playe appointed deanGeorge L. Playe has been appointed to fill the newly created post of dean of undergradu¬ate students. This appointment, made by John P. Netherton, dean of students, and an¬nounced by Alan Simpson, dean of the College, is essentially the same position as dean ofstudents in the college, a post last held by Harold Haydon. Haydon, who was dean for a re¬cent record-breaking two years, is 7 —defined a dean as "a mouse in graduates, whence the new title,”training to become a rat,” had Netherton continued,only accepted the third year be- ......cause no successor had been dis- fvv^° ^a,s Ius* resiRnedcovered. Upon returning from as cha,rman hie French staff,returning to a full-time teachingposition in the art department ofthe College.Haydon had accepted the posl* Illlie 41wltl. .Uon of College dean of students, Vermont and hearing of recent Paf sPent tho last week running*'* j i 0 nOl \X700U nio CAnAyid f I /va-m r\nnw)1(.n Netherton’* predecessor developments, Haydon decided tojtohcrt M. Strozier offered it to offer his resignation. This was* accepted, and Playe was ap-M««. only on the conditions that p0jnted, according to Dean Hay-this term of office not exeeed don himself.“two or three years.” Having Playe received his BA degreeserved for two years in this posi- from Brown university in 1939and having cheerfully re- and an MA from the same institution. tion in 1940. After some additionalwork at Washington university in office and his third floor scholar¬ship office. Now that scholarshipshave been settled, he intends tobegin working full time as Deanof undergraduate students.He is looking forward to “work¬ing out the problems I know theoffice will present me.” He doesnot intend to give up his teaching Deans appointedAlan Simpson, dean of the College, has announced the fol¬lowing appointments to the College staff, effective last week.Associate Dean of the College, Warner A. Wick; AssistantDean of the College, Albert M. Hayes; Dean of Students in thecollege, George L. Playe; JamesE. Newman, assistant dean of stu- is no secretary of the facultiesdents in the College; Benson E. since Robert C. WoeUner’s retire-Ginsburg, head, biological sci-gigned himself to a third and finalyear, Haydon signed his new eon- St Lou is and at The University of dut‘es, <»mpletely; in fact he ac-trart. Illinois, Playe found his environ- £pt*d Nethert°n’s °«ey. of theHowever, while Dean Haydon ment suddenly switched from the j b up°n the condltl<>n thatspent a between-quarter week on academic to the military,hi.s Vermont farm, tho administra- * lom 1942 to he s<?rved astors in charge realized that Playe, a criminal investigator for the USarmy, his knowledge of linguis-just completing his final year as tics and languages being of con-director of financial aid, would be siderable aid in the investigationthe most likely and most satislac- of Monies; his experience as antore successor to the new office, investigator later proved not with-•.... , out use in his position of directorIt was known that Haydon, whoappointment of the University's scholarshipprogram.In 1946, Playe accepted an in¬structor’s position in the CollegeFrench department. Recently hewas appointed chairman of thatdepartment and of the Collegelanguage staff. Playe has beenwith the University continuouslysince 1946, though he has taughtfor t v.) summers in Paris and forone summer at Indiana univer¬sity. Playe has contributed muchtime ana effort to the develop¬ment of the College language pro¬gram and to the scholarship of¬fice. His work has been character¬ized with great success, according,to Dean Netherton.“Students registered In thejoint degree program in effectsince 1953, have had two deans—a dean in the College and thedean of their division. The Execu¬tive Committee on UndergraduateEducation report, guiding light ofthe new College program, sug¬gested an end to this practice. Inthe future, Playe will be the onlydean of students for all under-institute still seeks buyerfor ten-year-old betatronAfter two months of advertising, the University still has aused betatron for sale.But there’s no talk of lowering prices, and no signs of worryfrom its salesmen, the members of the Enrico Fermi Institutefor Nuclear Studies. “Their classified ads have ap- The betatron, although still inpea t ed periodically in Chicago perfectly good condition, has fall-papers, the New York Times, and en a victim to progress. Its func-recently in the Wall Street Jour- tions are now being performed bynal. Although no one has yet the more powerful and versatilesnatched at the offer, the price synchrocyclotron now at the In¬remains “between $75,000 and stitute. The space now occupied$125,000,” stated Clement S. Mok- by the betatron is needed for in-stad, administrative assistant at trumentation of this synchro-the Institute. “We would junk it cyclotron, M o k s t a d explained,if we couldn’t sell it at that price.” Some of the space will also beThis price represents a consid- used for instrumentation of theerable discount from the $450,000 new 12billion electron volt par-the Institute paid for it new ten tide accelerator now at the Uni¬years ago. And it’s still in fine versity - run Argonne Nationalcondition, Mokstad asserted. Laboratory in Lemont, Ill.So far the well-publicized ad- During its ten years at the Uni-vertising has not yet been without versity, the betatron has beensome measure of success. The In- the instrument of much signifi-stitute has received inquiries cant atomic research, Mokstadfrom potential buyers in Trieste, said. It was used many times byJapan, Pakistan, Australia— and the late Enrico Fermi, for whomtwo In Texas. the Institute is named. RecentLast week’s ad in the Wall “spin experiments,” providing da-Street Journal brought three ad- ta for the spin theories of elec-ditional inquiries: from Convair trons, were performed on thisin Fort Worth, Tex.; from Van- machine.uerbiJt in Nashville, Tenn., and Many of the potential buyersIram the Erie Electric Co. of Buf- for the particle are private firms,falo, N.Y. Whoever buys it would probablyMokstad said they would keep continue to use it for research,on trying to sell the betatron un- “It’s very good for particle and‘ - September. In the future he photonuclear research,” Mokstadplans to advertise in magazines, asserted.loo: Scientific American and (“to Are chances good it will beRet worldwide coverage”) the Re- sold? “I’m hoping so,” said Mok-view of Scientific Instruments. stad. he could continue teaching Frenchone.Harold Haydon expressed some'regrets and some delights in va¬cating his office. He explained ina Maroon interview, that he hasvery much enjoyed his daily con¬tact with students and their prob¬lems; at the same time he is aprofessional artist, not a profes¬sional educator. He is anxious toget back to his art work and hisbacklog of commissions. ment. John Thompson vacated thedean of the chapel’s office lastences section; Leonard B. Meyer, October. Ruth O. McCarn is nohead, humanities section; George longer head of the disepilinaryW. Platzman, head, physical sci- committee, and Playe is currentlypnrps spptinn trying to fulfill two positions in.... , . ’ . . . the Ad building — director of fi-Wick is currently professor in nancial aid and dean of studentsthe department of philosophy in the College> a title whichHayes, besides being professor of might morc appropriately behumanities, is also an advisor and dean Gf undergraduate students,examiner in the College. Playe TT , , ,, . .has boon diroctor ot financial aid Heretofore there has been sonwand also an associate professor of confusion about the difference beFrench and chairman of tho Ro- an "associate dean of stu-manee-language staff in the Col- den,s and an "distant dean oflege. Newman adds his new title students. The new “associateto those of instructor of history dean” will perform such duties asin the College, director of student making calculations for classroomhousT^5 diieCtor student space, scheduling times for class°With* all these new appoint- meetings in the College, and han-ments, four positions are current- dling the registration of Collegely vacant in the University. There students.k:|TChicagoA MMVol. 68, No. 2 University of Chicago, July 10, 1959LAK, friend tour campusChancellor Lawrence A. Kimpton received a heartwarming welcome when he returnedto campus from his three-month vacation last Monday.Kimpton toured the campus and greeted students and friends who lined both side of 59and 60 street to wave as the Chancellor drove by with his friend, Mrs. Philip Mountbatten,queen of England. Approximately — : ——,— —— — —100 policemen were on hand to who were asslSned to bold back removed his tasseled nightstickhold back the surging crowds of the crowd were given maroon tas- and clubbed the cameraman whowell-wishers ° sels t0 bang from their clubs. fell to the street. With a splendidMrs Philip Mountbatten her So enthusiastic was the crowd’s effort typifying the stuff newspa-, u jo- nu v n - reception that your reporter was permen are made of, our photog-husband i mce i *P» indignantly kicked when he at- rapher rolled over onto his frontalStratton Mayor Daley and other tempted to brcak through the piane and snapped the picturefnedns of the Chance or accom- crowd 0f pGOpie some of whom seen here despite a herd of tram-panied him in his limousine from were heard t0 cry «Nobody’s gon. pling feet.International house to Co age na do me out of a piace to see The day o£ Kimpton’s tour sawGrove and then bac a ong 60 i after I’ve stood here for six and a group of strange posters aboutstreet towards the Museum of Sci- a half hours.« campus prohibiting parking onence ana industry The luckless M a r o o n pho tog- the streets mentioned above.Approximately fifteen thousand rapher assigned to the event had These posters were signed by theUniversity employees were al- poor results with his equipment dean of students office, howeverlowed time off from their jobs in (see adjoining) due to the fact that office denies them. The cam-order to see LAK as he made his that just as Mrs. Mountbatten ar- pus police claim no knowledge ofreturn tour. rived to pick up Kimpton, the them, however, on contacting theThe campus police were special- crowd swelled forward knocking Hyde Park police we were able toly outfitted for the occasion in the photographer against the po- find out that although no carsscarlet red uniforms, and were lice cordon. In order to stem the were towed away as was threat-seen to lead the cortege on route tide of people, an officer whose ened in the poster, several autosthrough campus. The city police name we were unable to discover, were “relocated.”photo by WilsonChancellor Lawrence A. Kimpton chats with Mrs. Mountbatten in their limousine.Communications media Jell of Schools progressThe ten-year-old committee cm communication, which was ®offifially dissolved July 1, has published the second issue of The good reader in the elementary school is “probably a better reader than his father,its journal, Studies in Public Communication, under the editor- probably a better reader than some of his teachers,” a University reading clinic was toldship of Edward C. Uliassi, a member of the committee.Dated Summer 1959, this issuefollows two years after, Volume I, modia do to people?No. 1. According to an editorial Another article, Art films andby EKhu Katz, assistant professor e£6heads by Kenneth P. Adler, recentlyMiss Constance McCullough of San Francisco (California) State college told more than1,000 teachers and school administrators from throughout the nation at the opening sessionof the University’s 22nd annual Reading conference that the effective reader is a “constantlearner,” not a "finished product.” —_ , 'This little paragon, the effec- ^iad ncd been made sensitive to and help ber become closer toof sociology, this issue has tenta- discusses personality differences ^ve reader, is Gutenberg’s best ™ai]y lrn°r,e klllds,ieaf,!ng ^dividual instruction,tively been scheduled as the between patronizers of "art friend,” Miss McCullough said. jS’_ra!^ lka” She caut,oned that grouping isjournal s last. Copies, at $1 each, films” and "conventional movies” “If it is in print, he’ll take a flingmay be obtained from the depart- as determined by a 1954 study of at itment of sociology. audiences at the Hyde Park (art) "We can thank TV, modernThe issue contains ten articles and Piccadilly (conventional) the- parents who share more withand Katz’ editorial. Katz, who has aters. Adler concludes that "the their children, modern living withbeen advisor to students in communication, states that there still and that "Those who prefer the present day publishers ™ ...... assocjate professor of edueation. lie schools.is a need for research in the field, conventional Hollywood films . . . many, varied, attractive offer- .. . ic ,centered on the "uses” approach, are conventional in most other ings,” she said. concerned with how to Td^nt the Wr)£htstone told the educatorswhich asks, "What do people do ways.” He adds that the art-film "But make no mistake about it: ™ t hods often chine that groi,p,ng’ per sf’ does notwith (mass communications) me- patron, nevertheless, does not ap- he would be little better than the . • . f .. Jj. automatically provide bolterdia?” rather than, "What do the pear to be "inner-directed.” older generation if his teachers aQ achjeve maximal development tioru”mg °* ,mpr°Ved instruc‘for each pupil.” Effective aidIn discussing the characteris- . _ties of the effective reader, Dr. he effective, it must haveMcCullough said that the young- Purpose and meaning for both theMike Todd’s balloon was launched, Mayor Daley released 300 white doves to promote world ster "is not necessarily the so-peace, the fleet came steaming into the harbor, and the International Trade Fair slipped out railed ’best’ reader in the class . .of the Chicago merchandisers’ womb onto Navy pier last week.The Outer drive was clogged with cars from the pier back to Grant park and we had de¬cided to approach the site of the fair on foot so we dreamed of 30 years ago, and “not a method of teaching. It isif they were not doing something only a means to an end ratherconsistently and directly to fos- than an end in itself,” she said.ter them.” Her words were echoed by J.Maximal development Wayne Wrightstone, director ofxxi# • „ i >. .. _ . ... , x. Mrs. Helen M. Robinson, diree- the Bureau of Educational R*.art-film fan ... is an egghead, its many opportunities, and the . , .. Da 7 X, ne^10se Who prefer «he present Vpublishor, ,or their search of the New York c.ty pub-said the Conference is primarilyThe Fair—a good time had by someas to get the total impact of it all. As we walked upa ramp all abustle with international traders andthe latest in rockets from Cape Canaveral, we wereordered by the attendant to kick the turnstilebefore we entered.Inside we saw stall after stall of Japanese for¬tune cookies, Mexican pottery, IBM machines,kissing dolls, Bell telephone displays, and Wimpy,the glorified hamburger. We shuffled past theRolls Royce display into the large auditorium atthe end of the pier. The auditorium was decoratedwith trinkets donated by none other than themayor of Osaka, and up by the stage TommyLeide"r and his orchestra were playing "Lady ofSpain.” Tommy Leider also acted as master of cere¬monies. He told us that what was being done todaywould no doubt push forward the cause for worldpeace.Then came the acts. There were Indian cere¬monial dancers, a French folksong duet that alsoknew a few of Elvis Presley’s tunes, a Frenchballet duo, and an Algerian tumbling team. as judged by a survey test ofreading skills.“For such a child may have ahyperactive grandmother and no When there is real un¬derstanding of the WHY ofgrouping, it becomes an effectiveaid to better teaching.”Wrightstone .said the variousOut on the pier we took seats overlooking abarge anchored just off the end of the dock. This word analysis skills, a high pro- plans for organizing classroomsbarge was referred to as “The Mystical island” portion of right hunches, or the pro\ide for adjustment of grossby a man in a turban who kept darting in and out answers for numerous fact' ques- differences in reading ability ofof the bushes on the "island” to announce the en- tions but no understanding of the children but do not reduce mater-tertainment as it appeared on the barge. The man implications of whot he reads. ia}*y *he T‘»nge differencesin the turban summoned the occult to bring us ”The effective reader,” she said, within a class,some dancers from Spain, then for an hour and ton “kelps himself, takes pride in Ranges in reading comprehen-minutes wc watched while he conjured the Watusi, helping others, gets help himself sion indicate the complexity ofan Italian ballad singer, a Chinese woman who when he needs it, uses the tech- the task of planning an effectivesang without a diaphragm, and Ceylonese dancers he^has found to be effec- instructional program, Wright-who had never before been seen doing their tribal 4”~initiation dance by outsiders.By this time it was ten in the evening and wewere making our way off the pier while behind usblazed the most spectacular fireworks display everseen by outsiders. On the way out vve bumped intosome of the native dancers who, by now, had doffedtheir costumes for more domestic zuit suits andleopard shirts. tive for him, and receives the stone said. He said studies showauthor’s message emotionally and the range of pupil achievementhas a spread of as much as fouryears at first grade level, up tointellectually.”Device of groupingIn explaining the conference•theme, "Reading instruction invarious patterns of grouping,”Mrs. Robinson described group¬ing as a device which helps theWhite doves, native dancers, a mystical island of teacher bring together learners of relatively homogeneous groupsparadise. We certainly gave world aggression a with common characteristics for and sub-groups must be accom-kick in the pants that day. The editors a particular instructional purpose panied by other steps. He saidinclude: 1) Provisionsix years at fourth-grade level,and between seven and eightyears at sixth grade level.Proposes structureWrightstone said organizationBEST ENGINES!One of 7 Big Bests Chevy givesyou over any car in Its fieldOpen invitation to excitement, the Impala Convertibleonly authentic sports car, the Corvette. and America’s You’ve got more to go on than our say-so:Every motor magazine has given Chevy’sstandard passenger car and Corvette V8’sunstinted praise. SPORTS CARS ILLUS¬TRATED says it this way: “. . . surelythe most wonderfully responsive engineavailable today at any price.” And if youwant the thrift of a six, you still get thebest of it in a Chevy.BEST ECONOMY Nodoubt about this:a pair of Chevy sixes with Powerglidecame in first and second in their class inthis year’s Mobilgas Economy Run—get¬ting the best mileage of any full-size car,22.38 miles per gallon.BEST BRAKES Not only bigger, butbuilt with bonded linings for up to 66%longer life. Just to prove what’s what,Chevy out-stopped both of the "other two”in a NASCAR*-conducted test of repeatedstops from highway speeds.*Xational Association 1or Stock Car Advancement andIlesearchBEST RIDE A few* minutes behind thewheel will leave no doubt about this.MOTOR TREND magazine sums it upthis way: ". . . the smoothest, most quiet,softest riding car in its price class.”BEST TRADE-IN Check the figures inany N.A.D.A.* Guide Book. You’ll find thatChevy used car prices last year averagedup to $128 higher than comparable modelsof the “other two.”*National Automobile Dealert AssociationBEST ROOM Official dimensions re¬ported to the Automobile ManufacturersAssociation make it clear. Chevy’s frontseat hip room, for example, is up to 6.9inches wider than comparable cars.BEST STYLE It’s the only car of theleading low-priced 3 that’s unmistakablymodern in every line. "In its price class,”says POPULAR SCIENCE magazine, "anewr high in daring styling.”NO WONDER MOREPEOPLE ARE BUYINGCHEVR0LETSIN ’59THAN ANY OTHER CARITry the hot one—visit your local authorized Chevrolet dealer!2 • CHICAGO MAROON • July 10, 1959 these include: 1) Provision ofplenty of instructional material;2) a systematic testing program;3) reduction of the teaching load;and 4) a flexible curriculum thatallows the teacher to adapt toindividual abilities.Small Cheese .... 95cSmall Sausage . .$1.15ItfICKYS1235 E. 55 1\0 7-90K3BUDGET YOURLIFE INSURANCEPREMIUMS WITHEASY, AUTOMATICPAYMENTSSUN LIFE'SNEW A.M.P.AutomaticMonthly Payment PlanRepresentativeRalph J.Wood Jr.481 N. LaSalle St.Chicago 2, III.FR 2-2390 • RE 1-0855SUN LIFE OF CANADAPan-Am games scheduledDormitories and dining rooms on campus will be transformed into a “Pan American Vil¬lage* between August 17 and September 9 to house athletes from 25 nations in the Ameri¬cas. They will be in Chicago to participate in the third Pan American Games, the WesternHemisphere’s regional Olympic competition, held every four yearsIn addition to providing formi- — ; —lory, eating and practice space supervising men's track and field Prof. Bernard Weinberg, chair-for the competitors, the Univer- ev£nts- man of the Department of Rositv has supplied the Pan-Ameri- .°*‘ j. Kyle Anderson, Uni- mance Languages and Litera-can Games with two general vers,ty baseball, coach, will be tures. Participants in the Semin-advisors, two chairmen of com- rian®g!:r of t.*10 Uni(ed States ar will be largely from the Uni-mittees on individual sports, and ba^ba!‘r team in the Games. versity faculty, with some gueststhe coach of one of the United he University s contribution to invited from those who haveStates’ teams. *be cultural 'Festival of the come to Chicago for the Festival.] )uring the three weeks of com- Americas in conjunction with According to Stavely, the Uni-netition, Ida Noyes hall will serve I/*0 games.will be a seminar on versity will aim only to meet itsas reception center and headquar- situation in Spanish Ameri- expenses in determining the billliterature at the present it will present to the visiting ath-time, ’ which is being planned by letes for room and board. OFFICE OP THE DEMI Of STUDENTSUNIVERSITY OF CHICAGOOFFICIAL NOTICE OFFICIAL NOTICEmZMEBSSCI ■a27Review is analyzedters for the athletes and man¬agers of the Games. The man¬agers of the competition and ofthe ‘village” wil be housed there.Let out dormsAll the University dormitoriesPXCept Snell and Hitchcock willhe used to accommodate athletes. „ ,, ,, - , , ,n addition, about 120 will be . Af,or al* the ss and con- swers somewhat. Final proof, ofi, i.,eH in the Chicago Theological troversy about the censorship course, will depend on what theySen4ary dormitory and HO in (?) of the Chicago Review, it for the next one or two orInternational house, stated Rich- continues to be published and will issues. It s easy to say whatard Stavely who is in charge of no doubt still be published after intend to do with your maga-the University’s preparations for the talk dies down, if it ever zine for publicity purposes—butthe Games. * does. So far the new staff, headed *or publicity Pak has little elseIf more athletes come than can by Editor H. W. Pak, has put out e^cept ^ I print what I damnbe handled in the dormitory space two issues. One is up to par, the Please. His staff has kept mum,provided, they will be placed in other is very impressive—in fact !°°' but in Private they are will-the Shoreland hotel, Stavely said, something of a coup. But both ing to argue about the “lies andThe actual competition, which raise questions. distortions” which have appearedwill Include 20 teams and indi- Is the Review, a student edited such places as Saturday .Re-vidual sports for men and women, magazine of fiction, poetry, essays \!fw aad ‘San P raneisco Review,will take place off campus, in and so forth turning into a dry. Also, they don t like it (they say)such places as Soldier field (track, academic journal? The editors tell that everybody, including facultyequestrian sports), Portage park me no! Is it turning into a maga- members, has offered his opinion(swimming, water polo), and the zinc with an ideology? Again they so fieely about what happenedCal Sag canal (rowing), among say no. but the big impressive anu what didn t happen and whatothers. But athletes will bo given summer issue is all about existen- sbould happen with the Review,free use of Stagg field and Bart- tialism (except for the poetry), ^bey print what they please, andlott gymnasium for training, Has it taken Partisan Review or slr?co bas the last word theyStavely said. something else for a model? Edi- Pnnt what he “danm Phases.''Faculty advises tor Pak says that PR is PR, and Thc Question is what they please.T. Nelson Metcalf, professor nothing else is PR, especially not Difficult writingemeritus of physical education, is the Chicago Review. But in theserving as a full time advisor to summer issue there are two or Take the summer issue. Therethe Games. Prof. Walter L. Hass, three regular contributors to PR. is an article by Paul Wienpahl,University director of athletics Finally, is thc Review more, less, who also had a piece in the Zenand chairman of the Department or just as serious about what it issue a year ago, which is aboutof Physical Education, is also is doing as it used to bo? Is it as dense and difficult a piece asserving in an advisory capacity, going to print good experimental any academic journal ever pub-Each sport has its own super- and unconventional writing, live- lishes. At the end of it he relievesvisory committee. Two members ly, intelligent stuff? Or is it going the reader with a short sentence:ot the Chicago physical education to give its several thousand read- “Philosophy is not easy.” Thatand coaching staff are committee ers only what is “innocuous and point lie proves beyond all doubtchairmen: Prof. Alvar B. Her- non controversial?” for all practical purposes. Thep , , , . real point of the sixteen-page es-rak s second issue say js somothing else, of course.The answers to all these ques- It is about Martin Heidegger, the_ _ _ # tions are given willingly enough German existentialist philosopher,Ingle chairman by Pak and his staff, but the proof and although it’s hard to say just^ is in the printing. And two issues what it is, in a few words anyway,Professor Dwight J. Ingle, is enough to check on their an- the point is not found (the editorsnoted hormone researcher,has been appointed chairman ,of UC’s Department of Physiol¬ogy. Dr. Lowell T. Coggeshall,dean of the University’s Divisionof Biological Sciences announcedthe appointment.Ingle’s appointment becomes ef I. 90TH ildoa of 59th Stroot fro« Storqr Island t* Cottage GrowsJ. DOTH sides of Unlworsitjr Avenue from 58th Street to S9th Streetfrom 7s00 a.m. to 5i00 p.».VIOLATORS' CARS WILL BE TOWED AMATMIMDMW «unros’©Shown above is the mysterious poster forbidding parkingon the day the Chancellor toured campus. Although it isattributed to the Dean of Student's office, that group willnot claim it, nor will any other. What with limited parkingfacilities it has been conjectured that LAK himself soughtto insure space for his car.manson, chairman of fencing,and Prof. Edward “Ted” Haydon,Undergraduate diesAlan Arthur Hahn, a third-year student in the College, wasdiscovered dead in his bed by his mother, last Monday. Hahn,fective July 1st. He will succeed a physics major, was living with his family at 3304 NorthNathaniel Kleitman, authority on Pacific. Hahn had been a resident of Burton-Judson until 19d8, and hesleep and dreams, who has been stayed last year in an apartment at 5641 Dorchester,acting chairman of the depart- Cause of death has not yet been determined; a coroner’s inquestmont since the resignation of will be held on July 24. It is conjectured that he was despondent overJohn O. Hutchens Sept. 30, 1958. recent grades.Both Kleitman and Hutchens are Hahn is survived by his parents and a sister.professors of physiology. Funeral services will be held at 10 am today in the Mueller FuneralT ', K T home; burial will be in the Acacia cemetery. John Callahan ot the«n erVin p, U research activities office anti Ruth O. McCarn. assistant dean of stu-» „ , " s f „ n S sf dents, have attended earlier services as official University repre-sponsored by the US Public , ’.Health Service Institute of Ar- sentatives-tbritis and Metabolic Diseases.Ingle was the discoverer of thebiological effects of the hormonescortisone and hydrocortisone. Heis currently studying relation¬ships between the cortex of theadrenal glands and diabetes, can¬cel', kidney diseases, and diseasesot the heart and blood vessels. say) in the academic journals.Neither the academic-literary northe academic - philosophical jour¬nals will publish works like this,ordinarily. But the editors of theReview took a flyer and pub¬lished it. Too off-beat for the pro¬fessionals, too philosophical formost of the literary “little maga¬zines” outside the universities, itapparently pleased the editors ofthe Review. That, anyway, mightbe their side of the story. Theirprofessors might have somethingelse to say, and so would wood-choppers in the groves of theacademe.Eleven essayistsThere is also a piece by HansMeyerhoff, which begins: “Philos¬ophy is in bad shape, in part forwant of identity. Instead of doingphiloosphy, most philosopherswonder whether philosophy isworth doing or what they shouldbe doing under the name of phil¬osophy.” Then, although Meyer-hoff (who writes often for PR) isnot really willing to damn anyschool of philosophy, he talksabout literature and what itshould do for philosophy andwhat both philosophy and litera¬ture should do together. His atti¬tude towards philosophy is cir¬ cumspect, and towards literature,more plainly appreciative. Likealmost everything else in this is¬sue it is tersely written—grantedthat the issue is heavily philo¬sophical, and existentialist philo¬sophical at that.There are other pieces by Wal¬ter Kaufmann, the Nietzsche man,and Marjorie Grene and ColinWilson of British fame and de¬fame, Everett Knight of Univer¬sity College in Ghana and NathanScott of the University of Chi¬cago. The essays run to 194 pagesall in all, there are 11 essayists,and there is no fiction. There is,however, some poetry.No fictionThere is one piece of fiction inthe first issue put out by Pak’sstaff. It is a super-experimentalpiece by an unestablished writer,Stanley Berne. Did the editorslike it? Apparently so. Didn’t theyhave anything else after cominginto their positions, as it were, inthe deluge? Apparently not.There are several pieces comingup, they say. Without saying verymuch about it, they warn us tolook for surprises in this au¬tumn’s fiction. Until then, we willhave to look elsewhere.Francis M. Daniel□ □□ □ all the Free Press booksTHE GREEN DOOR BOOKSHOP1450 East 57th HY 3-5829Chicago's most complete stockof quality paper backs^ ww w ■y^pr-spr W"W W ▼ V W V WW ▼ ▼ ▼ ▼ ▼ WWW'WW'yBicycles, Parts, Accessoriesspecial student offerACE CYCLE SHOP1621 c. 55th st.A AAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAJ 24-HourKodachrome colorfilmprocessingModel Camera Shop1342 E. 55th HY 3-9259* ^ ^ t^ear Uonlacl olenJcJ•>yOr. Kurt RosenbaumOptometristn32 E. 55th St. HY 3-8372 Jimmy’sand the University RoomRESERVED EXCLUSIVELY FOR UNIVERSITY CLIENTELEFifty Fifth and Woodlawn Ave. ITALIAN FIESTA PIZZERIAspaghettiraviolimostaccioli sandwiches:beef,sausage Cr meatballFree Delivery Over $2.00MU 4-9022, 1014, 10151427 East 67th st.ACASA bookstore -Carefully selected imports of cards, giftsand children's booksGood used books • Reliable typewriter service1322 E. 53lh St. HV 3-9051 gfrlllllllilllllllllllllllllllllllllllilllllllllllllllllllllllllljlllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllltlllllllllllllllllHit^Fifty-Seventh at Kenwood |UNUSUAL FOOD |DELIGHTFUL |ATMOSPHERE (POPULARPRICES 1sntiiiitiiiKuiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiilJuly il 0, 1959 • CHICAGO MAROON • 3* fij 4 ^ v *•11*6 " „'*,t ' - kieditorialsRegret Haydon’s departureLast week the University of Chicago lost one of the finest deans it has ever had the fortuneto possess: Harold Haydon, associate professor of art in the college and now former deanof students in the college. The University was fortunate in finding an equally able and excel¬lent successor in George Playe; however, while we have great confidence that Dean Playewill ultimately capture Dean Haydon’s remarkable ability to communicate, he is going to have a diffi¬cult time.It is difficult to laud editorially an outgoing dean without at least implying strong criticism for hissuccessor. This is not our intention! Rather, we wish to state our grateful approval of the commend¬able job Harold Haydon has accomplished.No one is born a dean, but Haydon was almost born a UC’er. His father was an eminent professorhere, and most of his education was obtained on the quadrangles. He attended the laboratory school here,received a PhB from the University in 1930, and an MA in philosophy a year later. As a student,Haydon was a track star, holding the Big Ten conference record in the 70-yard hurdles and the confer¬ence medal. At the end of his third undergraduate year he was a member of Phi Beta Kappa.Harold Haydon’s quiet wit and warm good-naturedness have inspired the trust and the confidenceof many College students. No one who has met him could doubt the sincerity of his expressed desire tohelp students in every way he could.Haydon’s recent resignation highlights one of the peculiar and insoluble problems of the University.Chicago, as former Dean of Students Robert M. Strozier has pointed out, is an unusual school in thatit “grows” all its own deans. The University holds very tightly to the policy that deans should be scholarsand teachers too. All of our deans are scholars and teachers; however, the rigorous demands of majoradministrative positions leave little time for scholarship, for teaching, or for creativity.Our retiring dean of students is an artist of some stature who wants to paint, and he is a teacher ofsome excellence who wants to teach. He has, with a good deal of justification, elected to return to hisfull-time duties as associate professor of art. We can readily sympathize with this decision, eventhough we regret it.In his relations with the Maroon, Haydon has proved a willing and accurate news source; he has onmany occasions gone out of his way to fill us in on background information as well as coming events.On numerous occasions he has been held on the telephone, late at night, for long periods of time pro¬viding us with essential information.Haydon once, in a Maroon interview, stated, “Art and humanism will be what saves us in the spaceage. It will provide the goal, sense of direction, and values for the technical authority."The arts will be necessary to create the image of a world which is desirable, as they always havebeen. They will be necessary to translate aspirations into tangible expressions.”As an artist, humanist and dean, Harold Haydon has done much toward proving his own thesis. Wenow simply wish to state that we are grateful for the two notable years Haydon has spent away fromhis first love—art. We are also pleased that the University has found a replacement, George Playe,who seems to possess the very excellencies which have so distinguished Hal Haydon.Irresponsibility in two ReviewsBig Table magazine seems destined to plaguethe University of Chicago until its dying day. BigTable’s, that is. All in all the University seemscapable of weathering the blows, but now and thenthey do become a trifle wearying.The latest event in the case was a two-pageeditorial in the Saturday Review of June 27. Thiseditorial, written by John Ciardi, read: “The Chi¬cago Review is a literary quarterly published bythe University of Chicago. Last fall, as the editorswere preparing their winter issue, a columnist onone of the Chicago newspapers attacked the fallissue as ‘filthy.’ The charge called forth a promptreaction from Chancellor Kimpton. In a memorableblow for academic freedom, Chancellor Kimptonsummoned then editor-in-chief Rosenthal and an¬nounced that the material submitted for the winterissue was definitely not to be published. The issue,as Rosenthal reports the Chancellor’s instructions,was to be completely ‘innocuous and noncontro-versial’ and it must contain ‘nothing which (sic)would offend a sixteen-year-old girl.’ ”Ciardi goes on to ask: “When has the true roleof the American university been more profoundlyenunciated? Its intellectual content is to be harm¬less and innocuous; its final test of moral valuesis to reside in the sensibilities of a sixteen-year-oldgill. . . . All men of learning and goodwill mustcertainly be grateful to Chancellor Kimpton for thedepth and courage of his intellectual leadership.”The Chancellor in question has pointed out thateditors' column:Ciardi should learn journalism(Sent to the editor of the Saturday Review)Mr. Ciardi’s editorial (“The Book Burnersand Sweet Sixteen’’) represents to us a mis¬use of journalistic freedom — even though,perhaps, in a good cause — because he took a sec¬ond-hand remark and damned the man who sup¬posedly made it, all apparently without botheringto check the original source, and all for the sakeof a mere literary device.To wit: We have good reason to doubt that Chan¬cellor Lawrence A. Kimpton ever made the “sweetsixteen” comment; we doubt very much that Mr.Kimpton even spoke with the ex-Chicago Revieweditor (who, it appears, was Mr. Ciardi’s onlysource on the matter); but in any case we are surethat Mr. Ciardi never attempted to contact Mr.Kimpton for his part of the story. This last is aviolation of a journalistic rule that every cub re¬porter is expected to learn: CHECK YOURFACTS!Moreover, there are only a few people at the Uni¬versity of Chicago who know all, or most, of thefacts surrounding the so-called “suppression” ofthe Chicago Review. We are only sure that thesituation is much more complex than Mr. Ciardireports; that if there was bureaucratic interferenceon the one side, there was immature stubbornnesson the other; this, however, is beside the point. Mr.Ciardi could easily have discovered most of themajor facts-and-opinions for himself—for tlieprice of a few phone calls — to Chancellor Kimp¬ton, to the faculty and administration membersinvolved, and to the staff of the Review. He mightthen have done his readers a real service by re- fetters to the editorsStern laments ‘Review’The EditorSaturday Review of LiteratureI am sorry that Mr. Ciardi did not have the opportunity tocheck the facts in his account of the Chicago Review in lastweek’s issue of your magazine. He seems to have relied solelyon the editorial preface to the magazine Big Table which issomewhat comparable to makingno one has to be a Chancellor if he doesn’t want to;having taken the job one should be prepared forthe bad with the good. This “bad” must includeirresponsible and inaccurate journalism. That isprecisely what Ciardi’s editorial is: inaccurate andirresponsible.Kimpton never made any comment to Rosenthal,never mentioned a sixteen-year-old girl to anybody,and, as far as he can remember, has never evenmet Irving Rosenthal, former editor of the ChicagoReview. Nor was any such comment made byRichard Stern, chairman of the faculty board. Werethis statement made by anybody, besides Rosen¬thal himself, it could have been no more than ajoke; the University is not yet staffed by idiots.The Chicago Review is not a student publication;it is not even a student activity. Rather, it is afunction of the University's English department.Thus, the Review is an official University publi¬cation, like the Journal of Modern History and theLaw Review. The University has a direct respon¬sibility for this magazine, which former editorsbuilt up into one of the finest literary quarterliesin the country.The winter issue was “surpassed” not because itwas obscene, not because of a Daily News news¬paper columnist, and not (as some have main¬tained) because the archdiocese of Chicago ob¬jected; the entire cause celebre occurred becausethe projected winter issue was dull, poor and in¬ferior literature. a study of National Socialism onthe basis of a reading of MeinKanipf.The basic facts as I know themare these:]. The Chicago Review’s editor,Irving Rosenthal, has used threeissues of the magazine as a show¬case for one group of writers,and was about to feature themagain. He was told that the pur¬pose of the magazine was to dis¬play a spectrum of the finestimaginative and intellectual workavailable, and that he, therefore,could not print the same group ofwriters in the next issue. He could,however, print each and every ar¬ticle of the proposed issue in sub¬sequent issues of the magazine,but a solid year of beat writingsconstituted a perverse monopoly.2. Chancellor Kimpton neverspoke to or saw Rosenthal.3. The magazine is aimed at in¬tellectuals, whether they be six¬teen-year-old girls or editors of the Saturday Review. Nobodyhere has ever objected to readingany word qua word or descriptionqua description; the criterion andthe only criterion of inclusion isimaginative and intellectual excel¬lence.4. Nothing in the so-called “siqvpressed” issue was read by a (ac¬uity member; nothing was cen¬sored, nothing ever will be cen¬sored. But the faculty board willpass on the intellectual responsi¬bility of student editors; thosewho print the work of cousins,those who print comic strips, andthose who rob the till, will beasked to either reform or resign.5. Recently a number of us sawa Postal Inspector about the pro¬posed banning of Big Table. All ofus objected to the proposed ban¬ning, and all of us would be w ill¬ing to testify to the serious intentof the contents.Richard G. SternChairman. Faculty Advisory BoardChicago KcciewNeighborhood clul) explainedporting all the available facts, and then expressedhis opinion of the University administration’s con¬duct of the affair, if he still thought it necessary.It seems strange to us that we should have tospell out a basic rule of journalism to a profes¬sional writer, particularly over an issue which, weagree, has been handled rather clumsily by Chan¬cellor Kimpton’s administration. We regret espe¬cially that the question of “suppression” had toarise in connection with a student publication atChicago; as student editors we have found theUniversity’s policy to be, on the whole, liberal,fair, and quite rare when compared with that ofother universities: student editors at Chicago have,both in theory and in effect, enjoyed completefreedom of publication — without censorship, “big-brotherism,” or interference.Such freedom implies to us an equivalent re¬sponsibility— to attempt honestly to base ourprinted opinions upon fact — which applies as wellto Mr. Ciardi and to SR as it does to us.We are grateful that you consider the Reviewaffair to be significant, and that you wish to de¬fend free expression and intellectual freedom soactively. We do not, however, appreciate the sloppiness with which your counterattack-was begun,since it did reduce the effectiveness of the realargument.Therefore, since you have already put words intoMr. Kimpton’s mouth without his knowledge orconsent, we suggest that you now owe him an in¬vitation to express his own views on academicfreedom and its application to the Chicago Reviewcontroversy, in equally permanent — and nation¬ally distributed — print. • ■ Dear Sirs:After having read your edi¬torial about the crime situa¬tion as a result of the gangs inthe outlying area. I feel some ad¬ditional comment is necessary. Onthe whole the editorial did informthe student body of the situationin and around the University areaand I agree that “care, cautionand judgment should be exer¬cised.” However, more than po¬lice efforts and additional streetlighting are being made to pre¬vent and reduce the “crime prob¬lem.”Within the Hyde Park areathere are currently five individu¬als who are specifically concernedwith the problems that are theresult of group or individual ac¬tion against the students andresidents. I refer to the StreetClub Worker program of theHyde Park Neighborhood Club.These five persons are employedto work with teenagers in HydePark on both a group and individ¬ual basis. Included in the func¬tion of these workers is the proc¬ess of making contact with thesegroups and building a relation¬ship with them which, amongmany other things, will lead to a reduction of any anti social be¬havior. Almost every group ofteenagers in Hyde Park is cur¬rently being served by one ofthese workers. I might add thatduring the last year and one-halfI have been employed as a StreetClub Worker in addition to beinga student. The groups I sei veare within the immediate Uniur-sity area.In view of the work carried onby these workers it is importantthat they be notified by the .■'in¬dents if they are involved withteenage groups or individuals.This is not meant to indicate thatthese groups or individuals am athreat to the student body, sinceduring the time I have spent asa worker there has been no casein which a student or residentwas attacked by any teenager Iserve. However, this informationis needed by the workers to helpkeep them informed of the totalteenage activity within HydePark. Therefore, I urge the stu¬dent body to notify the Neigh¬borhood Club of all incidents in¬volving teenagers and themselves.The telephone number is Midway3-4063.Yours very truly,RICHARD H. DAVISA i chicaqoM aroonEditors-in-chiefNeal Johnston, Lance HoddixProduction mgr. emeritus Jeon KvoflStott for this issue: Harvey Brundoge,. Oxxie Conklin, Marilyn Gust, Ct»,rtKessler, Allan Metcalf, Robert Wilston * * ‘ ' ’ ' *4 • CHICAGO MAROON • July 10, ,1959—-I—Benny tells art of 'love'Seldom has an art form reflected the tensions of its times with more brilliant fidelitythan the drama that flourished in London between the restoration of the Stuarts and thedeath of Mary. It was pie-occupied with social relations — between the sexes, between thegenerations, between the classes — in a period of revolutionary flux; and in comedy aftercomedy it applied, with a coolanalytic brilliance, its Lockeantouchstones of reason and free¬dom to the world about it.Critics, with their passion fortextbook categories, have damnedRestoration drama as "comedy ofmanners,” implying that its con¬cerns were trivial and transitory;and in consequence modern audi¬ences have all too seldom had anopportunity to savour the lucid,heady, martini-like bite of thismost consistently intelligent ma¬terial in the theater’s repertory.Court Theatre and its producerMarvin Phillips are doing a signalservice to Chicago audiences byreviving for us the most lambentRestoration comedy of them all,Congreve’s Love for Love.Congreve, of course, has a rep¬utation for tortuous and uncon¬vincing plots. Yet in these days ofinflationary and psychiatric pres¬sures the plot of Love for Lovewill probably seem much morerealistic to us than to the com¬fortable Edwardian critics whoestablished this canard.Revamps plotThe hero is Valentine, a youngman whose debts are even great¬er than his love for the fair — andremarkably self-possessed — An¬gelica. Beset by duns, lawyers andnagging friends, Valentine stagesa convenient nervous breakdown;and his disorder encourages awhole gallery of neurotics to actout their own fantasies.His father, an irascible elderwith a tight hand on the familyfortunes, betrays an old lecher’sinterest in replacing his son inAngelica’s affections; Tattle andMistress Frail, two raddled veter¬ans of local cafe society, findthemselves unseasonably marriedin their efforts to take advantageof Valentine’s breakdown; Prue,a newcomer to the glamorousways of the city, loses a good hus¬band by aping too faithfully thewrong people; the superstitiousForesight is brought to the brinkof euckoldom by his attempts atastrological match-making. I here is nothing in all this that, up <f his conditions of servicewith a minimum of updating, ("So—just the very backside ofwould sound implausible in a truth—but lying is a figure inmodern setting; indeed so perti- spee(h, that interlards the great-nent are many of the character- est part of my conversation’’) —izations and observations — par- all the central situations of theticularly the gloriously buffoon- play testify to Congreve’s inten-ish Tattle, a composite of all thegossip columnists operating outof Hollywood — that one canscarcely believe Congreve did nothave the Sinatra set in mind ashe wrote.Congreve's methodWhat is not contemporary in tion 1o harness his immense sati¬ric pc wers and gifts of character-izaticn to the work of reason.That the play is full of wit, orthat it has its bawdy moments, orthat the society depicted repre¬sents only a small coterie in theEngland of its day — or indeedLove for Love, however, is the any of the other deadly damningfrank delight in language as an labels critics have appended toinstrument of intelligence. The Congreve — is almost irrelevantvery precision with which Con- compared to the fine passion forgreve’s characters speak their truth that shines through themind imposes a tough technical work and gives its permanence,pioblem for modern actors, who (Locke’s Essay Concerning Hu-have grown used to eking out the man Understanding, with itsambiguities of modern dialogue analysis of the relations betweenwith ostensive definitions’ of language and thought, had been American round tablelauds interest groupsA report by the American Round table, a symposium jointlysponsored by The Advertising council and the University ofChicago, said today the great variety of interest groups inAmerican society helps make democracy work in the UnitedStates.Thirteen experts, representing interest groups, the government,the press and the academic world, gathered at the University campusto discuss th role of major interest groups in modern life.They reported in a book published Saturday, June 27, by the Uni¬versity Press, that an informal set of checks and balances is at workwithin and among private interest groups.Out of the public presentation of conflicting ideas, they said, comesa strengthening of the democratic process."What is important, and in the public interest,” the experts agreed,"is that we do not tear down the right of association in businessgroups, labor groups, and professional and other groups."They may not always serve the public interest, sometimes theymay harm it. On the whole, however, their activity does serve thepublic interest.”The authorities pointed out that organized interest groups cannotrepresent adequately every segment of society or every kind ofinterest.was certainly much discussed inWills’ coffee house during theperiod Congreve frequented theplace. An investigation of the in¬fluence of Locke on Congreve’spublished five or six years beforethe writing of Love for Love, and MA thesis.)gesture and action.Indeed the most exquisitelycomic scenes in the play all stemdirectly from Congreve’s concernwith semantics. When Tattle givesthe country-bred Prue her firstlesson in the arts of seduction,tho first rule he enunciates is,"Your words must contradictyour thoughts; but your actionsmay contradict your words,” andthe ensuing scene demonstrates been appointed George Her- *n economics at the University of Filbey has fiftiethEmery T. Filbey, active Uni¬versity vice-president emeri-work would make an interesting tus, marked his 80th birthdayMark BenneyEdward E. Schwartz appointedto George Jones professorshipEdward E. Schwartz has Pennsylvania, in 1930, his M.A.deliciously the possible range ofvariation.Play full of witS), too, when Scandal exerciseshis irresistible powers of verbalseduction on his friend’s behalf,and finds his advances evokingtoo enthusiastic a response, hehas to utter the classic cry of allwho prefer to confine theiram< urs to the bedchambers of themini: "You mistake: the libertyI take in talking is purely affect¬ed. 'or the service of your sex.”Valentine using his feignedmadness to say things never saidin ]>olite society, Angelica per¬versely taking him at his ownword and insisting that he is mad,the eervant Jeremy’s summing-IIYDE PARK THEATRE —men andwomen, part-time (20-30 hrs), evenings.For now and coming school year. Applyin person evenings at the theatre, 53rdand Lake Park.21 i ROOMSCheerful, newly decorated, attractivelyfurnished apt. Safe, fireproof deluxeelevator bldg. Doorman. Night watch¬man. Maid and linen service available.Reasonable monthly rate.V ERSAILLES A PA RTM ENTS5234 Dorchester FA 4-0200 furn. facultyFA 4-8496. house. July 15-PersonalFor salel>NA PORTA-FOLD bicycle now avail¬able. Folds in 15 seconds. Adjustable toall members of family. Miss Donegan,General Delivery, Chicago. WA 2-3183after 9:30 pm.REFRIGERATOR for sale, excellentcondition, $25. Phyllis Kessler, ext. 3234,•i to 5; or BO 8-3322 after 6 p.m.Services A tan jacket with a Lawrence Collegecrest on the left breast was mistakenlytaken from a rack In student health onTuesday, June 23. Please contact Mi¬chael Lepansky, 5737 University, BU8-9381.Wanted—Round trip weekend ride toPittsburgh or vicinity (Steubenville,Ohio). Will share driving costs. EvanGolder, Logan YMCA, HU 6-2660.Need a secretary in the fall? Find hernow and avoid the rush. Experiencedlegal and ad agency secretary Is return¬ing to school and wants a full time jobwith a few hours available for twocourses. Excellent references. Days, callCE 6-7252, ext. 312. Evenings, DO 3-6345.Wanted, by visiting professor at U. ofC., from Oct. 1, 1959 to June 19, 1960, a4-room furn. apt. in general vicinity ofthe University. Call MI 3-0800, ext. 3882,days. bert Jones Professor in theSchool of Social Service ad¬ministration of the University.Schwartz is currently directorof tho Social Service Program,New York University school ofPublic administration and So¬cial service.The appointment was an¬nounced by Alton A. Linford,Dean of the School of Social Serv¬ice administration. It will be ef¬fective October 1, 1959.Born at Cleveland, Ohio, in1908, Schwartz received his Bach¬elor’s degree in Economics fromthe Wharton School of Financeand commerce, University ofHutchison givenchemistry chairProfessor Clyde A. Hutchi¬son, Jr., has been appointedchairman of the Departmentof chemistry, effective July1st.A professor in (he Departmentof Chemistry and the EnricoFermi institute for nuclear stud¬ies, Hutchison will succeed Pro-essor Henry Taube, who had beenchairman since 1955.Hutchison, an authority onphysical chemistry, currently isdoing research on the phosphor¬escence of organic compoundssuch as naphthalene. He has stud¬ied the structure of uranium,neptunium and plutonium withmagnetic fields and radar waves.His study of the separation ofradioactive isotopes led to workin the Manhattan Project, start¬ing in 1942, and he was associatedwith the Metallurgical Labora¬tory which helped develop theatomic bomb. Pittsburgh, in 1932, and his PhDin Social Service administrationfrom the University of Chicagoin 1955.Schwartz has served with theCook County Bureau of Publicwelfare and Illinois EmergencyRelief commission, the FederalBureau of Public assistance, and Tuesday with an informal recep¬tion, sponsored by his neighborsin the administration building, atthe Quadrangle club.Now in his 50th year with theUniversity, Filbey greeted recep¬tion guests and introduced themto .his wife during the informalsession in the Club's main diningroom. Punch was served from atable at the north end of the room.There were no .speeches or pre¬sentations. "It was just a friendlyreception,” said Harry M. Price,director of special activities andone of those who attended thereception.After first coming to the Uni¬versity in the summer of 1909,Filbey remained to teach shop inthe laboratory school, and ihenthe U.S. Department of Health/ to take the successive offices ofEducation and welfare.He has published writings on.juvenile delinquency, health andwelfare expenditures in wartime,and infant and maternal mortal¬ity.The George Herbert Jones pro¬ dean of University College, deanof the faculties, and vice-presidentof the College.When he reached the compul¬sory retirement age in 1944, hewas named vice-president emeri¬tus. Filbey has served in thatfessorship is named after one of capacity ever since, being at pres-the founders of Inland Steel Com¬pany. The “name” professorshipwas made possible by a $300,000gift from the Jones estate by theChicago Community trust.Rooms for renl of Befo Theto Pi,5737 University. Coll BU 8-9381.CHINESE - AMERICANRESTAURANTSpeciolizing inCANTONESE AMIAMERICAN DISHESOpen DailyIt A.M. to 10:30 P.M.ORDERS TO TAKE OUT1318 Eost 63rd St. BU 8-9018 ent concerned with business suchas choosing an assistant dean ofRockefeller Chapel and aiding thelab school expansion program.Mis. Ruth O. McCarn, assistantdean of students, was reportedto have stated that several visi¬tors to the reception vere“shocked” at the absence of alco¬hol in the punch served for theoccasion.You won't have to putyour moving or storageproblem off until tomor¬row if you call us today.PETERSON MOVINGAND STORAGE CO.1011 East 55th StreetBUtterfield 8-671 1Experienced typist of thesis and otherPapers. Complete satisfaction guaran¬teed. Mrs. Cain, OA 4-4904.Cheerful, newly decoroted, ott-roc-tievly furnished opartment. Safe,fireproof deluxe elevator building.Doorman. Night watchman. Maidond linen service available. Rea¬sonable monthly rote. Ellen Coughlin Beauty SalonS105 Lake Park Ave. MI 3-2060SPECIALISTS IN HAIR STYLINGAND PERMANENT WAVINGOpen Mon. - Sat. — 9 a.tn. - II p.m.PROGRESSIVE PAINT Cr HARDWARE CO."Hyde Park's Most Complete Point Gr Hardware Store"Wallpaper — Gifts — Tools Rented — HousewaresUC DiscountHY 3-384Q-I 1 154-58 E. 55th st.HOBBY HOUSE RESTAURANTwe specialize inRound-O-Beef and WafflesOpen from Down to Down 1342east 53 st. HARPER LIQUOR STORE1114-16 East 55th StreetFULL LINE OFIMPORTED AND DOMESTICWINES, LIQUORS AND BEERAT LOWEST PRICESFree DeliveryFA 4PHONE -1233-1318-7699July 10, 1959 • CHICAGO MAROON • SOthello increases tempoCourt Theatre57th & University University of Chicago Bookstore5802 ELLIS AVENUEFriday thru Sunday, July 10, 11, 12Tickets at doorComing ...CONGREVE'S ROLLICKING FARCELOVE FOR LOVE (IAI TO U. OF C.STUDENTSsmalllarge Am*/ 3 pizzas for the price of 2FREE UCDELIVERY.$1.00 medium $1.45.$1.95 x-large $2.95giant $3.95Terry 9s Pizza1518 East 63 Ml 3-4045 UNIVERSITYBARBER SHOP1453 E. 57thFine haircuttingFour barbers workingLadies' haircuttingFloyd C. ArnoldProprietorSOCIOLOGY AND YOUJuly 16-19, July 23-26Tickets available atReynolds club desk THE SOCIOLOGICAL IMAGINATION, by Mills $6.00C. Wright Mills defends classic analysis vs. the "ascendant’' schools of sociology in the U.S.A NEIGHBORHOOD FINDS ITSELF, by J. Abrahamson $5.00How the Hyde Park-Kenwood area in Chicago is meeting the challenge of urban renewal.THE AMERICAN STYLE, edited by E. E. Morison $5.00Eleven Americans answer the question of the unique American way of getting things done.THE STATUS SEEKERS, by Vance Packard $4.50Class behavior in America and how it affects you, your community, and your future.For the first two acts of the Court theatre production of Othello, the spectators wereforced to watch an unhappy guerre a l’outrance between the play and the performance.The play struggled to stay alive under heavy pounding from stodgy direction, inept stag¬ing and, worst of all, from a tendency on the part of almost everyone to swallow theShakespearean lines. Then, almost as if to demonstrate the staying power of greatness, theplay gained the upper hand, the actors began to work with instead of against their ma¬terial, and it no longer became 77 —— —necessary to praise the hardwork- ieg-woman, Emilia. When theying members of University Thea- came to the playing of the ‘ wil-tre with faint excuses. The last l°w scene,” they evoked from theact of the production came close haunting song, the uneasy jokingto evoking that sense of emotional about adultery, and the abstractedinvolvement with the characters fumbling with the hair just theand their destinies which is the right tone of quiet foreboding andmark of a successful dramatic sacrificial surrender. This creationexperience. of mood seemed to inspire theFor this metamorphosis of ma- rest of *he cast,a™*’ as t.he tra®“chinery into life. I would give pri- clima* deepened, the performancemary credit to Jo Ann Schlag as and the Play became one;Desdemona and Carol Horning as It’s a shame that the first twoher coarse-minded but loyal wait- Mark Ashin is a professorin the department of Eng¬lish, where he is currentlyteaching a course on con¬temporary drama, and regu¬larly teaches the undergrad¬uate Shakespeare course. In1957 he received the classof '57's prize award for ex¬cellence in teaching.acts were so ineffective. This partof the play has to be carried bythe actor who plays Iago, whoserole is busy and difficult. Iago is wild eye-blinking, and a meaning-an artist in his villainy. He en- less gesture of throwing his armsjoys the spectacle of his own out wide.cleverness as he gives himself gut after Iago’s poison hadover to the manipulative play on done its work, Stubbs began tohis victim’s heart strings. It is no reSponci to the challenge of theeasy job to convince an audience part and ke rosc t,0 the commis-that wounded pride can be nur- sjon “judicial” murder withtured so relentlessly and with a hind of icy passion that repelledsuch venomous consequences. The an(j fascinated. One could almostmost charitable thing to be said —but not quite—forget what hefor Andrew Duncan’s perform- kad done to the rhythm of “Keepance of this role is that his mind Up y0Ur bright swords, for thewith his resnonsi- J_ :i 1 »was occupied with his responsi- devy will rust them,bilities as director. His soliloquieswere forced and self-conscious One happy exception to thex x. , mangling of the Shakespeareanmanifestations of an idle petu- ^ wag Qmar Shapli as Cassio.He understood what he had tosay and he said it in full, roundtones. The suspicious truculencehe exhibited in his drunk scenelance. He tossed out motives forhis hatred as dispassionately asif he were listing some minorgrievances about his job. He wasono of the chief Offenders in what exceIlently dono. A,i in all,seemed the prevalent disease of he was anothe; r<,ason for sayinghasty and meaningless delivery of „thanks.. to WFMT and |,e canlines. His best mo thank his years of announcingthe temptation scene where his iencc , hls clear and cIfec.poisonous thrusts were delivered F . .to the accompaniment of darts five articulation. His performanceand parries in an exercise of foils, was a noticeable standout.This was a good piece of business. Johft Sarkissian, with his bald-Ray Stubbs, as Othello, while jng head and his dolorous de-equally guilty of speeding many mands made a comic Roderigo,of his lines into incoherence, had j thought that the Bianca ofa chance to redeem himself in the joanne Kantrowitz was more in¬last act of the play. In the fiist sjpjd than seductive. Linn Allen’stwo thirds, he failed to be con- Lodovico could have benefitedvincing as the strong but simple- from a more mature make.up.minded general. He also relied Carol Horning, whom one Maroon reviewer has called "theKit Cornell of Mandel hall," is shown preparing in the Man-del basement for her performance as Emilia in Othello.too much on a phony smile, someLast Days3WILLIAM SHAKESPEARE'SOTHELLO Othello will be perfor medthrough Sunday of this week.Next Thursday, the Court Thea¬tre will open with Congreve’s bestacting play, Love for Love, withits cast of scheming lovers, frailwives, half-witted fops, and ag¬gressive country hoydens. Thedirector still has time to take alesson from the production ofOthello and get his people to de¬liver their lines with style and,above all, clarity.Mark Ashin Dewey exhibit is now in HarperAn exhibit commemorating the 100th anniversary of thebirth of philosopher-educator John Dew ey has been put on dis¬play at the University.The exhibit highlights "Dewey’s Chicago years: 1894-1904.”It will remain on display in the main corridor of Harper library andthe Social collections reading room, 1116 East 59th Street, untilAugust 31.Dewey first experimented with his progressive educational theoriesat the Laboratory School which he founded.The exhibit tells the story of Dewey’s professional life at the Uni¬versity through a series of original letters, each written at animportant turning point in his career.His contributions to educational thought are illustrated throughfirst editions of his books and essays along with photographs andrecords of the famous “Dewey school.” Dewey’s early contributionsto philosophy also will be shown by first editions of works writtenduring the Chicago period.The exhibit was planned in cooperation with the department ofeducation. Most of the material for the exhibit is taken from theUniversity archives.A Dewey Centennial issue of The School Review was publishedby the UC press last month.Culture VultureWith hot summer lake-less,lack-easy days upon us, there'slittle for an abandoned aca¬demic vulture to do but hanghead in abjectness and totteroff to Ravinia or Court Thea¬tre to recover his belief inhumanity. This particular vul¬ture has however become en¬chanted by a grotesque gar¬goyle carrying a broken swordover the dying body of a tickledDante — choreography by per¬sons who prefer to remainanonymous. So my spiel will bedelightfully short, if packed tothe brim with faint aromas ofpizza, frail alehouses, andsuper-subtle blithering ofMilne-ish nonsense.TheatreUniversity Theatre has trans¬ported and transcribed itself intoan outdoor summer, bloomingaround a tiny cement fountainin Hutchinson court and lighted by 60 watt bulbs disguised bynumber ten tomato cans. The of¬ficial name of this transcription isCourt Theatre.The first of the plays presentedin the air-ridden court is Othello.In its last weekend of running,Othello will play tonight, tomor¬row and Saturday. The script isby Shakespeare, Inc.Opening next week is Con¬greve’s Love for Love, a madlywitty play about socially properand morally improper high Resto¬ration society. The play is light,gay and beautifully stylized. Itwill run July 16-19 and July 23-6.The third, and probably final,play of the season will be Boker’sFrancesca da Rimini, a drama cen¬tering around a girl forced tomarry a hunchback knight, al¬though in love with his youngerbrother.Various summer-stock compa¬nies are producing various andvery sundry plays in assortedplaces. The Shady Lane theatreShown above is one of the many fencing scenes from Courttheatre's current production Othello. Andrew Duncan (left)doubles as director and lago.The CollegeLAUNDERETTE1449 East 57th St.MU 4-9236 Dr. N. J. DeFrancoOPTOMETRIST1138 E. 63 HY 3-5352JADEWEDDING RINGSonly atRUDY’S1523 E. 53rd Street($10 to students)—. Chicago s Most UnusualS Motion Picture TheatreAgain remind* all College Students of tlidSpecial Student Rales always in effect at DEARBORNAT DIVISIONPhone DE 7-1763EVERY DAY OF THE WEEKINCl. FRI. & SAT. EVENINGS SPECIAL7C* student NO WHATEJUST SHOtV CASH HR YOUR I.D. CARP will present Monique throughnext Sunday, Big-hearted Herbertnext Wednesday through Sundayand Elizabeth Sleeps Out the fol¬lowing week.The Theatre on the Lake ispresenting Just Married tonightand tomorrow night, Morley andLangley’s Edward My Son nextTuesday through Saturday, andUncle Harry the following week.And, of course, The Music Manwill continue from here till eter¬nity abandons itself.Tuesday, July 21, Under MilkWood by Dylan Thomas will per¬form itself at Northwestern’s Fiskhall. The performance is describedas “an interpretation,” and anyThomas would seem to requiresuch a definition of playing. Rec¬ommendation unassured, but sug¬gested.The Tenthouse theatre in High¬land Park is presenting Born Yes¬terday at the moment, to runthrough July 19. Its next produc¬tion is Gigi with Jill Corey, run¬ning July 20-6.Anastasia is playing at theHinsdale Summer theatre tonightand tomorrow, featuring EugenieLeontovich, who played the grand¬mother on Broadway. In manyways less and more effective thanthe film adaptation, Anastasia hassome very decent scenes and, ifwell-played, is worth seeing.Music?Ravinia, complete with the Chi¬cago Symphony orchestra, someold and grand music, its own artexhibit and its own music-lovingmosquitoes, is presenting its an¬nual series of outdoor concerts.Among those concerts this seasonare a number of jazz perform¬ances, including one by LesBrown and his band this evening.Next Wednesday and FridayRavinia will pfesent the NewYork Pro Musica in a properly ex¬cellent concert. Tomorrow nightWalter Hendl will conduct theChicago symphony in a concertincluding Stravinsky’s Firebirdsuite, Tcherepnin’s Fourth Sym¬phony, and .Rachmaninoffs thirdconcerto.Concerts next Tuesday, Thurs¬day and Saturday will includeworks by Harty, Puccini, Debus¬sy, Gershwin, Rachmaninoff, Bee¬thoven, Orbon, and Brahms.A week from next Tuesday,July 21, Jennie Tourel, sopranowill solo in Ravinia’s concert di-The T\ *Disc1367 E. 57th St.SPECIAL SALEFine Arts Quartetwith Reginald KellMozart, Brahms, Spohr,and Bartokx hyde park's first cafeespressoopen daily till 1open weekends till 21369 East57 th Street ^|uiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiimiiiiiiiiiiiiiiMiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii| list price 3 "X$4.98 NOW ^ ^$149"THE DIARY OFANNE FRANK"NO INCREASE IN PRICES |= Student rotes ore in effect S^lllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllilllllllllllillllllllililllllllllr CLARK Theatredark & madisonopen 7:30 am late show 4 amSPECIAL STUDENT PRICE50c ot oil timesjust show your i d. cardto the cashierSundoy Film GuildJuly 12—"my uncle""green mansions"july 19—"la strada""april in paris"july 26—"the key""no highway inthe sky" Marvin Phillips, producerof Court theater, in his lair.recteJ by Vladimir Goldschmann.The program will include Proko-fieff’s Romeo and Juliet Suite No.2, an air from Purcell’s Dido andAeneas, Mozart’s “Voi che sa-pate,” an aria from The Barberof Seville, and s e v e r a 1 otherworks.Grant Park, Chicago’s secondoutdoor-concert-producing areawill present Beethoven’s eighthsymphony, the overture to Romeoand Juliet by Tchaikowsky, Web¬er - Berlioz’s “Invitation to theDance” and Borodin’s "PolovtsianDances” this evening. The GrantPark concerts tomorrow and Sun¬day will be composed mainly ofpopular music. Concerts nextweek will be performed Wednes¬day, Friday and Saturday.WFMT is broadcasting severalchoral works next week. Sunday,Beethoven’s ninth symphony willfly through the air at 9:30. Ber¬ lioz’s L’Enfance du Christ isplanned for Monday night at 11pm. The Vienna symphony in Bee¬thoven’s Missa Solemnis will per¬form Thursday at 10:10. The Mes¬siah, for approximately the 718thtime this year, will be performedSaturday, and Orff’s secular can¬tata (comparable to Bach’s Cof¬fee Cantata only in its secularly)’,is scheduled Tuesday at 8 pm.The Art Institute, famed mostrecently for its newly paintedhand rails in honor of Queen Eliz¬abeth, is presenting the ChicagoChamber orchestra in a free gar¬den concert of wind serenades onSunday, July 26. The orchestra isquite decent, the music good, theadmission free.Motion picturesOpening this evening at theHyde Park are Viva Zapata andFather Panehali. The latter is amovie about a young Indian (ofIndia) and his sister, enmeshedin poverty. The film is possiblyromanticised, but probably taste¬fully so.Next Friday “A Cavalcade ofCharlie Chaplin” will run at theHyde Park. I personally have al¬ways hated Mr. Chaplin, but he isand was an excellent comedian.Running with the Chaplin cav¬alcade is “Russia Today,” a pro¬gram of documentary films in¬cluding a filmed Russian concert,a 40-minute feature on the BolshoiBallet school in bits and pieces offamous ballets, a series of news¬reels, a camera study of Lenin¬grad, a film of a Russian youthparade, and a short on penguins.LUu (~av4 eX S3 idyde park theatre Student rote 65cupon presentation of If) cordStarts Friday, July 10 — one week only!Wherever —People who love fine filmstalkThese two moviesare lovingly discussedELIA KAZAN'S production of John Steinbeck's“VIVA ZAPATA” AHTHONy*QuVnn— ond —Winner of five Grand PrizesFrom Calcutta to Cannes to San Francisco!“RATHER PANCHALI”"A shining jewel in movie-mok- "A rare exotic import ... aing ... it tells sod things but communication of human experi-is full of fun, laughter, and a ence . . . the creation of onwarm love of people." artist."— LIFE — Crowther, NY TIMES"... it happened to be a masterpiece . . . perhops the finest pieceof filmed folklore since Robert Flaherty's "Nanook of the North".The radiant beauty of the picture continually lifts the spirit. It bub¬bles over with gentle laughter ot the absurd things people do and ore,ond the set pieces of comedy — a day ot school, o bond concert,o visit to the villoge theatre — are just about as funny os organizedhumor con get. One of the finest pictures of recent yeors."— TIME mog.Starts Friday, July 17“DIICQIA TnnAV” "What a show" — NY TIMESllUOOIM I UUH I A program of documentary films:1. 40th ANNIVERSARY CONCERT . . . ULANOVA, DAVIDOISTRAKH, POPOV, Russia's famous clown, folk songs, ond folkdonees 21'2. SUNDAY IN LENINGRAD . . . a camera study of o city . . .18'3. LIFE AMONG THE PENQUINS ... a film story 20'4. USSR TODAY . . . current events 10'5. FESTIVAL OF YOUTH . . . Soviet Youth doy 10'6. WHEN THE SPIRIT SOARS IN FLIGHT . . . ballet 40'“CHARLIE CHAPUN, a Cavalcade”The beloved tromp characterization in the four one-reelers whereinhe was conceived and developed.1. THE TRAMP 3. SHANGHAIIED2. THE PAPER-HANGER 4. TRIPLE TROUBLEStarts Friday, July 24 — 1st time at popular prices!All seats — 90c, except children under 12 — 50c“AROUND THE WORLDIN 80 DAYS”A wonderful show that transcends all categories ... os entertainingos the circus, os sophisticated a a Magoo cortoon. A stor-watchingfeost done with subtle spoofing ... on imaginative, tongue-in-cheek recop of the history of film-moking.Bring the kids and plan to stay awhile (3 hours!) Mat¬inee Sunday . . . maybe Saturday . . . maybe others!Check newspapers or by phone for schedules.July 10, 1959 • CHICAGO MAROON • 7describes Crad Iibrary schooimtin«ing cducatio- ; “ " f '• '■ ' j K-y *f& f Hi”. I-iv 'keeping ■ wi,tIvtho, bi <>;.wi i>bj<*i 11\<»s of the school, con.'m recent yoais have inrluiird n>>t •■■ < >t 11 yv^such- libraryH«ehted subje< t as The Function of tiiebl.ibrary iii thBotlern college and New Directions, in Public LibraryPjWelbpincnt, bul'topivs .not ' ' ' . 'thought’^qf ..aslibi arfans^tp ^The1 F_»fttine bf,the/Ravok^id^ling'w 11h'Uu‘Scholarship -dealing with, the e\. hange-pfv.kndwl.'d ./ r ^i,.; The School s^most recent pub • \enturev i iBulletin of The ( enter lor < luhln-n s Bixiks, for win.the st hoed assumed .responsduht\ . in.,1938 -T he ' Bulletinis a < ini. . 11 review in- aivedpmv Pm i nbJ)o?/t |f .ri!11idi i'ii ar.d yhung people \> • ; ' • :> ■ ■:•g: aplied inter of fn ' nunrorandum w.nhm Mie ,l'ru\.i \ * y:y' ,* yy vy m $: ryy, M ..'sc f U I , b ■'^ Jt ;LS has m. K li' jiosMbie an oil, out cb hi pad gri-'.t Odb^riMthC;Bulletin to t he .vtionl run of teat Ire is- -.in.P.p.i! viits ;nv-was librai ians atvd hookselloi s. aiwl it is wo’ ', ■ J. '... • , , ■' u /_ • ' 7, v • 't ‘Vi\ ‘ ! 11 tom p / \i't \.eh" vy V'""'b'quarter ’. and < o input utiveh young 'tiny f,isi hool u tin l ' ted 'si lies w i- . -t ibl'isired in ^88T’jid" -^ “ _ U *’ i v a ' j >opened its dobrs in 1928', its impact on t-.he luofessionhas been out ©.f all proportion to i.ts size and the-lt -its history. N?o! small part ' iieotihghiieobjectives set for- it has been the fart tlint it.;is..eonn< ■with the. University of Chicago,' where -flex'ibilitv. adoirt to exp'Upirend. and' emi'ikasis ;ori; .soliplarship;;';u,..-traditlohal At Chuago the s<-hool h.is bet'nbable.d(tui e innovations and depart fiom. • ’ d ::b Thbdv; , v«v y Jb , ,*”b.",' o- : ’-'-e , b-fy-b-'"v b-'b'd".;- ""R-;deihon-t i a ted d lie value of a :.new J-do-av-.dt her..schoolsftvi),uently fi.dTowed. Not ove-ry-llung tiia.t -thepschool li..■ a.Oemptt'd has met with thV-appi(.,\;al of rive library fib! ias a whole; hotb'vo: d ivas bee'spceessftil s ' •, y-b ' ;_y\ ''o’*1 '*'* \r 4 Xi j« j /” ' ^ t\ y-•,J' " ’ b’’,»y'ygrj ''f< ^,’’1%/'o\t i tin m >st optimism u’crjcipicvhi t i ■ i i'ldjG■: ' The St lioOl -bidas i:sMio.t rlppsj’bool of 1928 bo'f couibecause the library field ofdThe change -rn tlve field ha • b.-.-p- h\ and. ]arr'"..,o' emcreasing- status and responsibilitv -fivi librarians in (Ansfifeiety. The pa i t t hat t he -graduale 11 bra i--y-''school and a iisp ufablyino.al-'W'less ,> uiie/i uUmt job opportune"' lion, than tTfdse in the graduate , library>ol" Librat lanslnp is one of the fastest growingpi . 3:fi - ■ ■ - ; I St it t tod3> and to meet the_demaru^rfor prolossionally.. educated librarians fr,om col-^l^g^s-burvivei -ii ics. public libraries, schools,_ industry, go\ei,"in.-nt ,and foicign countries thcie areorih 32sproftss , i,l aiwiedited library schools in ail ofb.,>.:^ ; A 1 ' \ r}:' "Sorhe enviable .international reputation, the po'si*.'v- - 1. \ix. ' *’ "y ■ ’t -”,yKwKr hbrar> s, hool_ and one can see t-hat its students areV' {.I s fas t 1 ml pcj-pul uly k’ w throughout th#»■’‘yyy b".. ' .-y pv - > < • ;1 ’4 b , ' , , ’i fa'd thatusbydb b ;. ■ .;ib . ■■ 'c ted with'y ur ycr^ity tb o t m •.artioMul refutation, and derh( aded' b '. ;v ; b , -b. ' : : c ’ ' tMOVIN' f . 1 aspet is o,( libi ar panshipax ant r u d** y ■ ■ -s- '. ■ 1 ■. role to play in raisfdji’^S■lyVTrrds o'f b,b: nry ex!u/ anan arid pTa-bpce, 4tad *1 tb df■■ ■■■■ ■ .•, * ; ’ i ■ -„«f It^s? hopl to watch / -Ji;,‘ -Udi %&&&&■b y'Uebru.jdi'ng„sU‘fej/>e;t exper t*> OJUt^ide the field of librarian-!fp-■ u- fn si students to> s, ope that,- > classes were made■ s all eady noted in the‘ wjjga 'vvh'Q''soii.glit '<rv f.LS the rate ofi|>oi tut try fo ev■ and thoTxv of pr^wtae,- - ■ b -bs-y •. r'< ’ I ii dor onstrafiftd and firmly estab-adeSSe research ©-n the‘ 0satomlhbrax. n-ijttaipt *5.0^ add^d with tne empln-siy s|« on, - " u\ riot <o' \ o< atiot d tiaim - Fox b;... - bv . ■ ' bp .;.■ . . ;.b • . : ; - \.b1 y . ., y ' . • • ■V*b' bvx' ■ • : • i■ n ion of a Mue’pp&grarawWiSii^‘S ‘ I M A ( UtlK ultiltft i& Atpiescrafprih^6an-d the Fh£> are the two degree^ m? Lester Asheim■C : ' 'thtbugh the personnel f^nd students of the s< hoo-1, jbtutalso, ju-codperatton wiih stwl»xntss and .atgani’/ati©nfe‘TTh■:■. b'd''*> ' ■ ^mi&atec Mb'' s to m |not only ^Stoa^pa $&t Sbva 1liljt 1 - pi vfi -skip goneiallv, tli-> school hiinvohod 1© programs ax<d aitiviues ulwc-h would extendits'influence bevo.nd K he < lassrnom a rtd‘ rhakc Uno\l rv’notlte-pe : - 1 ‘ >n. 1 ''''Wm§: •’ up 0’ip& pefy&ol.[ : i Ml, II V t> r !■ 1 i\ y ■I'Oumal in 11^1'^ m h'bbh ran -hip beg,in pi'kbliC4li,0n rn': b-.. ' dbd -' ■ .. •simlie-. a.libra i■ ■ d . • ' ,eyean a^®k,ojiJihhe tQ be impoitiint cornHi'but'ons^to the..... • ’ . - b’yGet»& Btid t1 i i ^ , / yof tl e^#gee ■ i id t .ad ife >,v lap;for jazz. Its fooling of space, the completely n - 'Iumas^ficre of . i^a-vahon andfredeorn entirb^.MWaWe.And ia manj^vvays the concertlast Wednesday lived up to il%sui rouadings. The dfbyers, by hiethe better half of the showshowed a careful freedom of‘movement ahjd ,_a kierd of gracet-hat was quite effective. NevilleB l a c k, the ch&r«spf'apher and-soloist M the group yi’as excellentin his first solo numlior. although! somhwhat cramped. »d less pol-i-shed in the lat.ewh>opkceg. Mor-upfei', 8uC“ slClptj l&fe -lifeother dancers, too withgiacefiil and effectix o movementaThe iagt number, a subdued conffnuum of dance e r esiyn do - d o s c r e s-endo prov'oked a- t and -m*|* Fire & Theft InsuranceMalpractice InsprMce| Mutu ale Joseph .x 5524 5. Everett Ave.|M> - Ml«bo^o - -c:" -; gregteipt 0$gm % thewas a certam luck of precisionpa 1 Ocular lv in the < oordmation ofsimilar; ■■miwmxdiffife.octagonal stage and the limitedNEW POLICY• Open 7 nightsfli^sed’tue. and wed. lunch• Maturing’ Completei^^^^^ejnju y;and Hors d'oeuvre Table'; *\3Q1.65|.651,50Shown above is Gene Esposito at the piano. Esposito scombo will be featured during the summer at Court Theatrevon July M *nd August 5. Tickets may be purchased atJimmy's, 1172 E. 55; Discount Records, 201 N, LaSalle;ijMiiiiiAHMiiMMaMttMMsic, 328 58 SSS^l| Professional fh;cin<rb- . and Hefinishinq ©f, bShoes and Handbags• Colors matched • Tvcs cut out♦ V©mps lowered • Platforms, removed ‘ : ■EQUIPPED TO REPAIR LADIES'Jb 'fJtAR RO V^'s''^p,Sb Heel* changed—Any Style—' ■ Any ColorBackstrap*. Removed and Springo-lihMk. h' Sft J Shoes str teft J—A- |pp ■ 1 -— Od^)j04die W0«k.b dsttjLLtfiiwi^. ;FA:'b. . .. ■ • . .B Seymour's Records, .^39 S. Wabash; Ret MuCLAD IS 12^Wm2.002 25888;1527 E. 55th DO 3-9St>7w« Specialize in Weli-Bolpnced Meats otPopular PricteSi, and 'liMnitieySnocksOPEN ALL NIGHT — ORDERS TO GO .* *.. • .Sausage..^richovy . * , . .Pepper & Onionl ice Delivery on All Pizza to l'C Students\iivty&Qgi #ou lloiiiiils!.x ' ’ ’ • ■ ‘ .-.. ■ ' . _ b-can eat . . * $ 1.95Combination x «ShrimpBacon tr OnionUnlvtd’pil. wm$0. .. - M^atlqunrtvrs for sport and tfkmkPlop pocket wosh & wear ivy league trousers — Wash & wear dressiplctc i*ne of keds footwear — treDeh■ ; .v- : / • ' ;I DO 3-957Zb„... : . ,• .... ... • ■■■ ■■ :bb; b 1. .» b h i L a G 0 r. A R 0 b t ^ ' . 1