Fee: $5Single Lecture Fee: $1.50Series subscription by moilor phone:The Old Town School 7>f Folk Music33 W. North Ave. WH 4-7475Also regulor closses on other eve¬nings in guitor ond five - stringbanjo ond folk doncing. PersonalWanted: late model Underwood type¬writer, not portable. HY 3-6342. WORKSHOP IN CREATIVE WRITING(PLaza 2-8377)Dear Army Brat: Did you hear aboutthe new fad to be neat? We might getto St. Louis if you are. G. Mulligan.Lost: 1 set keys in blue case near Gor¬don’s gunday. Reward. Green 41. Television series, "People and Ideas,”8:30 pm, over WTTW. Lee Wilcox, as¬sociate director of educational broad¬casting and lecturer in speech, Mead-ville Theological school, interviewsthe Reverend Sunder Joehi, Unitarianchurch, Hinsdale.Thursday, 15 JanuaryLecture series: "The extreme situationin religion and art,” 64 E. Lake street,6:15 pm, "Sin and grace,” AudreyBrune, teaching assistant, Divinityschool.Seminar: Recent British monetary pol¬icy, Department of economics, Lawsouth, 7:45 pm. Speaker: Roy Harrod,Christ Church, England.Lecture series: "Children's readingproblems,” 64 E. Lake street, 8:15 pm,"World progress in teaching childrento read.” William S. Gray, emeritusprofessor of education, director of theWorld Wide Study of Reading forUNESCO, 1952-55.Record concert, 8:30 pm, Internationalhouse home room.Friday, 16 JanuaryLutheran student group meeting andcost dinner, 6 pm, discussion, 7:15p m. "Our common body,” ReverendHenry Duwe, Grace Church, Evans¬ton, speaker. Chapel house, 5810Woodlawn avenue.Lecture series: "Primitive art: sculptureof Negro Africa,” the Art Institute,8:15 pm. "Introduction to primitiveart.” Allen Sawyer, curator of primi¬tive art. the Art Institute.Record dance, 7 to 11 pm, Internationalhouse, room CDE, admission 50 cents.Lecture, "Prospects of Fair EmploymentPractices Legislation in Illinois.”7:30 pm, Ida Noyes Hall; Mr. WilliamBerry.*☆ WRIGHTSHIRTS15 cents LAUNDRYwith Hydro bundle COMPLETE* LAUNDRY AND DRY' ☆ . CLEANINC SERYICE1315 EAST 57TH STREETM4 3-2073WHAT ARE YOU DOING TONIGHT?PLANNING ON STAYING INDOORS AND LOOKING OUT AT THE COLD?WHY DON'T YOU COME OUT, INSTEAD, AND JOIN US FORA BIT OF GOULISH FUN?(% WHAT BETTER THINGS DO YOU HAVE TO DO THAN TO COMETO Z B T TONIGHT AND TAKE IN OURCHARLES ADAMS PARTY?THE ADDRESS IS 5554 SOUTH WOODLAWNTHE TIME IS ANYTIME AF1ER 8:30THE SCENE WILL BE A COOL WILD ONE WITH MUSIC FOR DANCING,SETUPS FOR DRINKING AND TONS OF FOOD FOR EATING■Ian. 9, 1959 • CHICAGO MAROON • 98' ivc/v1959s contests openThe University has announced that the 1959 Charles HLSergei Drama prize contest is open for entries.This biennial contest awards $1,000 to the best full-lengthoriginal play never before produced or published. There is asecond prize of $500.Any US citizen, not already a winner of the contest, is elig¬ible. The University assumes no rights to the winning play orplays except the right of production by the University Theatre.Anyone interested may request entry forms and a Kst offhe contest regulations from the Charles H. Sergei Drama prize,University of Chicago, Chicago 37, • Illinois. Manuscripts re¬ceived without the formal entry forms wiM not be considered.The deadline for all entries is March 1, 1959**4.A.M.P.AUTOMATIC MONTHLY PAYMENTt s MSun Life of Canada now offers policyholders anew, automatic method of payment of life insur¬ance premiums. By agreement reached betweenyou, your bank and the Sun Life, the premiumdue is automatically paid from your regularbank account each month. There’s no check towrite, nothing to mail, no worry about makingthe payment in time. Let me tell you how tbieplan can save you time, effort and money.RALPH J. WOOD JR. '48SUN LIFE OF CANADA1 N. LA SALLE STREETCHICAGO 2, ILLINOISFR 2-2390 • * RE 1-0855 Tonight at 8:30 offeringvariety of satirical playsby Omwe ConbKnOperating on the old principle that if a horse isn’t somewhere near water he can't drinkit, and that even if he is near it he won’t touch the stuff unless he wants it, the UniversityTheatre is presenting a series of one-act plays giving the theatre-going horse as many kindsof water as possible. This series, nominally known as Tonight at 8:30 will be produced in atwo-week program to open two weeks from today.The first week’s program will include four one-aetees. The show will open with The PianoTuner, a comedy of manner- ciintock in addition to his com- fame and Neal Johnston of UTlessness as managed in overtly position of Blackfriar’s Simpering will direct the two productions,musical families. Omar Sha- slash (to be carefully separated AH performances are scheduledpili’s La Follia, an involved com- from Low Blow) has written in the Reynolds club theatre atedy centered in an unknown Uni- In4er a Ilia, a musical satire of 8:30. Performances of the firstversify in Hyde Park, Chicago, musjCal and anti-musieal produe- week’s program will b« held onUSA, will follia, folly a, or follow, tiong xh* Bald Soprano, a satiri- January 23, 34, and 25* The sec-depending on your point of view. caj farce or farcieai satire on so- ond week’s show will appear onThe second half of the program ciety in general and badly man- January 30 and 31 and Februarywill include Living Hoars not to nered middle-class society in 1 and 2. Tickets are now on salebe eeiled a comedy for few of particular will oomplefo the pro- at the Reynold's dub desk. All, gram. Mike Ha# of Biackfnars admissions are $Lseenung repetitive, and Edna St.Vineent Millay’s Aria da Capo, apoetic eombination of tragedy andfarce involving the traditionalColumbine-Pierrot theme, sui^-pounding two misled shepherds. ,The plays will be directed byPete Smith, WHl Moody, Jerry Rjchard Nash's "The Young and the Fair," a suspense dramaMaat and Dave Ingles, respee- sej jn a y^ng women's finishing school will open January 16tivety, at the Goodman theatre.The second week will see a new Brook Valley academy, themusical by Don McClintock and finishing school referred toIonesco’s The Bald Soprano. Me- above, attempts to permit young'Young 6l fair' opensby Carol BrentRepresentative SfAe tMAum PHOTOGRAPHERS1171 EAST 55th STREET MIDWAY 3-4433*; #**>'*?< im. -r-; --rift Jimmy'sand the University RoomRESERVED EXCLUSIVELY FOR UNIVERSITY CLIENTELEFifty Fifth and Woodlawn Are.California- in s t i tu t e of 't.echnoiogy.JET PROPULSION LABORATORYPASADENA . CALIFORNIAOFFERS CAREEROPPORTUNITIES in research anddevelopment ofmissile system*Active participation fh Space Research and Ttechnofog*Radio Astronomy^ Missile Design and Development*Opportunity to expand your knowledge • Individualresponsibility • Full utilization of your capabilities •Association with top-ranking men in field•Openings now 7n these fieldsELECTRONIC ENGINEERING • APPLIED PHYSICSMATHEMATICS • MECHANICAL, METALLURGICAL,AERONAUTICAL AND CHEMICAL ENGINEERINGSystems Analysis • Inertial Guidance • ComputerEquipment • Instrumentation • Telemetering • FluidMechanics • Heat Transfer • Aerodynamics • PropNIonteMaterials ResearchU.S. CITIZENSHIP REQUIREDJanuary 129 - 5Reynolds ClubRoom 200 It'i fine for the boys in the lobs to ran around in circles, but «tThe Shoretand we quit doing that years ago. No experiment herefor good food and drink elegantly served. Outstanding facilities forparties, conferences, conventions, etc. Quality apartment and hotelaccommodations. Attention to detail makes the difference. All serv¬ices, food and rooms sensibly scaled.Visit our Cottage Bar, Coffee Shop or Wedgewood Room.THE SH0RELAND HOTEL5454 South Shore Drive PLaui 2-1000 women to steep themselves in theamenities of discriminating living.The 21 young women in the playmanage to stoop below a steepand involve themselves m a discriminating life of social and religious prejudice, with a touch ofblackmail for spice.The Goodman theatre produetion will feature guest professional Beverly Younger. The play wilrun from January 16 through February 1. Friday and Saturday performanees begin at 8:30 pm. Curtains on Tuesday, Wednesday, andThursday evenings are at 7:30 pmThere will be a matinee on Thursday, January 29 at 2 pm and oneSunday performance on February1 at 7:30 pm. All seats are reserved. Admission to public is $2Telephone reservations may bemade by calling CE-6-2337.FREE DELIVERY- NICKYSPIZZERIANO 7-9063Our advice on your mov¬ing or storage problem isentirely free and withoutobligation. But it is amaz¬ing how often we find youhave need of our services.PETERSON MOVINGAND STORAGE CO.1011 East 55th StreetBUtterfield 8-671110% Discount to UC Students and PersonnelAH Laundry and Dry Cleaning ServicesCOMPARE THESE LOW NET PRICES8-LBS WASHED & FLUFF DRIED ... 59*10-LBS. FLAT WORK $131DRESS SHIRTS i* 22*QUALITY DRY CLEANING — RAPID SERVICE — REASONABLE PRICESFREE PICK-UP AND DELIVERYPhone Plaza 2-9097UNIVERSITY QUICK LAUNDRY1024 E. 55th St.Culture VultureI Have just returned from a two-week lay over in a justly obscure town in an unjustly unobscure state. Unlike most vultures,or any other sort of birds, my flight had nothing to do with a cold weather, although this would have been a more than ade¬quate reason for leaving; rather, I left because the University had closed down for the interim, the Maroon had suspendedpublication, and my parents expected me.In any case, I am now back after two weeks of doing none of the things which I am used to doing. What you might ask,are these activities? Attending all the concerts, plays, exhibits, and lectures about which I write? I'm afraid not. Spending myafternoons in Mr. Harper's forgotten stacks, seeing what the greal critics have said in the past? No. Pouring for hours overmy copy to see that the highest degree of polish is blazing forth. Now, we all know better than that.No. Almost all my time at this University is spent wandering around campus looking for material with which to fill thisintroduction.I could write an interesting little paragraph about why only the center doors of the administration building are used, butit would only be a paragraph and not in the most remote sense cultural.I could also write a "clever" introduction (and for the benefit of my more caustic critics, I would like to state that I havenot been sabotaged by irate editors: the Maroon protects its own, and those quotation marks are mine, not a copy reader's)on the subject of why all social science syllabi are blue, but I've already done this.I suppose there is something new to be said about University Theatre, but how can one be clever about an organization asmature, astute, versatile, and excellent (of which I am a member) as this?To return to my original complaint, my Christmas vacation has prevented me from such products of excessive contempla¬tion, and I have nothing to write about in my introduction besides introductions. But this shall soon be changed, things arereturning to normal. Humanities 3 students are at last finding all the answers in Croce, natural science 2 students are dis¬covering what a post-Aristophanic biologist can do with frogs, OMP students are getting around to "M," history studentsare returning to God, The Culture Vulture's in his office, and all's well with the Maroon, not to mention the world. Whoknows, next week I might have something to write about — in the meantime. . . .1 On campusTheatreUniversity Theatre, which Isalways doing something, is doingprecisely that. In this case, thesomething is Tonight at 8:30, or,for the more initiate, Tonight at8:52. Besides, if you get there at8:30 you have a better chance fora good seat, although all the seatsare good, excellent, or superb,depending on how well tickets aresoiling.The program for the two weeksof one-act plays, the produce ofmass hysteria on the part of thetheatre’s directors, includes sixcomedies.The first week will account forfour of these offerings. The PianoTuner, a French farce with moreor less a cast of characters; LaFollia, a Hyde Park play by aHyde Parker, Omar Shapli; Liv¬ing Hours, a musical adaptationof The Quare Fellow lasts nineminutes and 73 seconds, and AriaDe Capo. The subject for thissentence is too far back to hanga verb on to, but it would seemclear that this is the programbeing offered.The second weekend, which hap¬pens to be the fourth weekend inJanuary, will contain neither TheBald Piano Tuner nor the SopranoPiano, but will contain The BaldSoprano, and avante-guarde playbased on nothing in particular,but containing no end of informa¬tive aphorisms: ‘You can sit ona chair if it hasn’t any.’ In addi¬tion, UT will present an originalmusical review Inter Allia. Thisshow, the English translation ofwhich is Among the Allies, is de¬ signed for a University audience,it will be presented In Latin. Withbook by Don McClintock andmusic by Mary Ann Erman, thisshow is built around the fall ofthe Third Reich. Tickets for allof the above will go on sale soon.Over at the other end of Mandelcorridor, Blackfriars is sittingaround wondering what to do withitself. It has a composer who isdoing what all good composersdo — i.e., composing. It has anauthor, who either is or is notdoing what all good authors do— i.e., rewriting. It has a direc¬tor, who is not doing what allgood directors should be doing —i.e., directing. This, however, isthe direct result of one thingwhich the Black Friars do nothave — a cast.They do have an excellent andworthwhile book, however, SourMuse, by Don McClintock. Thesour muse of the story is theancient Greek music of religiouslyric poetry, Polyhymnia. Poly¬hymnia is irritated because nobodyseems to be writing religious lyricpoetry any more these days, soshe withdraws her inspiration tosee how the world gets alongwithout her. When she discoversthat the world is getting alongquite well without her becausenobody seems to want to writereligious lyric poetry, Polyhym¬nia returns to indulge in a modernfertility rite with a group ofSouthern boy scouts.Art exhibitionsNot exactly an exhibition, butnevertheless one of the most ex¬citing things on this campus since1931, is the Shapiro student loan art show. A great success whenit was innovated last quarter, thisshow enables students to hanggood paintings and prints on theirwalls for 50 cents a quarter. Theentire exhibit will be on displayuntil January 20, when the draw¬ing will be held. Information andentry blanks which must be filledout before UC’ers are eligible todraw for their choice of paintingsare available at the Ida Noyesdesk. It has not yet been definitelydecided, but it is hoped that theservice will be available to off-campus students this quarter. Inany case, do come and see what isgoing on and about in Ida Noyes.Motion picturesA film of unusual interest isbeing screened tonight, Tsar toLenin, narrated by Max Eastman.The picture, sponsored by thePolitics club, has not been in Chi¬cago for over 25 years; this Cul¬ture Vulture, who is not spon¬sored by the Politics club, hasbeen in Chicago for 19 years andconsequently has not seen the film. Judging from the reviewsI have seen, it is a shame lhatone or the other of us has nottraveled more.This movie is historical, beingcompiled from films taken bymore than a hundred cameramen,including the Tsar himself andanyone else who happened to bearound at the time. On the wholethe clips, which run from pre-wardays through the civil war, are ingood condition.The show will be presented at7:15 pm and again at 9:15 pm insoc sci 122. Student admission is50 cents. General admission is $1.As to the campus, this is justabout that. The CTA and theI-C should do well this week.Off campusConcerts and recitalsFritz Reiner is currently in the midst and/or depths of his mid-season vacation and the ChicagoSymphony is in the everchanginghands of a number of talentedguest conductors. This afternoonHans Rosbaud, according to mypress release, an acknowledgedspecialist in contemporary Ger¬man music, will conduct somecontemporary German music:three exerpts from Berg’s operaWozzeck with Frances Yeend assoprano soloist, Schoenberg’sFive Pieces for Orchestra, Hinde¬mith’s Concerto for Orchestra andl.a Mer by Debussy.On Tuesday, Rosbaud will i*e-peat the Schoenberg and Debussy,will substitute Hindemith’s Con¬cert music for brass and percus¬sion for the earlier concerto andwill also conduct Haydn’s 90thsymphony.MODEL CAMERAAuthorized LeieaDealerNSA Discount1342 E. 55th HY 3-9259Chicago’s Most UnusualMotion Picture 1 heatreAgain reminds all College Students of theSpecial Student Rates always in effect at Phone DE 7-1763EVERY DAY OF THE WEEKINCL. FRI. & SAT. EVENINGS dark theatredark & madisonopen 7 o.m.late show 4 o.m.College Student Price50c at all timesjust present your student identi¬fication card at the boxoffice.Sunday Film Guild ProgramsJon 11 "Caf On A HotTin Roof""Rooney"Jon 18 "Damn Yankees""The Goddess"Jon 25 "Knock On Wood""We're Not Married" SYRACUSE SEMESTERSINA unique foreign study programsponsored by Syracuse UniversityAmerican college students are offered anopportunity to enrich their education witha foreign experience and, at the same time,complete their college course in four years.No launguage prerequisite. "Home stay"with Italian family arranged.Write for Booklet SS-1UNIVERSITY COLLEGEOF SYRACUSE UNIVERSITY610 E. FAYETTE ST., SYRACUSE 3, NEW YORKNOW-75 SPECIAL,• STUDENTRATEJUST SHOW CASHIER YOUR I.D. CARP Mr. Hu lot ReturnsJacques Tati"MY UNCLE"SALE SALEThe Di cr *1345 E. 57thWestminster $2.29Epic ('til 1 Feb.) $2.49Folkways 12" $3.95 10" ... $2.95AH types diamond needles . . . . . . $7.98All records sold at discountSALE SALE *t 7the A7vde parkturfing mayJanuary 9TWO GEEAT STARencore from 'Me and the Colonel'Danny Kayebacked his comic'Kau-kuacinadoub/e-Mingventriloquist m-Curt Jurgensin hismice festival best actor Mrd&ermdn - speakin4 ro/e4Sthe Devils Generalfrom I* pU, by CARL fUCMWrOcilO Knock oJpTDS FAME THEATRE / LAKE PARK AT 53rd / NO*™! 7-9071 / STUDENT RAIS $Qf ALL RCTORMAftCESJan. 9, 1959 • CHICAGO MAROON • riI 'V»i'M?i)»Mif •F' _II: lB1V ,-i’1;tr11 R. Palter discusses Nat Sc/ 3 objectivesby Robert PalterActing chairman, natural sciences 3IN ORDER to understand the position of Na¬tural Sciences 3 in the College natural sciencesprogram one mtist bear in mind the character ofthe first two courses in the sequence, Natural Sciences1 and Natural Sciences 2: since these two courses havebeen described in some detail in earlier articles in thisseries, the following brief indications should suffice.•Natural Sciences 1 is a course in physical science em¬phasizing the following topics: descriptive astronomy ofthe solar system, Newtonian mechanics and gravitation,atomic-molecular theory, atomic structure and funda¬mental particles, molecular structure and chemical prop¬erties, and kinetic molecular theory. This course presup¬poses high school algebra and geometry but no highschool science. Natural Sciences 2 is a course in biologi¬cal science treating selected problems in the followingareas: physiology, biochemistry, evolution, ecology,genetics, and embryology. This course presupposes theknowledge of certain fundamental physical and chemicalprinciples studied in Natural Sciences 1, such as theconservation of energy and the atomic-molecular struc¬ture of matter. Natural Sciences 3 has two variants,one physical and one biological; both variants presup¬pose specific knowledge of the subject-matter of thenatural sciences (roughly equivalent to what is coveredin Natural Sciences 1 and 2), as wel las a certain depthof insight into the nature of scientific inquiry (roughlyequivalent to that obtainable in Natural Sciences 1and 2).THE GENERAL objectives of all three courses aretwo-fold: (1) to teach the student some significant sam¬ple of what is now known about the natural world; (2)to teach the student something of the methods andtechniques used to obtain knowledge of the naturalworld. Of crucial importance for an understanding ofour objectives is our belief that (1) and (2) should sofar as possible studied as parts of the integral wholewhich is ongoing scientific inquiry. Thus, we considerthe achievement of (1) to be incompatible with the useof conventional college textbooks as primary readingmaterials; and we consider the achievement of (2) tobe incompatible with the use of any standardized accountof “scientific method.’’ Instead, our reading materialsconsist mainly of original scientific writings; these writ¬ings—edited and annotated by our staff—are groupedinto units designed (a) to convey some genuine insightinto the methods and conclusions of a significant areasof the natural sciences, and (b) to stimulate reflectionupon the scope and validity of such methods and conclu¬sions. It must be emphasized that we do not dwell onso-called “methodological” or “philosophical” issues butsimply try to analyze the acutal arguments of the read¬ings together with (if necessary) their implicit pre¬suppositions. (Incidentally, we have nothing against“philosophy of science”; we simply believe it should betaught in a distinct course. Certain members of our staff,in fact, teach special courses—variants of the CollegeOMP course—concerned with philosophical problemsarising in the areas of the natural sciences. Thesecourses will be discussed below.)Let us turn now to a more detailed consideration ofNatural Sciences 3. Originally, this course consisted oftwo more or less independent halves, one dealing withtopics in modern physics (line spectra and the structureOf the atom) and the'other dealing with various schoolsof modern psychology (Gestalt, behavioristic, andFreudian). However, some years ago it was decided that a full year course was required to achieve the specialobjectives of Natural Sciences 3. and at this time thephysical and biological variants were introduced. Thesespecial objectives include, first, an understanding of ahighly significant aspect of the development of science,namely, the synthesis of several initially distinct andindependent theories into a single more general theory;and, secondly, an understanding of the nature of therelations between the physical and biological sciences.The first two quarters of Natural Sciences 3 (physi¬cal) begin with a study of light, electricity and magne¬tism, and atomic structure, and culminate in the studyof the quantum theory of light and matter. A carefuleompartive evaluation of the coi'puscle and wave theo¬ries of light is pursued in readings by Newton. Huygens,Young, and Fresnel. A detailed though qualitative analy¬sis of the concept of the electromagnetic field is devel-ped in readings by Faraday and Maxwell. The originalaccounts of the discoveries of the electron and the nu¬cleus are introduced in readings by J. J. Thomson andE. Rutherford. And finally, an account by Millikan ofthe photoelectric effect and Bohr's classical paper “Onthe Constitution of Atoms and Molecules" complete thefirst two quarters’ work.Robert M. Palter, chairman of Natural Sciencesin the college and acting-chairman of the naturalscience 3 staff, is another of the very young, verysignificant administrator-instructors about campus.Like many of his colleagues. Palter is also theholder of a rather unusual combination of degrees.After receiving a BA from Columbia in chemistryin 1943 and spending two years in army researchon the Manhatten project, Palter enrolled at UCto continue his work in science and engage in amore intensive study of philosophy, ultimately re¬ceiving a PhD in philosophy in 1952.Palter began teaching here in 1949 and foundhis experience in both these diciplines to be val¬uable, having taught Natural science 1 and 3, OMP,and various logic and philosophy of science coursesin the philosophy department. The combination hasbeen rather successful, for in '53 he was the re-ceipiant of the highly regarded annual award forexcellence in instruction in the College. THE FIRST two quarters of Natural Sciences 3 <bio-logical) are devoted to a study of the application ofclassical genetics to the analysis of populations of organ¬isms aqd to problems of evolution, in readings bv j0.hannen. G. H. Hardy, and Sewall Wright; and to a studyof the interactions of .nucleus, cytoplasm, and environment in regal'd to gene action and the physiology ofearly development, in readings by Haemmerling, Beale.Ephrussi. and Waddington.The Spring quarters of the two variants of NaturalSciences 3 are identical. The general problem with whichtre quarter begins is the relation between the physicaland biological sciences and the possibility of a purelyphysico-chemical explanation of life; this problem issoon particularized to the question of whether modernquantum physics of caapble of explaining gene actionThe implications of gene theory, quantum theory, andenzyme theory for this question are studied in readingsby F. G. Hopkins, Schroedinger, Delbrueck, Crick, andothers.With the introduction of the new College bachelor'sdegrees most students were no longer required to takeNatural Seances 3. It was decided, however, to constructtwo Natural Sciences variants of OMP to be taken byall students majoring in mathematics or in one of th<-physical or biological sciences. An adequate characterization of these courses would require a prior descriptionof the content and aims of OMP—a task which is clearl>beyond the s«*ope of this article. Nevertheless, it may behelpful to refer to at least the Winter quarter of OMrbecause of its obvious connections with all three NaturalSciences courses. This part of OMP Is concerned with“methods of the sciences,” and among these the methodsof the physical and biological sciences naturally occupyan extremely important place.Thus, for example. Pasteur’s proof that fermentationdoes not occur in the absence of living yeast spores(studied in Natural Sciences 2) constitutes a splendidillustration of J. S. Mill’s methods of experimental inquiry (studied in OMP). Or. again, Einstein’s discussionof the epistemological foundations of physics in hi-essay ““Physics and Reality” (studied in OMP) ishighly pertinent to a full appreciation of the historicaland philosophical significance of Newtonian mechanics(studied in Natural Sciences 1). In Natural Sciences 3the rich and complex scientific subject-matter of eithervariant provides many rewarding topics for philosophical analysis. Thus much of the work in OMP NaturalSciences amounts to a reconsideration of materialstreated in Natural Sciences 1, 2, or 3 but approachednow from a philosophical or “integrative” point of viewNew sets of readings, distinct from those in OMP or inany Natural Sciences course, have also been introducedFor example, one such set of readings deals with alternative approaches among contemporary mathematiciansto the philosophical foundations of mathematics; whileanother set of readings deals with alternative approachesamong contemporary psychologists to the study of behavior, the diverse approaches reflecting diverse philo¬sophical views.AS MENTIONED above, the number of students nowtaking Natural Sciences 3 proper is quite small. Becauseof the unique contribution of Natural Sciences 3 to theliberal education of-science and non-science majors alikeit would be extremely unfortunate if the course shoulddisappear from the undergraduate curriculum. One stepdesigned to forestall this eventuality has been the deci-sion to offer to all qualified students, as quarterly elec¬tive courses (with full credit and quarter grades of re<-ord), any of the quarters of Natural Sciences 3 (physicalor biological).NEW-TEXT BOOKS-USEDNote BooksPencilsPaper STUDENT SUPPLIES Mortgage InsuranceEducational InsuranceConnecticut Mutual LifeJoseph H. Aaron, '275524 S. Everett Ave.PoliticalPhilosophyPsychologyReligion GENERAL BOOKSIVewReconditioned TYPEWRITERSGreeting CardsInfants9 WearWomen’s WearSandwichesSoft DrinksHot Coffee GIFTS and NOVELTIESSNACK BARCamerasAccessories PHOTOGRAPHIC SUPPLIES RentedRepairedCosmeticsSocial StationeryCostume JewelryCigarettesTobaccoPipesFast and ExpertDeveloping ServiceU of C BOOKSTORE5802 ELLIS AVENUE UNIVERSITYBARBER SHOP1453 E. 57thFine haircuttingThree barbers workingLadies' haircuttingFloyd C. ArnoldProprietor < >5CHICAGO MAROON • Jan. 9, 1959