Enrollment showsno real increaseEnrollment on campus has ated theological 321, Law—347,taken a slight rise tnis fall SSA—221, Grad library school~pomnared to figures of last 54- . .announces William Van 4 10 t<a*al business school in->'.dl TTniver^itv registrar cludin2 the quads, the executive( leve, University registia . program, and the downtown cen-The preliminary enrollment ter is 1,261. The University college Vol. 68, No. 8report released last Tuesday has 1,923 students this year. Ob\shows that there are 5,813 stu¬dents on the quadrangles thisquarter as compared with 5,804at this time last year. The totall c population is 8,676 as com¬pared with 8,585 last year.While the undergraduate popu-I nion has taken a slight dip (2,143this year, 2,153 last year), thegraduate school has increased University of Chicago/ October 16, 1959——- 31LAK explains self-study reportpus classes,” the report stated.“Since adults have had to con¬front problems not commonfor advanced study in among youth, those who plan and“The University of Chicago cational policy,” Kimpton con- versity of Mo n t re airi^tKiF Hr ure to appreciate the differencesshould continue its historic tinued. Sheats, a dean at the University between adult programs and eam-COmmitment to adult educa- Tbe self-study committee came of California; and Ralph W. Tyler,tion,” states the just-com- out uequivocally for the continu- who served as chairman of thefrom 3,651 in 1958 to 3,670 in ’59. piefe(j analysis of University at*on the downtown extension, committee as well as Director ofDean of Students John P. Neth- roiieffe The fjmi rpnort “We recommend,” the report the Center fopi Ion, who had predicted a five the seif.stUf}y comrnittoe investi- read’ ,that UC continue to pro- the behavioral sciences,per cent increase in enrollment »at;n„ downtown nf vide one organization, University The investigation was intensivefor this term, stated that so far ^ wag turned over (o the Coun co^e2°- to concentrate and spe- and extensive. “With a measure’cil of the University senate last cialize upon the task of adult edu- of ruefulness we note that, sinceTuesday cation. We recommend also con- October 1, 19d7, we have devoted2 tinued encouragement of initia- twenty-one full-day meetings toAlthough this ropoi t states spe- tive Qf ^e various departments, discussions of the organization,•K fompiamts and ad\ocates divisions and schools in develop- progress, and evaluation of thejine different reforms, the report jng their own programs for spe- study. We have interviewed atA breakdown of the College does not necessarily outline the cjaj audiences and needs,shows that there are 544 first year future of University college, ac- Boorstin Reoort bers of the University college ad-siudcnts, 155 transfers, and 13 voiding to Chancellor Kimpton. “Although there should be con- ministrative staff; we have talkedstudents at large. “The future of the Loop center is stant experimentation with other t0 some of these persons threeIn the graduate schools: Bi Sci in the hands of the faculty, essen- sites (including the Quadrangles), or f°ur times,” commented Street-• incl. Med.) has 530 students, tially. Legally they can’t abolish University college should continue er *n a fetter to the Chancellor.Hum has 441, Phy Sci- 506, Soc University college that ouestion to have an identifiable Downtown The committee found that UCSri 898, Business— 321, Feder- L , . _ x center as the central part of its serves four main functions inoperation.” adult education. One of these isThe faculty has been concerned to provide educational opportuni-about University college for some ties for adults capable of benefitthe figures were not completeSince the reasons for drop-outa re singular for each case, it isimpossible to state a drop-out rateand at the same time give a wayto rure it.Enrollment figures will still beincreased by late registrations. belonging to the Board of Trus¬tees, but the trustees invariablygo along with the faculty on edu-time, as expressed by the Chan¬cellor. The main complaint hasbeen with the quality and educa¬tional significance of some of thecourses and programs offered. Afear seems widespread that the with a high level of intellectualname and reputation of the Uni- potential, the committee claimed.versity is being misused in the Different Approachpresentation of inferior courses. . , , ,Last fall the faculty created its . A second role of the Univer-own committee to study the prob- Slty 1S ° provide continuing edu-lems of the downtown college and cational opportunities for personsmake recommendations. This who have already completed theircommittee,headed by Daniel Boor- imtial preparation for one of thestin, reported back last spring, Pr°"SS10^’recommending the abandonment T*1'e ^hird 10 e’ Kalven rex-of the downtown campus, and Plained, is the one which is mostmoving all its classes and offices commonly neglected, that ofto campus. The Boorstin commit- brmgmg the scholarly and seien-tce recommended that the exist- *l4lc efforts of the University di-ence of University college as an recuy to the public,autonomous unit be discontinued. AA representative of the Department of State will visit the The obligations for curriculum Tn^vAtoH nInterview future diplomats teach in adult programs can takeadvantage of their students’ ex¬periences. The usual formal cam¬pus prerequisites and approachesshould sometimes be adjusted ac¬cordingly.Because adults are motivatedto engage in further education byinterest in particular subjects orlength at least twenty-five mem- problems, or by recognition of aneed for certain knowledge orskills, the titles of courses, organ¬ization of content and the selec¬tion of teaching methods arelikely to differ from those appro¬priate to students whose primarymotivation is to obtain a collegeeducation, master a subject ormeet certain graduation require¬ments, according to the authorsof the report.Change Suggested“Adult students vary greatlyin their self-confidence to con¬tinue education as well as in theircompetence.”The committee suggested oneconsiderable administrativechange, the establishment of afaculty board for University col¬lege composed of representativesfrom the campus faculties whoare interested .in the work of thedowntown center.“There are a number of currentissues with which such a boardcould make immediate construc¬tive progress,” the committeestated. “One issue, arises from thefact that there are at present con-fourth role is to serve the 1,ic,ing polici^ as *® ,‘he kindsof courses which should receiveing from a high quality of educa¬tion, who, for a variety of rea¬sons, have not completed theircollege and university work.There is no over-supply of people+ * x uoui i ia live ul me L/cpai uueui vi oiaic win v wii tn c „ — world in ovniorintr now and credit. The faculty governingUniversity on Friday, October 16, to speak about career op- construction and control would be making a univer- board could study this problemportunities in the United States foreign service.The lecture will be held at 3:30 pm in the north lounge ofthe Reynolds club. All students are invited.Pamphlets describing opportunities in the foreign service subsequently tranferred to the be^er ways of making a univer-pertinent existing campus facul- a vital and constructive forcein the lives of intelligent adults.The members of the committeeNo Action Taken found a justification for the con- and suggest the criteria andpolicy to be applied.”Sore PointAnother problem which thecommittee felt a faculty boardand applications for the written examination to be given on H tinuation of University college inDecember 5, 1959 are available at the Office of vocational haTnfbLnTole^ lhe aPPr^l^cessary ™uld help:solve is that of weed-guidance and placement, 2nd floor. Reynolds club. ■ ’ .haV1"g bee"-p0inte? *>r adult education. “One of the ing out the less able students en-Darwin centennial celebrationAdvance Registration Formspecial student priceNameAddressThe celebration registration fee is $1 for UCstudents. Please send remittance with this form.All checks should be made payable to the Darwincentennial celebration. Registration entitlesstudents to free admission to all panel discus¬sions.Please indicate the events you wish to attend hy entering thenumber of tickets needed next to each event.Tuesday,November 24... ...Centennial dinner, :Wednesday,November 25...Thursday,November 26 ...Panel Ilf .. .Convocation.. .Time Will Telldinner, $5 (all seats $3)Friday, .. Time W ill TellNovember 27... ...Panel IV (seats at $3, $2, $1)Saturday, .. Time Will TellNovember 28... (seats at $3, $2, $1)Send this form to Charles Callender, 1126 East Fifty-NinthStreet, Chicago 37, Illinois.The registration deadline for students has been movedtack to next Tuesday. This is your last chance to register. out that University college was difficulties universities encoun- rolled in University college. Thetered in providing effectively for committee estimated that someadult education arises from a fail- (Continued on page 19)Need every single studentitself in the midst of extensiveanalysis. “It would hardly be po¬lite to act on the Boorstin reportuntil the self study was com¬pleted.” one faculty member com¬mented.The original plan of the self-study, as it was presented in the William H. Rosenthal, a covered that Rosenthal’s Chev-application for a grant from the premedical Student at UC, re- rolet station wagon had disap-Fund for adult education in May, turned to his studies Tuesday P^ared. They went to the police.1957, provided for an advisory after a vacation trip to Mex- “From then until Sept. 30 Icommittee to leview and criticize fj[0 was minus his auto- spent eight to ten hours a dayplans for the study and to provide mobUe but m h wi about trying to prove that my ear hadcounsel to the study staff in the red ta ’ been stolen.” said Rosenthal, wist*conduct of the project. Before he cou]d leave Mexico fully shaking his head. “Appar-Further Investigation City, 16 days after his arrival, numbcr of AmericansThe committee named by the President Adolfo Lopez Mateos, have driven to Mexico, sold theirUniversity administration in the Governor Herschel Loveless of ,2/,summer of 1957 Included three Iowa, and Iowa congressionalfaculty members, Robert E. delegation, a tractor agency, andStreeter, then dean of the College, the US state department wereinvolved in the search for his car.On September 21, Rosenthal,of Waterloo, Iowa, and four stu¬dents checked into the Hotel York,planning to spend a week in Mexi-Harry Kalven, professor of law,and D. Gale Johnson, professorof economics. The other threemembers of the six-man commit¬tee were R. Eric O’Connor, professor of mathematics at the Uni- co City. After dinner, they dis-Theatre party tonight stolen, and collected on their in¬surance.”Rosenthal said he presenteddocuments to Ricardo GarciaLobos, director of Mexican fed¬eral automobile registry, on Octo¬ber 1. “Lobos said that he believedI had sold my car and could notstamp my tourist card for de¬parture unless I paid the importduty, about $3,000.”Rosenthal telephoned his par-ents October 3. They asked Gov-This evening at 7:30 University Theatre will hold an open iowa^congressiona^ddegaUomhouse in the Reynolds club theatre. All those interested in They informed the state govern-the theatre are invited.. ment, which contacted the em-Althcugh UT’s first production, Pepel the Unburied Russian bassy. The Mexican branch of thehas already been cast, several smaller productions, including a radio John Deere Tractor company wasshow in cooperation with WUCB, the campus radio station, and studio also asked for help by familyreadings sponsored by the theatre board will be arranged at this time, friends.Scenes from several of last year’s productions will be performed Finally, the president of Mexicoat the open-house. The plays from which these scenes are taken intervened, and Rosenthal wasat ttie open house. The plays from which these scenes are taken allowed to leave—still without hisinclude: Ionesco’s The Bald Soprano, Wedekind’s Spring Awakening, car. When last seen, RosenthalLa Follia by Omar Shapli, playwright in residence at Bennington, and said he was “still trying to figuresongs from Don McClintock’s musical revue, Inter Alia. out how much his vacation hadRefreshments will be served. cost.”Decadent Houses?Should those fraternities sity staff, is currently interview-which are in financial trouble in& fraternities on campus to findbe bailed out by the Univer- °,Jt e“J> hol!sc'f pIaIr,.lc“'?r,p™?.'sitv? What stpns can the ad- Iem- Although-the University willsity. wnat steps can tne act nQt have the complete committeeministration afford to take report until November, it seemswhen it considers giving the c]par that only a few possibilitiesfraternities money to remodel, re- exist as t0 what uC might do inbuild, or relocate? rebuilding a fraternity row.These are some of the questions The administration could decidethe University is attempting to t0 do nothing at all. This wouldanswer at this time as it investi- not bo so surprising: since as fargates new property for other back as any0ne can remember UCcampus structures — a new book- has deplored the decadence of theGreek buildings, many of whichwere constructed last century. Ithas not yet done anything towardimproving their appearance.UC might decide to build a high-rise building on 55th street oppos¬ite the new men's dorm there.Within this building, fraternitiescould be partitioned off from oneanother although their identitiesmight suffer nonetheless.UC could decide to allocatefunds to remodel, or rebuild. Amost expensive step, it is doubtedwhether the University can affordstor£, library, and dormitories. To to parcel out enough for all.keep itself informed on real estate In any case the Meitzer reportconditions, zoning ordinances, and should give useful suggestionsconstruction costs, UC has con- abolq building conditions. Jamestraeted the Meitzer committee, an Newman, director of student ac-organization headed by Jack Melt- tivities, has suggested that once2er who has previously worked tbc problem is clearly stated, per¬mit*1 the Hyde Park redevelop- bapS the administration will de¬ment program. cide to arrange for a loan or aThe Meitzer committee, now en- stipend with the condition thattirely separate from the Univer- alumni put up an equal amount. The Delta Upsilon chapter singseach spring. Down among the dead men" at the IF sing held'Fraternities here to stay'If you stand at 58th and University, and look north, you’ll see "fraternity row,” on whichare located some of UC’s ten fraternity houses, some of them older than the university itself.Beta Theta Pi was established in 1893. "Beta” was the first house on campus. Currently,it has 27 members.Nearby is Phi Gamma Delta. Chartered in 1902, it developed from a campus organiza¬tion known as the Dragon’s Tooth. "Fiji’s” look forward to their Apache Brawls.Phi Kappa Psi was founded in Get thee to a girls' clubby Carleen Schmidt, president of the 1C councilInterclub Council and its six women’s clubs: Delta Sigma, Esoteric, Mortarboard, Quad-rangler, Sigma, and Wyvern, welcome you to campus.All the clubs here at the Uni-versity are almost as old as sports trophy. All of these are through Fall rushing which is aTTnivnrsifv are almost as old as Just a few events ^’P*031 of the specific period early in the Fall^ annual club calendar. Culturally, quarter. The first event is Inter¬file University itself and were many dubs enjoy theater parties, club Rush tea where all of theoriginally founded with varying concerts, dance presentations, art clubs are present to meet and getprinciples anti purposes in mind showings, etc., where the club acquainted with students inter¬ranging from suffrage move- members attend in a group. Edu- ested in rushing. Rushing offi-ments to cultural groups. Since cationally, several clubs "have ex- cially begins with this function,the 1890's, however, the clubs have cellent scholarship funds, and Following this, each club holds aevolved into a more homogenous other academic costs. Some of the party for all entering students,group with each club differing clubs have had lecture series at This first party is for anyonefrom another in the emphasis it their meetings featuring faculty over 16 enrolled in the Univer-places on particular activities. All speakers. The clubs often support sity who is not a club member,of the clubs offer a wide and and endorse other discussion and These parties are two hours indiversified range of activities lecture groups which they find length and are generally held inwithin their own individual or- interesting. Various service and fraternity houses. The scheduleganizations and within the club volunteer projects are also a part for this Year appeared in thesystem through activities planned of the club schedule. Club mem- booklet you received and will ap-and executed by Interclub Ccun- bers annually solicit for World pear again in the Maroon nextcil. Each club has extensive social University Service. The clubs also week with times and places. Inactivities such as coffee hours are setting up a volunteer project addition you should receive an in-with fraternities and dorms; spe- in connection with the University vitation from each club for theircial parties for club members and hospitals. Several clubs hold first party.their dates such as dances, pic- Christmas parties and other Following this round of initialnics, swimming parties, hayrides, events for underprivileged chil- parties each club holds a secondetc.; parties for just the members dren from Chicago settlement party the following week. Thesesuch as pajama parties and show- houses. Christmas time also find parties are by invitation only,ers; and teas and suppers for clubs carolling at the various Uni- The final event and climax ofparents, distinguished guests or versity hospitals and homes and rushing is Preferential dinneralumnae. Friendly competition other institutions in the Ilyde and dance. Each club holds aalso exists among the clubs when Park area. formal dinner for their meml>ersthey compete for the quality and This perhaps can give you a and invitees at the hotel of theirquantity trophies at the annual more detailed picture of what Choice. Following the dinnerInterclub sing, and when they clubs actually do. These activi- everyone returns to Ida Noyescompete in the annual basketball ties are in addition to the many hall where each invitee acceptsor volleyball tournaments for the functions surrounding Fall Rush- the bid of her choice to pledge aing, yet they are well spaced so specific club. As soon as a rusheeas not to be too demanding on has accepted a bid to a club, shethe individual member’s time, is presented individually to tHeEach club gives its members an members of the clubs, their dates,opportunity to participate in a and the dates of the othermaximum of activities: to rushees. Following the presenta-1865. It originally specialized inathletic activities, but in more re Alpha Delta Phi, established in of Trustees, stated in an exclusive1896, is located in a fraternity release to the Maroon that frater-cent years “Phi Psi’s” emphasized house built by the University, nities “tended to conflict” withsocial activities as well. Alpha Delt lists Robert Maynard the success of the new four-yearPsi Upsilon was established na- Hutchins, ex-chancellor of UC, as college, and he recommended thattionally in 1869. Included in Psi an alumnus. they be ousted.U's social events is their tradi- Kappa Alpha Psi established However, later that night a spe-tional Hardtimes party. the Iota chapter in 1919. Iota is cial committee representing theZela Beta Tau was established the only UC fraternity not on fra- Board of Trustees and the UC fac-in 1918 as a Jewish fraternity, ternity row. Located at 4700 Ellis, ulty met with the alumni inter-Today the “Zeebs” are non-sec- this negro fraternity has mem- fraternity council and subsequent-tarian.'as are all the houses on bers from Illinois Institute of ly stated that “fraternities, withcampus. Zeta Beta Tau is the Technology anod Roosevelt Uni- the full approval of the Univer-largest fraternity on campus. versity in addition to UC students, sity, will continue to operate asDelta Upsilon, founded in 1901, Fraternities at tJC have led an heretofore ...”grew out of a local organization, uncertain existence. Chancellor Today’s UC fraternity men feelthe Iron Key. “DU” is a non- Hutchins thought little of frater- that their present and future aresecret fraternity nity life, and is on record as say- much more secure than in the un-Phi Delta Theta was chartered ing, “Fraternities are neither a certain days of a decade ago. Ac-in 1860. Many members of Black- menace nor a boon to mankind.” cording to Basil Demeur, IFCfriars belong to Phi Delta. Basil During the period 1934-46, ten president: “In the last five yearsDemeur, president of the Inter- fraternities left the campus. (Phi a different type of student haslraternity council, is a Phi Delt. Kappa Sigma, Kappa Sigma, Kap- appeared on the UC campus. HePhi Sigma Delta was estab- pa Nu, Alpha Tau Omega, Delta is ‘well-rounded,’ willing to showlished in 1821. Just prior to World Tau Delta, Lambda Chi Alpha, school spirit, and he wants anWar II, Phi Sig took in three Ger- Tau Kappa, Epsilon, Sigma Chi, active social life. Today’s admin-man refugee students and sup- Phi Pi Phi, Sigma Alpha Epsilon.) istration, which anticipates in-plied them with board, lodging, On November 16, 1945, Ernest creasing college enrollment, looksand tuition. C. Colwell, president of the Board most favorably on this.”2 • CHICAGO MAROON • October 16, 1959 v broaden their acquaintances(male and female); to show lead¬ership and initiative in a well-planned organization; and aboveall to take a minimum amount oftime away from the academicschedule. You will find soon thatyour academic schedule here isvery demanding, probably moreso than you anticipated sincemost of you were top students inhigh school. I know you wouldprobably like to support manycampus organizations, but willfind you simply do not have thetime for all of them. I have foundthat the club system provides mewith a well rounded and variedextracurricular life here that isa necessary counterpart to therigorous academic schedule for anormal healthy life. Many clubmembers are extremely active ina wide range of activities in addi¬tion to their club work, butothers find that they must limitthemselves in order to do goodwork in their courses.I want to stress at this pointthat the clubs here are not sorori¬ties. They have no national af¬filiation nor do they have a house.Our meetings are held regularlyin Ida Noyes hall. Many socialactivities are held in the fuaterni-ties who are kind enough to lendus their living room or basementfor a specified activity. The clubsacquire memoers once a year tion a dance is held in the Clois¬ter club in Ida Noyes hall. At thenext regular club meeting therushee is initiated as a pledge andher club activities begin. Mostclubs initiate their pledges asmembers early in January. Invi¬tations to Preferential dinner aremailed special delivery at noonon Friday preceding Preferentialdance. These invitations must beaccepted or rejected by phoneSaturday morning.This should give each of you afairly complete picture of clubactivities and rushing events.However, I can already see thoseof you who are commuters say¬ing: “how can I participate inrushing? I can't come to campusevery night.” Many club mem¬bers are Chicagoans and com¬muters. Rushing is probably thesingle most difficult event forcommuters to attend. For com¬muters who wish to rush, my ad¬vice is to be sure to attend Inter¬club Rush tea which is Wednes¬day, October 21 from 3:30-5:30pm in the library at Ida’ Noyeshall. Here you can meet membersfrom every club. Following thetea try to attend at least one rushparty of your choice. If you areinterested in two or three clubs,be sure to attend coffee and cokedates with individual clubs in theC shop 1:30 to 4:30 every after¬noon during rushing.Put out new social code“ v change in your socialregulations code will be neces-sarv ” Dean of Students JohnP Netherton told a meetingof F raternity house presidentsand inter-fraternity officerslast Friday.-It is clear that certain provi¬sions of the code have left thefraternities open to kinds of be¬havior not in the best interests0i the fraternity system, whichthe t'niversity cannot sanction,”James Newman, assistant deanol students and director of stu¬dent activities, continued. “Wefoci strongly that a revision ofthe Code must be made beforethe school is much older.”The two Deans were quite ex¬plicit about which areas of thecode should be changed and inwhich direction, in several casessuggesting exact wording.Under the old code, chaperoneswere to be required at all frater¬nity parties; however, under I-Finterpretation this clause did notapply to cocktail and coffee hours.Neuman and Nethorton hold thaton an occasion when women arepresent and liquor is being served,chaperones should be present.The rode now demands that nolieer or liquor be served at openhouses or formal rushing func¬tions. Newman asked that therule tie changed to read that liq¬uor neither be served nor con¬sumed at such events.Articles two and three of thecode now read “Women shall nothe above the first floor after TOpm. This does not apply to thepresence of women in commonrooms or rest rooms above thefirst floor during registeredevents. Common rooms shall beregistered with the social com¬mission of the Interfraternitycouncil.”‘ Allowing women above thefirst floor of a fraternity househas created problems for the fra¬ ternities, individual students andthe University,” Newman an¬nounced. “Articles two and threeshould be revised to read: ‘Wom¬en shall not be above the firstfloor at any time. This does notapply to the presence of womanin registered common rooms andrest rooms above the first floor.Common rooms shall be regis¬tered with and approved by thesocial commission of the I-F coun¬cil and the Office of Student Ac¬tivities.”Newman and Netherton pointedout two additional areas whichthey feel need improvement, butfor which they did not state spe¬cific suggestions. These were asuitable definition of the qualifi¬cations of chaperones and theproblems of excessive drinking onweek-nights.The fraternity representativesat the meeting were informed that unless the I-F council tookaction on these problems, theDean of students would be forcedto step in and create his ownrules.“We want to maintain the demo¬cratic and independent nature ofthe e o it n c i 1,” Netherton com¬mented. “These rules are absolute¬ly necessary for legal, as well asmoral and educational reasons.We want to convince the Inter-Fraternity council of the neces¬sity of these regulations, becausewe want them to l>e the council'sown rules and we want the coun¬cil to enforce its own regulations.”“If the council doesn’t act, Iwill be forced to,” Netherton con¬tinued. “I cannot enforce a ruleto the effect that no woman isto be above the first floor. Thisis impossible. I will be able toenforce a rule that no woman isallowed in a fraternity house atany time, however.”and then they found my mother above the first floor. Social service school begunThe School of Social Service administration and the FamilyService bureau of United Charities joined forces to lay thecornerstone of the Robert H. McCormick Building, 6125*29 S,University ave., at 11:30 am yesterday.“Just as a medical school needsa teaching hospital for trainingand research, so the SSA needs tostrengthen and use its relation¬ships with social agencies in itsteaching program,” commentedDean Alton A. Linford.Not only will students benefitfrom this nearby training center,scheduled to open in January,1960, but also the Family ServiceBureau which will be able to drawupon social work studies by theschool’s research center.One hundred fifty SSA gradu¬ates from Illinois, Indiana, andWisconsin gathered at the HotelSherry for drinks, dinner andspeeches at the first annual meet¬ing of the New Alumni Associa¬FREE DELIVERY.* NICKYSPIZZERIANO 7-9063 tion last night.Highlights included AssociateProfessor Mary L. Somers’ ac¬count of the social group workprogram initiated this fall andAssistant Professor Charles Shier-man’s talk on the new juvenile delinquency correction program.Newly-elected president, SolomonO. Lichter, pi'esided. Phyllis R.Osborn and Grady Murdock step¬ped into the vice president andsecretary-treasurer posts.Every Type ofINSURANCECAR, FIRE, LIFEHEALTH, RETIREMENTSidney Blackstone(U. of C. Cr Harvard Alumnus'Hyde Park OfficePhone: DOrchester 3-0447Days, Eves., Saturdays Cr Sundayshew TEXT BOOKS use. 1STUDENT SUPPLIESFOUNTAIN PENS-NOTE BOOKS-STATIONERY-LAUNDRY CASESBRIEF CASES-SPORTING GOODSTYPEWRITERS sold-rented-repaired| POSTAL STATION RENTAL LIBRARY |I WOODWORTH’S 1BOOKSTORE1311 EAST 57th STREET |= 2 BLOCKS FAST OF MANVEL HALL iSTORE HOURS: DAILY 8:00 AM. to 6:00 P.M. . . . EVENINGS — Monday, Wednetdoy, Friday to 9:00 P.M. jr= =rmm mi iliumOctober 16, 1959 • CHICAGO MAROON • ithe Chicago maroonfottntled — 1892Issued every Friday throughout the University of Chicago school year and Intermittently during the summer quarterby students of the University of Chicago. Inquiries should be sent to the Chicago Maroon. Ida Noyes hall. 1212 i.. a9thStreet, Chicago 37. Illinois. Telephones: MI 3-0800. extensions. 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.All unsigned editorial matter tin this page represents the official opinion of the Chicago Maroon editorial board. Signededitorial material represents the Individual opinions of the authors.Bookstore here for profitor for students? New seriesThe standard standing argument againstthe Bookstore giving discounts to students isthat it cuts into the store’s profits. If anyonecould show the business office, the argumentgoes, how to give discounts and make just asmuch money, why the business office will beglad to consider the possibility of reduced ratesfor students and faculty.It is impossible for any student to give a com¬plete answer to this question; the informationnecessary to answer the query is contained inquite properly privileged data, data to which nostudent has access. However, partial answers arepossible. Last week we showed how five to sixthousand dollars could be .saved by the elimina¬tion of the useless charge account system. Anotherimpressively large sum could be saved by t lieelimination of Bookstore theft.It is ridiculoulsy easy to steal materials from t lieBookstore. It is, moreover, done all the time.Finally, the student body, instead of condemningsuch thefts, not only condones but also approvesof the thefts. Yet the' solution to the whole prob¬lem is clear.If we as students steal books, this is our fault,our error and our responsibility. If however thestore makes no effort to stop this outward flowof unpaid for materials, this is the Bookstore’sfault, error and lack of responsibility.The standard method for ‘lifting’ books is assimple to accomplish as it is to correct. Individualsare allowed to carry their own books into the books department. Thus it is impossible for thechecking clerks to determine which books arenew and which are old, which have been paidfor and which have not.The pilfering student then picks out severalnew books, hands one to the cashier with a billlarge enough to cover all his ‘purchases’ and willinvariably be charged only for the single itemhe hands over. If ever caught, an excuse is clear,ready-made and quite perfect.The entire problem of thievery could be muchreduced by putting a checking service at ihe door.This service would be a convenience to many peo- jpie who enter the Bookstore with large bundlesthey don’t want to hold while standing in line. ;It wrould prevent the less honest element of our !population from utilizing a fool-proof method of!stealing.It is objected that individuals with honest in¬tentions would resent the implications inherent in 1asking them to turn their books and briefcasesover to a check-girl. The argument seems spurious.!A checking counter scorns more of a conveniencethan an insult. Any individual who really resentedthe system we’re proposing should be remindedthat there are several other bookstores in HydePark.The salary of a cheek-girl would almost certainlybe less than the annual inventory loss. If not.it would still be a more sensible way to eat upprofit than by maintaining a useless charge-ac¬count system.LC fraternities differentFraternities have been a subject of controversy at Chicago ever since the University’s ifounding. Since 1930 fraternity members have been a minority, often called upon to justifythemselves — once threatened with complete dissolution. This position has undoubtedlybeen a good thing. It is one of the major reasons the Chicago fraternity system differs fromthe systems of other colleges:Next week we shall publish an editorial expressing our views on the fraternity system,what it should accomplish, and what it seems to be achieving at Chicago. We do believe that the Chi¬cago fraternities are a valid part of campus life.Fraternities have been a peculiar problem to the editors of the Maroon ever since we took office.Three of the five major positions on the Maroon staff are filled by fraternity men, and because ofunusual circumstances, all three belong to the same fraternity, Beta Theta Pi.This creates two immediate problems. The editors must insure that Ihe newspaper does not becomea Beta publication, and, even more important, see that the campus does not think of the Maroon inany such terms. We are certainly not going to change our name-plate to the Beta Bugle, we will not jpublish a Beta-of-the-week column, and wo will give the fraternity no more space than it seems to merit. 1We are also faced with a problem in the handling of the entire fraternity system. We are as unwillingto change the Maroon into a fraternity-system publication, concerned only with fraternity-affiliated ac¬tivities, as we are to turn it into a sounding board for any single house. We do wish to print a fair,equitable, and reasonable amount of material on the fraternities, just as we wish to give the same kindof coverage to all facets of campus life.On page eight of this issue we reprint the major portion of a rather lengthy article from the Nationmagazine. It is a well-written and rather persuasive attack upon fraternities. Naturally we do not agreewith it completely. We belong to a fraternity, and we have reasons for belonging. Wade Thompson’sarticle does not state accurately the present condition of fraternities on this campus, nor does it ade¬quately describe the morality and mentality of the members of those houses. The chapter of whichThompson writes has not been at Chicago for some time.Yet Thompson’s article is not without validity; his individual points have some basis in fact. VVereprint the article because it is about Chicago, and because it will be of interest to many individuals.Two years ago when the Maroon was edited by an independent, Gary Mokotoff, or last year whenthe editor was Rochelle Dubnow, it would not have been necessary to reprint this article. Today, inorder to prove our intentions it is necessary. As long as three hundred students are fraternity mem¬bers and eight thousand are not, we will feel and try lo fulfill an obligation to present all positions onthe question.Letters fro the editorsCalls NS A congress useful On Campos withMaxStolmaji(.4 uthor of “I Was a 7'een-age Dvvirf “The ManyLoves of I)obie f/ttfts”, etc.)FOOTBALL: ITS CAUSE AND CURENext Saturday at the football game while you are sitting in yourchoice student's seat behind the end xone, won’t you give athought to Alaric Sigafoos?Alaric Sigafoos (1868-1934) started life humbly on a farmnear Thud, Kansas. His mother and father, both named Ralph,were bean-gleaners, and Alaric became a liean-gleaner too. laterhe moved to Oregon and found work with a logging firm as astump-thumper. Then he went to North Dakota where hetended the furnace in a granary (wheat-heater). Then he driftedto Texas where he tidied up oil fields (pipe-wiper). Then toArizona where he strung dried fruit (fig-rigger). Then to Ken¬tucky where he fed horses at a breeding farm (onMotor). Thento Long Island where he dressed poultry (duck-plucker). Thento Alaska where he drove a delivery van for a bakery (breail-sledder). Then to Minnesota where he cut up frozen lakes (ice-slicer). Then to Nevada where he computed odds in a gamblinghouse (dice-pricer). Then to Milwaukee where he pasted cameralenses together (Zeiss-splicer).Finally he went to Omaha where he got a job in a tannerybeating pig hides until they were soft and supple (hog-flogger.)Here he found happiness at last.Why, you ask, did he find happiness at last? Light a firm andfragrant Marlboro, taste those better makin’s, enjoy that filterthat filters like no other filter filters, possess your souls in sweetcontent, cross your little fat legs, and read on.Next door to Alaric’s hog-floggery was an almond grove ownedby a girl named Chimera Emrick. Chimera was pink and whiteand marvelously hinged, and Alaric was instant!} in love. Eachday he came to the almond grove to woo Chimera, but she, alas,stayed cool.Then one day Alaric got a brilliant idea. It was the day be¬fore the annual (tmaha Almond Festival. On this day, as every¬one knows, all the almond growers in Omaha enter floats in thebig parade. These floats always consist of large cardboard al¬monds hanging from large cardboard almond trees.Alaric’s inspiration was to stitch pieces of pigskin togetherand inflate them until they looked like big, plump almonds.“These sure boat skinny old cardboard almonds,” said Alaricto himself. “Tomorrow they will surely take first prize forChimera and she w ill be mine!”Early the next morning Alaric carried his lovely inflated pig¬skin almonds over to Chimera, but she, alas, had run off duringthe night with Walter T. Severidge, her broker. Alaric flew intosuch a rage that he started kicking his pigskin almonds all overthe place. And who should be walking by that very instant butAbner Doubleday!Mr. Doubleday had invented baseball the day before, and hewas now trying to invent football, but he was stymied becausehe couldn’t figure out what kind of ball to use. Now, seeingAlaric kick the pigskin spheroids, his problem was suddenlysolved. “Eureka!” he cried and ran to his drawing board andinvented football, which was such a big success that lie was in¬spired to go on and invent lacrosse, Monopoly, run sheep runand nylon. c> 195U M«* shuinm»* • •When non go to next Saturday’s gome, take along ihe perfectfootball companion—Marlboro Cigarettes or Philip MorrisCigarettes or new Alpine Cigarettes—all a delight—all spon¬sors of this column.Bookstore likes accountsDear Sirs;In his “report” on NS A pub¬lished in last week’s Maroon,Mr. Cohler seemed to take theattitude that this summer’sNS A congress, althoughworthwhile for some less en¬lightened students, was for hima big waste of lime. Well, no won¬der Mr. Cohler was bored: hespent most of his time at the con¬gress in workshops and subcom¬mission like “how to make stu¬dent government effective in twoeasy lessons” and “how to en¬courage more student leaders.”I take exception to this attitude,first because I found the conven¬tion both stimulating and inter¬esting, and second, because Ithink that NSA has a lot to offerevery student. I learned a greatdeal at this meeting, and (mostimportant of all) a great deal that I could not have learned else¬where. In a workshop on the im¬plementation of desegregation ineducation, I met, for the firsttime in my life, a candid southernsegregationist who insisted“South Carolina will never be in¬tegrated,” and who, when askedhis specific objections to inter¬marriage, replied that it was“against the will of God.”For someone raised in a well in¬tegrated Northern community,where the evils were discrimina¬tion and intolerance rather Ilianmicegenation and “racial impur¬ity,” meeting someone like thiswas a unique experience. Andsitting down and discussing withhim, in as rational a manner aseach ‘ of our emotional involve¬ments allowed, was a valuable les¬son in tolerance—for both of us.I think too, that when he could tell me after a heated discussionthat desegregation was “perhapsinevitable,” some little progresshas been made in his thinking.And I, for one, have now a littleunderstanding — if still, I amsure, no sympathy — for ardentsegregationalist views.The other discussions in whichI participated, on nuclear disarm-stimulating, and I feel that theeducational value of any one ofthese would have justified thetime, effort and money exoendod.Mr. Collier’s point, that NSA mustbe brought home to the campus,is a good one. But it is primarilyas a part of tlie student’s educa¬tional experience that this shouldhe done,Carol (Sam) Silver Dear Sir:Your suggestion that every¬one who does not already havethan you ever knowingly woulddesire.While throwing around a lot ofgeneral statements, your articleof October 9 issue of tiie Maroonfails to take into account thebasic reason for the allowance ofcharge accounts in any selling es¬tablishment. That simple reasonis the calculation that credit salesat prevailing prices will increase gross profit enough to more thancompensate for the costs involved.When such is the case, the costsof the system are borne, in fact,by those whose purchases exceedwhat they would have been with¬out a charge account. In selling, itis generally understood that al¬most all people actually increasetheir purchases at an establish¬ment w h i c h extends credit tothem.Why, then, should you assumethat the functioning of the book-si ore charge accounts follows an¬other pattern?Sincerely,JAMES E. BRANDSament and international studentrelations (which discussed theVienna festival), were also very a bookstore charge accounthasten to establish one mightwell he a much better idea4 • CHICAGO MAROON • October 16, 1959G A D F LYINobody knows the rubble I've seenNow that the autumn windshave begun to blow, we HydePark pedestrians have discov¬ered a new hazard on ourstrolls: flying sand. All sum¬mer our perigrinations wereaccompanied by the barbaricrhythms of air hammers, and theroar, dank, and grind of powershovels, earth movers, and grad¬ers. The landscape created by thisensemble is characterized by tonsof fine sand which, on a windyday, gets in your hair, your eyes,your mouth, nose, and pockets.The reason for this discomfort isan impersonal plan called Rede¬velopment, but there are peoplein the neighborhood who are tak¬ing it personally, because the fly¬ing sand is aimed at them.Redevelopment, like most slum-clearance projects, is not meantto give slum dwellers better hous¬ing, but to drive them out inAttacks the“Vulture 99To the editor:I ask the author of theMaroon’s Culture Vulture togo back and take a second andmore careful look at his articlein the issue of October 9. Per¬haps a sober, reflective view ofthat unfortunate creation willserve to convince him that juve¬nile wisecracks and unjustifiedaspersions are not the most desir¬able methods to be employed ina review of cultural activities.The article abounds, for exam¬ple, in such remarks as those con¬cerning “friendly Fritz Reiner”and ‘Berlioz’ tender, throbbingand rather cloying Romeo andJuliet.” In one place he says ofthe movie Farrebique, “All theactors are non-professionals,mainly because the back - to - the -earth movement couldn’t supplyanyone who wanted to go back,so the producers had to use peo¬ple who were already stuck inthe mud. At any rate, . . . themanure will steam in the midden... as scheduled.” Elsewhere herefers to Sunrise at Campobello as“. . . still weeping its way alongat the Blackstone Theatre, andwill come to a soggy halt Octo¬ber 31. This is presumably so thecast will be able to wring them¬selves out and join the otherghouls and ghosts on Halloween.”Such outbursts, made grotesqueby their ignorance, seem to me tofall miserably short of the spiritof careful and impartial judgmentwhich the University of Chicagohas traditionally attempted to in¬culcate in its students. I suggestthat in the future the author ofthe Culture Vulture either at¬tempt to support some of hismany unexplainable prejudiceswith facts, or else not bother toinclude them at all.J. ZaritTAhSAM-Y&.NCHINESE - AMERICANRESTAURANTSpecializing inCANTONESE ANDAMERICAN DISHESOpen Daily11 A.M. to 10:30 P.M.ORDERS TO TAKE OUT1318 East 63rd St. BU 8-9018 favor or a more “desirable” classof tenants. The prime targets ofRedevelopment are Negroes andbohemians.This is not an unfamiliar phe¬nomenon in American cities. Itsappearance in Hyde Park is onlyinteresting when one finds out,that instigating this purge is theadministration of the Universityof Chicago. What this indicatesabout the University is disturbing.That one of the world’s mostprogressive and liberal institu¬tions of learning is concentratingits energies on the fortification ofmiddle-class norms — and I be¬lieve that this is the true signifi¬cance of Redevelopment — that"a respectabel university in a re¬spectable neighborhood” is UC'snew goal is disturbing in the ex¬treme.Hyde Park is a strange neigh¬borhood. It is a place where, ata party, you are likely to find apsychologist, three professors, sixfolk-singers, an advertising man,five stenographers, a bass player,and two dope addicts. It is aplace where a playwright and asociologist can be overheard dis¬ cussing baseball in the local barto the accompaniment of Vivaldiconcerti. It is a place where a boyand girl living in the same apart¬ment are not necessarily marriedand nobody minds. Where youcan go swimming at three amand discuss Nietzche till seven.It is a place without fixed habitsor mores, without color-lines orclass distinctions. It is a melting-pot hodge-podge of unsorted peo¬ple who meet and separate in afriendly and casual way to doanything or nothing, and it existsbecause of the university, and be¬cause of the slum.To the university students whopartake in its life, it is a pleasureand a danger. It is an escapefrom the pressures and pruderiesof a conformist world. A place tomeet people and discuss things,to drink and make love, to takephotographs, write poetry, singfolk songs. And it is also a placeto neglect studies, to get in trou¬ble, to forget what it was theyever wanted to do or why.The slum provides the cheaphousing, the moral freedom, asKEfflBFMCET THEums.cuNWWTts!POLITICS AAfc CHANGING. MAJOR CAMPAIGNERS ftfc£NOW tUVfUiUG TMtl*SfcW£<>TO PROMINENCE 8Y ATTACKINGSOME EASILY REC.06NtZ.A6lA.PU6IX MEN Ate.fw BROTHERI SftSSEp j1 sasseOhofcp 6UI THOSE CANDIDATESWHO CAN'T GAT HOC]) OFA FAMOUS mUCMENACE. CAN CARRYTHIS iNflftTAfeUt.&AU0O* WITH IHtMPND OSfc IT. well as the physical and moraldangers. It also provides theNegroes, with their terrifyingsocial problems, their iconoclasm,and their seductive and refresh¬ing repudiation of the omnipres¬ent and oppressive middle-class.The administration, seeing onlythe dangers, would change this.Down with the cheap housing, upwith the new dormitory and themiddle-class homes, out with theNegroes, bohemians, and bars, inwith the respectable people whowill live their respectable lives inprivate, and leave the students inthe antiseptic isolation of class¬rooms and formal proms, dormi¬tories and smokers, and maybeeven football games.Once our University stood forsomething. We were recognizedas a controversial battleground inthe fight for progressive educa¬tion. Whatever the worth of anysingle idea or program put forthin those times, the turmoil andthe controversy were sympto¬matic of an intellectual freedomand enthusiasm that made theUniversity of Chicago unique.What is happening to that in¬tellectual enthusiasm today?How much of it will be left whenthe administration succeeds in theaccomplishment of its only posi¬tive policy: increasing enroll¬ment? And at the cost of theuniversity’s progressive spirit andits characteristic student life?How will we tell UC from a thou¬ sand other conformist institutionswhen its overpopulous, spanking*new, cupboard - like dormitoriesenclose hordes of lower-standardsstudents, displaying their shiny,normal faces to the paying custo*mers? When the people whowould carry on UC tradition aredriven out and their haunts eradi¬cated? When the university dom¬inates its students instead of serv¬ing them, and delivers nothingmore valuable than a diploma?A great university is more thana school. It is an environmentand a way of life. Our way oflife has heard its death-knell. Theflying sand gets in everybody'seyes, but for some of us it marksthe end of an age. A great stu¬dent community is being de¬stroyed, and in its place, someday soon, I’m afraid we will find— a desert.Gifts for All OccasionsKOGA GIFT SHOPQuality and ServiceIs Our JttottoImported and Domestic Dry GoodsChinaware - Jewelry - KimonosSandals - Greeting CardsMisa Kotfa 1203 E. 55 St.ME 4-6856 Chicago 15, 111.WITH THE. ADVENT OfBALLOON WWHWGNIN&V)£ MAW LOOK TOWARDTO MANY REFRESHINGINNOVATIONS OH WfVUTlCAt SCENE. SUCH EVfcSoMA ASTHE Oil# PARTY BOSSAND THE SLEAZYU>AA» HEELER WILLDisappear, RtriAttDev A GRJMU INHUX OFFEMHE CANDIDATE^USING HEW AND ZAC#balloon techniques-Photographic FinishingA Complete Custom Service• Fine Grain Developing• Enlarging • Copying• 35mm Specialists• Black and White Roll Films Received Before 5 PMWill Be Ready by 2 PM the Following Day• Kodachrome, Ektachrome and Kodacolor Processed byEastman Kodak• All Black & White Finishing Processed at This AddressACADEMY PRINTSStudent Discount5309 KIMBARK MU 4-5454dAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAi LAAAAAAJ B • MMQHI MMMMb NfTMd HV AH tOMHi IOf Two MindsOn the one hand, you have Thirsty G. Smith.Good taste to him means zest and zip in •beverage, sparkle and lift and aQ like that >^9On the other hand, T. Gourmet Smytheperceives good taste as the right, fit and properrefreshment for a Discriminating Coterie!So?... Have it both wayst Coca-Cola... so good in taste, in such good taste.EtvouBt sign of.good tastSBottled under authority of The Coca-Cola Company byThe Coca-Cola Bottling Company of Chicago, Inc.October 16, 1959 • CHICAGO MAROON • 5Protests Kimpton’s‘unvoiced’ philosophyTo the Editor.In last week’s Maroon therewas an article commenting onthe Chancellor’s birthday. Tb^author of this tribute said thatthe student body was preju¬diced against the Chancellor atthe beginning of his administra¬tion and slow to recognize theman’s ideas; and that Kimpton’sintegrity, honesty and sensibilityhave won over the students on thecampus.I think the author of the articleis either uninformed or a liar. Itseems to me that the students arestill prejudiced against the Chan¬cellor. Now if the students are stillprejudiced against the Chancellorit is obvious that he hasn’t wonthem over.I maintain that the studentshere have every right to be prej¬udiced against the Chancellor; infact they have no choice otherthan prejudice. — The best wayto get rid of prejudice is to in¬form people. The Chancellor cer¬tainly hasn’t informed anybodyabout anything that’s not alreadyobvious. Has the Chancellor evertold the students how he thinksabout education?The Chancellor’s statements canbe divided into various categories:1. The Blurb — These are eu¬phemistic statements about the re¬lation between the university andsociety for advertising purposes.This is not a philosophy of edu¬cation.2. The Speech to the Faculty—This is a speech which is givenonce a year on the state of theUniversity. (It is well reported in the Maroon most of the time.) Thefirst 10 minutes of this speechconsists of praise. After this thepraise becomes indirect, and thevarious departments are rated insort of a “stock market” fashion;i.e., Classics down 2, BusinessSchool up 500. This is not a phil¬osophy of education.3. Interview with Maroon Re¬porter—This, as it is representedby the Maroon is an “I am one ofthe boys” talk. Here the Chancel¬lor says that he is in favor ofGod, mother, country and a lib¬eral arts education. An affirma¬tion is not a philosophy.4. “Off the Cuff” talk to theStudents—This takes place aboutonce a year. Since it is off thecuff the Chancellor doesn’t pre¬pare for it (at least it doesn’tsound like it). During the talk hementions the physical set-up inthe Ad building. After the talk isover frustrated students ask himimpolite questions, this makes therest of the students happy andproceeds to frustrate the Chancel¬lor. This is not a philosophy ofeducation.5. The Speech at Graduation—I have never been to a graduationhere, so I don’t know what theChancellor talks about. If he talksabout philosophy it doesn’t do thestudents who don’t go to gradua¬tion any good, and that is most ofthe people who are going to comeback next year.If the Chancellor wants the re¬spect of the student body he hasto tell us what and how he thinks.This is the only way to deprej¬udice the prejudiced.Cary Freeman6 • CHICAGO MAROON • October 16, 1959 Criticises political criticismTo the Editor:There are a number of such exceedingly disconcerting elements in last week’s letter byKermit Eby that one is more apt to feel benighted than enlightened by it.Not the least of these is a startling inconsistency in Mr. Eby’s rhetoric. Writing of theMandel hall meeting with Vice-President Nixon, he insists that Mr. Nixon ought to havespoken of his part in the whispering campaign against his opponent, Jerry Voorhis, in the1946 Congressional race. “I amconvinced,” he says, “that Rich¬ard Nixon countenanced, if notby avowal then by his silence,statements he knew to be untrue.Not six inches down the columnappears this statement: “I respectJerry Voorhis who went to defeatrefusing to answer to what heknew was untrue.” How is it thatone man is raised to grace by thevery tactic that damns the other?Of course all of us who takecomfort in Herblock’s cartoonsknow that Mr. Nixon can only bethe Villain; and sentimental dich¬otomy requires of Mr. Voorhisthat he be the Victim. But it issimply a shirking of responsibil¬ity when Kermit Eby, a LiberalSpokesman, is satisfied with whatamounts to an appeal to senti¬ment. He ought properly to ap¬peal to the intellect, extractingthe relevant facts and convincingus that his interpretations ofthem is the correct one. He him¬self must break through all thissilence.The same, hazy kind of critic¬ism appears elsewhere in the let¬ter. That Mr. Nixon spoke pub¬licly for Senator McCarthy whenhe was last elected and later, afterthe move to censure, avoided sup¬porting him further is, accordingto Mr. Eby, an instance of “poli¬tical opportunism,” which laterappears from the context to be aninherently bad thing. But why isit so? Precisely how do thesefacts indicate political oppor¬tunism? What exactly is the errorin explaining Mr. Nixon’s actionas a simple case of party loyaltyand an attempt to build congres¬sional support for administrativepolicy?Instead of attending to thesedifficult questions with clarityand definition Mr. Eby has vague¬ly linked together the names ofNixon and McCarthy. What with to have nothing to say. Sometimesthe search for issues leads to em¬barrassing pratfalls — as whenJohn Ciardi was so eager to feel(I use this word deliberately),that academic freedom at UC wasin jeopardy that he neglected evento check his facts.I cannot understand why thisyielding to sentiment and preju¬dice so easily displaces ordinaryintellectual process in the verypersons who fashion themselvesintellectuals. Ratiocination is onthe skids, apparently. In politicalcriticism, however, much of itarises from the one failure to dis¬tinguish between private moralityand public morality. This leavesthe way open for the fallacy ofall reform movements: good men-make good governments; bad menmake bad governments. The state¬ment has a grand ring to it nodoubt, but several decades of ex¬perience with righteously throw¬ing the bums out periodically hasnot helped corroborate it at all.The bums’ honest replacementsfrequently cannot, or will not,govern. The job offends their pri¬vate morality, and the public goodsuffers.Mr. Eby seems to hold to thisfallacy. lie is more concernedwith Mr. Nixon’s soul (his “in¬tegrity” or his “moral reprehen-sibility”) than with explaining tohis readers why he will make abad president. For Mr. Eby thesedo not appear to be separate prob¬lems, although our experience isto the contrary. It seems unlikelythat anyone may ever doubt theintegrity of President Eisen¬hower, but his administration willcertainly be remembered as asecond- or third-rate affair. Onthe other hand, it is not difficultto raise questions about the in¬tegrity and political opportunism the moral worth of Mr. Nixon, orwhoever it is; the question is sim¬ple and practical: who will do 1 liejob best? Can the candidate con¬trol the farmers without payingthem to be still more unproduc¬tive? Can he keep the veterans’groups quiet without buyingthem? Will he foresee and act ef¬fectively, though possibly unpop.ularly, on international problems?Can he work with Congress? Willhe be able to resist immediate po¬litical pressures in order to under¬take long-term projects? Docs hehave the proper dignity for hisrole, especially with regard to in¬ternational meetings?These are the questions whichought to be answered clearly bythe political critics. Whether aman can accomplish these thingsand also be a good man, or evena nice man, is an affair betweenhimself and his private gods.After all, we must not confuse aballot with a billet-doux.Finally, and quite apart fromother things, I wonder whether itisn’t just a tiny bit satisfying tohave at least a few “morally rep¬rehensible” people in government.They always act as a convenientrepository for one’s inevitablefeelings of guilt. Even KermitEby, who, though he deprecateshis own moral courage, cleanlyoutdistances the rest of us inspeaking his mind on social andpolitical problems, has chosenrather to complain in vague termsto a fairly sympathetic groupabout Mr. Nixon's baseness ofcharacter than to put up at apublic meeting a barrage of ques¬tions that might conceivably bepolitically embarrassing. The sj>e-cific complaint is against Mr.Nixon’s immoral silence, and Ishould venture to guess that thisthe fact that the sun never sets of Franklin Roosevelt while ad-on souls who identify the latter mitting his administration to thewith vileness and corruption, the . .sentimental effect is colossal.Change the names, however, to When we go to the polls nextOppenheimer or Latimore on one year we are not asked to decideside and certain supposedly leftistassociates of theirs on the other,and Mr. Eby’s tactic becomes W ^ ^ |^ „ |what was called in olden days (JvUlVO |jCl 1Guilt by Association. X JTprotest is related to Mr. Eby’sown silence at the Mandel hallmeeting.Arthur LuehrmannFaculty of Nat. Sci.If I am correct in finding inKermit Eby’s letter these evi¬dences of sentimentalism, thenone can only wonder how oftenthe expression of this attitudemay pass for liberal politicalcriticism today. The comparativesterility of liberalism at presentsuggests that it happens moreoften than not. The critics seemHyde park's first cafeespressoopen daily till 1open weekends till 21369 East 57th Street My dear venerable Editor:I am with due gratificationin writing you this letter withwhich I hope that it will meetyou in good condition ofhealth. How do you do sir: Pleasesir, it will please me very much ifmy editor can allow me a spacein his paper to publish my nameand address.I am a Nigerian youth of 20years of age who seeks for theAmerican pen pal of both sexesfor the exchanging of the Niger¬ian goods for the American ones.The Nigerian or African goodsare: Dagger knives, snake skinhand and shoulder bags, snakeskin slippers, crocodile handbagsand wallets, leopard skin hand¬bags, raffia wallets, native combs,used stamps, cocoanut milk, ebo¬ ny carving, dried pepper, lionskins, etc.For the American ones such as:Sport shirts, T-shirts, slacks, handwatches and jackets and Techbook in radio serving. I am a stu¬dent of Radio serving engineerand I finished school this yearwhen I entered Technical college.My father is a well-known black¬smith and my mother is doingmidwifery. I have 2 sisters, allare teaching, and 3 brothers ofwhich I am included; the rest 2 —one of them is supervisor of UACMobil out of Nigeria Ltd. and theother one is in high school.Yours faithfully,Christophe Azikec/o S C OkonkwoGBO Tech Dept. Box 26Ilonis, Northern regionNigeriaRELAX WITH PHOTOGRAPHYSEE THE BOOKSTORE WINDOW FOR AVARIETY OF EQUIPMENT AND ACCESSORIESSEE RUDY GERSON IN THE PHOTO DEPT..FOR ASSISTANCE IN ACHIEVING FINEST RESULTSTHE UNIVERSITY of CHICAGO BOOKSTORE5802 S. Ellis Avenue■Danforth offers grad grants Grants benefit programsThe Danforth foundation, scholarship, or Woodrow Wilsoneducational foundation lo- fellowship, he becomes a Dan- New courses, graduate fellowships and im-rili'd in St. Louis, Missouri, forth fellow without stipend, un- provement of Oriental Institute library facili-invites applications for the lil these other relationships are ties due to grants under the National Defenseni,uh class (1960) of Danforth C0™P Uf, Education Act mean significant improvementGraduate fellows from college All Danforth fellows will par- jn 0ur program, reports Edward A. Krackesenior men and recent graduates ^ipate in the annual Danforth jr > chairman of the Committee for far east-,v 11o are preparing themselves for Foundation Conference on teach- ern civilizationp'lreer of college teaching, and to be held at Camp Mini- p T . ,a career oi college leauuug, aim Minhicrar. cnnfnm Courses in Japanese language, literature andarc planning to enter graduate ‘ g* - P * religion, contempory Chinese government, historyschool in September, 1960, for • •... °f central Asian art, Chinese and Japanese geo-their first year of graduate study. The qualifications of the candi- graphy and history of Chinese and Japanese medi-The Foundation welcomes appli- dates as listed in the announce- cine necessitate a catalogue revision. Conversa-cants from the areas of Natural ment from the foundation are: tional Chinese will be expanded into a three-quar-and Biological sciences, Social sci- men of outstanding academic abil- ter course.cnees, Humanities and all fields of ity, personality congenial to the “The weakest portions of the old program werespecialization to be found in the c assroom, and integrity and char- Japanese language and literature,” Kracke com-undergraduate college. acter, including serious inquiry mented. “We are offering for the first time aChancellor L. A. Kimpton has within the Christian tradition. course on Japanese language and one on Japanesenamed Mrs. Ruth McCarn, assist- All applications, including the literature—in translation—and its cultural baek-anl dean of students, as the liaison recommendations, must be com--ground, both of which are being taught by Prof,officer to nominate to the Dan- pleted by January 31, 1960. Any Edwin McClellan.”forth Foundation two or not to ex- student wishing further informa- (Ed. note: Prof. McClellan recently pub-cccd three can i a es or ese tion should get in touch with Dean lished a translation of one of the most signi-1960 fe ows lips. ese appoin - McCarn. ficant and interesting modern Japanese novels,ments are fundamentally “a rela- 1t i o n s h 1 p of encouragement”throughout the years of graduatestudy, carrying a promise of fi¬nancial aid within prescribed con¬ditions as there may be need.The maximum annual grant forsingle Fellows is $1,500 plus tui¬tion and fees charged to all gradu¬ate students; for married Fellows,$2,000 plus tuition and fees charg- Kokoro (The Heart) by Natsume Soseki, whichcombines both Japanese and Western tradi¬tion.)Dr. Harrie Vander Stappen, replacing Prof. Lud¬wig Bachhofer in art, recently introduced the“History of Central Asian Art” on campus, hitspecialty being Ming Dynasty art.Political Science gains a course, “ContemporaryChinese Government,” taught by Asst. Prof. TangTsou; Prof. Kenneth Madison from the Universityof Illinois will head the “History of Chinese Sci¬ence” course.“Chinese volumes on social sciences and variousJapanese books will add considerable stature tothe library,” noted Kracke. “We shall also enlargethe library staff.” The division is now sponsoringfive three-year graduate fellowships and severalone-year grants with the government aid.The Committee for far eastern civilizations pre¬pares “Introduction to Chinese Civilization” forthe college. “It is a means through which depart¬ments work to develop a more rational and bal¬anced program of far eastern studies,” concludedKracke.Fellowshipsnational science foundation marshall scholarshipsThe University of Chicago These fellowships will be award-is now receiving applications cd for study in the mathematical,for 1960-61 National Science physical, medical and biologicaled to all graduate students with FOUndationCmdSS vpCrad sciences’ including anthropology,an additional stipend of $.500 for r ounaanon cooperative Laad- UC students who expect to academic ability with the capa-receive their bachelor’s degree eity to PIay an active part in thein the current academic year United Kingdom university t®may apply for Marshall Schol- which they 8°-uate Fellowships, which will carry arships, which enable students The candidate must be a citizenannual stipends of $2,200 plus of^eoerfDhv eco^omkJ and sc^ to study in universities in the of the us and under 26 years oftuition and fees. This program cioW^g The onW students fn the United Kingdom. The scholar- age on October 1 of the yearregular Graduate^eUowsh^'pro^ medical sciences who are eligible ships provide a generous grant when he begins study in thegram and differs from that pro to aPP*y are those who mtend to for two years and are renewable United Kingdom,gram in that it provides for a obtain advanced training directed in >some cases, said Mrs. Ruth O. Those interested should readconcurrently "with his ~Danf orth broadened base of university par- |owar a c a r e e r in iesearch or McCarn, assistant dean of stu- the bulletin board in Room 202fellowship and applicants for Additional information concern- d<m,s- of ,he club- Additionalmust submit Cooperative Gradu- ing the program and application They are open lo men and worn- information can be obtained fromfnr a nanforth fpiw!.hin ate Fellowship applications locally procedures is available in the of- en students, whether married or Mrs. McCarn. Completed applica-by November 6. The University fice of the Committee on Fellow- single, who possess distinction of tions must be filed with her notwill announce award actions on ships and Scholarships, Adminis- intellect and character as evi- later than October 23.each child. Students with or with¬out financial need are invited toapply.A Danforth fellow is allowed tocarry other scholarship appoint¬ments, such as Rhodes, Fulbright,Woodrow Wilson, Marshall, etc.,for a Danforth fellowshipIf a man received the Danforthappointment, together with aR h o d e s scholarship, Fulbright April 1, 1960. tration 304.Open fellowship competition denced by both scholastic attain- Twelve such scholarships arement and by other activities and awarded annually to Americanachievements. Preference is given students, three of which go to theto candidates who combine high Midwest states.The Woodrow Wilson National Fellowship foundation has announced the opening of com-I>elition for its fellowships for the academic year 1960-61. The chief purpose of the fellow¬ship program is to offset the critical shortage of qualified college teachers by encouragingcollege seniors of outstanding ability to consider college teaching careers.To this end the Wilson foundation annually awards 1,000 fellowships for first-year gradu¬ate study at any university of the recipient’s choice in the United States or Canada. Wood-row Wilson Fellowships carry astipend of $1,500, plus full tuitionand fees, and, in the case of mar¬ried Fellows, a dependency allow¬ance for wives and children. Theprogram is open to college gradu¬ates in the natural and social sci¬ences and in the humanities. Bothmen and women are eligible, andthere is no limit on the age of thecandidate or the number of yearshe may have been out of college.Those who receive awards are notasked to commit themselves tocollege teaching, but merely to“seriously consider” it as a pos¬sible career.The Woodrow Wilson founda¬tion does not accept applicationsdirectly from students. Candi¬dates for the award must be nomi¬nated by a faculty member. Nomi¬nated students are invited to de¬clare themselves as active candi¬dates for the award by complet¬ing the necessary applicationforms. Winners of the award areselected through screenings of theapplications and personal inter¬views by regional selection com¬mittees, made up of faculty mem¬ bers from the regions’ universitiesand colleges.Last year, in an experimentalprogram, 41 college juniors wereselected for Woodrow Wilson Na¬tional fellowships. Provided thattheir work continues to be of the same caliber during their senioryear, they will also become Wood-row Wilson Fellows for the aca¬demic year 1960-1961.The closing date for nomina¬tions for the academic year 1960-1961 is October 31, 1959.►| Bicycles, Ports, Accessories ^[ special student offer J: ACE CYCLE SHOP For Your EatingEnjoyment Featuring ...Half Milk-FedFried ChickenINDIVIDUALLY PAN-FRIED OR BROILEDTO A GOLDEN BROWN PERFECTIONThis Includes a Complete DinnerFrom Relish Tray to Dessert$1.55' 4\ We believe that to be <► helpful we must be both <► sincere and ready to serve. \\ May we be helpful to <; you? Our business is mov- <► ing and storage. \| <► PETERSON MOVING J; AND STORAGE CO. !I 1011 E. 55th St. ;► BU 8-6711 :► 4 Free transportaiton to and from campus for parties of four.Sundays, 12 noon to 8 p.m. CallAlexander'sRestaurant1137 E. 63rdMU 4-5735 STUDENTWIVESWORK ON CAMPUSThe Personnel Office has a variety offull-time clerical and technicalpositions available.WE NEEDSecretaries — StenographersTypists — ClerksClinical Technicians — Research Technicians(including)Medical Chemists — HematologistsHistologists — BacteriologistsBENEFITS INCLUDE3 weeks' paid vacation2 weeks' sick leaveLibrary and recreational privilegesapply NOWUniversity of Chicago Personnel Office956 E. 58th St.October 16, 1959 • CHICAGO MAROON A‘7My own war against fraternitiesby Wade ThompsonReprinted from ‘Nation’ Magazine. . . To anyone who has better things to do than topoke his nose into the idiocies of educational institu¬tions, this account of fraternities and their frailties mayseem like a sour fantasy—something spun out of themorbid brain of a disgruntled college professor whohas nothing better to do than to play with words anddistort facts. I can only promise the unbeliever that Irecord every word with gruesome sobriety, with malicetoward none and strict justice and charity toward all . . .I was drawn abruptly to my scholarly duty towardfraternities the other day when I accidently stumbledover an issue of the National Interfraternity ConferenceYearbook—in this case, a record of the forty eighthannual meeting of all social fraternities. This partic¬ular meeting was exceptional in that it was blessed bya wild kick-off from Dr. Ralph W. Sockham, a notedNew York pastor. . . I have time to replay only a fewclimactic bars of Dr. Sockman’s composition:“America is showing something superior to theKremlin at the moment. .“We are the style-setters morally for the world.That is not boasting. It is just humble recognition.We are.^’Ecce Homo* . . A frat boy wouldn’t know what a moral style-setter was if one came up and goosed him. “These greatcollege fraternities,” as Dr. Sockman calls them, arethe silliest, stupidest institutions invented since the in-tusus ception of the chastity belt. They have no moremoral “style” than a collection of Mafia gangsters,D.A.R. girls, army generals or ladies of joy.When a young man is chosen to enter a frat, he isknown as a frat-pledge, and he must pass through aperiod of pledgeship—roughly corresponding to an ap¬prenticeship for knights or bricklayers. As a frat-pledge,he is expected to undergo certain trials and to learn cer¬tain lessons, for which purpose he is given a PledgeManual. The lessons he learns are three in number:(1) Sentiment—or how to love his brother; (2) Smooth¬ness—or how to conduct himself; and (3) Ritual—orhow to perpetuate the old frat.Brotherly loveSo far as Sentiment is concerned, I cannot do betterthan to quote from a pledge manual of one of our mostfamous fraternities. (There is no point in getting thisstuff secondhand). On page 76 appear detailed instruc¬tions on how a frat-boy feels toward his brother: . . .“I love you for putting your hand into myheaped-up heart and passing over all the foolishand frivolous and weak tilings that you can’t helpdimly seeing there, and for drawing out into thelight all the beautiful, radiant belongings that noone else had looked far enough to find. . . I loveyou because you are helping me make of the lum¬ber of my life not a tavern, but a temple, and ofthe words of my every day not a reproach, but asong.I love you for closing your ears to the discordsin me, and for adding to the music in me by wor¬shipful listening. . .”After the frat-pledge has been dunked sufficiently in this vat of sentiment, he must steel himself -it takescourage to join this outfit — to endure a lesson inSmoothness. Smoothness is a quality so devoutly tobe desired that no fewer than forty-six brilliant meta¬phors are expertly mixed, amid incantations and mut-terings, to insure its miraculous conception. . .I shall deal in the next paragraph with only one ofthe milder forms of smoothing—the Dinner.Facing the dragonThe unassailable Saint George himself, during thegreat dragon-carnage of 744 A.D., could not have feltmore trepidation at the prospect of battle than themodern frat-pledge must feel as he scrubs his face andlips in preparation for Dinner at the Frat House. Themanual warns him that “the dining table is the Water¬loo for those who don’t know” . . . “The spoon mustbe held somewhat the same as a pencil, but at a dif¬ferent angle, of course, the handle passing between thefirst two fingers, and the thum (sic) resting on theupper side.” And even if he gets his thum—sic firmlyon the upper side, he now has the grim task of trans¬porting the victuals while at the same time engagingin Conversation. (“Conversation at the table should bein a moderate tone and should be confined to agreeableand reasonably refined subjects . . . Discussion of wom¬en should not be indulged in at the table.”) But even ifhe leaves out women, he must know that many a messhas been made between the platter and the palate, andthat one drop of a pea could mean the loss of the en¬tire battle.Rites and customsBut let us suppose he wins the battle; lie now hasto learn his Ritual, most of which is so fantastic thatit would put to shame a Polynesian fertility rite. Ipersonally was once privileged to witness a full-scale,nationally organized, recondite and highly esoteric cer¬emony—done up with full scenery, costumes, tears,nobility and appropriate moanings—so I know whereofI speak. I shall spare the reader any details: sufficeit to say that the whole thing was excruciating; everylast word, every last gesture, was drawn out, torturedand buried publicly to the unutterable misery of every¬one present, so there is no point in trying to reproducethe affair on paper. Besides, all present had been en¬joined to keep it a secret (I can easily see why). Itwent on for two hours and fourteen ghastly min¬utes. . ..Myth and factWhy do fraternities exist? Their demerits are sonumerous, their short-comings so short: they codifysnobbery, they pervert values, they corrupt decent in¬stincts. They eat on exclusiveness, they thrive on intol¬erance, they presume to stratify peoples and beliefs,they gorge on stupidity and inanily, and they disgorgeheartache and viciousness. What amazing secret do theypossess?One popular myth has it that they have some remoterelation to scholarship—that they actually promote it.This is so foolish as scarcely to warrant comment. Evendeans and frat-boys know better. Any frat that can keep its scholastic average even close to the average of non-frat students for as long as six months is so rare thatit can confidently expect to be pelted with plaques andtrophies, and people will stand around and marvel at it.I know whereof I speak, for I myself have tasted thedivine nectar of fraternal brotherhood. It happened atthe University of Chicago, shortly after the last war.At that time the entire university was infested by in¬tellectuals and would-be intellectuals—with the resultthat frats were finding it mighty rough weather indeed.Frat chapter after frat chapter was forced to fold itstent like the Arabs and as silently sneak away for lackof patrons. The few that did manage to survive did soprimarily because they offered a place to live andplaces to live were then hard to come by. The resultwas that these frats found themselves occupied by themost unlikely and unfraternal brothers in creation -most of whom, like myself, had just been released fromthe armed services, and had had our fill of stratifiedidiocy. I confess the impurity of our motives, but I w illsay we gave the old frats every chance to endure, ifonly they had been endurable. At least I can speak forthe one I belonged to. We even went through the ritualas prescribed—a minor duplication of the ritual I de¬scribed earlier although I admit we speeded it up con¬siderably. Indeed we got so good at ripping through it,that we reduced the time to two minutes and fourteenseconds, and I am convinced we could have cracked thetwo-minute barrier if only we could have gotten overthat lumber-temple-tavern business without faltering.Purging the hereticsNow it so happened that the headquarters of thenational fraternity was in downtown Chicago, and thepermanent cadre of the frat were mighty suspiciousof us. Once we took in two Jewish boys, and theyswooped down upon us and gave us a terrifying ser¬mon on the dangers of “mongrelization.” Then one dayone of the national brothers spotted a couple of Negroesin the house—and that did it. Brotherhood had gonetoo far, and the whole intention of this great moralstyle-setter was being subverted. The chapter wasabruptly and unceremoniously closed, the house soldand the heretics were perforce scattered far and wide.Personally, I was not on the scene when the climacticbit of anti-mongrelization took place, but I submitteda letter of protest to the Awful Powers, and announcedmy resignation. This seemed to me the only fraternalthing to do. A couple of days later I received, to myutter astonishment, a reply from the national head¬quarters to the effect that my request to resign wascompletely out of order, and that I should consult Sec¬tion 7 of Article XV of the fraternity constitution beforewriting any more letters of protests. I consulted thevital section, and literally rubbed my eyes to see that“no member can voluntarily sever his connection” withthe organization. The whole force of the revelation hitme. You can’t get out! Like joining a penitentiary —you stay in till they put you out.For seven years now I have been enduring, waiting,suffering—but always hoping, hoping, hoping that mymisconduct will be heinous enough to warrant expul¬sion. If this article serves to reduce my sentence byeven one day, it will have been worth the writing ifnot the reading.The best tobacco makes the best smoke!*• J. Rtynoldi Tobitto Co., Wlniton N CD* •, , , , . % , \ - * * • • * A • w s \ .* *' ^t • CHICAGO MAROON • October 16, 1959“ — ■■ "* ; ■■ ■■■■",»)*•■Have a real cigarette-have a CAMEL Ellen Coughlin Beauty Salon5105 Lake Park Avc. MI 3-2000SPECIALISTS IN HAIR STYLINGAND PERMANENT WAVINGOpen Mon. - Sat. — D o.n*. - 11 p.m.1411 E. 53rd FR 4-5525 - — HY 3-5300Cafe EnricoFeaturing Our Hors cToeuvres TableFree Delivery to U.C. StudentsON ALL PIZZAComplete Italian-American RestaurantCHEESE 1.30SAUSAGE 1.65ANCHOVY 1.65PEPPER and ONION 1.50SHRIMP 2.25COMBINATION 2.25SPECIAL!Vi Fried Chicken .1.25LimitedINTRODUCTORY OFFERwith this coupon•% Cc OFF ONA 9 ALL PIZZA1Center is many-sided Comps ore not confined to campus. University College also offersmany of our general education courses for credit.The Downtown Center:An AnalysisIn Chicago’s Loop area. 64E Lake st., one finds an oldbuilding which houses theDowntown Center (DC) ofUC. The 67 year old DC isUC’s extension facility foradult education. It occupies 8floors; the 2nd, 12th, 13th, 14th,16th. and 17th house the class¬rooms and lecture halls. The 11thfloor houses the administrativeoffices and the bookstore, whileou the 15th one finds the libraryami the student and facultylounges.DC hopes to further the edu¬cation of those adults who havenot been able to finish their col¬lege work and who now attendDC part time in order to obtaintheir degrees. While they do notform the majority of the enroll¬ment, they do provide minimumof DCs expenses. They are cer¬tainly the most stable group atDC.DC hopes to keep professionalmen, who are already working intheir own fields, informed of anyand all now developments in theirown fields. Thus the medical andbiological divisions are kept busyinforming doctors and bio-re¬search men on new medical dis¬coveries and techniques. The busi¬ness and economics divisions arequickly relating better businesstechniques and ideas to econom¬ists, businessmen, and account¬ ants as soon as they are devel¬oped. They also give supplement¬ary courses in business to thosebusinessmen who desire a bettereducation in their field. Seminars,sponsored by private organiza¬tions, are given to executives onbusiness administration and tounion leaders and workers on bet¬ter bargaining.DC tries to reach the generalpublic through seminars and lec¬tures and keep them informed ofgeneral developments in the fieldsof science and scholarship. It alsotries to tell the public of whatUC is doing in these areas ofknowledge as well as the world’saccomplishments in these en¬deavors.DC also tries to serve the aca¬demic community as a whole byexperimenting with different tech¬niques of adult education and pe¬riodically reporting on the variousprograms’ respective successes orfailures.There are 8 course programsnow being offered at DC.The academic program forcredit last year included 552 de¬gree candidates and 2471 non¬degree students. The latter wereeither not planning to take anyform of degree or were hoping tocomplete their work at some otheruniversity.The liberal education for adultsprogram aims at giving the intel¬ligent layman a background inthe liberal arts.The fine arts program tries toacquaint the above-average lay¬man with a true appreciation ofScientist research teamsreport on cancer effectorA UC research team today reported that brain tumors oftwo patients “responded dramatically” to a combination ofhormone and radiation treatment, but that cancer in otherparts of their bodies spread faster due to the drug. They saidsimilar treatment of bronchial cancer in two other patientsalso appeared to show signs of effective responses in thebronchial tubes. However, cancercontinued to spread in other parts The .factors said that the x-rayo ie body and eventually proved fasago on the brain tumors wasaa two Patients. almost half ordinarily consideredis Melvin L. Griem and Jo- necessary to stop the brain can-seph A. Stein made the reports cerS) but other cancer tissue in-on the latest phase of their re- creased its rate of growth undersearch with x-rays and a synthetic stimulation of the drug.L-triidothyron. Th TOn(,,ul,„, ... . . a ,umorTl?; £nnu? m“tln8 ot untreated by x-rays seems to grow.j_l • „ an much more rapidly when a patient° '°' Fnday' *Dr, p • • , . . x uiuiiv.. • i t x vxi uixa x cm.iuii, u iin ^lCITi^1S afs,stant been decided that only those pa-sor in the Department of Radi¬ology at UC, and Dr. Stein is nowat the Hebrew university in Jeru¬salem, but has been on campus asPROGRESSIVE PAINT Cr HARDWARE CO."Hyde Park's Most Complete Point & Hardware Store"Wallpaper — Gifts — Tools Rented — Housewares *UC DiscountMr 3-3840-1 1 154-58 E. 55th st.30% OFF On QualityDRY CLEANING1 work done by a regular Chicago Wholesaler whose plant serveslier retail stores in addition to his own outlets. You get this servicecauv n( mi r HAn.nMsIib nnlLu mn/4 Ir w nvornon/iTrousers . 50c Shirts . 50cJackets .. 50c Dresses . 95cSuits . . . . 95c Suits (2 piece) . . 95cTopcoats 1.00 Light Coat . . . . . 95cOvercoats 1.10 Heavy Coot .. .1.10Metv! 29% Oft on All l.aundrtfUNIVERSITY OF CHICAGOSTUDENT SERVICE CENTERReynolds Club BasementHoprs:.]J;30- \j}Q — 3;l5.=5xl5_ the world’s finer music and mas¬terpieces of art.The government administrationprogram develops and relates,through seminars, lectures, andcourses, better methods of gov¬ernment administration and moreefficient forms of governmentalprocesses.The center for programs in themass media concerns itself withtraining people for positions inpublishing, advertising, television,radio, journalism, etc. It also con¬ducts seminars in how to improvethese media.The educational psychology sec¬tion deals with the application ofsociological and psychological the¬ories to the methods of moderneducation. It also instructs teach¬ers in modern methods of educa¬tion.The public lectures programserves numerous aims. Amongthese are: providing an introduc¬tion to fields of learning; andexamining controversial issues ofthe day from a variety of in¬formed viewpoints. These lecturesare open to anyone who wishes toattend them regardless of theirprevious educational background.The general program is dividedinto three sections:The informal program, which isa home study program, consistingof a series of lectures on betterparenthood, a Great Books course,and a study program for personsin current duty in the Na%ry;The testing, reading, and study-skills center, which provides DCstudents with the means to im¬prove their learning skills throughcourses like speed-reading and“Building a better vocabulary";andThe special services to businessand industry program which givescourses to union leaders andworkers on better methods of or¬ganization and administration.Also it holds seminars for execu¬tives and businessmen on betterbusiness procedures.Last year’s enrollment in thelast seven programs was 4,352students, two-thirds of the totalenrollment.On the whole, DC is a veryactive extension of UC, encom¬passing many worthwhile activi¬ties. Tuition paymentplans offereddents the option of making month¬ly payments of fees, Joseph A.Cotton, university bursar, says,‘‘We allow students to pay thequarterly fees in three monthlypayments—in September, Octoberand November for the Autumnquarter. We,don’t assess a servicecharge. Anyone wishing to spreadhis fees over the school yearshould get in touch with the Bur¬sar’s office."Cotton went on to explain whypayments beginning the monthprevious to the quarter they arefor: "I strongly feel that all stu¬dents should be free of financialworries as they enter the crucialfinal four weeks of a quarter. Pri¬marily for this reason we haveruled that all payments must bemade previous to the final fourweeks of a quarter.Retirement InsuranceAnnuitiesConnecticut Mutual LifeJoseph H. Aaron, '275524 S. Everett Ave.RA 6-1060 Ml 3-5986 For students who prefer notto pay their tuition and feesin three quarterly lump sums,the Bursar offers two plans bywhich students may arrangefor monthly payments.The newest of these for UC isTuition plan inc. The plan, a pri¬vate organization with headquar¬ters in New York, allows parentsto contract for monthly paymentsto cover tuition, room and board,or any portion thereof, for a pe¬riod of up to four years. Life in¬surance, which will automaticallypay the rest of the student’s feesif the student’s guardian dies, isincluded in contracts of two ormore years. The fees are payablein nine equal installments.There is a service charge forthe plan which amounts to fourper cent for a one year contract,five per cent for a two year con¬tract, and six per cent for a threeor four year contract.This is the first year that UChas been associated with Tuitionplan inc., and so far 60 studentshave taken advantage of the plan.In addition to this plan, theUniversity has long offered stu-Ij Midwest Army Store ;! CONTINENTAL IVY PANTS j&J In Solid Colors or Ivy Stripei The CollegeLAUNDERETTE1449 East 57th St.MU 4-9236$ 2.99ronine. . . . For this reason, it hastients with inoperable, well-local¬ized tumors considered incurableby conventional radiation therapy,an Ann Langer Cancer Research should now be studied by thisFoundation Fellow. method." Dr. N. J. DeFrancoOPTOMETRISTEyes examined Glosses fitted1138 E. 63 HY 3-5352 This offer exclusive to University to acquaint you withour new store at1018 E. 63rdAnnouncing 'Rambler -for ’60New high style! Low, low cost!New styling . . . models . . . features! New 3 seat, NEW RAMBLER AMERICAN 4-DOOR SEDAN5 door Station Wagon! Bigger windshield for Thriftiest, most maneuverablegreater visibility. High, wide doors for easier entry. sedan |n u-,fo-R0,w "'*.h Vi??p ,J,b , . . „ , , , , J convenience! Room turbbig adults.Save on price, upkeep, resale. At Rambler dealers, 4'SAVE WITH RAMBLER—The New Standard of Basic ExcellenceOctober -1-6,-1959 CH1CAGO >»; a . » * >MAROON • 9Foreign student aide goes Business library to openThe oDeninc' of the Business- “We want to keeD one lih,-.The opening of the Business- "We want to keep one libraryApproximately 500 students are graduate students,” said Mrs. Mrs. Laska is herself a former Economics library in the old law unit open on Sunday on this sideor about 6 ner rent of the Laska, whose doctoral disserta- foreign student. She is originally school will usher in the new year, of the Midway,” Gwynn ve-* 1.. . . . , from Czechoslovakia, and was an ~ »—Jtotal registered UC student tion m American history discussed International House fellow here,body is composed for foreign *ore'£n student in America untjj She married. She has sincestudents, stated Mrs. Vera Laska, with particular reference to the received her doctorate from theformer foreign student counselor diversity of Chicago. "Under-graduate foreign students do notusually do well here, althoughmost of our foreign graduates doexcellent work. It is easier for thein the Admissions office.Mrs. Laska is resigning herposition to go with her husbandto Sao Paolo, Brazil. In her threeyears of service as foreign stu¬dent counsellor she has processedadmissions and records of all for¬eign students on campus, intro¬duced a new orientation procedureand served as general counsellorto foreign students.The foreign students at UC,stated Mrs. Laska, come from al¬most 55 countries. The largestgroups represented come fromIndia and Canada, about sixty stu¬dents each. China, Japan, Korea, student to study what he wantsto study. Moreover, the difficultywith language in covering manyacademic fields, as it must on theundergraduate level, is quite im¬portant.”This year’s student body willinclude two Russian exchange stu¬dents, one in medicine who is par¬ticularly interested in the study ofanemia, and one in pork sausageat the Institute of meat packing.Mrs. Laska said that the major¬ity of our foreign students are according to Stanley E. Gwynn, marked. “The problem is one ofassistant director for Readers’ security. It will probably be eitherservices. “This is probably the a part of Harper or this new fa.best possible use for the library,” cility; which one has not yet beennoted Gwynn, “because of its con- decided.”nection with the economics office Round and rectangular tables,in social sciences.” individual study units, arm chairsThe 16,000 volumes, including for soft students, the circulationthose on economic theory and his- desk manned by a qualified h-tory, transportation and commu- brarian, and card catalogs willriod, and will be replaced by Peg- nication, commerce, and finance, dominate the reading room. Thegy Snellings, who is at present will be transferred from Harper’s Graduate School of Business willhandling the non-academic advis- shelves. Statistics will probably re- use the basement and first flooring of returning foreign students main in the main library. for classrooms.University of Chicago.In leaving, Mrs. Laska wouldlike to say good-bye and good luckto all the students she has knownhere. She will leave the Universityat the end of the Orientation pe-Hither and Yonand Germany send about 30 stu- studying in the Business school lege name will be used (theseMuch has been said and even more muttered concerning the new College program. Forthose students who feel that the next step is a quick slide down the razor blade of Life wehave gone through nearby college catalogs.Here are some excerpts, quoted in an attempt to bring you up to date regarding the newcenters of enlightenment. No col-dents to UC.Many of the students are spon¬sored under fellowships fromsuch organizations as the Insti¬tute of International Education,the Commonwealth Fund, theAmerican Association of Univer¬sity Women, the National Councilof Jewish Women, and Rotary.Mrs. Laska said, however, that and in the Social sciences division— particularly in economics andeducation.Three years ago Mrs. Laskaoriginated a foreign students ori¬entation program, which includesexplanations of the University or¬ganization, various programs, thetesting system of the University,and many other all-important de¬most are supported primarily by tails, a tour of the campus, a re-their families, although about 30 ception for foreign students atper cent of UC’s foreign students International House, and individ-have tuition scholarships. ual interviews with the foreign“Most of our foreign students students counsellor. quotes are taken from freshmanhandbooks and student press re¬leases and the school, if men¬tioned, would have to pay adver¬tising rates). But any interestedstudent can visit the Maroon of¬fice for additional information.“Our era is one of tired people,emotional expenditures in thepast decade have been far toogreat for the individual mind andbody . . . people emerge moretired than ever ... it is thosepeople who are fresh in mind andbody who will lead the world.The tired souls will . . . gladlyfollow anyone who seems to havea definite program. The world is seeking people who understandlife . . . come and learn at ... .college.”“. . . cheerleaders must developa new pattern for 12,000 students.A pattern that . . . lasts through¬out the . . . year. ‘School Spirit.’ “Prohibition has been intro¬duced at the University of . .“By a vote of 413-33 the facultyapproved President M... s’ recom¬mendation that alcohol beveragesbe ban net! . . .‘By removing this problem as“School spirit is defined as yell- an issue with which the admin-ing and hollering upon command,in unison. . . . This is animalspirit, brutish at the outset, vulgar by nature, .as football itself.‘‘The job is big. College studentsfall into a familiar groove: M . . .S . . . says that school spirit willreach a new high this year. Arcyou in the right groove?” istration has to deal,’ M . . . con¬tinued, ‘creative energies will befree to develop a broadened lim¬it's as crude versify social program.”“Freshmen wear on their curlylocks green ‘beanies’ with red but¬tons and class numerals. Thesecaps set you apart from the crowdand make you look very, verysporty. You must wear the ‘bean¬ies’ at all times. Whenever youTAN6I New breakfast drinkyou can keep in your room!EARLY ELLEN: I get Up SO earlyto study that a glass of TANGtides me over until breakfast. It’sdelicious—and wakes you up bet¬ter than a cold shower. ALWAYS HUNGRY HAL: I’m a be-fore-and-after-meal TANG man.It really fills in where fraternityfood leaves off. Buy two jars.Your friends need vitaminC, too! LAST MINUTE LOUIE: A fastTANG and I can make it throughclass... ’til I have time for break¬fast. Fast? All you have to do isadd to cold water and stir. DEAD BEAT DON: I have to putin a lot of hours on my Lit. Butsince I have TANG on my book¬shelf it really keeps me goingeven through the longest hours.NEW! INSTANT!Just mix with cold water!MORE VITAMIN CTHAN ORANGE JUICE!wanted: Characters and captions for campus TANG-ites (likeabove). Must relate to TANG. Will pay $25 for every entry used. GET TANG FOK YUURBOOKSHELF SOONTANG has real wake-up taste,more vitamin C than fresh orfrozen orange or grapefruit juice.Plus vitamin A. TANG keepswithout refrigeration so you cankeep TANG right in your room.A product of General Food* Kitchen*Address: TANG College Contest, Dept. GRM.I’ost Division, BattleCreek, Mich. (Entries must be postmarked before Dee. 15, 1959.)October 16, 1959• ■ vtfrM *<• \v vXw*'>'*11*>.v see an upperclassman approach¬ing. . . . You ‘button’ to showrespect. With grace and withspeed, you place the index fingerof the right hand on the red but¬ton until the upperclassmanacknowledges you . . .“The beanies are not compul¬sory. However any student object¬ing to wearing them must firstpresent his objections to the as¬sistant dean of students.”We repeat, pick up all admis¬sion information at the Maroonoffice.PERHAPS THIS MANCAN HELP YOURalph j. Wood, Jr. '48FR 2.2390 • FA 4-6800Is a member of your commun¬ity. He is engaged in one of themost exacting and unselfish ofall professions. His success de¬pends directly upon the degreeto which his neighbors realizethe need for substituting thecertainties of life insurance torthe uncertainties of life. Heknows that the ownership oflife insurance brings peace ofmind and greater happiness:means safeguarded homes andprosperous businesses; guaran¬tees completed education forthe young, and carefree retire¬ment in later years. He knowsthat no one can have too muchlife insurance.He is thoroughly qualified togive expert advice on the lifeinsurance program best suitedto your particular needs.SUN LIFEASSURANCE COMPANYOF CANADA1 N. LaSalle Chicago, HI.in —-■ -U. S. has most foreign students1171 EAST 55th STREET MIDWAY 3-4433^hiiiiiiiHiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiimiiimiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiimiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii^Fifty-Seventh at Kenwood imm m UNUSUAL FOOD jDELIGHTFUL |ATMOSPHERE |POPULAR |PRICESMI1ll1t!irillllllll||||||||||||||||||lillllllU1HI1]llllllllllllllllllllllllltlllllllllUIIHHimililllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllTcHARPER LIQUOR STORE1114-16 East 55th StreetFull line of imported and domestic wines, liquorsand beer at lowest prices.FREE ■■ A M —1233DELIVERY PH0NE FAUC foreign enrollment upTwo Russians and four Poles are amonsf an estimated 450 foreign students enrolled at UC,the office of adviser to foreign students has disclosed.Jack Kcrridge, the adviser, said the exact number of foreign students enrolled will notbe known until figures are released by the University registrar, but the number is expectedto approximate 10 per cent of the total student body.The two Russian students are participating in an exchange agreement signed two yearsago by ambassadors of the United — :States and the U.S.S.R. Some Rus¬sians are enrolled in Americanuniversities this year, a substan¬tial increase over the 17 ex¬changees last year.Kcrridge said he did not knowthe number of American studentsattending Russian universitiesthis year, but 20 participated inthe program a year ago. Exchangestudents spend one year abroad.The agreement between thetwo nations is a pet project ofPresident Eisenhower, who hasexpressed the hope that the pro¬gram will be expanded to includeseveral thousand exchange stu¬dents.A similar agreement was signedthree years ago betw'een the Unit¬ed States and Poland, Kerridge the nations represented are Tan- World’s Fair, one of the exhibitsganyika and British Guiana. at the American pavilion was aAttending the University this tabulating machine enabling visi-year from the University of tors to select the American uni-Frankfurt. Germany, is Armin versify they would like to attend.Frank, who is residing at a fra- UC ranked second in tiie unoffi-ternity house. UC and the German cial balloting,university have established a re- Not all foreign students on campus are here to study. The individualsshown above were among the 1500 South Americans staying on campusfor the Pan American games. They spent little time with their books.ciprocal exchange program.In addition to the students en¬rolled in the University, facultypersonnel and specialists are ex¬pected to swell the number offoreign persons to G00-700, Ker¬ridge said.Throughout the year, foreignstudents and professors will bearriving on the Chicago campusfor shorter durations. Eight Bra¬zilian educators are presently atthe University for about onesaid. Under the programs with week, and twelve Pakistanis arebotli countries, artists, professorsand cultural groups also partici¬pate. At least 100 Poles are in theUnited States, he estimated.Tl7e roster of foreign studentsat UC resembles roll call at the participating in an education proj¬ect for several weeks.Few American universitiesrank higher than UC in the num¬ber of foreign students enrolled,Kerridge said. When this reporterUnited Nations. Included among was in Brussels last year at the&Ae tMSum PHOTOGRAPHERS “I see a brilliantfuture for you..To carry out this prediction and seeyou through college into the graduateworld—Arrow recommends the sturdygood looks of Basketweave oxfordcloth. This luxurious “Sanforized'’fabric promises perfect fit, lastingcomfort. Carefully tailored with theflattering, arched buttondown collar.$5.00.■ARROW-The number of foreign stu¬dents studying in the UnitedStales has increased 38c/o inthe last five years, the Instituteof International Education re¬ported in a survey released thisweek.Tne 47,245 students from 131countries registered in US col¬leges and universities this yearrepresent a 9% increase over thenumber last year and an 86% in¬crease over that of the academicyear 1948-49. According to allavailable statistics the currentfigure represents the largest for¬eign student population in anycountry of the world.The post-war period has alsoproduced a great spurt in the ex¬change of university teachers andscholars, the Institute revealedin its fifth edition of Open Doors,an annual statistical report oneducational exchange. In fiveyears, the number of foreign pro¬fessors teaching in our schoolshas tripled. American collegesand universities reported 1,937foreign faculty members thisyear, in comparison to 635 in 1954- 55. With 1,842 American facultyabroad, this was the first year onrecord that we “imported” moreprofessors than we “exported.”Emphasis on sciencesThe sharp increase in both “ex¬port” and “import” faculty fig¬ures reflected the US’s growingconcern with education in thephysical sciences. Nine hundredand seven, or 47% of the foreignprofessors brought to Americanschools this year were in thisfield. This was double the numberof foreign science professors herelast year. The number of Amer¬ican science professors who wentabroad to teach and do researchwas 389, 43% more than last year.“The increasing percentage offoreign students attracted by ourscience courses seems to showthat the United States is achiev¬ing now status in science educa¬tion,” said HE President KennethHolland in commenting on thesurvey. This was the first timethat the physical and natural sci¬ences placed third in fields of in¬terest among foreign students. Inprevious years, it had scored fourth, fifth and even sixth, al¬ways trailing behind the socialsciences, and sometimes behindmedicine and business administra¬tion.The study also revealed thatUC ranked third in the numberof faculty members currentlyabroad, with fifty-five professorsout of the country. Only the Uni¬versity of California with onehundred and seventy-eight, andMichigan State university witheighty-nine surpass the UC total.Foreign scholarsThe University also has sixty-nine foreign scholars on its fac¬ulty, the fifth largest total in thenation. MIT has 198 foreign pro¬fessors, Wisconsin an even hun¬dred, California ninety-three, andCalifornia Institute of Technology70.The University was not listedamong the top ten schools interms of foreign student enroll¬ment. However, the state of Illi¬nois has the fifth largest numberof foreign students in the coun¬try, claiming 2,953 graduates and undergraduates, or six and one-fifth per cent of the total numberof foreign students here.The rapidly developing MiddleEast sent a record number of stu¬dents here this year, according toOpen Doors 1959. This was thefirst year that more Middle East¬erners came tp study in the USthan Europeans. The largest num¬ber of foreign students (15,823)continued to come from the FarEast and the second largest num¬ber (10,249) from Latin America.The Middle East was third with6,619 and Europe fourth with6,601.Engineering popularEngineering, which claimed23% of the students, continued tobe the most popular field of study.The humanities, with 20%, wasagain second. Far and MiddleEasterners and Latin Americans,striving for their countries’ indus¬trialization, were again concen¬trated in engineering. The Farand Middle Easterners also ac¬ counted for many of the newstudents in the physical sciences.Statistics on sources of finan¬cial support showed that againthis year the single largest groupof students—42%—were studyingon their own funds. The nextlargest group—28%—were aidedby scholarships from private or¬ganizations. There was a slight in¬crease this year in the number ofstudents supported by foreigngovernments (4.9%), with a par¬ticularly large number of Africanstudents receiving help from theirown nations. The United Statesgovernment gave scholarship aidto 4.8% of all students, and joinedwith private organizations in sup¬porting another 2%. These statis¬tics again point up the vital roleof private foundations and frater¬nal and civic organizations inbringing foreign students to ourshores and also seem to indicatethat the prestige of our schools isas much a factor in attractingstudents as the availability ofscholarships.years of distinctive wear...► in Arrow Oxford ClothOur new Arrows have everything you wantin a shirt—the perfect fitting collar, in favoritebuttondown and other collar styles—quality“Sanforized” fabric, in white, solids, and classic6tripes—and above all, the oustandingworkmanship typical of Arrow. $5.00,D & G CLOTHES SHOP744 E. 63rd St. 851 E. 63rd St.October it: 1959 *• /C Hxfc.1.6 0-UM.Ai'cTcX*N -• - IIJJUA. v'* lack Saturday t«« tho NCAA football "Gam* of thoWook—NEC TV—tponsortd by ARROW.From Co-op's Home"Two New Kitchens"Ii ve got two brand new kitchensin the new store! Now I can literallyserve you twice os well.Most of the time you will find me in thetest kitchen on the main floor. I'll be thereto answer your questions while writingarticles and preparing foods and recipes forthe weekly recipe sheets and special foodprograms. My hours are 9 to 5 Monday,Wednesday, Thursday and Saturday; 9 to 1and 6 to 9 Friday; not in Tuesday. My newphone number is NO 7-1444.The second kitchen, in the meeting roomof the lower level, is for food programs.This kitchen isn't quite ready for use yetbut it will be soon. Then I will presentdemonstrations in the mornings, afternoonsand evenings of different days. These pro¬grams are free, of course. Watch for datesof coming attractions on the bulletin boardand in this column. I know we'll have lotsof fun with food at these sessions.. • ; - - 'ENJOY A NEW ADVENTURE IN FOOD SHOPPI• High Quality Foods • Low Budget PricesSPECIALS FOR ONE FULL WEEKStarting Wed., Oct. 14 Through Tues. Oct. 20Thomas J. WebbCOFFEERegular or Drip 59 the only Super Market witlWhere "l-haven't-seen-you-in-Bor — designed to give today'sshe shops. Here at the Co-op is i aLive lobsters in the Co-op tank! Mrs. Abner J. Mikva,5545 Kenwood, picks out her own, and she has itsteamed right here while she finishes her shopping —or she can have it packed for preparation at home.(While you can pick out your lobster, you don't haveto pick it up — Co-op experts will take care of that.)LIVE MAINELOBSTER From Our DelicatessenFRESH BAKED M f) Ic Fresh Baked Fruity A cCookies*! J) P piesFresh Baked From Co-Op’s Cookie Machine Hot From Co-Op’s Ovens(Blueberry fir Strowberry 69c)Rotisserie Bar-B-QuedCHICKENS12 • CHICAGO MAROON • October 16, 1959 $169each and up_IPER 1ART J V in theHyde Park Shopping Center U. S. CHOICEII these exclusive featuersies" friends meet: Co-op's Coffeelemaker a chance to relax wheni in-the-store parking place for gro¬cery carts; here arecoffee, tea, soft drinksand pies to enjoy, and-with so many friends• shopping Co-op - hereis always friendly con¬versation to sharewhen you shop.THOMPSON FARMREADY TO EATWhat are leeks? And how do you prepare Them?It's no problem for Mrs. Landon Raymond, 5730Stony Island, when Co-op home economist BarbaraCoede is on hand with tested recipes, advice, menus,and ever-so-helpful hints for big and little cook¬ing problems. HAM5 to 8 Lb. AverageOctober 16, 1959 • CHICAGO MAROON • *3riomist:Co-op firstsfo open in new^hppping centerloss. In 1933, in an attempt group was still operating-in the store was open to the public,ake room for storing goods, rod. \\ ir .!’. a short time a11,roup decided to rent a small At the advice of .sen..tor Pong- adop'ton of Douglas’ plan i>,.This was done, but the las, then a college professor, me store showed enough profit to fe «turn a substanial refund to gio'ip.smorial fund honors Dr. Taylor . Pr if its of the store, in reamemorial fund has been set up to honor the memory of ^UTmVmad a ii,'''late Dr. Ruth E. Taylor who watched over the health ol stmv Staining *the ori£,ma .students for 30 year's. as a club room and office buddui'T;r. Taylor, a well-known physician in Chicago, died of leu- j)urjnnr tj1f> sanio year a .a-in General Hospital in Buf- ~7 ~ * was received from the District <,fAmid fireworks and square stations, operated by push but-dancing. the Hyde Park co-op; tons, ..which will direct customersopened its new $1.25 million build- r to any of -the items carried in theing on Tuesday evening.-US store, the largest frozen food sec-Senator Paul Douglas, one of tion in the nation, a 200-foot self-those responsible for the co-op’s service -meat counter, -'a-, 32-seattransformation from a small buy-- coffee bar, and two test and dem-ing club to a co-operative grocery onstration kitchens, ,, ,store, was featured speaker at Also included in the store willthe opening ceremonies. * > be a delicatessen with built-in?The co-op is the first to open ovens to provide fresh bakedamong the 14 stores included in goods and a cookie machine thatthe $15 million Hyde Park shop- turns out cookies-to order.' %ping center now under construe- The co op was founded in 1932 the ago of 63. She was buried in jl0r namo should be sent to UC totion. The center is part of a large as a wholesale buying-club. They Emerson, Iowa, her birthplace. . ^ us0(i bv the Division of Homaredevelopment project being built would gat her orders for canned^ A memorial scr\ ice-.- at 11 am toiogv: -Mrs-.vItuth-McCarn. assistby Webb & Knapp .rievelopci g... goods and grot arms. and :: when - Sunday.- •November.;.-! |jf|al llockt': ant di'an of students and directorf 5*ore a the amount of orders was. large filler Memorial C h a p el, 59th of vocational guidance and placeof 46,000 square feet 22 ot eno.ugh: to permit wholesale buy- slriVi :i. d.Woodlawn m memory merit >s. in-charge of the campuswhich arc desoted to selling would,i.iil oi'clors., of UniveVsity faculty who died m ( omimt ice for the memorial.. ’ Because thev were buying in the-preceding year,-will include a Dr 'l'a \ 1 o r received her R.cAmong thc.many.new .fMturos^ ^ ^ to Dr Taylor. . from Parsons college. Fairfieldof the store are s,\ si i ue > a'' \ V / ; * . ‘ t™, i<iw ..ml h,.r MD fionlocated electronics infer: j Her friends have organized a. ‘ Ci„Too much too soon?Universal Army Store 1Hoailtiunrter.s for sport and work* ic'earFlop pocket wash & w,ar ivy league trousers - - Wash Cf wear dressshirts — camping equip. Complete line of keds footwear — trenchcoots — luggage and trunks.1144 East 55th st. DO 3-95721 Q °n reduction with this couponJimmy'sand the University RoomRESERVED EXCLUSIVELY FOR UNIVERSITY CLIENTELEFifty Fifth and Woodlawn Avc.NEW AuthorizedUNIVERSITY CLASS RINGCome In : - See It'' '' '_ ' ' a;Open Evenings ; SRUDY’S JEWELRY1523 E. 53d St.Student iMM.iiint on Ollier MerchandisePOPULAR FILTER PRICE DUAL FILTERall the Free Press booksTHE GREEN DOOR BOOKSHOP1450 East 57th HY 3-5829Chicago's most complete stockof quality paper backs1. It combines a unique inner filter of ACTIVATED CHARCOAL, .defi¬nitely proved to make the smoke of a cigarette mild and smooth . ..■iiurnti1 iPwllWjWitiTr> "2. with an efficient pure white outer filter. Together they bring you thereal thing m mildness and fine tobacco taste! THREE PIZZA'S FORTHE PRICE OF TWONEW :DUALFILTER Free II,C. DeliveryProduct14 v• ,CH;XCAfiQ,:, M.A ROON %• October 1AJ-959Atomic scientists of Chicogo reportThe facts concerning radiationdose of more than 750 R.After-effects of serious radia-Every era has its witches, ?fP^nds IMI 'heir enerey. For the normally stated in terms of the 0f their normal positions; elec- dose, and it Is doubtful if anythingand it seems only appropriate normally oncoun- number of radioactive disintegra- (rons are pullcd loose jrom itoml can save someone who receives lthat our current age of sup- hmd '» "““«*•<*« «'"*<anreS, tions occurring in the source per and atomlo nucIcl are dlsrUpte<i.posed scientific enlightenment *£““ I* ''"5, "ntlm<!' The usual unit is the curie, In a slmple substance, evcn tbeschas a full-fledged, scientific ™.l£,ar,l P<‘ne' ond,T T "S e,fects arc of Uttlc consequence, tion sickness Include visual cata-trate a shirt cardboard. ond, which is about the strength unless a significant fraction of racts and sterility, thoueh theseGamma rays do not have a well- a one-gram lump of radium. the atoms in the substance are af- only appear in less than one perdefined range. A beam of gamma Sources of curie strength and fected, taking millions of R. cent of all cases. Susceptibility tora>s is gradually thinned out in up are particularly dangerous, But in living tissue, even the leukemia is greatly increased, be-a.S?**,.tllrou.B? are ordinarily stored in shield- disturbance of a few atoms can ing 100 times as great as for unex-"witch” in nuclear radiation.The supernatural character ofatomic radiation is evident in thefollowing manifestations: it can- “ 1not be seen, felt, smelled, heard, intensi*yH<>-the modern wizards of science R takes a one-inch slab ed vaults and handled only by re- disrupt the complex eh e m i c a 1 posed individuals.an,i technology seem capable of lead or a one-foot concrete wall mote control. Millicurie sources processes of ]conjuring it up will; it can hurt to r,edUCe the inte?sity of tyP1™! (one one-thousandth curie) are serious effects.you in mysterious and unfathom¬able ways, and finally; an unbe¬lievable quantity of unutterable nuclear gammas by a factor of also stored in shielded containers,ten. Twice this thickness will give but may be handled (with care)a reduction factor of 100; three in the laboratory. Microcurie (onenonsense'‘has* becn^wrTtten about ti/nes- a factor of one thousand, one-millionth curie) and weakeretc. sources are relatively harmless.If the following article merelysucceeds in compounding the con¬fusion in the public mind concern- processes of life, with possible The effects of smaller doses arelittle understood. Though a singleThe acute effects of a large dose small dose of radiation, in theof radiation, administered in a milliroentgen range, probably hasshort time, on a living creature, no serious effects, there is as yetare fairly well understood. In hu- no certainty about the cumulativen • , , ,„,t u a- i ti man beings, a dose of less than effects of many small dosesCosmic rays are a form of radi- Radioactive watch dials often con- R „ nrn(1llAoa ™ vw;™.ation that bombards the earth tam as much as one-tenth micrc-from space. They have extreme- curie of radioactive material. 10 R usually produces no notice- spread out over a long period ofable effects. Above this, some time.slight changes in blood count ap- One type of small dose effect isIng radiation, it will bo operating * high energy; and by the time Whe" radiation passes through Z fafriyw^H understood a^ld that ishi-hinii an imDressive weieht of they reach ground level, they usu- matter, it gives up all or part of \TArn until nt oKnnf P fhn - n i i ibehind an impressive weight ofprecedent.Radioactive substances emitthree types of radiation whichearly researchers dubbed alpha,beta, and gamma, in the order oftheir penetrative power. Bothalphas and betas are of suchcharacter that they slow down asthey pass through matter, eventu¬ally coming to a stop after a cer¬tain distance, the “range,” which they reach ground level, they usu¬ally include all of the above-men- its energy to the substance vere, until at about 100 R, the the genetic one. It has long beenfirst external symptoms of “radi- known that radiation can induce.ioned types of radiation plus a >h™gh -/tieh It is passing. The arion siokn^” are ob^. ZtiSons genetic changes wWehnumber of other types, too complex to mention here. Many ofthese types of radiation are also amount of energy given up perunit volume is used to measurethe dose of radiation received. Ra-produced by high energy aeceler- diation doses are measured in aators, though usually at lower number of sets of units, but thoseenergies than cosmic rays.The radioactive strength of apiece of radiation-emitting mate¬rial, or “radioactive source,” is most commonly encountered in-Scientists relate technicanews, more articles to comeThis article is the second in a series that will appear in jnfRadiation sickness is perhaps pass on to future generations. Thebetter described as an injury than overwhelming majority of muta-a sickness, as it results from the tions have detrimental effects, butkilling by radiation of large num- a small few may possibly be bene-bers of vital body cells, disrupting ficial. They occur spontaneouslyelude roentgens (abbreviated R) the whole function of the body in in all organisms, though some ofor REP’s or Rads. For purposes many ways. The first symptoms these “spontaneous” mutationsof estimating biological effect are nausea and dizziness, appear- are doubtless caused by naturalthese three units are roughly inS usually a few hours after ex- radiation.equivalent. The distinction be- P°syre- These symptoms soon The effects of radiation in caus-iween them applies mainly to the vanish, but after a latent period, ing mutations are strictly cumu-technique that is used to measure rangmg from a few days to a lative; each exposure to radiationthe radiation intensity. *ew weeks, more significant dis- produces its quota of mutations toAs a rough indication of the orders appear. In the second be carried in the germ cells of thesize of these units, the natural Phase» the victim experiences high affected individual for life. Asbackground radiation we all re- fever, loss of hair, wild fluctua- far as is known, there is no sig-ceive consists of about .001 R (1.0 R°ns 1° blood count, hemorrhag- nifieant difference in type be-^ ^ ^ milliroentgen, or mR) per week in2> and extreme susceptibility to tween spontaneous and radiation-Ihe Maroon throughout this year. The first article, on the from cosmic rays, and about twice infection. induced mutations. The exact re¬effects of nuclear weapons, was printed in the orientation this amount from radioactive Chances of recovery from radi- lationship between accumulatedissue. material in our bodies, the soil, ation sickness depend, of course, dose and mutation rate has beenThe articles are written by members of The Atomic Scientists of and the air around us. upon the general health of the in- thoroughly studied for some low-Chicago, an organization founded on campus in 1945 in the wake of The actual amount of energy dividual and the medical care he er organisms, but only indirectUC's contribution to the initiation of the atomic age. The organization deposited by radiation passing receives, but depend particularly information is available on humanis composed of students, faculty members, and research workers through matter is quite insignifi- strongly upon the size of the dose, beings. Though geneticists casu-from universities, industrial labs, and government research institu- cant, but the form this energy Nearly all victims survive a dose ally breed irradiated fruit flies intions throughout the Chicago area. It is affiliated nationally with the takes may lead to serious conse- of less than 200 R. Fifty per cent milk bottles, similar experimentsFederation of American Scientists. quences. Atoms are knocked out of victims will survive a 450 R (Continued to page 22)The 1960’s Are Here!CONTINENTAL... LINCOLNMERCURY... EDSEL...TAUNUS•%See Them All TodayFREE COFFEE and FREE BALLOONSP. Sm The Taunas Starts At $1,820*00LAKE PARK MOTORS, ing.6035 COTTAGE GROVEOctober 15, 1959 • CHI C A 6 O M Aft O O 4Student Government meets in law north on alternate Tues¬days throughout the year. All students are invited to itssessions.WUCB plays SimpsonOn Wednesday, October 21, at 8 pm, WUCB will broadcastits recording of Dean Alan Simpson’s Orientation Week ad¬dress to the entering students.Instead of the traditional outline of the College’s educationalphilosophy, the Dean told the students some of the experiences hehoped they would have while they were in the University. Amongthese were that they would meet at least one teacher who would havea stimulating effect on their intellectual life, and that they wouldacquire a taste for the graceful use of the English language. SG maintains services whilefacing problems, making plans“This fall Student Government faces the annual problem of filling vacancies created bythose who have left the campus over the summer,” says Maureen Byers, SG president. Themechanical work of this type will be the first item on the SG agenda when it holds its initialmeeting on Tuesday evening at 7:30 in law north. All students are invited to attend thisfirst meeting in the hope that some of their questions regarding the functioning of SG willbe answered.Some of the first reports sub¬mitted to the government will bethose of the delegates who attend¬ed the meeting of the NationalStudent association’s congressthis summer.There will be in addition somediscussion on the efficiency of SGas a student organization.This year the Student Govern¬ment on campus wishes to investi¬gate the possibility of establishinga Student Activities council muchlike the Student-Faculty-Adminis¬tration court. The Committee onRecognized Student Organizations(CORSO) will investigate thispossibility as a branch of SG.Also being discussed this yearis a speakers program for Aca¬demic Freedom week, the possibil¬ity of co-sponsorship of a lectureseries during the year with theMaroon and the Chicago Review,and the publishing of a list ofneighborhood stores offering dis¬ counts to students on merchan¬dise.Among the services currentlymaintained by SG are the StudentService center in the basement ofIhe Reynolds club. The center of¬fers a dry cleaning service, a laun¬dry service, a loan service (shortterm loans up to ten dollars), anda ticket service (securing ticketsfor most Loop events, includingOrchestra hall, for a small serv¬ice charge). The center also oper¬ates a used book exchange fordents.Another SG activity, the stu¬dent flight to Europe, offersround-trip transportation to Eu¬rope for UC students and em¬ployees, at a very considerablediscount.SG has given positive effort aridattention last spring 1o the ques¬tion of increasing available libra¬ry hours and space for study. This work will be followed up thisquarter.The government would like tourge all interested students to at¬tend its meetings which are heldbi-weekly on Tuesday evenings.The constitution allows for associ¬ate membership in the govern¬ment whereby a student may become a member of one of thestanding committees even thoughhe is not an elected member of theassembly. In the event of a vacancy occurring in the govern¬ment between actual SG elections,associate members are given pri-ority over .all others in filling thevacant scat.SG President Maureen Byerswill hold office hours in the Stu¬dent Government office in IdaNoyes on Tuesday afternoonsfrom 1:30 to 4:30. Those withquestions, suggestions, and crit¬icisms are asked to contact thepresident at this time.LUCKY STRIKE presentsT>fi,.Fru>oa:DR. FROOD’S MORAL. OF THE MONTHThings worth having are. worth working for. For example: If youwant a football letter, find a football player and ask him to writeyou one.Dear Dr. Frood: I'm dunking every¬thing but math. I get D in that. Help me.(Name withheld by request) Dear Dr. Frood: I go steady with twogirls—one in the dorm, one in the Thetahouse. "Raveling between the two placesis making a w reck of me. What to do?TiredDr. Frood, Ph.T.T.Dear Dr. Frood: I am a 35-year-oldfreshman. Should l wear a beanie?WorriedDear Worried: If I were a 35-year-oldfreshman, I’d wear a mask.OtDear Dr. Frood: Nobody likes me. Girlsdespise me. Men can’t stand me. Profsdetest me. Dogs snap at my cuffs. Whatshould 1 do? HatedDear Hated: Don't ask me. 1 don’t likeyou, cither.1tDear Dr. Frood: I’m a non-conformist.But 1 smoke what everybody else smokes— Lucky Strike. How can 1 be differentand still smoke Luckies?7. M. OddDear Mr. Odd: Light both ends of theLucky and insert a straw into the middle.Sip the smoke through the straw and say“wildsville” after each puff. Dear Withheld: Spend less time onmath.ca*Dear Dr. Frood: 1 have a ravishinglybeautiful girl in my class. Sadly, she iswitless. Should I flunk her?. BookishDear Bookish; Pass her. Other profes¬sors are waiting. Dear Tired: Get your girl to get yourgirl into her sorority.DR. FROOD AND THEAMAZING NEW FILTERI had occasion recently tostudy the remarkable "nosmoke” filter made of solidlead. No matter how hardyou puff, you get no smoke.Incidentally, a pack of thesecigarettes weighs 2 pounds.Luckies weigh less... andyou get smoke. The best.COLLEGE STUDENTS SMOKEMORE LUCKIES THANANY OTHER REGULAR!When it comes to choosing their regular smoke,college students head right for fine tobacco.Result: Lucky Strike tops every other regularsold. Lucky’s taste beats all the rest becauseL.S./M.F.T.—Lucky Strike means fine tobacco:TOBACCO ANO TASTE TOO FINE TO FILTER!Qa. r. c«- /Product of <J/v& Jf/rrusidran <Jo&iceo — rjofnifxcr is our middle■• • •. . Y.V.V.V V V. .*.*• « L OaXlVOtt vW. '•16 *• C.HJ.CACO MAROON *, Ocfrber,j6..)9g>. Now thatyou’re onyour own...You’ll need a complete and authori¬tative dictionary to help you in yourcollege work. There are 10 reasqn*for insisting on Webster’s NewCollegiate Dictionary, the Merriam-Webster.1. Only Merriam-Webster is basedon the unabridged Webster’sNew International Dictionary,Second Edition.2. Only Merriam-Webster meetsthe detailed requirements of col¬lege students.3. Only Merriam-Webster gives thetechnical Latin names for plants,animals.4. Only Merriam-Webster is basedon complete records of the wayEnglish is spoken and written.5. Only Merriam-Webster is keptup to date by a large staff ofspecialists.6. Only Merriam-Webster presentsdefinitions in the historical order,essential to understanding com¬plete meaning.7. Only Merriam-Webster gives youextensive cross-referencing.8. Only Merriam-Webster, withseparate biographical and geo¬graphical sections, keeps entriesas accurate and complete as theyshould be.9. Only Merriam-Webster meetsthe one-hand test; easy to useand carry.lO. Only Merriam-Webster is baseuon continuing word research.Get Webster’s New Collegiate Dic¬tionary — the Merriam-Webster —today! $5 plain, $6 indexed. Advt.copyright by G. & C. Merriam Co.,Springfield 2, Massachusetts.INSIST ONMERRIAM-WEBSTERAND DISCOVER THE DlfFERENCE• Maroon classifieds •C~ - *-/-,!« Babysit occasionally for room and board IcrOl Sale and help with children. 73rd and Phil- rCTSOnOlSlips. 1 block from IC. SA 1-8971.Hyde Park Residencelively 4-bedrm., 2*/2 bath, brick homelor $22,500. Cmply. mod. with elec,inrh 220 wiring. Brick garage A; fencediird Call Mrs. Redfern, HY 3-2215.C w. Hoff A Co., Inc.Co-op Apt. For Saleu of C. Lge., light, 4-rm„ sunoorrh Mod. kit. Mod. Ass.—$38.50. Mgt.Hoard approval adult couple. Somefurniture to sell. Price $7,500. CheaperIf all cash. MI 3-1120.Wal. table. 36 in.; uph. chair; drapes,etc. Very cheap. RE 4-3539.For rent1 iii-2-3 rm. furnished apts. Reason¬able' Near University of Chicago. 6107Dorchester. PL 2-9641.Attractive, modern 6-rm. apt. now avail¬able. 7711 East End Ave. RE 1-0497. Furnished apt. for 3 or 4 Grad studentsor interns. U of C neighborhood. C. W.Hoff and Co., Inc. HY 3-2215.2 working girls to share furnished housewith same. C. W. Hoff and Co., Inc.HY 3-2215.Basement rm., with priv. bath In pro¬fessor’s home. DO 3-3710.For male student. Small room, privatebath. PL 2-1667 any time.ServicesPIANO LESSONS? Experienced maleteacher available. University area. Mas¬ter of Music degree. Excellent references.Children a specialty. Ph. PL 2-2787.Creative Writing Workshop(PL 2-83!<)Sewing alterations, hems, etc. Call MU Thanks be to my Loyal(a) DertibcraticPrecinct Captains for favors received.Especially Messrs. Keane, Mundt, Mur¬ray, Sanzenbacher, and—their Brain-trust, Mr. McCarthy. J.Miss the Summer issue of CHICAGOREVIEW? "Existentialism and Litera¬ture,’’ with twelve comprehensive es¬says, Is still available at the UC Book¬store,CHICAGO REVIEW, Autumn issue, ison sale today.Green coffee tastes good like a cup ofcoffee should.Ophelia: Doubt that the sun doth move?Hamlet.Little Girl: Only 34 more shopping days.Old Man.Coffin for sale cheap. Pepel.1404 E. 57th Street2 Rms, $85. See Wernls, DO 3-6921 orEngler, BU 8-1855. Freshly decorated,scml-fiirnlshed apartment, convenientto campus, transportation and shopping,ready to be shared with quiet youngwoman. Call BU 8-0426 after 5:30. 4-3941.Lost and foundLOST: Lady's wallet, pink. Please callHY 3-8619. I wouldn't touch it with a ten-footsyllabus. MomGo to H - - - Bill Bauer!After you Mr. Johnston. New surgery profDr. Duncan Holaday has been appointed Professor of sur¬gery and head of the section of Anesthesia in the departmentof surgery.He was formerly Associate Professor of anesthesiology atColumbia University college of Physicians and Surgeons andAssociate Attending Anesthesiologist at the Presbyterian hos¬pital in New York city.Announcement of Dr. Holaday’sappointment was made by Dr.Lowell T. Coggeshall, dean of theDivision of Biological Sciences.Dr. Holaday was graduatedfrom UC in 1940 and received hisM.D. degree there in 1943. From1947 to 1950 he was an instructorin the Department of Pharma¬cology at Johns Hopkins Univer¬sity, when he was appointed As¬sistant Professor of Anesthesi¬ology at the Columbia UniversityCollege of Physicians and Sur¬geons.He has conducted research inthe effects of various anestheticson the central nervous system andbody functions. Recently he has been concerned with the physi¬ology of the respiratory system.Dr. Holaday’s research accom¬plishments include the develop¬ment of procedures whereby acid-base equilibirum can be moni¬tored during surgery.Dr. Holaday is a member of theAmerican Society of Anesthesi¬ology, the Association of Univer¬sity Anesthetists, the AmericanPhysiology Society and the Amer¬ican Society for Pharmacologyand Experimental Therapeutics.A native of Denver, Colorado,he is 53. Dr. Holaday is married,has five children and resides at5641 South Woodlawn Avenue,Chicago.Coming events on the quadranglesFriday, 16 OctoberLutheran Student group supper, 7:15pm. Chapel house, 5810 Woodlawnavenue. Supper. 6 pm; Interfaithpanel discussion, 7:15 pm. Problemsrelating to social and dating life oncampus.Students for Rockefeller meeting. 7:30pm. South reception lounge, Ida Noyessecond floor. Plans for a Rockefellerdemonstration upon his arrival Octo¬ber 19 will be discussed.llitiel foundation Succoth celebration,7:45 pm. 5715 Woodlawn avenue. Fire¬side Succoth Oneg Shabbat, 8:30 pm.Saturday, 17 OctoberWl'CB-Radio Midway general meeting,2 pm, Mitchell tower studios..Recorder society meeting, 1:30 pm, IdaNoyes East lounge. First meeting; allInterested are Invited to bring Instru¬ments and music.Sunday, 18 OctoberEpiscopal Holy Communion, 9:30 am.Bond chapel.Young People’s Socialist League meet¬ing, 4 pm. Ida Noyes. "The roots ofthe cold war,'* second In a series ofdiscussions on United States foreignpolicy.Episcopal Church supper and discus¬sion, 5:30 pm, Brent house. Speaker:The Reverend William H. Baar, "TheUniversity’s fragmentation and man'sneed."Bridge Club meeting, 7:30 pm. IdaNoyes. Duplicate bridge will be played.Radio broadcast: Faith of our fathers,7:05 am, WGN. The Reverend RabbMinto, chaplain, Stanford University,and the UC choir.Roman Catholic masses, 8:30, 10 and 11am, De Sales house, 5735 Universityavenue.Episcopal Communion service, 8:30 am,Bond chapel.University Religious service, 11 am,Rockefeller Memorial chapel. TheReverend John S. Whale, visiting pro¬fessor of church history. FederatedTheological faculty. Varsity soccer game. 2 pm, Stagg field.UC vs. Purdue university.Carillon concert. 5:30 pm, RockefellerMemorial chapel.Radio broadcast: The sacred note, 8:30pm, WBBM. A program of choral mu¬sic by the UC choir.Calvert club lecture, 4:30 pm. De Saleshouse, 5735 University avenue. TheReverend Anthony Zimmerman speak¬ing on "Overpopulation.”Monday, 19 OctoberArt exhibition, 9 am - 5 pm. Monday-Friday; 1-5 pm. Saturday, throughNovember 14, Goodspeed 108. HaroldHaydon’s mosiac, "The law” and areview of historic masterpieces Incolor plates.Art exhibition, 10 am-5 pm, Monday-Friday, through November 6, UC press,5750 Ellis avenue. Oil and water-colors by Babette Kornbluth.Ilillel foundation study and Interestgroup, 4 pm. 5715 Woodlawn avenue.Seminar, "Moments and Ideas InJudaism,” led by Rabbi MauricePekarsky.Division of Humanities, special facultymeeting, 4:30 pm, Classics 10.Committee on social thought seminar,5:30 pm, Social Science 302. Philos¬opher and author Jaques Marltaln on,Auguste Comte: positivism and hu¬man knowledge.”Ilillel foundation study and interestgroups, 7:30 pm, 5715 Woodlawn ave¬nue. Folk singing led by Rabbi HenrySklrball.Motion picture: Pather Panchall, 8 pm,International house.Glee club rehearsal, 8 pm. Ida Noyestheater. All singers welcome.Tuesday, 20 OctoberSketch class, 7:30 pm. Lexington studio.Live model, students please bringown drawing materials. Instructionwill be given. Charge, 50 cents. Spon¬sored by the department of Humani¬ties.Students for Rockefeller meeting. 7:30pm, South reception lounge, Ida Noyessecond floor. Organization meeting.^ ' foreign car hospital l dimeSA 1-3161dealers in:castrol lubricantslucas electrical partsarmstrong shockspirelli & michelin tiresvandervell bearingsbeck distributors linespecialists m speed tuningcustom engine installationsclutch •gear boxelectricsbrakessuperchargingcustom coachworkbob tester MG psychiatrist Ilillel foundation study and Interestgroups, 4 pm, 5715 Woodlawn avenue.Class in Intermediate Hebrew.Ilillel foundation study and Interestgroups, 4 pm, 5715 Woodlawn avenue.Class in elementary Yiddish.Varsity cross-eountry meet, 4 pm, Wash¬ington Park. UC "B” team vs. Wrightjunior college.Institute for the study of metals, col¬loquium, 4:15 pm, Research institute211. “Fluctuations In the non-equilib¬rium steady state,” Melvin Lax of theBell telephone laboratories.Committee on social thought seminar,5:30 pm. Social Science 302. "AugusteComte: Positivism and human knowl¬edge,” Mr. Maritain.Cap and Gown staff meeting, 7:30 pm,Cap and Gown office, 3rd floor of IdaNoyes hall. First meeting of year. Newmembers welcome.Ilillel foundation study and interestgroups, 7:30 pm, 5715 Woodlawn ave¬nue. Seminar on “Great texts in Juda¬ism” (English) led by Rabbi HehrySklrball.Television series: "All things consid¬ered.” 9:30 pm. WTTW (Channel 11)."History of encylopedias.”Wednesday, 21 OctoberEpiscopal Evensong, 5:05 pm. Bondchapel.Politics club meeting, 7:30 pm. SocialScience 201. Donald Page Moore ofthe American Civil Liberties unionspeaking on, "Civil liberties and thepolice.”University symphony orchestra, re¬hearsal, 8 pm, Ida Noyes theater. Allinstrumentalists welcome.Country dancers, Ida Noyes hall, 8 pm.All dances taught.Parapsychology society general meet¬ing, 8:30 pm, Ida Noyes library.Lecture series: “Know your Chicago,”11 am, (University College), FullertonHall, the Art Institute of Chicago,Michigan and Adams. "Charitas: Theheart of a city,” Edward L. Ryerson,industrialist and civic leader.Divinity school religious service, 11:30am. Bond chapel.Varsity soccer game, 3:45 pm, Staggfield. UC vs. University of Ulinois-Chicago. Ilillel foundation study and interestgroups, 4 pm, 5715 Woodlawn avenue."Great texts In Judaism” (Hebrew),led by Rabbi Maurice Pekarsky.Ilillel foundation Interest and studygroups, 4 pm, 5715 Woodlawn avenue.Elementary Hebrew class.Statistics seminary, 4:15 pm. Eckhart207. “A stochastic modification of theformula of Newton-Cotes.” Leopold K.Schmetterer, director of the Institutefor mathematical statistics, Univer¬sity of Hamburg.Carillon concert, 4:30 pm, RockefellerMemorial chapel. James R. Lawson,Chapel carillonneur.Episcopal Evensong, 5:05 pm, Bondchapel.Ilillel foundation Interest and studygroups, 7:30 pm, 5715 Woodlawn. Folkdancing, led by David Moses.Student forum-debate meeting, 8 pm.Ida Noyes South recreation room.Open to all Interested students.Thursday, 22 OctoberEpiscopal Holy Communion, 11:30 am.Bond chapel.Episcopal Church choir practice, 8 pm,Bond chapel.Student Zionist organization lecture.7:30 pm, Hillel house, 5715 Woodlawnavenue. University college instructorspeaking on, "Merits and demerits ofthe literary work. Exodus.” Questionand discussion period to follow. Instruction in woodcut, etching, andother graphic techniques, 7:30 pm,Lexington studio. Sponsored by thedepartment of Humanities.Episcopal Communion service, 11:30 am,Bond chapel.Hillel foundation study and interestgroups, 12 am, 5715 Woodlawn avenue.Hug Ivri (Hebrew speaking group).Bring your own lunch.Cuptures yourpersonalityas well asyour personNow milh . . . CoronaStudio1314 E. 53rd St.MU 4-7424ITALIAN FIESTA PIZZERIAspaghetti sandwiches:ravioli beef,mostaccioli sausage £r meatballFree Delivery Over $2.00MU 4-9022, 1014, 10151427 Eost 67th st.tAAAXAAAAAAAAAAAAAXAAXAAAAAAAAAAAAAAXAAA'PRE-ELECTRICSHAVE LOTION to got a bottor.»h«v«lQvickor ctoorTff twoothor ; v ^ffranyr.whot jyghjrw you vte-1.00* wirtiw i pi*, kmSHULTON NwYwl • Toronto7215 exchange ave.Chicago so,'IllinoisOctober 16,1959 •* CHICAGO MAkOdX « 171 —UC sponsors harbor tripThe downtown center of UC offers an all day boat trip as a credit course in geography. Thecourse, entitled “Metropolitan Chicago” provides a tour of the Port of Chicago, includes a viewof the Chicago skyline from Lake Michigan, and an exploration of the barge and sanitarycanals around Chicago. The course is offered in fall and in spring; the next tour will be eitheron^Tay 21 or June 4. — - - -Some 80 students took this tour York. Philadelphia, and the IIous- from the bottom of the lake andlast Saturday, leaving at 8:45 amfrom Michigan avenue and theChicago river. Commentator wasHarold Mayer, professor in theUniversity geography departmentand author of The Port of Chi¬cago and the St. Lawrence Sea¬way, a definitive study of thearea.Three types of water-born com¬merce were seen on the 75 miletrip; freighters carrying iron ore,coal, and newsprint, barges of the ton-Galveston area.Mayer explained that the Chi¬cago business district is built on apeninsula, bounded on two sidesby the Chicago River and by Lake used to pad the banks.Beer cans are part of the neces-sary equipment for ships passingthrough the Blue Island lock; in-formation concerning the shipsMichigan on the third. The sky- cargo and passengers is thrownline of the city, viewed from LakeMichigan, presents a surprisinglyuniform outline, because therewere height restrictions in the into the water in a beer can. tobe eventually retrieved by thelock-keeper. This detail was sup¬plied by Mr. Mayer in his effort20’s when many of the sky scrap- to give the passengers a bettorcomprehension of the importanceof water transportation in the do-Present at the annual Chancellor's reception were Chan¬cellor Lawrence A. Kimpton, his wife, Marcia, and Deanof students John P. Netherton, and his wife Ruth. ers were built. Much of the city’sshoreline from the university toMississippi Valley System, and the Grant Park has been created by velopment of Chicago and thecargoes of the Great Lakes Over- fill which has been scooped up Middle West,seas Traffic. Activity of the firsttwo types was limited at the timeof the tour because there weretwo major strikes affecting theport; the steel strike and a strikeon the four largest commercialbarge companies of the Missis¬sippi Valley. However, overseastraffic has been greatly increasedsince the opening of the St. Law¬rence Seaway on April 25, 1959.The Port of Chicago is the busi¬est inland waterway in Americaand has heavier water trafficthan any salt-water port in thecountry except the ports in New Counselors to tourEastern high schoolsTwo UC counselors will make extended trips through theeastern third of the nation to talk with high school studentsand advisers about college life.The counselors are J. Harold Bradley and Robert J. Charles,both of UC’s office of admissions.Bradley’s itinerary, scheduledfor October 19-November 10, willtake him to public, private andparochial schools in Upper NewquaaCL'(SHE COULD BE YOU'>the worlds larges & .. a Lieuten-.she’s an Army officer ml am-^ant in the Women s Army Corps.exciting occupies aOn duty, this^dWgheS^S»"“tonal privileges of an Army°o7L7X^ * sssissiweekend! plus 30 days anm- 1.£^ Qr raake ashe’ll attend evening clas a hoiiday on the F tench,skiing trip to St. Mon P find a world of fun!-Riviera. Whatever site does, i* t u Lo\rg to be I?3Tis. uevenOf course,New York or Los Angeles. she enjoys a feelingBut wherever this young^adygoes,^ ^ ^of individual accomplishme . ^ ihc Women scareer as an executive . • •Army CorpsShe could be you . .; tins young executiveon the Champs Elysces.,q60 ffa-*****Iic coupon, i t«-lC > THE ADJUTANT GENERALDepartment of the ArmyWashington 25. D. C., ATTN: AGSN-LPlease tell me more about a world-traveling,executive career in the Women’s Army Corps.Nam*.Address.City .Zone. .State.College or University.Major .Graduation Class.m ms York state, Massachusetts, Con¬necticut, and Rhode Island. Healso will meet with students inPittsburgh. Pennsylvania.Charles left October 14 on aswing through Missouri, Tennes-see, Georgia, Virginia, Maryland,and Washington, DC.The purpose of the trip is toinform students and high schooladvisers of entrance require-ments and social and cultural op¬portunities at UC. In Bradley’swords;“In the midst of the presentclamor for accelerated education¬al programs, it is gratifying tonote the increasing tendency tobalance the demands of special¬ization with the need to educatethe whole man.“In the College at Chicago italways has been held that theundergraduate years are the timefor gaining a general education.“Our purpose is to identifyamong the nation’s young menand women those qualified andmotivated to make the best ofthis opportunity."Appoint UC manto atomic councilGovernor Stratton has an¬nounced the appointment ofRobert J. Hasterlik to a newlycreated legislative commissionon atomic energy. Dr. Hasterlikis the associate director of theArgonne Cancer Research hos¬pital of the University of Chicago.The eommisison was formed tostudy the social and economic im¬pact of peaceful uses of atomicenergy and radiation. It has a to¬tal of seven members, represent¬ing science and technology, indus¬try, labor, and the insurance busi¬ness.In reference to the value of thegroup, Governor Stratton said,“I cannot overemphasize the im¬portance of such a study group inthese days of rapidly expandingscientific knowledge."The T\ *Disc1367 E. 57th St.Recordof the week•CallasMad ScenesAng 35746$3.99 ►.• CHICAGO MAROON • October 16/1-959SEND YOUR ANSWER IN 25 WORDS OR IESSWIN 4 YEAR WARDROBE261 PRIZES IN ALL1st prize—A famous Botany “500” wardrobeevery year for 4 years (2 Suits. 2 Sport Jack-ets, 2 Pair of Slacks, and 1 Topcoat.)Next 5 prizes—Ultra-precision imported SonyTransistor RadioNext 5 prizes — World-famous pocket sizeMinolta “16” CameraNext 250 prizes—Kaywoodie Campus PipePick up an official entry blank at your regu¬lar tobacco counter, or write KaywoodiePipes, Inc., New York 22, for one,HINTS TO WIN. Why men smoke pipes-There’s a rich, fulfilling, “all's well” feelingthat a man gets only from a pipe. A relaxed,calms-you-down contentment that's associ¬ated exclusively with pipe smoking. And youget alt the pleasure of smoking withoutinhaling.Teams begin practice Sports part, not oil, ofeducation, says AndersonInformal practice sessions in three varsity sports got underway this week, as candidates for Chicago’s swimming, wres¬tling, and basketball teams began limbering up for their1959-60 campaigns. With last because of work and study sched-year’s season records for all three ujesteams showing marked improve- The rising surge of basketballment over recent seasons, optim- fortunes at Chicago will continueism and desire are high in all t0 climb if size, experience, num-three campus as the prospects bers, and talent have any directcondition for more intensive work- bearing on the season’s outcome,outs next week. for joe Stampf welcomed over 25Swimming coach Bill Moyle, hopefuls including 12 previouswhose 1958-59 team rewrote the lettermen and another dozen tal-UC record books, welcomed 15 ented freshmen to the initial prac-swimmers to the first practice, tices at the field house this week,including 9 lettermen. Moyle The cagers will begin intensivehopes to maintain a squad of 20 WOrkouts Monday for their firstwhen the season gets into full dash with Lawrence, on Decern-swing. ber 1.Hopefuls for Donald Bengtson's Athletes interested in gymnas-varsity wrestling squad are re- tics should contact Bob Kreidlerquired to attend three practice for information regarding prac-sessions per week from now until t i c e sessions, and prospectiveOctober 26, when daily workouts fencers are urged to notify Coachgeared to the beginning wrestler Alvar Hermanson before officialwill be held until the end of the workouts begin November 9. Bothall - university intramural wrest- coaches may be contacted at Bart-ling championships. From Novem- lett gym.ber 16, through the end of the Varsity Soccerseason, Bengtson will pull all Chicago’s varsity soccer teamstops in daily practice to build dropped its first match of an-what he hopes to be the finest other rugged season to Indianawrestling squad Chicago has Technical college, 5-2 at Staggboasted in over a decade. Although field last Saturday. Maroon goals13 experienced freshmen have in- were scored by Zoran Sibincicdicatcd an interest in the varsity and Roman Wirsczcuk. Chicagoprogram plus a number of upper- goalie Neeman Taylor was se¬el a s s m e n, Bengtson’s biggest lected the outstanding player forproblem is securing some of the the hosting Maroons by the ref-top grappling talent on campus eree and ITC coach.Why are so many collegemen switching to pipes? KYLE ANDERSON, manager of theUnited States baseball team, left the Univer¬sity of Chicago in nineteen twenty-eight witha bachelor’s degree in geography and a minorin geology. Two years later he was back athis Alma Mater as an important member ofthe university’s coaching staff. In between he spentone summer playing an infrequent second base-man with the Pittsburgh Pirates.Somewhat more successful as a baseball coachthan as a professional player, Anderson begins histhirtieth year with the UC athletic departmentthis fall; during this period Anderson impressedhis personality and his personal philosophy uponhis associates, his students and his department.Anderson when he was a Maroon back.‘There is nothing contradictory about being aserious student and a good athlete,” he insisted.“But, mind you, I said student and athlete, notathlete and student. When it comes to a question ofvalues, well, there is no question. These boys cometo school as students and that’s what they shouldbe, first and foremost.” For Anderson sees the principal values of sportas being achieved, win or lose. He put his feet onthe dormatory bed and explained, “these valuesare achieved as long as the game is enjoyed, winor lose, and if my team didn’t enjoy playing evenwhen they lost, it would be much harder fieldinga squad.”What are these values? He elucidated: one isthe sheer fun of participation, the exhilaration,the camaraderie, the friendships made inevitablewhen nine young men are acting in concert. Theother is a process of self-education, self-realization,self-discipline.“These same good effects develop from manyother activities too. Sports do have one specialdrawing card though, their immediacy. Athleticshave quick results. As soon as the game’s overyou know how you’ve done; even before the gameis finished you know how well you’re doing.“Our place is not in the Big Ten,” he digressed.(Chicago by its own action dropped out of theWestern Intercollegiate conference in 1946 on thegrounds that it was no longer able to provideadequate competition. UC had abandoned inter¬collegiate football seven years earlier in 1939).“Had we an undergraduate enrollment of 20,000students, yes I’d want back in; but we don’t, wehave two thousand undergrads.“The only real job we have is providing all theopportunities students want to utilize. I hope we’redoing that.”Anderson is somewhat of a living example ofhis own philosophy. The soft-spoken genial manwas extremely active, and on sound testimonyfrom other sources, well-liked as an undergraduate.He was a member of all three of the university’ssecret honorary societies, he was treasurer of hisclass one year, and a member of the varsity foot¬ball team for three years, and a member of thebaseball team for an equal number of years. In1926 he was all conference halfback, and a similarbaseball honor was awarded him the followingyear.“Sports, and the other extracurricular activitiestoo, give a balance to college life. It’s mentally aswell as physically refreshing.” He went on to pro¬pose that participation qua participation is perhapseven more important than the event participatedin.“There is a real danger here, and that is going‘crazy’ about an activity, shooting off on a wildtangent and sacrificing more important things forthe benefit of something, well, something moreephemeral. I wouldn’t like to think that we’vewon any ball games because my boys have losttheir grade averages.” With some pleasure Ander¬son proffered the information that textbooks areuniversal reading matter on all ball trips.The lean man with a rather weathered face wassomewhat bitter about certain common attitudesamong coaches. He told of one would-be ball playerhe once coached, a young man who had been kickedoff his high school team for misjudging a fly ball.“This fellow wanted to play ball more than al¬most anyone I’ve ever known. All winter long he’dcome into my office and say, ‘C’mon coach, catchme,’ and we’d go out to the field house and hewould practice pitching. You know, that boy turnedinto one of the finest pitchers I’ve ever been luckyenough to have. But he had been kicked off hishigh school team.“Well,” he went on, “there are more importantthings than winning. There’s a certain somethingabout young men which makes them want to testtheir mettle, to prove their wares. My job is togive them the chance to do this, that means to allthe young men who want it. I’m not going to refuseto coach anybody just because they misjudged afly ball.” There was a strong note of distaste inAnderson’s voice.The obvious candor with which the fifty-year-oldcoach spoke left no room for cant as he explainedhis philosophy of winning. No pretense was madethat “winning” didn’t matter. He pointed out thateveryone likes to do well and the better one’s per¬formance the more one enjoys performing. YetAnderson has coached his way through disastrousseasons and never regarded his exertions as wastedor futile.Trip dates set by Outing clubAfter one year of trying to establish himselfas a pro baseball player, Anderson returned tothe city of Chicago to work. At this time thefamous coach Fritz Crisler was wavering betweenstaying at Chicago and accepting a position atMichigan. Amos Alonzo Stagg, then head of theUC athletic department wanted Anderson if hecouldn’t have Crisler, and in 1930 Anderson washired as assistant football coach and freshmanbasketball and baseball coach.At this time the UC baseball team gave anexhibition tour in Japan every five years. Andersonhad missed the 1925 trip because he was playingfootball; he now missed the 1930 trip because hewas coaching football. In 1934 he was appointedcoach of the varsity baseball team.Campus Bulldog Campus BilliardCHOOSE YOUR KAYWOODIEfrom the famous campus collection .. .*4.95 Kyle AndersonWhy pipe smokerschoose KAY WOOD/EKaywoodie Briar 1$ imported, aged,selected, hand crafted, handrubbed, tested, inspected, andonly then does it earn the covetedKaywoodie Cloverleaf. That’s whyKaywoodie hefts airily light; alwayssmokes cool and sweet. The exclu¬sive Drinkless Fitment inside thepipe condenses tars, moisture andirritants as nothing else can. Trya Kaywoodie. One puff is worth1,000 words.other styles and shapes *5 to *50Custom Gra'nPrince of Wales J10KAYWOODIEaccents the male look The UC Outing club has sched¬uled two trips for the fall quarter.On October 23 the club will go toBrown County state park, Indiana,for a week-end of camping, hik¬ing, and horseback riding. Thefollowing Sunday (November 1)the club will explore the PalosPark forest preserve in Cookcounty. All UC students, alumni,and faculty members and otherinterested persons are invited toparticipate. Complete informationon both trips can be obtainedfrom campus bulletin boards or by calling Harold Lucas, PL 2-4960, after 6 pm. UC studentsunder 21 years of age must se¬cure release forms from the Stu¬dent Activities office before 5 pm,Monday, October 19.The UC Outing club is lookingfor qualified persons to lead skitrips for the coming season. Inreturn for organizing a chartered-bus trip of thirty-five skiers, thegroup leader will have his food,transportation, lodging, and towfees paid for by the club. Toqualify for leadership, persons must be at least 21 years old,skilled skiers, and have someknowledge of the area for whichthe trip is planned. Previous lead¬ership experience is desirable, butnot essential. UC students, alum¬ni, and employees will be givenfirst preference. Interest in ski¬ing on the campus is sufficient tojustify three or four weekendtrips to local areas and week-long trips for both fall and winterinterims. Applicants should con¬tact the president of the Outingclub, Harold Lucas, at PL 2-4960.20 • CHICAGO MAROON • October 16, 1959Frank Seno: The man and the legendby Bill SpadyThroughout the records ofniodern history, one finds ac¬counts of men who throughgreat personal sacrifice, de¬termination, hard work, andseemingly super-humanamounts of energy and desire,have achieved fame. Their deedshave been recorded in the volumesof history and in biographies, andare frequently revealed to us to¬day in movies, plays, novels, andmagazine articles. They stand aspersonifications of the humanideal: men who have surmountedprodigious obstacles to attaingoals which few mortals arc evencapable of approaching. We as apeople have recognized theirgreatness and have aspired to thepermanent example which theyhave left for us.Unfortunately, not all who de¬serve lasting fame and greatnessreceive their just rewards. Manyare mercilessly forgotten. Theirdeeds are recorded not in books played football under Amos Alan-zo Stagg for two years. In theseinitial two years of unhamperedathletic competition under thewatchful eye of the “Grand OldMan,” Frank became one of theoutstanding running backs in col¬legiate football.Then tragedy struck again. Dur¬ing the spring of his sophomoreyear at COP, Frank’s motherpassed away, and he was forcedto quit school to support hisyounger brothers and sisters.Upon a recommendation fromStagg, Frank was hired by theChicago Cardinals of the profes¬sional football league. With thechance of earning enough to sup¬port his family and playing foot¬ball at the same time, Frankeagerly joined the Cardinal, de¬termined to make good in the progame.His first three years with theCardinals were great years. Hisrunning ability was the talk ofthe league, and his speed and during the bone-crushing actionof the first quarter, and was kepton the bench until the final threeminutes of the game. When theGiants tallied against the waningCardinal line to take a 42-7 lead,Seno pleaded to enter the gameagainst the tremendous odds.and histories, but in the heartsand minds of their contemporar¬ies. But through the inadequacyof men’s minds, these deeds ofvalor and chivalry are oftensuperseded by more spurious andtrivial matters until they are com¬pletely forgotten.Such is the story of FrankSeno, a man who only a littleover a decade ago was recognizedas one of the great heroes ofAmerica. His life was a collectionof misfortunes and disasterswhich would have abrogated thecourage and insight of many ofthe greatest figures of our era,yet Frank Seno was able to con¬tinue, to fight back, and finallyto achieve the goal of all greatmen: to achieve something whichno other human being had everaccomplished.Frank Seno was born in 1923in a mining settlement in Califor¬nia, the fourth child of a familyof eleven, llis father died whenhe was very young, and Frankwas compelled to put in longhours to Help support his motherand 10 brothers and sisters. Thenthe next of several significanttragedies struck: Frank wasstricken with polio. His familywas forced to move to San Fran¬cisco in an attempt to obtainmedical care for him. After lyinghelpless for 3 months, Frank be¬gan the arduous struggle to re¬gain his strength and coordina¬tion. After a period of two yearslie was able to walk normallyagain, and he resumed his school¬ing and work. His determinationand spirit were not manifestedin any conventional way, for bythe time he reached the age of13, he had established himselfamong his peers as an exceptionalathlete.After sieges of the mumps andchicken pox, a broken arm anda stomach disorder furtherplagued his high school athleticcareer. At the age of 18 he enteredCollege of the Pacific where he adroit fakes and cuts made him anightmare for opposing tacklers.Frank Seno was approaching hisgreatest moment.On a rain drenched field of mudat the Polo Grounds in New Yorkcity on a dark and chilly October Frank stood on the goal line,ankle deep in mud as a heavysnowfall began, waiting for theGiant kickoff. The icy wind blewinto his face as he watched theball arch high into the blindingswirls of snow. He backed up two,throe, four stops, opened his arms,and caught the slippery ball asit plummeted toward the ground.At that instant Frank began themost memorable run in the his¬tory of football. From four yardsdeep in the end zone later (biasedNew York officials called it three)Frank began to run, the coldheavy mud clinging to his feet.Behind pitiable blocking he head¬ed up field toward the superlativeGiant tacklers.He ran, and feinted, and cut,slipped away from three tacklersand kept running. The snow fellharder, the wind grew icier, andhis blocking ceased altogether,but still Frank kept running. Atmidfield he reversed his field forthe third time, nearly trippingin the snow covered mud, but heonly thought of the goal lineahead.As he ran he stiff-armed sev¬eral would-be tacklers with hisinjured arm; only thirty moreyards. He angled for the sidelineas three Giants closed in. Hedodged one, slipped away from thesecond, but was solidly jarred bythe third on the five yard line.Frank Seno, the man, churninghis legs and struggling with everyounce of power in his numb body20, 1946, Frank Seno the man be¬came a legend. The Giants ranwild that day, and they led theCards 35-7 in the closing minutesof the game. Seno had receiveda badly torn tendon in his armGet Them Hot otNIGKYSPIZZERIA1235 E. 551 b UNIVERSITYBARBER SHOP1453 E. 57fhFine haitcuttingFour barbers workingLadies' haircuttingFloyd C. ArnoldProprietor tripped and fell into the endzonewith the final Giant tackierclutching his legs in vain. FrankSeno had run farther in one playthan any other player in the his¬tory of the game. His run washeralded throughout America asthe greatest achievement in thehistory of football. Against im¬possible odds, Frank Seno had ac¬complished the impossible.In the very next game, theblossoming career of Frank Senocame to an end. In a disputedplay, he was deliberately kickedin the small of the back by anopposing lineman, and he suffereda lacerated kidney as a result.With his football career over,Frank was soon forgotten by theaverage football fan. He marriedand settled down in a small townnear Chicago where he was rec¬ognized as a national hero. Butthe chain of misfortunes whichhe had never been able to avertdealt his greatest blow.One week before the tenth anni¬versary of Frank’s epoch makingrun, his record of 103 yards wasbroken by A1 Charmichael of theGreen Bay Packers, who accord¬ing to game officials (the mayorand city council of Green Bay)returned a kickoff 105 yardsagainst a defenseless PittsburghSteeler team just as the final gunsounded. As the players turnedto leave the field, certain that thegame was officially over, Char¬michael grabbed the loose ball inthe endzone and casually beganwalking toward the other end ofthe field. He reached the otherendzone untouched, and thecrooked officials allowed the At this time, plans were almostcompleted for a huge tenth anni¬versary party. A large cake hadbeen ordered with a diagram ofFrank’s run outlined in frosting.An uncle in California had mort¬gaged his home just to attend.Townspeople had donated hun¬dreds of hours of time decoratingMain Street. Now all their efforthad become futile. Frank had be¬come a nobody.In grief he turned to drink, andhis business went bankrupt with¬in a month. His wife and childrenbecame social outcasts. To getaway from the constant insultsof ex-friends, Frank left home.He traveled all the way to GreenBay on foot determined to rectifyinjustice done to him. City offi¬cials would not give him an audi¬ence, so he wandered aimlesslyaround the midwest looking forwork. He worked for a time ashouse man at Psi Upsilon Frater¬nity at the University of Chicago,and was last seen hitch - hikingthrough Livingston, Montana, re¬portedly on his way to Oregon.To most selfish Americans,Frank Seno never existed, but toan annually increasing number ofpeople on this campus Frank Senois a man whose noble deeds shallnever be frogotten. His run standsas a milestone in American sports,and this Sunday, October 18, atStagg Field the fourth annualFrank Spno Memorial Run will bereinacted by those who have rec¬ognized the greatness and signi¬ficance of Frank’s accomplish¬ment. Preliminary ceremonieswill be held at 2:00, with the Runto follow during half time of theChicago-Purdue soccer match.UC cross country loses toEastern Michigan, 18 to 45The University of Chicagocross country team was out¬run by the horses of EasternMichigan, 18-45 in Ypsilanti,Saturday October 10th.Preston Grant, second yearstudent, prevented an EasternMichigan sweep of the first 5places by finishing in 3rd place.Grant covered the 3 mile run overthe hilly course in 16:47.Bud Perschke, Patrick Palmer,a first year student from Lan¬sing, Michigan, Dave Houk andTom Clarke completed the scor¬ing for the Maroons by finishing 9th, 10th, IJth and 12th respec¬tively.Coach Ted Hay don’s commentwas that, “Grant ran a fine racefinishing strong to outsprint the3rd and 4th Eastern Michiganmen. Perschke and Palmershowed good improvement overlast week (when we lost to De-Paul, 36-22.). Houk, Clarke Gary,Augustine and Dennis Rusehewent the distance after only onewek’s practice. The course wasmore hilly than Washington Park.It was a satisfactory meet interms of general team improve¬ment.”Maitland GriffithWILOROOT CREAM OilKEEPS HAIR GROOMED LONGER!MAKES HAIR FEEL STRONGER!"Surface”Hair Tonics PenetratingWildroot Cream-Oil"Surface’* hair tonics merely coat yourhair. When they dry off, your hair driesout. But the exclusive Wildroot Cream-Oilformula penetrates your hair. Keeps hairgroomed longer... makes hair feel strongerthan hair groomed an ordinary way.There’s no other hair tonic formula like it.MAKE HAiR OBEY ALL DAYWITH WILDROOT CREAM-OILIOctober 16, 1959 • CHICAGO MAROON • 21I Culture VultureSpeaking of culture, whathas happened to the bagpiperswho used to play in front ofReynolds club? Last spring,they skirled gloriously, butnow, they don't even drone dis¬mally. The Scots are terriblystingy with their music thisfall. Anna Russell suggests put¬ting molasses in the bag, andif such is the case, the coldhas probably turned it to gin¬gerbread. And speaking ofbeing Scotch, let us also be par-siminous about introductionand get on with the culture.On campusTheatreUniversity theatre has becomeSlavically interested in cemete¬ries. In its fall production, Pepel,i li e Unburied Russian, by J i mDamico, the winner of the Sergelldrama prize, UT will expose thecorruption and graft of cemeteryofficials under the one-party sys¬tem in Russia. The play has beenscheduled for performance inearly November in Mandel hall.The Chalk Carden can still beseen and discussed over coffee inJohn Wollman hall on 57th streetthis Saturday and Sunday at 8pm. From all accounts, it is acomedy of British middle classmorals and manners, but it con¬tains an underlying serious theme.This is the first in a series offive productions by the Companyof Four, a new Hyde Park d^amagroup.MusicThe first of six University Con¬certs will make its hallowed andmuch halooed appearance nextFriday in Mandel hall. The per¬formers of the evening are theMasterplayers of Lugano, an en¬semble of twenty string and windplayers from Lugano, Switzer¬land. The Masterplayers will pre¬sent Handel’s concerto, “Alexan¬der’s Feast,” Mozart’s “Symphonyin A major” and three other works. University concerts willalso sponsor the appearance ofthe Alfred Deller trio, two quar¬tet groups, the Netherlands Cham¬ber choir, and Levins and Mc-Graw, duo pianists. Tickets canbe obtained at the music depart¬ment and at the door.Motion picturesInternational house’s moviethis week is Pat her Panrhali, anIndian-made film. All the blurbssay that it’s a luminous revelationof Indian life and language thatall can understand.” Now, wheth¬er or notihis is like all movie ads,and means nothing at all, Ihaven’t the faintest idea. All Icould find out about it was thatit centers around family life inan Indian village. The chief char¬acter is the brahmin father whocollects rents and writes poetrythat is never published. It has,and I quote, “scenes of povertyand death, and wonderful shots ofwater butterflies.” The Int housemovies are always Monday nightin the East lounge at 7 and 9 pm.It is a horrible thought that thisphrase or its exact equivalent willbe in Culture Vulture for as longas the Maroon and Int house shalllast, till death do them part.But at last, there is a break inthe monotony of dates and places.Next week’s Doc Films’ moviewill be in Judd 126 for a change..Instead of the usual unrelateddocumentaries, Doc Films is hav¬ing a German series this year, anhistorical survey of German filmsfrom 1919 to 1946 based on Sieg¬fried Kraeauer’s book From Cali-gari to Hitler. Bob Williams, amember of the group, explainedthat “In his book, Kracauer ad¬vances the hypothesis that the de¬velopment of the German mindfrom the First World war to therise of H i 11 e r can be tracedthrough films. The politicalstruggle between anarchy andauthority is strongly reflected incertain outstanding Germanfilms.” This week’s film is Va¬riety. Made in France, it tells the story of a year in a French peas¬ant family. Next Friday’s movieis The Cabinet of Dr. Caligari.The blurb for this one says “sus¬pense with an expressionist back¬ground,” whatever that is. Thefilm starts at 7:15 and 9:15 pm inSocial Sciences 122; admission isfifty cents.Joseph Lockett, an American-born pianist, will present a pro¬gram of Bach, Chopin, and Liszton the afternoon of October 25.He has had engagements in NewYork and Washington and hasgiven recitals at Tuskegee Insti¬tute. Admission is $1.65.MoviesBurton-Judson is showing Rif-ifi tonight, a superb crime story.Actually, it is the case history ofa robbery, picturing in detail, theplanning, execution, and after-math of the burglary. The filmwas made in France, but the dia¬logue is in English. The thirty-five minutes of complete silenceduring the robbery makes this oneof the most tense, exciting, thrill¬ers ever produced. Rififi will beshown twice, at 8 and 10 pm inJudson dining hall; the admissionis 40c.LecturesRichard M. Stevens is present¬ing all the campus camera bugswith an hour of colored slides nextThursday at 8 pm in the Inthouse homerooms. His lecture,Color photography can be fun,will cover all types of slides andcolor technique in photography,illustrated by 175 slides. Admis¬sion free.Off campusTheatreThere is really nothing new inthe Loop that is readily accessible,but Arthur Koestler’s Darkness atNoon at the Athenaeum closesthis Sunday, and Sunrise at Cam-pobello, playing at the Blackstonehas only 16 more days to go. WestSide Story at the Erlanger andThe Music Man at the Shubertwill run forever, or at least long enough for all of Illinois to seethem, so all the last paragraph isfor us to tell you that they arestill extantMusicTomorrow night, the ChicagoSymphony Orchestra, conductedby Walter Hendl, will give a pro¬gram consisting of William Wal¬ton, Schumann, Prokofieff, andRavel. The next Thursday and Fri¬day will see Fritz Reiner back onthe podium conducting Stravin-ski’s Mavra, and Respighi’s Pinesand Fountains of Rome.The Opera this week is La Ce-nerentola, Rossini’s fairyless taleof Cinderella. In the place of thefairy godmother, there is Alin-doro, a philosophic person and afriend of the prince, and insteadof a stepmother, Rossini added astepfather, someone rather likeMoliere’s bourgeois gentilhomme.Cinderella herself is still mistreat¬ ed by her stepsisters in this tale,but she does not long to go to theball, and she is not the one whoindulges in the comic disguisesloved by all opera composers. Itis the prince who comes to seeher, dressed as a lackey. In otherwords, everything in this versionis turned upside down, and theonly thing that remains of theregular story is the happy ending.It opens Saturday night at 8:30at the Lyric.The Pro Musica society seemsto have metamorphosized into thePro Musica Strings for their firstconcert October 20 at 8:30. Theywill premier works by Toru Take-mitsu, Heitor Tosar, and HansWerner Henze. Single admissionis $3.00 at the door, which is to befound, strangely enough, in frontof the building at 109 E. Ontario.RadioSixteen harpsichord recitals byWanda Landowska will be broad¬cast by WFMT during the monthof October. The opening presenta¬tion, tomorrow night at 7:30 willbe the first five preludes andfugues from the Well-TemperedClavier. The series includes theGoldberg Variations, the ItalianConcerto, the Chromatic Fantasy,the Fugue in D minor, and all 48sections of the Well - TemperedClavier.LecturesBig Table sponsors the beatpoet Lawrence Ferlinghetti in areading of his own poetry, ConeyIsland of the Mind, tonight at 8:30in the Oriental Theatre building,32 W. Randolph. Regular admis¬sion, $1.50, students $1.uUiC A? S3 1*0yde park theatre Student rate 65cupon presentation of ID cardExhibit to open SundayOpening Sunday, October 18, from 3 until 6 pm, will be the first of regularly scheduledmonthly exhibitions sponsored by the Renaissance society, an organization founded in 1915“to advance an understanding and appreciation of art in all its forms.” The exhibition willbe centered around The Law, Harold Haydon’s mosaic for Temple Beth-El, Gary, Indiana.The Law consists of colored rr~~z —~tesserae, depicting important mailing list and receive notifica- Haydon will demonstrate some ofJewish religious symbols against tion of all cultural and social h]e mosaic technique and discussthe outline of Gary factory build- events connected with the Renais- his wrork.ings. According to Mrs. Francis sauce society. These events are On^ of the highlights of theBiesel, the supervisor of Renais- many and varied, consisting not year in the Society's activities issauce society activities, it is prob- only of exhibitions in the plastic the annual art display and saleably the most important work and graphic arts, but to a varying entitled “Contemporary Art foramong the few modern mosaics degree of lecturer, recitals, and Young Collectors.” This year thethat have been done. him showings. Some visitors in sale will run from November 28Together with The Law there the past have been Prokofiev, to December 16. Art objects bywill be a display of colored prints Bernstein, Chagall, Tillich, and reputable artists will be for sale,of historic masterpieces in the mo- Anthony Tudor. ranging in price from a minimumsaic medium. The fee for joining is $1.00. $5 to a maximum of $75.Students are invited to attend This year, the two initial lec-the tea that is customarily held tures will be related to the exhibi-on the opening day of an exhibi- tion. On October 28, at 4:30 p.m.,tion in the galleries of the Renais- Bertha H. Wiles, assistant pro¬vince society, located on the first fessor of art, will speak on thefloor of Goodspeed Hall. Although topic “Mosaic: A history of theduring the first two days of an medium.” She will discuss the his-pxhibition the staff may be too toric mosaics pictured in thebusy to enlist new members, at colored prints of the. exhibition,other times students may go the Her lecture will give somewhatgallery office to join or to receive of a background to the one shortlyinformative literature about the following on November 5, at 8:00society’s activities. pm, entitled “Mosaic: A demon-The advantage of membership stration with special reference toIs that members are placed on a The Law.” In this lecture, Dr.ORCHESTRA HALL TONIGHT, 8:30 P.M.America's Greatest Folk SingerSEEGEIN A COMPLETELY NEW PROGRAMTICKETS: $3.65, 3.20, 2.50, 1.75TICKETS AVAILABLE: Orchestra Hall Box Olllce, 220 S. Michiganand The Disc, 1367 E. 57thPresented by TRIANGLE PRODUCTIONS in association withALBERT B. GROSSMAN, CONCERTS, INC. Have a WORLD of FUN!Travel with tITA27th Years Orient43-65 Omyt$998Many lovtt intlvtftco/ftg* (ttdilAlso low-cost trips to Mexico$169 up. South America $699 up,Hawaii Study Tour $59i up ortdAround the World $1l9t up.^ Ask Your Travel Agent337 U. tli(ki|on An.CImage 4. NA 7 755/ HELD OVER!Bosley Crowther:New York Times: “The picture is o triumph. A truly incrediblecast of well-nigh flawless British players assist Mr. Guinness in givingform to one of the most incisive pictures of on artist ever made."Time Magazine: “A wizard's brew, that may be too much for theaverage moviegoer's blood. Guinness, of course, is a howl as JoyceCary's gutter genius, Isulley Jimson — that wheezing, hawking merryold soak — sporting a fortnight's grizzle, along with “eyes like apair of half-sucked acid drops," and a horrendously comic walk."Life Magazine: “Guinness adds art to uproar — and leaves viewerslaughter-happy, with a howling disrespect for the respectable."— and —\\ Danny Kaye Louis ArmstrongTHE FIVE PENNIES n“Sidemen Danny Kaye and Louis Armstrong hove a ball . . . Satchmois almost worth the price of admission. At 59 he still grins, gravelsand blasts away on the trumpet with enormous energy. And ComedionKaye, when the script gives him a chance, does mimic wonders."—Time magazine.Starts Next:D. H. Lawrence's\\ Lady Chatterly's Lover"Daniel Darrieux Lee Germend introducing Erno Crist— and —Ingrid Bergman’s first great film masterpieceUWORLD TRAVEL TORMENTstarringMai Zetterling IFOctober If, 1 ?59 •.. C H' L£ A GO; M A ft Q $ N _ • 23