University of Chicago, November 13, 1959LAK announces tuifionraise again next year“The tree,** victim of thepranks of Halloween vandals,has Ijeen restored to its placeof honor outside Woodworth’sbookstore.The tree, which has been rapid¬ly decaying lor the past severalyears, was set in a base of con¬crete and is expected to survive —■, photo by Carsonfor another few years. Despitemany financial offerings to payfor the tree's rehabilitation. Wood-worth’s decided to pay the ex¬pense themselves.The 44 year-old landmark, serv¬ing as a communal bulletin boardfor notices of every description,was overturned October 30. • “Tuition will be up again nextyear, I’m sorry to say,” statedChancellor Lawrence A. Kimpton.The Chancellor was not yet pre¬pared to announce the extent ofthe increase, but did explain thatit would affect both graduates andundergraduates.There will be no increase in the$20 general-service fee, Vice-chan¬cellor John Kirkpatrick an¬nounced.Precise figures on the natureof the increase will be announcednext week. Kirkpatrick is current¬ly preparing a financial explana¬tion of the necessity of the in¬crease.Chancellor Kimpton and Vice-president R. Wendell Harrisonare currently meeting with thedeans of the various divisions andschools to iron out final details.Precise information will have towait until these conferences areover, explained John P. Netherton,dean of students.“Raising tuition is a painfulprocess for all of us,” the Chan-UC to open its laboratoriesto 1,000 high school studentsThe University opens its laboratories to 1,000 high school students from four midwestemstates tomorrow in the fifth Annual Science Open House.Students will learn of advances in science in the United States and in Russia from Uni¬versity faculty in a science fair atmosphere designed to show them the excitement of scien¬tific investigation.Warren C. Johnson, vice-president of the University in charge of special scientific pro¬grams, said the science openhouse is staged to generate teenage interest in science.The open house will begin at1:15 pm in Mandel hall. John A.Simpson, director of the Univer- cellor commented. “It is one of thelast ways we consider for bolster¬ing our income. But there aretimes when there is no alterna¬tive.”The question of increased tui¬tion has been discussed for sometime. The decision was reachedtwo weeks ago at the annual Lake¬side conference of trustees and ad¬ministrators.Tuition has increased some twohundred per cent in the past fif¬teen years. It had stood at a con¬stant $100 a quarter from 1935 to1944 45. Since then it has been in¬creased almost annually: $110 in1945-46, $140 the next year, and$150 the year after that.Tuition was $165 per quarter in1948, $180 in 1950 and an even$200 in 1951-52. The following yeara tuition rate of $230 was estab¬lished, a rate which held until 1958when it was raised $50 per quar¬ter. Last year it was increased to$300 per quarter. These figures donot include the recently estab¬lished $20 general-service fee.“Further increases seem ines¬capable,” the Chancellor has com¬mented. In a speech delivered yes¬terday to the Association of LandGrant colleges, Kimpton predict¬ed that tuition would probably betwo thousand dollars a year, sevenor eight years from now, (Thespeech is printed in its entirety onpage 5.)On another occasion, Kimptonhas predicted that by 1975 tuitionat UC would be in the neighbor¬hood of $2500. “There is nothingwe can do about it,” Kirkpatrickacknowledged. “We are as unhap¬py about the increase as is thestudent body."“Tuition here is still lower thanat most schools,” Netherton point-produce custom-made laboratory Michigan, Indiana and Wisconsin.Admission is by ticket only.5. Division of living cells underthe altering influence of ultra¬violet radiation.6. Demonstrations of glass«iiy of Cosmic Radiation Research blowing techniques used to schools %viil come from'"Illinois]group, will report on the Explor ‘ - . .et VI “paddlewheel” satellite, and eaujDrtM»ntdisplay the complex electronic de- H vvwte. used to monitor radiationstriking the satellite.Pi;ofessor Marcel Schein, direc¬tor of the University Laboratoryfor High Energy Physics and Cos¬mic Radiation, will speak on Rus¬sian progress in the study of cos¬mic rays. He will show a film ofhis September 4th record cosmicray balloon experiment, and willalso exhibit the aluminum gondolato be used early next year for ama jor cosmic ray balloon flight.Professor L. Anderson, directoror the University of Chicago En¬rico Fermi Institute for Nuclearstudies, will describe Soviet workWith atom smashers and othertools of high energy physics.Richard H. Dalitz, prdfessor ofphysics, will describe Soviet edu¬cation in physics.. .Laboratory demonstrations andtours for the youngsters to be con¬ducted in the Research Institute'sbuilding, 5640 South Ellis ave.,will include:1 A look at the University atomsmasher, a 450 million electronvolt synchrocyclotron.2. Melting of metals with in¬visible, high frequency radioWaves. ’ •3. Strange behavior of mate¬rials at a temperature of 452 de¬grees below zero Fahrenheit.4. A magnet supported in air*** invisible columns of magnetic*ner gy. •; ’• ed out. At Harvard it is $1259.Yale charges $1400. At Princeton,tuition and fees cost $1450. Tuitionat Swarthmore runs $1150. AtStanford the cost is $1005.The increased tuition schedulewill probably place us ahead ofNorthwestern university in totalcost, Netherton acknowledged.Among the problems left tosolve are what prices shall be setfor single-course and two-courseregistration. Also tuition sched¬ules must be set for the medicalschool and the divinity school. Atthe moment, tuition in the divinityschool is under the average cost;while the school of medicinecharges $1000 a year plus fees.London to soloat choir festivalGeorge London, bass-bari¬tone of the MetropolitaaOpera company, will sing withthe University choir under th«direction of Richard VikstrontSunday at 3 pm in Rockefellerchapel.London is guest soloist for thechoir's Brahms’ festival. The pro¬gram will include Brahms’ “AGerman Requiem,” “The FourSerious Songs,” and “Naenie."The choir will present Hander*The Messiah December 13, Bach’e“A Christmas Oratorio" Decem¬ber 27, and “St. John Passion,*April 10.The 45 voices of the choir aredirected by Richard Vikstrom.Also participating in the concert#are members of the Chicago Sym-phmony orchestra and UC organ¬ist Heinrich Fleischer.7. Test tube creation of syn¬thetic materials.Selected students and their sci¬ence teachers and principals frompublic, private, and parochial high Hutchins to speakat law conferenceRobert Maynard Hutchins, former UC chancellor, will be aguest of the University next Wednesday. He will speak atthe conference on “Power and responsibility” sponsored bythe law school.According to James Ratcliffe,assistant dean of the Law school,the conference will deal with “therole of the law in defining thelimits of various power groups Alchian, on “Assumptions of Eco¬nomics”; Peter Odegard, profes¬sor of political science at the Uni¬versity of California at Berkeleyin society. This is the second of on “Response of political order”fthree conferences marking the James Wiggins, executive editornew law school’s ‘dedicatoryyear.’ ”Admission to the conference, of the Washington Post, and pres¬ident of the American society ofnews editors, speaking on “Th#to be held in the main lounge of position of the press ”; Wilburthe new law building, is open toeveryone. The conference will be¬gin at 10 am.Ratcliffe said, “I doubt that stu¬dents will individually be able tomeet with Hutchins, as he hasinformed us that he has other en¬gagements the same day. Katz, James Parker Hall profes-sor of law at UC, speaking oa“Power and the modern corpora-tion”; Paul Hayes of the Colunvbia law school, speaking on “Posi¬tion of labor.”In the evening James Viner, ofPrinceton and ex-UC faculty mem-Ratcliffe said that he felt one ber, will lecture on “The inteUeo-of the reasons Hutchins had been tual history of laissez-faire ”Snow again at UC asked to speak at this conferencewas that the Fund for the Repub¬lic, of which the ex-chancellor ischairman, has “been concernedwith social responsibility on thepart of major power groups insociety.”Other speakers at the confer¬ence will be: Economist Armen “These conferences serve stu¬dents and the practicing bar,” saidRatcliffe. “Through them, author¬ities on significant subjects an#made available to students. Also;we feel that law schools shouldwork on continuing education oflawyers; this is a second aim oithe conferences.”NewsbitsB^ers gefs Merit award•The Chicago Technical So¬cieties council presented ananual Merit award to Dr.Horace R. Byers, chairman ofthe department of meteorologyat UC.Dr. Byers was one of the pio¬neers in the development of thefirst weather service designed tomeet the needs of aviation. Forthis work he received the RobertM. Losey award of the Instituteof Aeronautical Scienc es. Dr.Byers was director of the “Thun¬derstorm” project, and contrib¬uted much to fundamental im¬provements in safe air navigationin thunderstorm areas.The physical processes in the"Clouds” project at UC cameabout through Dr. Byers’ work on"Thunderstorms.”Bi Sci to studyconnective tissueChemicals in the composi¬tion of connective tissue willbe studied under a three-yeargrant of $122,791 from TheNational Foundation. Connectivetissues include the bones, tendons,and cartilage and a materialcalled ground substance thatbinds the cells together.Announcement of the new"March of Dimes” grant wasmade jointly Saturday, Septem¬ber 26th, by Dr. Lowell T. Cog-geshall, dean of the Division ofBiological Sciences, and BasilO’Connor, president of The Na¬tional Foundation. They said itwas the largest grant ever re¬ceived by the University fromThe National Foundation."Finding out how the bodymakes and maintains connectivetissue is an essential step towardunderstanding the rheumatic dis¬eases, including rheumatic feverand rheumatoid arthritis,” saidDr. Albert Dorfman, director ofthe research program. All formsof arthritis affect some kind of(connective tissue.Dewar appointedto chem staffMichael J. S. Dewar hasbeen appointed professor inthe Department of Chemistryat the University of Chicago,effective October 1. The Britishscientist is best known for hiswork on the “tropolone ring”structure of atoms in certain or¬ganic compounds. He is currentlyprofessor and head of the De¬ partment of Chemistry at QueenMary College, University of Lon¬don, England.Dewar applied to chemistry themolecular orbital theory, a set ofprinciples designed to increase un¬derstanding of molecular struc¬ture, in his book, “Electronic The¬ory of Organic Chemistry,” pub¬lished in 1949.Dewar has been at Queen MaryCollege since 1951. In 1957, he wasvisiting professor at Yale Univer¬sity and in 1951, a Reilly Lecturerat Notre Dame University.Dirks to speakat RockefellerThe Reverend J. EdwardDirks, professor of Christianmethods at Yale universitydivinity school and editor ofThe Christian Scholar, will speakon “The absence and event ofGod” this Sunday at Rockefellerchapel.Dirks has taught philosophy atLake Forest college, and prior tothat he was a Protestant chaplainat Columbia university. He ispresently working on a researchconsultation project at Yale andthe World Student Christian fed¬eration. In this connection, he hastraveled to university centers inmost of Asia, Europe, Latin Amer¬ica, and north and central Africa.IF council plansball, iudge queenLast Tuesday evening theInter-Fraternity Council metat the Phi Sigma Delta houseto discuss final IF Ball plansand other matters pertinent tothe fraternity system.The fraternities are now in theprocess of selecting their candi¬dates for Queen of the IF Ball.The Queen must be a registeredstudent on this campus. The can¬didates are judged on the basisof personality, charm, and per¬sonal apeparance. The final judg¬ing will be held Thursday, Novem¬ber 12, at 3:30, in the library atIda Noyes. The judges will beMrs. Kimpton, Mrs. Netherton,and Dr. Gnilka.The Inter-Fraternity Ball, the"Greek” social highlight of theFall quarter, will be held from0-12 pm on Saturday, November21, in the Crystal Ballroom of theDel Prado hotel. Music will be byVic Faraci and his orchestra. Thebids are $5.00.THREE PIZZA'S FORTHE PRICE OF TWOFree tJ.C. DeliveryTerry ’s1518 E. 63rd Ml 3-4045 Inter-dub danceends girls' rushThe inter-club preferentialdance held last Saturdaymarked the close of the rush¬ing period for UC's six girls’clubs.Mortar Board has gained 18new members, Esoteric 14, DeltaSigma 10, Quadranglers 5, andSigma 3; Wyvern does not haveany new members.“Since all girls’ clubs on cam¬pus must have at least 10 activemembers, Wyvern will be allowedto hold open rush all year,” saidInterclub council president Car-leen Schmidt.Extend studentsuicide inquest Quadranglers Barbara Wezolowsky, Carol Allen, and AbbySheldon at preferential dinner last Saturday.been added to the Department ofRomance languages and litera¬tures. George Haley, assistantprofessor of Spanish, is comingfrom Brown University; NormanB. Spector, assistant professor ofFrench, is coming from North¬western university.John C. Osborn, who has beenat Northwestern university, hasbeen appointed an instructor inthe College and the departmentof Germanic languages and litera¬tures.Inquest into the suicide ofDavid M. Gomberg will be con¬tinued pending an autopsy _A— . #report, according to George L. FOTA committeeplans programOutdoor dances, beat gen¬eration poets, famous actors,and visiting student dramaproductions — these were justa few of the events suggested byFestival of the arts members atTuesday’s initial meeting of the“spring thing” committee.According to co-chairman AliceSchaeffer, “This spring’s Festivalwill have wide appeal. Our goal isto involve the whole campus inthe many events which comprisethe FOTA.”“Toward this end,” said GeorgeLejnieks, co-chairman, “we wi 11hold the annual skit competitionin the winter quarter instead ofthe spring quarter, and we willconsider sponsoring and co spon¬soring other events throughoutthe year.”“FOTA for 1960 will be held thelast week in April. We must beginplanning now, however, so thatall programs and arrangementsfor the many distinguished vis¬itors will be completed in time.”Speaking for all the membersof the board, co-chairman Schaef¬fer said, “Our best efforts are be¬ing devoted to planning the bestpossible Festival of the arts.”Playe, dean of undergraduate stu¬dents. Gomberg’s body was foundin Jackson park at 8:30 am Fri¬day."Gomberg, an 18-year-old un¬dergraduate from Winwood, Penn¬sylvania, had no seemingly obvi¬ous motive,” commented Playe.“His grades here were good. Hewas probably in a fit of depres¬sion."Poison was the cause of death,but the specific poison and thetime of death will remain uncer¬tain until the autopsy report isin,” Playe continued. ‘There is allprobability that his death tookplace sometime Thursday night.”Name languagestaff membersSix new staff members, includ¬ing a specialist in Bengali lan¬guage and literature, have beenappointed to the University’s for¬eign language departments. Theyinclude two associate professors,three assistant professors and aninstructor.One of the foremost Bengalischolars in the United States, Ed¬ward C. Dimock Jr., has been ap¬pointed assistant professor ofBengali language and literaturein the department of linguistics.He has studied at two universitiesin India as well as at Berkeley,Harvard, and Chicago.Also appointed in the depart¬ment of linguistics are the twonew associate professors. HughMcLean, on Harvard’s facultysince 1953, will become an associ¬ate professor of Russian languageand literature. Johannes A. B.Van Buitenan, a native Dutchmanwho received his degrees from theUniversity of Utrecht, will be anassociate professor of Indology.He has spent^three years of re¬search in India.Two assistant professors have Int house plansNov. 15 programInternational House day willbe celebrated on the quad,rangles Sunday, Nov. 15. Anannual event at Internationalhouses all over the world, theChicago celebration will bringtogether some 660 foreign visitorsengaged in study and research a*the University and Chicago’s corvsular corps.Sunday’s program begins at 4pm. Mrs. Clifton Utley, directorof the midwest office of the Insti¬tute of International Education,wi]l speak on “How internationaleducation helps world understanding.”Robert Whyte Mason, consulgeneral of Great Britain and deanof the consular corps in Chicago,will extend greetings on behalf ofthe corps. John J. McDonoug!^president of the board of gov¬ernors of International house anda University trustee, will alsospeak. <Mrs. Marcus A. Hirschl, preskdent of the Chicago chapter of theInternational House association,will preside. The program is opento the public.ErratumThe listing of firms offeringdiscounts to UC students, whichappeared in last week’s issue,erroneously listed the address o4Dr. Kurt Rosenbaum, Optome¬trist. The correct address of DnRosenbaum’s office is 1132 E. 55thstreet.Anthropology—New Works On The Study Of ManHoselitz: A READER'S GUIDE TO THE SOCIAL SCIENCES $2.95A valuable guide made up by University of Chicogo instructors and contrbiutors, with experi¬ence in this field.Ashley Montagu: HUMAN HEREDITY $5.00Presenting the principles of human inheritance, with discussions of newly discovered facts andcontemporary questions of race, influences of atomic fall-out, etc.Joseph Campbell: THE MASKS OF GOD: PRIMITIVE MYTHOLOGY $6.00Revealing the common origins of man's inner life, this new approach to mythology createsa new goal. Exciting.Henri Lhote: THE SEARCH FOR THE TASSILI FRESCOES $6.95A report to the world on the extraordinary wealth of*prehistoric paintings discovered in thecentral Sahara. Illustrated in color.The University of Chicago Bookstore5802 Ellis Avenue Editors-in-chiefNeal Johnston Lance HaddixManaging editorOzzie ConklinBusiness Manager Advertising ManagerWiiiiam G. Bauer James SchardienGuest editor Jean KwonNews editor Kenneth PierceFeature editor . Jay GreenbergPhotography coordinator Steve CarsonCulture editor Maggie StinsonSports editor Bill SpadyEditorial board: Williom Bauer, Ozxie Conklin, Joy Greenberg, Lance Hoddi*,Neol Johnston, Kenneth Pierce, Kitty Scovilte.Editorial staff: Joel Ashenfarb, Frances Brown, Jeonr.e Crawford, DcbbfeDenitz, Dorthy Dorf, Francesca Folkensetin, Dean Fischer, Maitland Grif¬fith, Matthew Hirschorn, John Juskevice, Elliott Landau, David Noble, Tamo?Verga. , .Photography staff ...Al Berger, Sidney Seolin*Cartoonists Ron Burton, Arnold Perr.Business stoff Joan Helmken, Francis Herder, Pat Masse*rJoel Schwartz, Mourice ZeitlerCirculation managers Warren B. Bernhardt, Nothon B. Swith,2 • CHICAGO MAROON • November 13, 1959positionsby Matthew HirschhornThe 61 workers striking against the Chicago home for incurables claim they want ..bet¬ter wages, shorter hours, and better working conditions. Yet director of the home ArthurAlmon claims that the wages, hours, and working conditions at the home are as good asean be expected for the type of work, and that they will get even better.According to Les Curtis, the organizer for the State, County, and Municipal EmployeesUnion, “One of the main goals of the union is to protect our people from arbitrary dis¬missal.” Almon said “I cannot - —— ■>—understand what the Union means n°I bad considering the type of but no violence, no threats,by this. Nearly 90 per cent of our People we have working here. Almon agreed “It is true that“The majority of our people the Union has promised no vio-are unemployable—people with a lence. The Union did try to stoplow degree of intelligence and milk delivery early in Sept., butambition. A highly intelligent am¬bitious individual will not take ajob like this. It is menial work.There is no future. We also em¬ploy severely disabled persons,who would not be able to workemployees have been with us formore than five years. Many havebeen here over ten years.”“We will also seek to raise thewages of the workers and im¬prove their working conditions,”says Les Curtis. Regardingwages. Director Almon states:•The workers were informed be- elsewhere ”fore there was any union agita¬tion that they would - have the outraged public opinion forcedthem to stop this, after’it got intothe newspapers. Otherwise theyhave been docile.”Director Almon’s final state¬ment was “We are a charitableinstitution; we have served theWhile the union says that 90 people of the Chicago area for au/„i k week reduced from 44 to cent of the workers are mem- long time. We are the only such* bers, Almon claims that only 60 institution in the Chicago area.out of 200 workers are on strike. We have also been good to our“This enables us to maintain a employees. We have and will con-one-to-one employee to patient tinue to do our best for them,ratio. Comparable institutions but our primary concern is thehave three patients per employee, welfare of our patients.”“While it is true that we will not40 hours, with no decrease in pay.This is, in effect a ten per centwage increase. We cannot affordany more. We are a non-profitinstitution.”When asked to elaborate onthis, Almon explained: “We carefor chronically and incurably ill The interview at the left was the first granted by homedirector Arthur Almon to any newspaper.need as many workers when wemove into the Billings Complex, SRP votes NSA supportFull support was voted for UC’s National Student association membership at the Studentpeople. When they enter the hos- we haye f ]d workers thatpital they expect to spend the rest ... .... ... .Sr their lives here. We have one "" °.n<“ wlil •* ,lred' wdl ««man who has been here for forty- not hlre a"> new '',°rkers'four years, and most are here *h rePly to Almon’s assertion .from five to ten years. - that the Hospital is unable to Representative party caucus Sunday evening. “NSA’s advantages far outweigh its disad-•The treatment, and the ma- rais€ wa8es- Curtis says “We vantages," commented Student Government minority leader Sam Silver,ehinery for the treatment, is ex- have offered to have an account- “NSA conventions serve as places_were students from small southern colleges are throwntremely expensive. Few people af't inspect their books before in a milieu with students from large ‘aware’ schools, enabling these perhaps to have theirean afford this long term treat- making definite wage requests.” viewpoints enlightened and their horizons widened,” Miss Silver explained.ment—yet we have never put any- “We have not threatened the “Also, NSA is the students’ —body out. or refused anybody ad- welfare of the patients. We are voice to our nation and foreign and that these are NSA’s main nuclear weapons tests, and deseg-mission to the home for financial not striking against the patients nations concerning both foreign concern. Nevertheless, these pro- regation resolutions were amongreasons. We have only three but against management. There and domestic affairs. Only a £rams are an important issue and those published by this year’spatients who are paying their has been no violence, no stoppage strong organization can fulfill a*d to the small colleges which convention. NSA also sponsorsown way. Our deficit is made up of essential services, no intimida- this purpose,” she continued. are heavily represented in NSA.by private philanthropic grants.” tion of non-strikers. We hoot at “Many critics have maintainedAlmon is opposed to the work- them sometimes catcalls, you that student self-organization pro- stricted academic travel includingers’ joining the union because know scab and things like that, grams are relatively worthless travel to red China, cessation of“We feel that the unionization ofour employees would be a threatto the well-being of our patientsWe are dealing with direct per¬sonal services to people who arephysically incapable of helpingthemselves. They are old. andthey are crippled. We must havethe workers do as they are told. O-board recruits members student racial relations seminarsFederal aid to education, unre- in the south and annual Academicfreedom week, held at mostschools in the spring.NSA membership includes 350to 400 schools. UC, a member ofthe Illinois - Wisconsin regionwhich will hold one of its threeyearly conventions November 20at the University of Wisconsin, isone of the few schools whichelects its delegates directly. Five- * by Al BergerStudent Orientation board is now accepting applications for membership for the 1960-1961 school year. " _ b ^_ i(i Orientation board is a group of students working with the dean of students ip acquainting votes are allotted to delegatesWe cannot ''quibble and arbitrate students, and particularly entering students, to the ideological and physical background of from UC at annual national con-snythlng. the University. Specifically the board is responsible for planning, coordinating, and exe- ventions.“For instance if an object falls cuting the fall and midyear orientation weeks in conjunction with the dean of students’ office. “NSA is usually conservativeu-oMnnM waitimHi In addition to this the board — 77 T—77.^, 77 777 77 7 : .. . in international affairs,” noted!" ' hicr777!rd har7Lj^d has attempted to increase student general informal,on about UC, the actmt.es, the dtseusston method Mjss sj, ..perhaps olwhether the nu^s aid sho^d be understanding ot the University's hoard de votes ,ts meetings and other top.es appropnate to orl Inal affiliation with th.whether the nurses aia snouta ne , 7 . .• . *7 throughout the year to discus- an orientation program. rntomatiAnai Uni™required to pick it up, or if this educational objectives and pro- . ^th members of both fac- Financial restrictions limit the 4 t 0 ,a .°” of s,ude*1^®»it/nnrtm-'s work Whon nennle are cedures, and the issues that arise wun. me.m. . .°7 7,77 ! ,7**;Y~'“J“*7, „77 the present student movement h»is porter s worK. wnen people are .1 ^ ulty and administration. The membership of the board and nec- „mintrioc nnrelderly, a little fall can easily *I0m these objectives, through b d makes itself a center of dis- essitate a selection from among ?omn™ St C°l#n+u i anC*break'their hip. In an older per- discussion meetings, teas, and ^.sionofmajor educaUonals- the applicants^after th^comple baP* ^cause of the large wprs-„ k! ftaftai akL* other programs throughout the cusslon majo', “ ' * 777 . . " sentation of s m a 11 midwestemson, this can be fatal. The object ^ s & sues an(j the problems which they tion of the training program, i.e., and ~nnthprn rnilpee*! ”must be picked up immediately. year , _“There are certain situations in During Orientation week, O-which we feel a union has no board members live in the do: mi-place—the police force, the army, tories so that they may be mostand. in our opinion, a hospital.”, accessible to entering students.According to organizer Curtis, P^grams about the College, ledsponsorship), lead tours, and con- by faculty and administration of-duct discussions. O-board mem- bring to the University commu¬nity.All undergraduates are eligiblefor membership on the board. Atraining program of discussion , , „ _ . and southern colleges,before the end of the winter quar- ° ,,ter “Chicago delegates usuallyApplication forms are available ur*e ^proved relations with bothfrom O-Board members at the communists and non-communistReynolds club desk, the activities countries," she stated "Ther. anthe employees are getting lessthan $1 an hour. Almon says:“This was before the work weekreduction. The majority of work- ^rs are available to answer ques-ers will not get over $1 an hour.This is a good wage for unskilledlabor.” ficiate, is held in the winter quar¬ter for all applicants and mem¬bers. The training program servesto provide members and appli¬cants with valuable informationabout some of the major aspectsof their College, such as the cur- office in Ida Noyes, and the in¬formation desk of the Administra¬tion building. some changes needed in NSA, batthe solution lies not in droppingmembership.”tions, especially those which dealwith the educational aspects ofthe University.Since the questions they mustThe union claims that “we have answer and the problems thatpeople who are receiving only 30 will arise during O-week require rent educational philosophy, theor 40 dollars per week.” Almon specialized knowledge as well as advisory system, housing, studentis quick to point out that this istake home pay. They have al¬ready had income tax, Blue Cross,Blue Shield, Social Security, andtwelve meals a week deducted—this is what they have left. It is GLADIS r • • t a i r a * t1527 E. 55rt» DO 3-9788We Specialise in Well-Balanced Meals atPopular Prices, and Midnite SnacksOPEN ALL NIGHT —. ORDERS TO GO$10,000 "Pure"Life InsuranceNow $40 Per Yr.Major Life Insurance Companiesnow issue $10,000 “Pure” Life In¬surance at a premium of only $40a year at age 25. At other agescates are proportionate.For Brochure No. L-10, write orphone Sidney Blackstone ^Har¬vard and U of C Alumnus), at5476- Everett Ave., DOrchester8-0447. THE UNIVERSITY OF CHICAGOUNIVERSITY THEATREpresents the premiere ofPEPELTHE UNBURIED RUSSIANBy JIM DAMICOPrize Winning Play of the 1959 Charles H< Sergei Playwriting Contest.",. a poignant blasfc fere#- a parody of aone-party systemfilled with intrigues,disguises. <and misplaced bodiee **«W;NovemberFri Sat Sun6 7 814 15 8:30 PM MANDEL HALL 57th & University AveAll seats $1.50, Student-faculty $1.00 Frl A Sun onlyMail orders to University Theatre, 5706 S. University Ave.Tickets on sale, at Reynolds Club DeskNovember 13, 1959 • CHICAGO MAROON • BfADV.)’the Chicago maroonfounded — 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 E. 59thStreet, 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 on this page represents the official opinion of the Chicago Maroon editorial board. Signededitorial material represents the Individual opinions of the authors.Does ending comp retakesinjure College purpose?The College teaching staffs are currentlyconsidering whether or not “retake’' compre¬hensive examinations will be offered in thefuture. College Examiner Knox Hill and theUniversity examiner’s office have advocatedthe value of retake exams. We fully agreewith Hill, and we sincerely hope that the Collegestaffs also agree with him when it comes timeto vote on the question.In the past any student dissatisfied with hiscomprehensive grade could take another examina¬tion on the same course, and whichever gradewas higher would be his grade of record. Thestudent availing himself of this did not need toreregister for the entire course, and the only costwas a $10 examination fee.The objection which some staffs have to thispolicy is clear and reasonable. Take the case ofEnglish. It was ^decided earlier this year that toomany students prepared for the examination inan irregular fashion. English, the faculty main¬tains, is a “skills” course demanding constantwork. Moreover, they continue, one six-hour exam¬ination, given under necessarily “unreal” condi¬tions, is an insufficient sample of a student’swork.And so English is now graded by counting boththe regular weekly assignments and special inclass essays. The first quarter of the three-quartercourse counts twenty per cent of the final grade,the second quarter thirty per cent, and the thirdquarter fifty per cent. In each quarter the in-classessays count half of the grade, the weekly assign¬ments make up the other half.Now, they ask, if we allow a student the optionof merely retaking one examination to obtain a final grade, we are in effect allowing two moansof preparation for the course. This would con¬stitute a go-ahead signal for the lazy student whodidn’t want to write an essay each and everyweek. This, then, would be defeating the wholepurpose of the new grading system.But would it be? Or would the elimination ofretake examinations instead be defeating thewhole purpose of the College?The College of the University of Chicago de¬mands competence in the liberal arts. It makesno claim that the only means by which competencecan be achieved is the classroom. This is the basicphilosophy behind placement examinations. If astudent knows a field, he should be excused fromcourses in that field.Imagine an entering student who receives a Cfor the English composition course his first yearon the quadrangles. After several more years, hiscommand of the language increases, so that hecan now earn an A on the comprehensive. Whyshould he not be allowed to earn that A withoutthe expense of money and time which would benecessary were he to retake the entire course?It is the command of the field which is important.This would be a minor question were it not forthe lingering importance -of grades. Outside ourGothic walls (and to an unfortunate extent, insidethem too) a letter grade is regarded as the indexof an individual’s command of a subject. TheUniversity should do everything it can to bringboth a letter grade and what it represents intoconcordance. This means the retention of retakeexaminations privileges for all students.If the various staffs elect to cease this practice,consistency would demand the abolition of place¬ment examinations. DIARY OF A COEDMONDAY: Prof. Ponifritt sprang quiz in English lit thismorning. If Shakespeare didn’t write Canterbury Tales I’m adead duck . . . Lunch at the house—turkey hash. Question;how can we have turkey hash when we never had turkey? . ..Smoked a Marlboro after lunch. I dig those better makin’athe most! . . . Played bridge with sorors in afternoon. Whengame was over, my partner stabbed me several times withhatpin. Must learn weak club bid . . . Dinner at house—lambhash. Question: how can we have lamb hash when we never hadlamb? . . . Smoked a Marlboro after dinner. What filter! Whatflavor! What pack or box!... Chapter meeting at night. Motionmade to abolish capital punishment for pledges. Motion de¬feated ... Smoked more Marlboros. Qn* Ih joie!... And so to bed.TUESDAY: Faculty tea at the bouse. Spilled pot of oolongon Dean of Women. She very surly. Offered her a Marlboro.Still surly. Offered skin graft. No help . . . Dinner at KozyKampus Kafe—24 hamburgers. But no dessert. Have to w atchwaistline . . . And so to bed.WEDNESDAY: Got our marks in English lit quiz. Luckyfor me Shakespeare wrote Canterbury Tales! . .. Afternoon datewith Ralph Feldspar. Purely platonic. Ralph wanted to con¬sult me about love trouble he’s having with his girl NymphetCalloway. I assured him things would get better. Ralph saidhe certainly hopes so because last four times he called onNymphet, she dumi>ed vacuum cleaner bag on him ... Smokedseveral Marlboros. Wonderful cigarette. No confusion aboutwhich end to light. Saves loads of time . . . Dinner at house—bread. That’s all; just bread . . . And so to bed.THURSDAY: Three packages from home—laundry, cookies,records. So hungry I ate all three .. /Quiz in American history.If Millard Fillmore didn't invent cotton gin, I’m in big trouble. . . Dinner at house. Big excitement—Nymphet Calloway an¬nounced her engagement to Ralph Feldspar. While sororsflocked around to congratulate Nymphet, I ate everybody’sside meat. .. Then smoked Marlboro. Oh, what a piece of workis Marlboro! . .. And so to bed.FRIDAY: Got our marks in American history quiz. Wasshattered to learn that Millard Fillmore did not invent cottongin. He wrote Canterbury Tales .. . How very odd! . . . Lunchat the house —bread hash ... Marlboro after lunch. Great smoke.Must send valentine to manufacturers . . . Spent entire after¬noon getting dressed for date tonight with Normap Twonkey.Norman is dall, dark, loaded—a perfect doll! Only thing wrongis he never tells a girl where lie's going to take her. So I puton a bathing suit, on top of that an evening gown, and on topof that a snow suit. Thus I w as ready for a splash party, a dance,or a toboggan slide ... So what do you think happened? Heentered me in a steeplechase, that’s what!... Would have takenfirst prize easily if I hadn’t pulled up lame in the last furlong.. . And so to bed. « i»m Mm* * *Ignorance breeds no newsOn page 7 is printed a letter from the officers of the Student Peace union criticizingthe Maroon for faulty, or rather, non-existent coverage. The criticism is just and we ac¬knowledge its validity. We do resent, however, the implication that there was a consciousattempt to kill this news.The presence of Norman Thomas on campus is a significant event which should receive a con¬siderable amount of advance publicity and post-event coverage. But neither the editors nor themanaging editor of this newspaper were aware that Thomas was delivering a lecture on campusuntil well after the event.We apologize for our ignorance, an event of this nature should be brought to the attention ofthe student body and the Maroon is the best means of disseminating such information, but wewere ignorant.Putting out a large weekly newspaper is a hazardous and confusing business. Stories, even im¬portant stories, have a propensity for getting lost at print shop. Almost weekly a story doesn’t getin which should. This, too, we regret. This, too, we are attempting to correct.The responsibility of fair and adequate coverage is a weighty one to attempt to fulfill. We areanxious to provide space for any worthwhile event sponsored by any student activity. We are attempt¬ing to ‘silence’ no one. In the future we hope to avoid any such error of omission.Bookstore editorials end;some communication achievedThe Maroon has come to the end of itseditorial series on the bookstore, unless wereceive more information. The real purposeof the series has been achieved. The com¬plaints students have with the store havebeen voiced. Student Government is investi¬gating the bookstore, and various members of theUniversity’s administration have expressed anactive interest in correcting some of the flawsof the store.The bookstore exists to make a profit, and onlysecondarily to serve students. Even this wouldn’tbe too objectionable (any money made is rapidlyused by the University) if the store only made agood profit. It does not. Last year with an incomeof nearly a million dollars, the total profit wasonly slightly over $60,000.Many worth-while and valuable services are notperformed by the store. There is no discount onbooks for anybody, there is no rental library,there is no adequate second-hand section, and thereis a constant under stock of necessary texts.Some of the services which are performed areinadequate or unnecessary. We refer to the charge-account system and the vast amount of space devoted to such non-essentials as stationery, bras¬sieres, and photographic supplies.The managers of the store seem to express nodesire whatsoever to correct or ameliorate thesituation. D. S. Passmore, head of the store, hassaid that he would strongly object to other UCdepartments underselling the bookstore. Thiswould eliminate such possibilities as the Univer¬sity Press selling its own publications at a dis¬count to students. .Despite the store’s unwillingness to change,other forces in the University seem quite willingto change the store—and this is all we ever askedfor.For those many students who spend hours eachweek rpaming the store, we are now printingthe bookstore’s price code. This should make roam¬ing somewhat more interesting. On the back ofeach book is a white sticker, stating the retailprice. Also on this sticker is a series of codeletters. This represents the cost of the book to thebookstore. In this code V —one. N two, A “three,R = four, 0 = five, L = six, H -seven, S —eight,C = nine, T=zero, X = a decimal point and -f- =one half. Thus a book marked VXNO costs thestore $1.25. Happy hunting. Yes, the college life is a busy one and you may be hat ingtrouble choosing the cigarette that’s right for you. Here’sa handy guide: For filter plus flavor—Marlboro, For flavorwithout filter—Philip Morris. For filter plus flavor plus cool¬ness—Alpine,. . . All made by the sponsors of this column.FREE!! One Day OnlyTWO BALL POINT PENSWITH ATTRACTIVE CARRYING CASEWith Purchase of 5 Packs ofPhilip Morris, Marlboro, Parliament or Alpine Cigarette!FRIDAY, NOV. 13thUNIVERSITY BOOKSTOREPublic vs. private? LAK asserts:Universities must work togetherReprinted here is the complete text of theChancellor's speech presented yesterday at ameeting of the Association of Land-Grant Col¬leges. •It hadn't occurred to me until I began to organize what| loosely call my thoughts for this talk that I have never,m college student, faculty member, or administrator,teen associated with a public institution. This is a fright¬ful admission to make in this company, and I hope youwill forgive your chairman for inviting me and me foraccepting. Perhaps the invitation is parallel to ones Ihave often received and I am sure you have too. TheyHome from business or occasionally professional groups,asking me to talk about education. “We just want tohear something different from what we usually talkabout,” says the invitor, implying somehow that, amid<hc serious concerns of their meeting, they are pre¬pared to relax with some real nonsense. In order toavoid talking sheer nonsense, I thought I might, welladdress my remarks to a subject that does, or at leastShould, concern us both, namely, the growing chasmbetween public and private higher education.There is a saying among lawyers that all family quar¬tets are over money, and in this materialistic age, manymight add that there is nothing else worth quarrelingHbout. In this controversy, too, the main issue seemsto be money, though it certainly has other dimensions*nd indeed deep and far-reaching implications.It is no secret, I suppose, that the private colleges andUniversities are hard up. There are many reasons for thisunfortunate situation, among then* the inflation and itsImpact on endowment yield, the enormous number ofHew causes that compete for the philanthropic dollar,jwid the widening gap between the cost of education andthe tuition charge that the private institution dares tomake. I think, too, that there Is another factor not oftenmentioned in polite society, but I assume I am not•peaking in polite society. Actually, the major privateUniversities are not hard up absolutely; they are beeom-Lawrence A. Kimptonhard up relatively—relative, that is to say, to theEublic universities, which, in the last quarter century,ave grown immensely in size, stature, and wealth. ItIs true, I believe, that, in the first decade of this centuryMid on into the twenties the University of Chicagolowered, in the middle west. Our competition for money,faculty and students was with Harvard, Yale, and Co¬lumbia, and our attitude was friendly but patronizingtoward our surrounding public sisters. I hope we are•till friendly, but there is nothing patronizing todayabout our attitude toward our neighboring universities•f the midwest—and, frankly, we are scared to deathOf the University of California at Berkeley. Harvardremains smug and Yale aloof, but I can assure you thatthey are scared too.This situation has all the makings of a family quarrel,and there has already been a great deal of fussing andfeuding. This quarrel is not confined to the major uni¬versities; the smaller private colleges, as a peculiarlyoppressed minority, have displayed particular bitterness,ftfor do I want you to think that tempers flared chieflyenong the university presidents; it usually was at awer echelon. Whatever one chooses to say about us, •ore observe the amenities, at least in public, even on»uch inflammatory issues as the permissible limits offootball mayhem. As an academic vice president someyears ago, I was surprised by how polite my presidentknd a neighboring public-university president were to•ach other on a speaking platform, since I knew eachthought the other an ass. When I expressed my surprisein private to my president, he said, “Well, you see, he®ealiy is an ass.”I first became aware of the growing dimensions ofthis quarrel when the low birthrate of the thirties madeit difficult to recruit students. It was shamelessly statedt>y recruiters for some private institutions that public universities were socialistic in concept and Godless ininstruction; that one could not get a decent educationin a public university among the hordes of undergradu¬ates; that social standing and job opportunity were con¬ferred only by the private institution.The same sort of thing was going on, though in a moresubdued way, in the'recruitment of the ever-scarce goodfaculty member. Department heads in private institu¬tions muttered darkly about loyalty oaths, legislativemeddling, heavy teaching loads, and lack of freedom forinvestigation. The case against the public university,if one could call it that, probably reached its crescendoin the field of money-raising. Here, all the socialisticand Godless charges were repeated, but a lot of newtwists were given to the arguments. It was claimed thatpublic education was extravagant and wasteful, and thatthe private institution could do a better job at lower cost.Corporations were told that*they could expect competentresearch people only from the private universities —until the du Pont company discovered that it had morescientists from the University of Illinois than from anyother university. It was suggested that real pioneeringand innovation could come only from the private uni¬versity. Finally, it was asserted that quantity and qualitycould not go together, and that the public institutiondealt in inferior mass production while the private uni¬versity dealt only in superior students in small, well-conducted classes.Quality or quantityI think it fair to say that the private institutionsstarted the quarrel, but I would be remiss if I let youbelieve that our public sisters took all this lying down.They denied that they were Godless and socialistic, theyclaimed that they were as free as, if not freer than, theprivate institution; they cried that it was a low blowto say that they spent more to educate a student than theprivate college; and they emphatically asserted that quan¬tity and quality could and indeed did go together. Nordid they rest their case with a defense; they moved on tothe attack. They suggested, if they did not say right out,that the private institution was a relic of a by-goneperiod before the public had assumed responsibility foreducation, and they pointed to the ancient British andContinental universities which began as private enter¬prises but are today supported by the public purse.They even implied that the private institution served noother purpose today beyond giving the sons and daugh¬ters of the rich a phony accent and the dubious privi¬lege of sporting the old school tie.Now all of this is pretty rough stuff, but it still mighthave been ignored as one, of those family brawls thatpass, leaving the members more affectionate .even thanbefore. Anyway, there were students enough for all onthe horizon, and, as the economic situation improved,money was easier to come by. But within the last sev¬eral years, a sharp, hard, and single issue has arisenwhich proves to be far more divisive than the wild, free-swinging fights of the past.Tuition becomes importantThe private universities have had to raise their tuitionuntil the cost differential between public and private isno longer nominal; it is substantial. More than that, theprivate institutions would like—indeed will be forced—to raise their tution charges even more within the nextfew years. There are good reasons for this action, bothfinancial and moral. The private institutions have to havemore free money, and, if I may use the phrase, morerecurrent money. Private philanthropy is a very finething, but the donor’s wishes and the university’s needsdo not always coincide. The foundations, bless them,usually support, without overhead allowance, some one-shot, break-through project that does not help with thecoal bill or even the pencil bill.Tuition income, on the other hand, is good, hard, freemoney that conies in year after year and pays profes¬sors’ salaries (and keeps the plant going. Anyway, froma moral point of view, why shouldn’t a student pay forhis education if he can afford to and why shouldn’t theprivate institution charge what its product costs? It isthe professor and his family who are currently subsi¬dizing higher education and, if labor can talk about aday’s work for a day’s pay, why can’t the academicworld? All these are arguments that the private insti¬tutions have made among themselves, and the resultsare apparent. Tuition has gone up year after year, andmy guess is that a figure of $2,000 will not be uncommonwithin another six to eight years.Education for saleNow comes the rub. To put it in the crassest termspossible—and I knew this will offend many of the broth¬erhood—it is hard to market a product at a fair pricewhen down the street someone is giving it away.The ability of a private institution to raise its tuitionhas varied inversely with its proximity to strong publicinstitutions. It was only natural, therefore, that presi¬dents of private institutions, singly and collectively,should suggest to. the heads of neighboring public uni¬versities that they raise their tuition rates, thereby re¬ducing this ruinous competition. There were probablyother and more generous motives present. The publicuniversities are hard pressed too, and all higher educa¬tion could be elevated and improved by having moremoney enter all our budgets in this period of unparal¬leled general prosperity. The suggestion was received bythe public institutions without enthusiasm; in fact, theythought it was a lousy idea and said so.It is presumptuous of me to try to state your case,but so many of us on my side of the widening intellectualdivide have had trouble in understanding your reasonsthat I will try. I suppose the first reason was that, evenif you were sympathetic to our proposal, you didn’t thinkyou could get by with it in the legislature. Free publiceducation is a popular cause, and increasing tuition isnot » way to win friends or influence voters. Moreover, monies received from increased tuition would probablyonly be subtracted from the general legislative appropri¬ation, and public funds thus saved would be siphoned offinto roads, public works, and other charges upon thestate's resources. But there is another and far moreprofound reason, and one that I deeply respect. It iscentral to the philosophy of public education. At what¬ever level, education is not a commodity to be boughtand sold. It is a natural right, and should be as free toall as the air we breathe. This country, with one of thehighest literacy rates in the world, was built upon thisJeffersonian principle. It is immoral to treat learning asanything but a gift which each state owes to all its sonsand daughters.Here, then, we find the issue fairly joined, and on bothfinancial and moral grounds. The private institutionshave no choice but to raise their tuitions substantiallyabove the present levels. Something of value is beinggiven, and the student who has the means should payfor it. It is immoral for the faculty member and hisfamily to subsidize the student. The reply is that educa¬tion is being treated as an economic commodity, whichit is not. The state owes to everyone the opportunity toreceive all the education he has the ability and will toacquire, and any other view of education is debasingand erroneous. Moreover, any substantial increase intuition among public institutions is probably politicallyimpossible and, in any event, would not really assist theeconomc status of the public institution.In family quarrels, it is not uncommon to call in aminister, a marriage counselor, or occasionally even ajudge, who tries to reconcile the opposing views, usuallyby seeking higher ground from which a better perspec¬tive can be obtained. I have no great confidence in thesewell-intentioned people when hard, substantive issuesare involved. They are usually ri£ht, and occasionallysoothing, but too often they ignore the point that theonly way to live together is to find a way to live to¬gether.Dissension unwiseIf you are going to have a quarrel in higher education,they suggest, this is a poor time to start it. We live ina divided world, and higher education is probably thekey to the survival of Western civilization. The onlything that should concern us is excellence in higher edu¬cation, and the distinction between good and bad hasnothing to do with the distinction between public andprivate. There are good and poor universities on bothsides. More than this, diversity, whether in educationor in anything else, is a long-established and valuedAmerican principle.We do not want a monolithic system of higher edu¬cation; we need precisely the kind of variety that publicand private provide. And if there develops a little com¬petition between them, this also follows an old andvalued American principle. A little touch-up now andagain is healthy for both parties at issue, and keeps uson our toes. Now this is the stuff of which counselingis made, and I have listened to and indulged in a lot of itin my time. It is often true, it is edifying, and if it is welldone, everybody feels just dandy—for a little while. Buthortatory admonitions are not solutions to real problemsand may even keep us from facing the issues; there arcreal issues here, and there is no point in dodging themby making a high-sounding emotional appeal.The first real issue, I think, is the case for privateuniversities and the case for public universities. If weare both doing the same thing and in the same way, thenthere is no such thing as a case for the private universityor a case for the public university. The importance ofmaking a case appeals more strongly, perhaps, to theprivate educator. He obviously has to have some groundupon which to justify a higher tuition and gifts beyondthe tax contributions already made to the public insti¬tution. But I venture to say that the same thing hold*for the public educator. He must be able to face thelegislature or the citizens of his state and give somerationale for higher learning at public expense. If theidentical job is being done by each of us, then neitherof us has a case. On the other hand, each of us must beable to state his case as one in which he truly believes,but without unnecessary offense to the other. Now thisis not an easy problem to resolve and I can only makela»Aml>«r 13. 1959 (continued on page 171• CHICAGO MAROON • 5G A F LYBad men and good teachers:was Columbia university right?When professors are firedfrom universities because theyare exposed as communists or“Fifth-amendment commu¬nists,” liberal opinion in thecountry is, and should be,properly outraged. In part, thisis undoubtedly caused by generalirritation on the part of the lib¬erals at the excessive precaution¬ary measures taken by those inpower against the “communistmenace.” But primarily their dis¬pleasure at such antics is attrib¬utable to their view of the ideaand functions of a university.I think the liberal assumes, con¬trary to Plato, that a bad man can•till be a good teacher. A distinc¬tion is made between the qualitiesa man possesses as an instructorand those he possesses merely asa person, Thus, they should be righteously indignant if a quali¬fied instructor is refused a posi¬tion because he was once a juve¬nile delinquent or because hespends evenings at the local pubs.The question to be asked about aman’s vices are whether they af¬fect his teaching ability and noth¬ing else.Such a view would thus makelittle distinction between politicalvices such as communism, andnon-political ones such as per¬jury. The political sins are per¬haps more heroic and undoubted¬ly more appealing to all the phonyliberals, but it seems that neithershould be accorded much moreweight than the other in evaluat¬ing men qua teachers.With this introduction, let usnow look at Charles Van Doren,a man who appears to have com¬mitted a crime something like per¬LAK's statistics wrong?Dear Sir,In the last issue of the Maroon, LAK’s “State of the University”address was printed. Please note that the Tennessee river has achannel with a minimum depth of 9 feet running the 600 miles fromKnoxville to Paducah. Perhaps the Chancellor was so preoccupiedwith the declining gas gauge that he left the main channel onlyto travel in the shallow treacherous water near shore. But maybeth* channel is more crowded than it used to be.A WPA trailblazer,Joan Merlin jury. He is probably a bad manfor having done so, and we arenot inclined to exonerate him orto use him as a starting pointfor bemoaning the sorry state ofAmerican intellectualism. Whatwe are concerned with is whether,given the fact that he is a per¬jurer or deceiver to some degree,Columbia university did right infiring him.It seems to me that a consistentliberal must find it as unjustifi¬able to fire Van Doren for his de¬ceit as it is to fire a man merelybecause he is a communist. Nei¬ther trait seems particularly rele¬vant to teaching ability. Is VanDoren any worse a teacher todaythan he was two weeks ago be¬fore the revelations? Yet then hisabilities were rated high enoughto keep him on the faculty. In¬deed, a segment of the Columbiastudent body still seems to thinkthat he is a good teacher; theyhave petitioned for his reinstate¬ment.To those who approve of firingcommunists, this argument car¬ries little weight. Nor does thereseem any good way to make adistinction between communistsand deceivers (especially when J.Edgar Hoover calls communists“masters of deceit”), to persuadethem not to fire Van Doren types even though they are committedto firing communists. Such a dis¬tinction would go against all thathas been hitherto argued.But then I do not think thatthere is any really valid way forliberal thought to rebut this view,which is probably the consistentposition of conservative thought.The conservative and liberal ap¬proaches are here (as in otherfields) so radically different thatreal communication is probablyimpossible.The difference, I think, turnson the way in wttfch liberals andconservatives tend to analyzeproblems. The liberal analysisasks whether Van Doren is stilla good teacher, and if the answeris yes, finds no reason for dismis¬sal. The conservative analysis, onthe other hand might well admitthat he still can teach, but wouldlook at other considerations, Ir¬relevant to a liberal. The con¬servative might ask how Van Do¬rm's presence at Columbia wouldaffect the reputation of the uni¬versity, and finding that it wouldbe adverse to that reputation, ap¬prove of firing him.These differing analyses seemto stem from the fact that con¬servatives are very much con¬cerned with “moral postures,”while liberals are not. Thus theconservative does not want to ad¬ mit Red China to the United Na-tions because of the United Statedmoral commitment not to recog*nize the valide existence of some*thing evil. The liberal, on theother hand, sees only that RedChina does exist and is a majorcountry, and consequently cannotunderstand why it should be ex.eluded. Concepts of reputation,prestige, and moral posture areall appearances which lack realityto him.And I must admit that as a“liberal” I cannot understandhow Columbia’s reputation as auniversity bears upon this point,I cannot imagine how that reput*.tion is affected by his dismissalat all, but more importantly I can¬not see how a university can pre*tend to live by appearances. Soe>rates and Newton were supposed*ly homosexual, yet I cannot be*lieve that a right-thinking univer¬sity would dismiss them becauseof that. Moral postures seem sotransient that it is downright dan*gerous to try to operate by them.Who today is a heretic may turnout tomorrow to be a genius. Uni*versities, above all, should besanctuaries of resistance to pop*ular myths. Not only should theybe the places where men dare topronounce what they believe to bethe truth, no matter how unpoibular it sounds, but also theyshould be the places where thepronouncements of such men willbe evaluated on their own merit*rather than upon the personalcharacteristics of the speaker.Columbia university’s endeavofto purify itself of the “taint” ofVan Doren is not very significantin itself. He is a rich enough mannow to survive on his own, andthere are enough other goodteachers around to replace him.But it does strike us as a rathe*petty thing for a traditionallygreat university to indulge in.Franc-tire«*WOOiKPT.Cheerful, newly decorated, otlroc-tievly furnished apartment. Safe,fireproof deluxe elevator building.Doorman. Night watchmon. Maidand linen service available. Rea¬sonable monthly rates from $87.50.5234 DorchesterFAirfax 4-0200Have a WORLD of mlTrivet with flTAUnbelievable tew Ceil'rMany four* imlvdetoll*9* (ftrfitjr*Also low-cost trips to Mom!3?$t49 up. South America MW up,Hawaii Study Tour $39$ up oneAround the World $1198 w*-J27th Vt»r Ask Your Travel$ JM So. MMilfoil lit.Chicago 4. NA MS£TW0R10 TRAVEL fDislikes clinic pharmacy policypear Sirs:We may not all ultimately become inmates of the now notorious Chicago Home for In-turables of which Mr. A. A. Almon is head; but a good many of us in Hyde Park as eithergtudents, faculty, or alumni find ourselves as customers of the Pharmacy of the University©f Chicago Clinics. Now, contrary to Mr. Almon’s opinion that a college newspaper shouldfiave no interest in the whims of private institutions with public trust, I do here urge theChicago Maroon to concern itself with a questionable practice of the Clinics — more specifi¬cally. its pharmacy. Here follows :g noli* e I’ve sent to the superin* which absolutely precludes com* content and have consistentlytonrient of the clinics subsequent pounding at any other than the found your pharmacy to be charg-(o my discharge as an in-patient Clinic pharmacy. I had to ask for ing from 15 to 20 per cent more0f Billings Hospital, and I should such prescription on a standard than certain of the Hyde Parkwelcome a public reply from this form permitting compounding at neighborhood drugstores. The. • i„ofi tn_ a pharmacy of my choice, f1 ® ^ . ... . ..*. $11,000,000 you contribute to the“Forgive me, but I feel your „ . ’ , . ...system is in violation of medical University s income could, in thisethics in that it forces the un* regard, stand just a little bittyknowing patient to trade with cut. couldn’t it?”your pharmacy! Also, I've com- L. E. SHaefferpared prices over about 5 yearsscript ion on a special Clinic form with care as to quantity and drugadministrator in whose institu- a pharmacy of my choice,tion I received otherwise admir¬able care:“This I consider a serious critic¬ism having to do with your pre¬scription policy. Firstly, on dis¬charge last Tuesday, the medicalIntern presented me with a pre- Jean Ratliff (left) and Jane Fishman (right) view one ofBabette Kornblith's works at a small UC Press showing.photo by Sealift*De restoratione biologicumTo the editors:When I read the description offhe College biology course in the1959 1960 edition of the Under¬graduate announcements, I wasshocked by the following state¬ments: “This course deals withthe individual, the species, and thebiological community as objectsOf scientific investigation. .. . Ap¬propriate readings, selected fromthe works of Lavoisier, Pasteur,Buchner, Hopkins, Krogh, Bald¬win, Sherrington, and others, aswell as textbook assignments, arediscussed in seminar fashion."How could these men begin toapproach the complexities of amodern day biologist; i.e., howwould they help me pass the Med¬ical College Admissions test fouryears hence?Fortunately, the catalogue wasIn error, for this very samecourse, Biology 111, is actuallyteaching me some biology, large¬ly from a new, revised, digested,and strained textbook of zoology.Reactionaries who favor the useof original sources have been ap¬peased; they have the option offoregoing the purchase of thebotany text in favor of the paper¬back edition of Aristotle’s long-lost treatise on plants, COS Bota¬ny.* The facts of biology can onlysuffer by the use of the seminardiscussion method, and this tech¬ nique has been wisely abandoned.Instead, thrice weekly, a man witha Ph.D. (who shares with us thecommon educational experience ofunderlining the same textbook)instructs the lecture room of 200wide-eyed green-thumbs as towhich portions of the text can beleft without underlinings with nopenalty to the reader.Mai Contentus•College Outline Series—Bota¬ny. Surprisingly enough, thiswork has far greater current ap¬plicability than any of Aristotle’sfour treatises on animals. Peacemakers attack MAROONTo the Editors of the Chicago Maroon:We would like to take this opportunity to comment on the lack of publicity given to ourrecent major conference on this campus. It seems to us that such an attitude of unconcernand non-cooperation with events of interest to many students is fairly typical of Maroonpolicy. Our organization has found that the campus newspaper, supposedly the news organof the university, has either distorted meeting announcements or has completely disre¬garded them. We are sure thatother organizations have come in ney Lens, and atomic scientist Dr. student body will cease and thatcontact with the same ineffi- Wm> Davidon were featured and the Maroon will be fair enoughciency. Norman Thomas drew more thanOur recent conference is but 100 students on Saturday morn-a flagrant example of this policy, ing, despite the news blackout,or lack thereof. The paper was It it, we. think, indicative of grossduly informed of the conference negligence at the least that suchwell in advance and was reminded an important event as this was notof the fact several times. The cal¬endar was also notified of themajor sessions of the conference.It is interesting to note that suchspeakers as Norman Thomas, Sid- accorded one word in the Maroon,despite numerous reminders andcomplete information.It is our hope that such lack ofconcern with the activities of the to announce all events of interestwith impartiality and care.Sincerely,Philip AltbachChairman, MidwestStudent Peace UnioaMike ParkerChairman, Universityof Chicago Studentsfor Non-ViolenceTAhSAM-YfcNCHINESE . AMERICANRESTAURANTSpecialising inCANTONESE ANDAMERICAN DISHESOpen Daily11 A.M. to 10:30 P.M.ORDERS TO TAKE OUT1318 East 63rd St. BU 8-9018ft SwinglineStapler nobigger than apacketgum!98«(Including'1000 staple*SWINGLINE "TOT"!Millions now in use. Uncondtf, tionally guaranteed. Makes bookcovers, fastens papers, arts andcrafts, mends, tacks, etc. Availsable at your college bookstore..SWINGUNf"Cub" Stapler $1.*gSuhmp&rvel I NO*Wn<5 iSLANO CtUi NfVO-0»*, bUfc New breakfast drinkyou can keep in your room!JOC FOOTBALL: TANG has areal wake-up taste for great get-up-and-go on the football field. 1drink two glasses every morning-—and watch out! SALLY SORORITY: TANG isreally great mornings. I alwayshave a jar in my room; it’s somuch easier than squeezing orunfreezing orange juice. lazy larry: I have such trou¬ble getting up for breakfast thata fast glass of TANG gets methrough my first class so 1 canhave a late breakfast.NEW! INSTANT!Just mix with cold water! HELEN HOME EC.: TANG 18 theperfect breakfast drink. It coo-tains more Vitamin C and A thatorange juice and is so handy tostore on any shelf.MORE VITAMIN CTHAN ORANGE JUICE!A product of General Foods Kitchenswanted: Characters and captions for campus TANG-ites (likeabove). Must relate to TANG. Will pay $25 for every entry used. GET TANG FOR YOURBOOKSHELF SOONTANG has real wake-up taste,more vitamin C than fresh orfrozen orange or grapefruit juice.Plus vitamin A. TANG keep*without refrigeration so you cankeep TANG right in your room.Address: TANG College Contest, Dept. GRM, Post Division, BattleCreek, Mich. (Entries must be postmarked before Dec. 15, 1959.)November 13, 1959 * CHICAGO MAROON ♦ T24 pages packed with facts: Free booklet“Travelling Economically in Britain” tellshow you can tour the British Isles for just apittance. Includes map; photographs; detailson transportation, accommodations, tours,customs, and currency. Mail coupon below—and see your travel agent before you go.CLIP COUPON TODAY —The British Travel Association, Dept. C-2680 Fifth Avenue, New York 19, N. Y.Please send me“Traselling Economically in Britain.”NameSchoolAddi essCity Zone State-<V\ EASE PRINT CtEARLY)NEWDUALFILTERfroduri of \j£ Jtdatto u our middle mo me a. t c»J• • CHICAGO MAROON • November 13, 1959u mm I I I I I,. I . 1Here’s how the Dual Filter does it:1. It combines a unique inner filter o,f ACTIVATED CHARCOA1—defi¬nitely proved to make the smoke of a cigarette mild and smooth ...2. with an efficient pure white outer filter. Together they bring you thebest of the best tobaccos—the mildness and taste that payoff in pleasure!Entering students Con A-boinb be rfefecfed?by Robert MarchClISCUSS problems Residents of Los Angeles who have “detected” US nuclear tests from the glow they makeA frroun nf first ctnin the sky would not think test detection very difficult. The problem facing the 1958 Genevafew weeks* to diMi^ sorneoftiw Drohlem^nprtinpnt tn entpr^ conference of scientists from the eastern and western powers, however, was to provide*ing students, according to Mary AHce Ne”! dean of enter-' gJ££ " “h ** SUrfaCe °rab°Ut th€ gCneral areaS They fo'und that bomte as small as one kiloton exploded in the atmosphere produce suffidents might have,” she explained, house depending upon the size ... id tification thousands by seismographs at large dis- apecUon quota and the relevantSuch areas might include cur- of the dorm. I hope this will be P .. f th_ test site under- tances, but earthquakes give simi- of new US data on the detectionriculum, the placement examina- taken care of in the next couple j .. , . iar signals. of underground tests. Just |afittions. orientation week, and the weeks, for I’d like one meeting be- water tests are also eas y , , week Russia took a step towardadvisory system. The group fore the end of the new quarter.” tected from shock waves that On-site location necessary considering the new data,would be an attempt to solve Mrs. Newman this year is gen- travel great distances in ocean Only on-site inspections can Does Russia want ban?some of the communications prob- eral advisor to entering students. watorc prove whether a signal really _ ..came from a bomb test if the en- Fr°™ £ Geneva conferenceergy is much less than five kill- J?_U,8Sians JW'ar ™rewaters.High altitude tests can now beJems which exist between new Every first-year student will have— *students and the faculty. at least oneappointment with hery radia,i0n . measuring Jl*' me'lBe'rkner report on sets- willing to make concessions than1 hope there will be a series this year. Noting that many of aeiecxea oy i t<ons-li*President at previous disarmament negotia-of meetings, although what I’m the students she had met had been instruments in satellites. If te H?.010^Pdi__ugses neW prob- tjons. Many Americans base opin.talking about won’t really be able to offer interesting and con- are made deep underground, how- Eisenhowei ”det tion of tests ions of the insincerity of the Rus-quite as formal as that sounds,” structive suggestions for the im- ever the heat light( an(j radiation Jem* ,n *“*"**_ detection sians 0,1 theories of the aims andIfrs.NowrriAnpnnHnimH provement of orientation week, : w,__. but also suggests new oeiec _ -**I imagine the members of this Mrs. Newman decided that a the blast can all be con- techniques Further research in methods of the communist gov--Croup will be selected by dormi- group discussion on similar topics tain* beneath the ear,IVs surface. ^Sgy prases *“«*'« ja"m« WadsS%tories—one or two to each college might also be productive. The shock wave can be detect the large num^ ^ delegate to the negotiations ha*_____— ‘ | spections that now appear to ue ,DUAL FILTER DOESFilters as no single filteFnin~for mild, full fimr! y mcr Md ■.. necessary for positive identifier said, “I honestly believe the Rus-tion sians want a treaty.”Following the agreement of the <bere any validity in Russianconference of scientists on a de- accusations of US insincerity intection system political negotia- approaching a test ban? In thetions between the US, Britain, and executive branch of the US gov-! Russia on a test ban began in eminent, opinions on the impor-: Geneva on October 31, 1958. The tance of testing to US militaryfirst major problem was solved security are divided. Consequent-two months later when the west- ly no clear picture of US inten-ern nations accepted the idea of tions has emerged. Before the USa permanent ban instead of the renewed its pledge to voluntarilyone-year treaty they had pro- foregoing testing d u r i n g theposed. Russia compromised by ac- Geneva negotiations the ARC andcepting the violation of anv treatv the Department of Defense werearticle as grounds for withdrawal permitted to make a campaign inby the other parties The press for public acceptance ofFaring espionage. Russia did new *««»* *" November whennot accept on-slte inspection till♦he spring of 1959. Then Russiawas persuaded to aceept perma¬nent inspection teams and the US The first pledge lapsed.President’ must decide•Soon President Eisenhowermust again decide on the continu-agreed to setting a quota on the ance of a test moratorium, sincenumber of on-site inspections. In 'he work »t Geneva cannot be- oevoev „ . a completed in the two months thatthe summer of 19;>9 Russia me remajn Gf our present suspension.In his news conferences he hasnot committed himself on whatthe US will do. The President hasalso declined to act on the recom¬mendations of the Berkner re¬port on seismology urging motethis concession by dropping itsdemand for a veto over inspec¬tion trips. Russia also agreed tohave foreign teehnieians in one-third of the staff positions in con¬trol posts on Russian soil. Al¬though the numbers are still nn-n- — |— — *■"der debate, the western powers potential of removing the lasthave consented to the partial staf- major technical obstacle to a Testfing of the posts by citizens of ^an agreement, the admini*>tra-the host country. Remaining is- thm has not budgcteil any moneysues are the size of the on-site in- US research.Though such a program lias theCultures yourpersonalityas well asyour personNow with . . . CoronaStudio1314 E. 53rd St.MU 4-7424 for it. The recommended sumwas twenty-two million dollars,less tiian one-tenth of one \H-rcent of our 40 billion dollar mili¬tary budget.The principal obstacles to a testban are as much political as scien¬tific. Little can be predicted aboutthe future negotiating position ofeither side, so not much can besaid about the probable outcomeof the talks. The critical issue oftesting and military' securitywhich is not dealt with here hasbeen discussed in the previous ar¬ticle of this series.Free booklet tellshow to tour Britainon a budget* * f *Serious writing, humor produceodd' mixture in latest Phoenixby Bobby WatsonThe most unlikely word to describe a college “humor” magazine (to me) is “dignified.”And a student literary magazine is usually too self-conscious to be humorous. The newPhoenix, the sixth issue of the magazine in its present incarnation, seems to be trying to fillthe place of both, with mixed results.Of the nine sizeable pieces in the issue, six could be classed as serious items in one sensepr another. But of these six, two, and possibly four, could also be classed as humorous.Om* among the remaining three —Contributions is a straight article, be significant about. This irrita- covery that the voice is “real,”while the last two are comic tion probably prejudices my are all described dispassionatelypieces with satirical intentions. In opinion of the story as a whole, by the author,the abstract, this lack of classi- In “Layoff,” Howard M. Levin Unfortunately, he has done hisfiability sounds like a positive has written a completely serious work on Miss Lamb too well, andgood; in concrete form it is a story of two men laid off during anything that happens to her islittle odd and not exactly pleas- the steel strike. Leaving the topi- of almost no interest. Miss Lambcality of the story aside, it seems is too much of a setup, too frag-Lead story best to have little value. In an itali- ile a character not to be meantThe first story in the maga- cized vision, presumably symbol- to be knocked down. The tech-zitio, “Social Prominence” by Ron ic, one of the men decides to re- niques of gothic horror can notBurton, benefits from the foggi- turn to his previous work as a be used in close conjunction withness of intention. Neither title, il- sailor. Since this is all that “hap- Westchester realism,lustration, or opening paragraphs pens.” the description “mood- Nostalgia effectivegive the reader any idea of what piece” seems correct. The article, “Fifty Seventhkind of story it is. or rather isn’t, The story fails (if I have Street,” by Robert Kaplan, is afor despite the fantastic events of judged its purpose correctly) be- straightforward story of the ar-the latter part of the story, the cause nothing happens emotion- tistic life of the Hyde Park area(almost) continuously detached ally either. A location is sketched after the turn of the century,narration makes the description in. three characters, and a feeling, when many of the writers mostof it as serious or comic impos- When the revelation comes to prominent in the twenties livedSible. the ex-sailor that the life of the and worked in this area. It is bothThe purpose of the tale as well sea, although hazardous, is more brief and informative, virtues Ias its events are self-contained, the work of a man. it seems in- find it hard to resist,to such an extent that its intent consequential, and the story ends Of the more purely humorousLs unimaginable. In the reading it with no more feeling of finality pieces, Neal Johnston's “The Plotis peculiarly effective and. to my than of anticipation. Perhaps to Simplify the College” is easilymind, is the most satisfactory what I am trying to define is a the most successful. Taking thething in the issue. lack of any specific character stand that the current attempts toTwo other stories, which are which might give to the story an simplify the College have mademore serious but as difficult to idenrtty of some kind. it more complex, Johnston hasdescribe, don't come off so well. Irony prominent written an unambitious funnyPerhaps it is the strangely elusive The ironic treatment returns to article, which supports his prem-tone in which they are written, some extent in “The Agony of ise well.“Philanthropy,” by Michael Wolf- Agnes Lamb" by Robert A. Ja- The poem “Old Ode.” of un-son, suggests in tone Kafka’s cobs. It tells the story of a woman specified authorship, is the sortmuch longer “Address Before an of “small, birdlike appearance,” of thing one makes up on theAcademy,” but only a faint one. who works at a wholesale cement spur of the moment and thenIt is an address to an Honorable firm, and who hears a strange forgets. Its publication in PhoenixSociety of Destroyers, an (evil?) voice answer her home phone won’t make it any more memor-entropic elite. The tone is ironic, when she dials her home num- able, or for that matter, anybut we learn so little of the body ber by mistake. By fairly fa- funnier,addressed, or the speaker himself, miliar technique, the author Clod isn't funnythat the object of the irony is un- makes Miss Lamb totally color- The thesis that to mock pre-elear to the point of irrelevancy, less by minute description of her tentiousness one must exceed theWolfson succeeded better than attire and manner. original in the same vice is dem-John Schultz, author of “Strange After he has established defin- onstrated by the last article,Craft.” The story is very short, itely that this woman is of no which I will call for convenienceSeemingly devoted to the form- “interest” whatsoever, he intro- the Clod study. What might con¬ing of a single, peculiar image, duces a totally irrational element eeivably have been funny in thewhich to me is pretty unsug- into her drab routine, which na- scope of a single page has beengestive. The tone of the piece is turally frightens her. Miss Lamb’s dragged on and on until it fin-weighted with significance, some- growing feat, her conquest of ishes the issue on a note of un¬tiling I find irritating in a piece her “superstitious” imaginings, believable dullness. The idea isWhich seems to lack something to and her horrifying (to her) dis- unoriginal, and it is worked outwith consummate bluntness. Infew words, it is totally negli¬gible.Despite my criticisms. I be¬lieve the issue well worth read¬ing. With exceptions, the piecesare worked out with surprisingskill; the only lacking thing ineach case seems to be a sufficient¬ly interesting subject matter. Thegeneral tone of standing dispas¬sionately apart, which theauthors share, I find distastefulto a certain extent, but the au¬thors’ attitude to their own cre¬ations is none of my business.Perhaps this passionate interestis their only real lack.Library soon to open Sundays“Harper reserve room andtwo first-floor study halls willbe open on Sundays as soonas we can find people to staffthem,” announced Stanley E.Gwvnn, assistant director forreader services. “We are aimingfor Sunday, November 28, as theStarting date for this policy.”“Two staff members must beon duty at all times,” Gwynn as¬serted. “We have found one mem¬ber of the present reserve roomstaff who is willing to work onSundays.“We have been planning to dothis for some time. The library’sbudget, as provided by the admin¬istration, includes funds for thispurpose. Nevertheless, the need torestrict access to the law libraryto those who have business withthe legal material, and the inter¬est of Student Government, put usUnder some pressure.”*The two study halls, with acombined seating capacity of 111,and the reserve book room will be Harper’s only open areas on Sun¬days. Smoking is permitted in theeast hall. The entrance will befrom the quadrangles; the 59thstreet entrance will be keptlocked.Campus libraries started open¬ing at 8:30 am this quarter, par¬tially restoring hours cut in 1952..Also, dinner-hour service was ad¬ded in Harper reserve and circu¬lation departments.Universal Army StoreHeadquarters for sport and work wearFlap pocket wash & wear ivy league trousers — Wash & wear dressshirts — camping equip. —— Complete line of keds footwear — trenchcoats — luggage and trunks.1144 East 55th st. DO 3 957210 % reduction with this coupon _ SOKVIUEla dangerous socialPHENOMENON! hundreds ,upper middle ciass ghuvflte WARNING FOR B TRIPto EukoPt. rrzTzr. JMtVRe FLOCKINGTO THE DOCKS llktLEMMINGS, CROfiNUjGOMERtVCRy (M-COM/ttGC-UNARD UNIR. THEtft FATHERSEITHER Um TKtMTO L0UM6K RROUNDhlllH THE lOWG *SHORE MEM OR SEN 0THEM OFF 70 LH£ IHSIN WITH TR£LITHUANIANS !Jimmy’sand the University RoomRESERVED EXCLUSIVELY FOR UNIVERSITY CLIENTELEFifty Fifth and Woodlawn Ave.UNIVERSITYBARBER SHOP1453 E. 57thFine haircuttingFour barbers workingLadies' haircuttingFloyd C. ArnoldProprietor HOBBY HOUSE RESTAURANTwe specialize inRound-O-Beef and Waffles 1342Open from Dawn to Dawn east 53 st.PROGRESSIVE PAINT fir HARDWARE CO.“Hyde Park's Most Complete Paint & Hardware Store”Wallpaper — Gifts — Tools Rented — HousewaresUC DiscountHY 1-3840-1 1154-58 I. 55th •». THIS DILEMMA most81 SOLVED- UPPERmiddle clawWOMANHOODMUST BE .PROTECTED 1 IT SEEMS THAT WECNW umv THEY'UBt SAFE IS TO BESENT OFF UEftfUNGBLACK KOM60A&SAND CARRYINGattache cases. THEN THE LONGSHOREMEN WILLTHINK THE GIRLS ARE SENATEINVESTIGATORS AND THEFOREIGNERS GJIU THINK IHE^REFROM THE STATE DtMAT«*£*JTTHE ULTIMATE |N SAFETY FOR THEAMERICAN GIRW*The trim classic beauty of a Hamilton watch forwomen. Perfection of styling, the ultimatein performance, a watch for the woman truly lovedSomeday you, too, may be given a Hamilton.It will be a day you will never forget./-/>A A/7/LJ7~O/V-M- The gift of a Hamilton — reward of loveNovember 13,1959 • CHICAGO MAROON • 9Mice, radiation don't mixNew information about one form of irradiation injury has been obtained by Argonne na¬tional laboratory scientists through the study of irradiated mice.Dr. Austin M. Brues, director of the laboratory’s biological and medical research division,gaid research conducted by Dr. Samuel W. Lesher, an associate pathologist, and Dr. EdwardH. Vogel, Jr., an associate biologist, reveals that in deaths occurring during the three andone-quarter to six-day period after whole-body irradiation, the major factor is intestinaldamage. One specific result is♦hp Hpctnipfinn nf thp prvntc are approximately three times or gamma rays when the test isuie trail uiuun oi uie ciypis, mQre effectiye than gamma rayg one of intestinal sensitivity.the regions in which are found from cobalt-60 when death (with- The study of radiation effectsepithelial cells that form the cov- jn an acu^e 30-day period) is used is one of the major research pro-ering of the villi in the small m- ag t^e criterion for relative bio- grams at Argonne, which is a cen-testine. - -■ - *Russian scientists tourLemont research facilitiesIII «*H at uic uvruaj ivv*/ ... _as the criterion for relative bio- grams at Argonne, which is a cen-logical effectiveness of the two ter for the development of peace"The sequence of changes lead- radiations. These recent studies ful uses of the atom. The labora-Ing to the destruction of the by Lesher and Vogel indicate that tory is operated by the Universitycrypts is the same,” Dr. Brues ex- neutrons may be six or seven under contract to the US atomicplained, “regardless of the expo- times more effective than x-rays energy commission,sure pattern or the kind of radia¬tion.”He added that the time of re¬sumption of mitosis (cell division)Is vitally important. Unless mi¬tosis is resumed within the first24 hours, the destruction of thecrypts results in denuding and dis¬integration of the villi, and recov¬ery becomes impossible, Dr. Brues•aid.Although the sequence ofchanges is the same regardless ofthe kind of radiation, disruptionef cell division lasts longer, andthere is greater damage to partsof the cell nucleus after radiation*>y fission neutrons than aftergamma-ray and x-ray irradiation.Previous work has shown thatfission neutrons from a reactor On Nov. 7, nine top Russianscientists and engineers visitedArgonne national laboratoryas part of a nation-wide tourof American energy facilities.This tour is a counterpart of therecent trip by a group of Ameri¬can scientists and top AEC offi¬cials to the USSR.Dr. Norman Hilberry, directorof Argonne, said “We welcomeour fellow scientists . . . and alsohope such visits will be the fore¬ runners of a growing exchange ofpeacetime atomic energy ex¬change between . . . East andWest.”The visitors saw the Argonneheavy water research reactor, ex¬perimental boiling water reactor,the Argonaut training reactor,the site of the Zero Gradient Syn¬chrotron, and the whole bodycounter, a device used to measureamounts of radioactivity contain¬ed in the human body. UC labs investigate causeof aphasia at speech clinicA new diagnostic test for aphasia — the language problemcaused by brain impairment — has been developed by re¬search teams from the University of Chicago and the Uni¬versity of North Carolina. ~ —The test has been under devel- Aphasia is usually caused byopment for the past three years strokes and head injuries, and oc-by research groups led by Profes- casionally by brain tumor oj>oia.sors Joseph M. Wepman, of the ^University of Chicago, and LyleV. Jones, of the Psychometric laboratory at the University of NorthCarolina.Dr. Wepman, an associate professor in the departments of psy¬chology and surgery, who directsthe University of Chicago Speechand Language clinic, said:“We hope that the new test willenable us to determine more spe¬cifically than we have before the degree of ability to name the pit-language defect presented by our ture or word, to match the pi<-lnr«patients, and from this analysis ^ Jenable us to make therapy morespecific to the individual prob¬lem.”Aphasia is a condition in whichspeech, hearing, reading, and inability to use certain areaswriting abilities may become gar- of vocabulary or to use words »nbled because of some brain im¬pairment. An estimated one mil¬lion people in the U. S. suffer, invarying degrees, from aphasia. tions. Aphasia occurs most oftenin people over 50 years old, butcan and does occur at all ages.Main instrument in the lest isa metal box which projects sim¬ple line drawings and words on atelevision-like screen 8 by 12inches. Sample pictures and wordsmight be those for a bicycle, dog,or house.The nature of the patient'saplmsic defect is revealed by biswith a projected word, to us«> th«word in a sentence, and to re¬spond to the therapist’s spnU<-nquestions, Dr. Wepman said.Specific aphasic defects, such asproper grammatical sequente,would be disclosed by the tcsi.Therapists then will be able tomatch a specific defect with amore specific treatment, Dr. Wop-man explained.Aphasic talk sounds In generallike a conversation over a tele-CUT DOWNON YOURSMOKING...THEBIG DUKEFILTERDOES ITFOR YOUFILTER KINGIntroducingNEW DUKE... DukeOF DURHAMKing-Size in the filter where it matters most...Lowest in tars of all leading low-tar cigarettes phone which has loose connec¬tions. One sample of aphasic talkrecorded during a therapy sessionat the UC Speech and Languageclinic was from a 52 • year oldwoman who was trying to de¬scribe her large family: “Oh vos.Me, any minute, two children,many, every, fight, I don’t know.Tired, slightly tired.”Three basic types of aphasicdisturbances—defects in the abil¬ity to form and use words havebeen found by the University ofChicago and University of NorthCarolina researchers, Dr. Wop-man said. They are:1. Aphasies who are able tospeak but can’t summon up thecorrect words to express Iheirthoughts. Their words are com¬pletely unrelated to the ideas theyare trying to discuss.2. Patients who seem unable toform the frequently used connec¬tive words of the language, suchas “the, and, of.” “They speak asthough they were reading froma telegram,” Dr. Wepman said.Such a patient would say “fishing. . . Monday” instead of “I wentfishing on Monday.”3. Aphasies who seem able touse only words of general mean¬ing. This type of patient speakswithout specific meaning, asthough the listener could supplythe important words. He soundslike this: “Well, I don’t know, hutI think, yes, I know it is, but it swonderful.”Qtlggett & Myeri Tobacco Co.|0 • CHICACO MAROON • November 13, 1959 The TREVIf*Hyde Park’s FinestEspresso House”Sun., Tues., Thurs.4:00 pm - 1:00 amWeekends5:00 pm - 3:30 amSHOW TIMETue*.# 9:00- 1:00 amThurs., 9:00 - 1:00 amFri., 9:30 - 2:30 amSat., 9:30 -.2:30 am1553 E. 57thCampus Bus Stopat the doorDarwin first editions soonon display at ReynoldsFirst editions of all Dar¬win’s major printed works willgo on display in Reynolds clubsouth lounge November 24 aspai-t of the centennial celebration,according to Robert Rosenthal,curator of special collections.“The collection, recently pre-aented to UC libraries by ColonelWilliam M. Spencer, emphasizesDarwin’s works, the works of hisprecursors, and the effects of hiswork on 19th century society,**commented Rosenthal. UCLAbiomedical library has prepared apictorial loan collection which willalso be displayed.“Between the two collections,we will be able to present a verycomprehensive survey of Darwin¬ism and a good historical back¬ground for the addresses. This isthe exhibition's primary purpose,”Rosenthal stated. Darwin’s Journal and Remarks,Narrative of the Surveying Voy¬ages of HMS Adventure andBeagle, the Journal of the Pro-reeding of the Linnean Society,Origin of the Species, The De¬scent of Man and Selection in Re¬lation to Sex, and several workson geology and botany are in¬cluded in the collection.Works of Jean Baptiste Lam¬arck, Erasmus Darwin, CharlesLyell, Robert Chambers, andThomas Malthus form the back¬ground for Darwin’s theories. Nu¬merous magazine articles, car¬toons, and books indicate the ef¬fects of the theory of evolution onscience, religion, society, andhumor.After the centennial the collec¬tion will be on display in specialcollections, Harper W61, until theend of the quarter. gcTOZoA —- —■—— . —y* f~ri’r*-’amoebajbdr~3>m eci uirt (double yo\V>) siTnoc ba.Cincbri^tre. 1vcact able •y * soup poRIF£RA cor-aA—uncommonSponge eenTthwoTmFreeze genius plasm?Man can produce a race of geniuses by using the frozen sperm of great individuals suchas Einstein, Pasteur, Descartes, or Lincoln, states H. J. Muller, distinguished service pro¬fessor of Zoology at Indiana university, in a paper for the forthcoming Darwin centennialcelebration.Muller’s was one of the forty-four papers which were circulated among participants inthe centennial. Fifty of the world’s leading authorities on Darwin will attend the centennial,which will run from November23 through the 28. Participants pr0gress which motivates the hu- However, scientists of todayIn the celebration will meet in many scientists to the samepanel discussions to assess the force which makes birds fly southideas of Darwin. for the winter and bears hibernateMuller suggests in his paper Up to the present time, onlythat only the sperm of a person mystical and metaphysical an-who has been dead for at least swers have been o/ferad to thesetwenty years be used, so that questions.“Much less biased judgments Dr. Fred L Polak, cultural so- Darwin show rehearsalsgoing well, says Haydonurge that the acceptance of thetheory is more important thanfor the winter and bears hibernate ever because it is requisite tofurther scientific improvement.In the words of Dr. Mueller,“one hundred years without Dar¬winism is enough.”The Soviet Union has been farcould be made concerning his ciologist of the University of Rot- more liberal than the West inactual merits as well as his short- terdam, has developed the field of the acceptance of the theory ofcomings." bio-philosophy in an attempt to evolution. Muller considers thisdangerous because, “We dare notleave it to the Soviets alone toHans Gaffi on. professor of bio- answer this question. In his pachemistry at UC, predicts in his per for the centennial, Polak sugpaper that man may be able to gests that “mental processes of offer men the inspiration that isproduce life in the test tube with- imagination and speculation that to be gained from the wonderfulin the next thousand years. Gaf- are generally regarded as abso-fi on suggests that, "There is no lutely worthless and even danger-reason to doubt that we shall re- ous (to rigorous scientific disci-discover, one by one, the physical pline) might be the key to an un-and chemical conditions which finished chapter in the evolution¬ary process, which may be atonce its essence and its perfec¬tion.”There has been, since the pub-onre determined and directed thecourse of evolution.”The UC celebration, which ispart of a national commemora¬tion of the 100th anniversary of lication of his thesis, much rethe publishing of Darwin’s “The sistance to accepting the ideas ofOrigin of the Species,” is more Darwin. In the words of Johnthan an evaluation of one hun- Lear, science editor of the Satur¬ated years of work. It is, in many day Review of Literature, this re-ways, the beginning of work sistance has been due to the factaimed toward many of the un- that, “Man still finds it hard tosolved problems about evolution, face Ihe emptiness of the uni-Because of the great emotional verse alone. His loneliness probupheaval which was caused bythe publication, Darwin’s work,many scientists feel that the per¬spective of 100 years is necessaryto subjectively evaluate the ideasof Darwin and to see where weare heading in the field.One of the problems that haslong been troubling scientists isthe indomitable drive toward ably is, in fact, deeper than evernow because the cosmos he isaware of has expanded." world view opened by Darwin andother Western biologists.Many religious groups havestrongly objected to Dai'win’sideas. They feel that it degradesman to be called a descendant oflower forms of life. Darwin him¬self was not a religious man. Hedid not believe in a God, because,“there seems to me too much misery in the world” to be deliber¬ately hatched by anyone worthbelieving in.Because of the religious contro¬versy concerning Darwin, a spe¬cial panel of Catholic, Protestant,and Jewish theologians will dis¬cuss, “The warfare of sciencewith theology,” on the final dayof the celebration.” “The Poliak - Ashenhurstteam is at peak form. Andwith a cast so enthusiasticthat it goes around singingshow songs outside rehearsal, weguarantee an impressive perform¬ance,” said Harold Haydon, a setdesign for “Time Will Tell,”and former UC assistant dean ofstudents.According to Haydon, one ofthe sets, representing a rockyseascape, will have “fossils ofeggs in frying pans, and whiskeybottles painted on it. This willprobably be visible only to thecast.”Scene 5 will have a very bigdrop, the interior of the OxfordMuseum, built in 1855, a yearbefore the big Darwin debate."Oxford was built as a scientific museum, and according to mymain source of information, Ro¬land Penrose of Tate Gallery, it’sfestooned with iron work of plantforms,” stated Haydon. “Eachcolumn in the building is builtof a different material. I feel Imust get some monkeys into thescenes in some place; it’s only fairto the spirit of Darwin.”“Be sure to attend,” urgedHaydon, “if only out of scientificcuriosity. For as a friend oncesaid to a grandson of Darwin,‘Say, I’ve heard that your grand¬father was a monkey.’”“Time Will Tell” will run overThanksgiving weekend. The firstperformance is Thursday, No¬vember 26, when all seats are $3.At following performances, onNovember 27 and November 28,seats are $3, $2. and $1.SURPRISING VALUESAuction bought clothing — pants,hots, furnishings, shoes ot thelowest prices.Guaranteed Fit1C MEN'S WEAR1547 E. 63rd"Over 25 Year* in tkaNeighborhood" □ CJ□ C all the Free Press booksTHE GREEN DOOR BOOKSHOP1450 East 57th HY 3-5829Chicago's most complete stockof quality paper backsGift* for AM OccasionsK0GA GIFT SHOPQuality and ServiceI* Oar MoffoImported and Domestic Dry GoodsChinawara - Jewelry - KimonosSandals - Greeting CordsWIs* KoK* 1203 E. 55 St.**U 4-6850 C hicago 15, III. See RUSSIA foryourself in 1960American conducted Student/Teacher Economy tours by Maupintour — thebest routes at lowest costs. From 1495, all-inclusive, summer departures.■ RUSSIA BY MOTORCOACH. Beginning Helsinki or Warsaw. Seecountry byways, rural towns plus Moscow, Leningrad. 17 days.■ DIAMOND GRAND TOUR. Russia, Crimea, Ukraine, Czechoslovakia,Poland, Germany, Passion Play, Bayreuth Festival, Berlin, Scandinavia.Benelux, Austria, Switzerland.■ COLLEGIATE CIRCLE TOUR. Cruise Black Sea, see the Caucasus,Ukraine, Crimea, Russia, White Russia, Poland, Czechoslovakia, Scandinavia,Benelux, Berlin, England, Luxembourg, France.■ EASTERN EUROPE ADVENTURE. New route. Bulgaria, Roumania,new hiway through Southern Russia, Ukraine, Crimea, Moscow, White Rus¬sia, Czechoslovakia, Poland, Krakow, Dresden, Berlin, Germany, Austria,m mm m ■ V See your local Travel Agent or writeMaupmtour^^^d^ HIP, HIP, HURRAYfor theGREYHOUND® wayto save money!Got the good word aboutGreyhound ScenicruiserService®? It’s the latest,the greatest way to go...with air-conditioning, pic¬ture windows, air-suspen¬sion ride and completerestroom! You’ll have aball headin’ home on aGreyhound —it’s oftenfaster than other publictransportation, and alwaysless expensive! COMPARE THESE LOW.LOW FARES:(One Way)St. Louis 6.55Detroit 8.80Cincinnati 9.20Now York 24.85•plus foxBAGGAGE PROBLEMS? You can take more with you on aGreyhound. Or, send your belongings by Greyhound PackageExpress. They arrive in hours and cost you lesslIT’S SUCH A COMFORTTO TAKE THE BUS...ANDLEAVE THE DRIVING TO US! GREYMUNDClark fir RandolphGREYHOUND TERMINALFI 6-5000November 13, 1959 • CHICAGO MAROON • 11Conning events on quadranglesFriday, 13 NovemberThe Eucharist according to the Lu¬theran use, 11:30 am, Bond cha;;el.Newborn conference, 1 pm, ChicagoLying-in hospital, Dora Lee hall.Political Science department open hourseminar, 3:30 pm. Social Science 302.“Research In American federalism,'’Morton Grodzins.Mathematical Biology meeting. 4:30 pm.5741 Drexel avenue. “A formal modelfor Gestalt perception,” Peter H.Greene, research associate, departmentof Mathematical Biology.Medical and surgical cardiac conference,5 pm, Gilman Smith hospitalOuting club meeting, 7 pm. Ida NoyesEast lounge. Movies, skiing and talkby John Verrey. ski instructor; displayof ski equipment and clothing.Lutheran student fellowship supper anddiscussion. 6 pm. Chapel house. 5810Woodlawn avenue. “The origins oflife and modern science,” Lloyd Koz-lott, assistant professor, departmentof Biochemistry.Motion picture series: “The Germanfilm." 7:15 and 9:15 pm, Social Sci¬ence 122. “Kameradschaft.”Hillel foundation Sabbath service, 7:45pm. Hillel house, 5715 Woodlawn ave¬nue.International house social dancing. 3pm. International house assemblyhall. Instrvct’cn, 8-9 pm. social danc¬ing, 9 pm-12 m.University concert, 8:30 pm, Mandelhall. The Alfred Deller trio perform¬ing songs and instrumental pieces byDowland, Buxtehude, Purcell, andHandel.Hillel foundation fireside conversations,8:30 pm. Hillel house. 5715 Woodlawnavenue. “Are the Jews a chosen peo¬ple,” Henry Skirball, associate direc¬tor, Hillel foundation.Saturday, 14 NovemberChest conference, 8 am, Billings hos¬pital M-l-37.Diseases of the nervous system. 9 am.Billings hospital M-137. Dr DouglasN. Buchanan.Pediatrics clinical conference, 10:30 am,Billings hospital M-137.Cross country championships, 11 am.Washington park. UC track club five-mile open run. International house outing, 11:30 am,International house lobby. Trip toIndiana Sand Dunes and to Herman'sDance palace. Round trip and foodwill cost about $1.50.Recorder society meeting, 1 pm. IdaNoyes theater. The first part of themeeting will be devoted to instruc¬tion.WUCB-Radio Midway, 3 pm. Mitchelltower studios. Regular general stationmeeting.UC Dames club open house. 8:30 pm. IdaNoyes library. All student and fac¬ulty wives and all married womenstudents and their spouses are in¬vited.University theater: “Pepel, the unburiedRussian,” 8:30 pm. Mandel hall. JimDamico's play which won the 1959Charles H. Sergei Drama prize.Sunday, 15 NovemberRadio broadcast: “Faith of our fathers,"7:05 am, WGN. The Reverend AndreTrocme, the Fellowship of the Re¬conciliation, Geneva, Switzerland.Roman Catholic masses, 8:30, 10. and11 am. DeSales house, 5735 Universityavenue.Episcopal communion service, 9:30 am.Bond chapel.Guru Nanak birthday celebration andinauguration of new Sikh religiouscenter, 10 am, 829 E. 60th street. Pro¬gram will include discussion and sing¬ing of holy songs. Refreshments willbe served, all are welcome.Lutheran communion service, 10 am.Bond chapel.University religious service, 11 am,Rockefeler chapel. The Reverend J.Edward Dirks, the Divinity school,Yale university, New Haven, Connec¬ticut.International house movie, 2 pm, homeroom. Refreshments.Carillon concert, 2:30 pm. Rockefellerchapel. James R. Lawson, chapel caril-lonneur.Concert: Brahms festival, 3 pm. Rocke¬feller chapel. The University choirand members of the Chicago Sym¬phony orchestra, Richard Vikstrom.director of chapel music, conducting.Guest soloist: George London.International house day celebration, 4pm. International house assemblyhall. Episcopal church council supper anddiscussion, 5:30 pm, Brent house.“What is man without communica¬tion,” the Reverend George F. Tltt-man.Disciples student fellowship dinner andprogram, 6 pm, Church of Disciplesof Christ. 57th and University. Ter¬rence Sandalo, former clerk of theSupreme Court will speak on, “Cen¬sorship. threat or blessing.”Bridge club, 7:30 pm, Ida Noyes hall.Duplicate bridge will be playedChanning - Murray club, 7:30 pm. 5628Woodlawn avenue. Dr. Mehlberg ofthe department of Philosophy willspeak on, “Semantic concepts oftruth.”Radio broadcast: “The sacred note."8:15 pm, WBBM. A program of choralmusic by the UC choir. Richard Vik¬strom, director; Heinrich Fleischer,organist.University theater: “Pepel, the unburiedRussian," 8:30 pm, Mandel hall.Monday, 16 NovemberCommittee on International Relationslecture, 3:30 pm, Social Science 122.“Recent developments in the MiddleEast,” Sir Alec Kirkbride. formerBritish ambassador to the independ¬ent kingdom of Libya.Hillel foundation seminar, 4 pm. Hillelhouse, 5715 Woodlawn avenue “Move¬ments and Ideas In Judaism.” led byRabbi Maurice Pekarsky.Botany club lecture, 4:30 pm. Old Bot¬any 106. “Endemism and relict floris-tlc areas in Missouri.” Julian Steyer-mark, botanist, Instituti Botanico,ministry of agriculture, Venezuela,and research associate, Missouri bo¬tanical garden, St. Louis.Motion picture: “Alone in the streets,"7 and 9 pm, International houseHillel foundation, 7 :30 pm. Hillel house.5715 Woodlawn avenue. Folk singing,led by Rabbi Henry Skirball.Television series: "News perspective."10 pm, WTTW (channel 11). “Shouldp o 1 f c e wiretapping be legalized?”Claude R. Sowle, assistant professor oflaw. Northwestern university.Tuesday, 17 NovemberThe Eucharist according to the Lu¬theran use, 11:30 am. Bond chapel.Meeting of the council of the University Senate, 3:40 pm. Law South.Hillel foundation, 4 pm. Hillel house,5715 Woodlawn avenue. Class in inter¬mediate Hebrew.Hillel foundation, 4 pm. Hillel house.5715 Woodlawn avenue. Class In ele¬mentary Yiddish.Institute for the study of metals col¬loquium, 4:15 pm. Research institutes211. “Study of the interface betweenelectrolytes and semiconductors,”J. F. Dewald, Bell Telephone labora¬tories.Intervarsity Christian fellowship, 7:30pm, Ida Noyes library. Non-denoml-national Bible study in acts, followedby an informal coffee hour.Hillel foundation seminar, 7 30 pm. Hil¬lel house. 5715 Woodlawn avenue.“Great texts in Judaism” (English),led by Rabbi Henry Skirball.Lexington studio, 7:30 pm, Lexingtonstudio. Sketch class, live models. Stu¬dents please bring own drawing mate¬rials. instruction will be given. Dona¬tion, 50 cents.Glee club rehearsal, 8 pm. Ida NoyesEast lounge. Rehearsal, all singerswelcome.Lutheran theological fellowship discus¬sion, 8 pm. Swift commons. “Can theLutheran confession still be regardedas theologically normative.” JosephSlttler and panel.International house folk dancing, 8 pm.International house assembly hall.Donation, 50 cents.Art club lecture, 8 pm. Goodspeed hall101. “The Jingojl screen: a recon¬struction of a thirteenth centuryscreen and its place in the evolutionof Japanese painting,” Robert J. Poor,UC graduate student.Television series: "All things consid¬ered,” 9:30 pm, WTTW (channel 11).Panel discussion, “Issues tn evolution—stated."Television series: “News perspectives,”10 pm. WTTW (channel 11). “Censor¬ship and restrictions on freedom ofspeech," Donald W. Smtthburg, pro¬fessor of Political Science, Illinois In¬stitute of Technology.Wednesday, 18 NovemberSecond dedicatory conference: "Powerand responsibility,” (Law school).Morning session. 10 am. Law schoolquadrangle main lounge. Lectures byDVt. PROOD’S MORAL OF THE MONTHWhen the world seems dark . .. when the sun re¬fuses to shine, do not fret. It happens every night.Dr. Frood, Ph.T.T. Dear Dr. Frood: A professor here saysI'm so dumb I can't spell my own name.What should I do? Willy urnDear William; He's just teasing.C0» C09 C0» Dear Dr. Frood: Several girls’ collegesnearby depend on our college for dates.Some girl is always calling and askingme to go out. How can I politely refuse?BotheredDear Bothered: Say you have a head¬ache. Better still, admit you have no head.Dear Dr. Frood: I have gone steady withfour different boys in the last threeweeks. Would you call me fickle?L.N.Dear L.N.: I would call you seldom.«O* <0* c0*Dear Dr. Frood: I hear that at someschools they let you smoke in class. Howcan I convince our administration to dothe same? HopefulDear Hopeful: Wherever you smokeLuckies, you're smoking in class.60* 60* 60*Dear Dr. Frood: My girl is the best¬looking doll on campus ... honey-blondhair, beautiful face and figure. I date herso often that my marks are suffering.What should I do? DaddyoDear Daddyo: Better your marks sufferthan you. Dear Dr. Frood: Like you're the most.I mean like you're out there ... so coolyou're Iceville. Like you’re the ginchiest.ChickDear Chick: Like you're sick, Chick. DR. FROOD ON ACURIOUS DECISIONThere is considerable talk intobacco circles about the in¬troduction of new cigaretteflavors. It is expected that youwill soon be able to buycottage-cheese cigarettes,sarsaparilla cigarettes andfresh-garden-vegetable ciga¬rettes. You will be happy toknow that Lucky Strike hasdecided to stick with its ownremarkable taste—that of finetobacco only. A pleasant de¬cision, I’d say.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 AND TASTE TOO FINE TO FILTER!CM. T. cw,12 * CHICAGO MAROON • Product of J’fnot/ucam <Jv£ux*> — <Jo&xgco- is our middleNovember 13, 1959 lor tne Republic; Armen A. Alchlanprofessor of Economics. University ofCalifornia at Los Angeles; Peter HOdegard, professor of Political Sote n c e . University of California atBerkeley. Luncheon session, 12 15Burton dining hall. Lecture by JamesR Wiggins, executive editor Washington Post and Tlmes-Herald andpresident. American society of news¬paper editor. Afternoon session 2 45pm, Law school quadrangle mainlounge. Lectures by Wilbur G KatzJames Parker Hall professor of Law"’Paul R. Hays, professor of law Co'lumbla university. Reception ’ 5 30pm. Quadrangle club. Dinner, 8 30pm, Quadrangle club.Hillel foundation seminar, 4 pm hiii«ibouse, 5715 Woodlawn avenue. '"Greattexts in Judaism,” (Hebrew), led t»vRabbi Maurice Pekarsky *“S?, rw^,ation- 4 pm’ HllleI house.5715 Woodlawn avenue. Class In eleimentary HebrewRelrn lectures: “Philosophy of econom-4-30 pm. Social Science 122Politics and economic policy ” FrankH. Knight distinguished service pro¬fessor of the Social SciencesCarillon concert. 4:30 pm. Rockefelleechapel. James R. Lawson, chapel carll-lonneur.Episcopal Evensong, 5 05 pm. Bondchapel. “W9YWQ meeting, 7 pm. Reynolds club3rd floor. Meeting of amateur radioclub, code practice.Politics club meeting, 7 30 pm. Social•Science 302 “How strong are the laborunions?” Brendon Sexten^undatiou, 7 30 pm. Hillel house.5715 Woodlawn avenue. Folk dancingled by David Moses.University Symphony orchestra rehear¬sal, 7:30 pm. Ida Noyes theatre.History club meeting, 8 pm. Ida NoyeaEast lounge. Professor ChristianWackauer will speak on history in thecollege. Refreshments will be servedCountry dancers. 8 pm. Ida Noyea halfAll dances taught.Henry Simmons lecture, 8 pm Lawschool quadrangle. “The intellectualhistory of lalssez faire,” Jacob Vlnerprofessor of economics. Princeton uni¬versity.Television series: “News perspectives,”10 pm. WTTW (channel 11). “Thegeography of world affairs.” RichardJ. Honk, chairman, department ofgeography, De Paul universityThursday, 19 NovemberEpiscopal communion service. 11 30 am.Bond chapelHillel foundation. 12 m. Hillel house.5715 Woodlawn avenue Hug Ivrt (He¬brew speaking group). Bring your ownlunch.Hillel foundation. 4 pm, 5715 Woodlawnavenue. Seminar, "Zionism andIsrael." led by Rabbis Maurice Pekar¬sky and Henry SkirballMeeting of the faculty of the divisionof the Biological Sciences, 4:30 pm.Pathology 117.Department of obstetrics and gyne¬cology lecture. 4:30 pm. Dora Lee hall.“Postmaturtty, determination, andtreatment,” Dr Herman H. Knaus,director, department of gynecologyand obstetrics. Hospital of Vlenna-Lainz. Austria.NAACP meeting. 7 pm. Ida Noyes li¬brary. “The Negro and the labor mar¬ket,” Ted Cobb, Chicago Urban league.Hillel foundation record concert, 7 30pm. Hillel house. 5715 Woodlawn ave¬nue.Lecture series: “Selecting your commonstocks,” 7:30 pm. 64 East Lake street.“Other selected industries and sum¬mary.” William C. Norby, vice presi¬dent,” Harris trust and savings bank.Italian club. 7:30 pm. Ida Noyes eastlounge. Danila Aguzzl will present alecture in English on the poetry ofSalvatore Quasimodo, recent recipi¬ent of the Nobel prize in literature.The public Is invited.Episcopal church council choir practice,8 pm, Brent house.Sheraton HotelsSTUDENT-FACULTYDISCOUNTSHere's money-saving newsfor students, faculty and allother college personnel. Dur¬ing weekends and collegevacations, Sheraton offersyou special low rates — evenlower rates when two or moreoccupy the same room.Special group rates are pro¬vided for athletic teams,clubs, other college organ¬izations.You get these discounts atany of Sheraton’s 54 hotelsin the U.S.A., Hawaii andCanada. Just present yourSheraton I.D. card when youregister. To get a SheratonI.D. card, contact:Mr. PAT GREENCollege Relations Dept.Sheraton Corp,470 AHantic AvenueBoston, Moss.: Leaders seek coordination Critic Kenner talks books-If we can’t get together on this thing now, we might as well quit,” said Jim Best, presi- III f ITSt ^AoOCl Y I@Cttir6dent of Blackfriars to an assembled group of the heads of student organizations at a meet¬ing in Ida Noyes last Monday. Best was referring to the amendment to the SG constitutionbeing considered by the meeting for presentation to the Government assembly next Tuesday.It had been decided in a meeting two weeks earlier that the organizations at this Univer¬sity were too loosely coordinated with one another. During this same meeting, the headsvt such groups as Blackfriars,Cap and Gown, the Maroon, theFestival of the Arts committee,Student Government, UniversityTheatre, and WUCB, togetherwith John P. Netherton, dean ofstudents, and James Newman, di¬rector of student activities, pro¬posed that a statement of intentIn the form of an article be drawnup to define the scope of the SAC.This article, if approved by thecommittee, w’ould then be submit¬ted to Student Government foraction.Bert Cohler, vice-president ofSG, Jim Best, president of Black¬friars, and Eugene DeSombre,representing Maroon Key society,were appointed to put the sugges¬tions of the committee into articleform, copies of which were distrib¬uted and discussed at the lastmeeting on Monday.The article as it now stands Ishere reprinted:To be considered as an amend¬ment to the Student Governmentconstitution:Article XIX: Student ActivitiescouncilA . The Student Activities councilshall be constituted as follows:1. Permanent members repre¬senting those a 11 campus,general interest student or¬ganizations which have beenin existence for the three im¬mediately preceding yearswhich shall consist of at least “In an age when anyone who reads a‘book calls himself acritic, Mr. Kenner is a precious commodity in a cheap mart.**With this introduction by Richard Stern of the English fac¬ulty, Hugh Kenner, literary critic and author, presented thefirst William Vaughn Moody lec-ture on “The book as book.” which would be impossible if theKenner focused his lecture on reader didn’t have the book in histhose authors who deny the con- hand,” stated Kenner. “Joycevention that “a tale is something writes from the faith that all rele-told.” This convention, followed yant knowledge can be recordedby writers from Homer through in one place—a book—to whichDickens, treats the written word you can go back and refer.”as merely a substitute for a speak- Joyce’s awareness of “the booker’s memory. as book” results in a concernIn contrast, James Joyce is the with the mot juste. He seeks forprimary example of an author the single word that not onlywho exploits the fact that the sounds right, but looks and feelsword is seen as well as heard; right also. As illustration, Kennerit is a spatial phenomenon, not cited the yawn found in Ulysses:temporal. “Joyce makes serious “iiiiiichaaaaaach.”demands on a reader, demands Kitty ScovilleLeaders of student organizations enjoy a moment duringthe SAC organization meeting Monday. Left to right (facingcamera) are James E. Newman, director of student activities;Ozzie Conklin, MAROON managing editor; and Bert Cohler,vice-president of Student Government.photo by Sealine For sale Help wanted.member from among thesegroups.4. Any all campus, general in¬terest group desiring a per¬manent seat on the Councilmust have been in existenceas a recognized student or¬ganization for over two yearsand at the end of that timesuch organizations will begranted a seat by an all-cam¬pus referendum.5. The Student Activities coun¬cil shall elect its own chair¬man. Hyde Pit. residence: Lovely 4 bedroom, Pt. time student to lead boys’ gym or2*i bath brick home, for only $22,500. swimming classes, afternoons. Ed. Roh-Completely modernized, with elec, mann, Hyde Park YMCA, 1400 E. 53rdkitchen, 220 wiring. Brick garage and St., FA 4-5300.fenced yard. Call Mrs. Redfern, C. W. — ———-— ———————4. To cooperate wljth Student Hoff & c0„ me., hy 3-2215. £?*?!$£Activities office in arranging Hyde Pk.: Ideally located, 10 rm„ take one course per quarter at 50%for meeting and event SDaoe 3 bath brick residence. Near Lake, IC, & tuition reduction. Salary, 3 wks. vaca-5 * evem Harte School. 30 ft. living rm„ tion. and other benefits. Apply Person-for organizations SO request- automatic oil heat, l»/2 car garage. Call nel Office, U. of C.ing and in the event that such Mrs. Redfern, c. w. Hoff & Co., Inc.,space is not available, shall HY 3~2215;petition for more space. House for *ale- « ng*., yard, garage.^ ^ 5743 Maryland. Call HY 3-5820.5. To be responsible for formu- Film at educed prices. 120. 35mm, 620:lating a meaningful philos- B&w, Color. 830B Salisbury after 6:30 Wantedophy for extra-curricular ac- Pm-tivities, and encouraging the 1955 Chevrolet Bel Air, new tires andbattery, exceptional motor, $675. CallBill. 38 Snell Hall.the following organizations:a. Alpha Phi Omega. Black- B. The duties of the SAC shall be:friars, Cap and Gown, Chi¬cago Maroon, Chicago Re¬view, Festival of the Artscommittee, Folklore socie¬ty, Glee club. Inter-clubcouncil, Inter-fraternitycouncil, National Associa¬tion for the Advancementof Colored People, Orienta¬tion board, Radio Midway,Student forum, Assemblyof the Student Government,Student union, UniversityTheatre, Women’s Athleticassociation, World Univer¬sity service, University or¬chestra, and the Music so¬ciety.b. One member from an or¬ganization representing allresidence halls.2. One member serving a one-vear term, and selected byrotation from among thesegroups: Nu Pi Sigma, IronMask, Owl and Serpent.One member elected by thepermanent members of theCouncil at the first meetingof the academic year fromeach of the following catego¬ries of student organizations:departmental clubs, politicalclubs, sectarian religiousgroups, and special interesthobby groups.a. A vote of 2/3 shall be nee-cessary to elect a yearly 1.To investigate the possibili¬ties of assuming some re¬sponsibility in the distribu¬tion of funds to the studentorganizations and to investi¬gate the possibilites of stu¬dent activities becoming self-supporting at some time.2. To distribute knowledge onthe budget allotments to stu¬dent organizations.3. To be responsible for drawing up, by May 15 of the pre¬ceding school year, a list ofa 11 activities scheduled by extra-curricular program.a. The SAC shall have thesame powers as the Assem¬bly in initiating Studentcode changes.b. The SAC may not take ac¬tion on any of these duties For rent Tutor for student In business adminis¬tration. Need finance or econ. back¬ground. ES 5-1346.Professional auto - driving instructor,reasonable rate. Phone BU 8-4395 after5 pm, except Friday.Job as babysitter. Prefer 5 day wk., dur¬ing day. Will sit in own home. Haveone year old child. Reasonable rate*.HY 3-4328.l-ll2-2-3 rm. furnished apts. Reason¬able. Near University of Chicago. 6107Dorchester. PL 2-9641. ServicesSewing, alterations, hems. MU 4-3941.Large clean quiet attractive room, semi-unless approved by 2/3 Of private bath in single family dwellingits current members,c. The SAC shall have no con¬trol over the internal af- near campus. BU 8-5140. Personals3-2215.fairs of the member organ- Furnished room for two. Private bath,izations. Use of four room vacant apartment.$35 per month for pair. 7953 S. Langley,6. The SAC shall provide for the see 2nd floor,interchange of extra-curricu¬lar ideas and resources.C. The student Activities Council afTer 6 pm-must meet at least once a small rm., pvt. bath. 1417 e. 56th. plmonth during the academic 2~1667-year from October to June. Furn. place for two girls, grads or Creative Writing Workshop. PL 2-8377.nurses. C. W. Hoff & Co., Inc., HYLittle Girl: Write me a letter soon, andI'll be eastward bound. Old Man.Ophelia: ???!!! Hamlet.Club Five: Forget the shades, the pais¬leys are wild. Eck.furnished2 apts.—4 rms. and 3 rms., .... _ . ... ... , ..with pvt. baths. MU 4-5990 or BU 8-2757 Beaverboard: How fares the bunny?Grubby.A Gmelirh is an animal maximus.Cachito: Solamente slete meses., IndiaSublease furn. apt., 6 rms., Jan. to June Viva Junio!sludent organizations during D. The President or Chairman of 26-°5808.4°' Hyde Pk BUd' neai Doctor; Get some sleep, j.the organizations representedthe coming Autumn Quarter,a This list shall be expandedin the Autumn quarter toinclude all scheduledevents sponsored by recog¬nized student activities forthe entire school year.< 1) The deadline date forthis calendar shall beNovember 1 and after , ,. , , T,such date the calendar ernment m“**nS "f'/uesday. Itrequires a 2/3 majority to pass.on SAC are considered the rep¬resentatives of these organiza¬tions.E. If passed, this article shallcome into effect on the Mondayfollowing the referendum nowbefore Student Government.The referendum referred to insection E will be voted on in Gov-will be printed and dis¬tributed to all students.• 2) The money for this pur¬pose shall come fromStudent Governmentfunds.>3) A supplement for thiscalendar will be pub¬lished in February.A DELIGHTFUL,DE LUXE, TREASURYOF PEANUTS! ACASA Book StoreX Cards X - Imported & Domestic - Foreign LanguageFeaturing one of the best 5c collections in the city.Also imported-Children's Books, Cards fir Small Gifts.RELIABLE TYPEWRITER SERVICE1322 E. 55th HY 3-9651See the Big News for ’60... Here By Popular DemandRAMBLER AMERICAN 4-DOOR SEDANLowest-Priced in America!Favorites Old and Newby CHARLES M. SCHULZA perfect gift at$2.95now on sale atall booksellers•long with PEANUTS • MORE PEANUTS • GOOD GRIEF,MORI PEANUTSI • GOOD OL' CHARLIE BROWN • SNOOPYYOU'RE OUT OF YOUR MIND, CHARLIE SROWNI • BUT WELOVE YOU, CHARLIE BROWN Only $1.00 eachRINEHART • New York 16 mCar illustrated is new Rambler American 4-door sedanGet new 4-door convenience in the 100-inch wheel¬base Rambler American for ’60. Save on price, ongas, on upkeep. Get highest resale value. Easiest toturn and park. At Rambler dealers now.Drive the New Standard of Basic Excellence RAMBLER AMERICAN PRICESSTART AT Rambler American 2-Dma,Hnl Sedan suggested deliv¬ered price at Kenosha.Wisconsin. State andlocal taxes, if any, au¬tomatic transmissionand optional equip¬ment. extra.>1795SEE YOUR RAMBLER DEALER TODAYNovember 13, 1959 • CHICAGO MAROON • >3HRiiSPy P\ l-Wt|rf S'mMm WinjJ 9 W ~% Hither ond yonStudent riots bring policeUC orchestra to giveconcert Dec. 4The University of ChicagoSymphony Orchestra, underthe direction of its new con¬ductor, H. Colin Slim, willgive its first free concert of theyear on Friday, December 4, inMandel hall at 8:30 pm, according to the orchestra's executive coun¬cil.Council chairman Tom Stevensrelated that the orchestra indrawing from the neighborhoodas well as the campus, is under¬taking a challenging program tocreate the interest and support ofthe University’s talent potential. Johns Hopkins Newsletter:“Out of season" campus riotinglivens dorms, brings police. Witha touch of spring in the air andan abundance of femmes-fataleson campus, 200 or so dormitorystudents began celebrating an outof season Bacchanalia. The “riot"brought four patrol cars and apaddy wagon but produced no ar¬rests.Johns Hopkins Newsletter:Bulletin: The AFL-CIO announcedthat it is “quitting for the present"its attempts to organize employes’unions at the three Baltimore hos¬pitals where it sought since Juneto gain recognition. ... A predom¬inantly pro-union sentimentamong employees at the JohnsHopkins hospital was uncoveredthis week by a special Newslet¬ter survey.Christian Science Monitor: NewYork on decline, . . . becoming acity of penthouses and slums. . ..Urban renewal at present ratecannot stop decline ... such werethe findings of a 345-page report titled, “Anatomy of a Metropolis,"by Edgar M. Hoover, economistat the University of Pittsburghand Raymond Vernon, project di¬rector for the Harvard School ofPublic Administration.Reed college Quest: TuitionRaised $200. . . . The Board ofTrustees of Reed college voted toincrease tuition for the academicyear 1960-1961 by $200 over thepresent cost of $1060 per year.The increase in tuition will facitt-tate the raising of faculty sala¬ries. . . . The increases . . . willrange from $200 at the lowestsalary level (presently $4600 peryear) to $825 at the top salarylevel (presently $10,175 peryear).University of California TheDaily Californian: French, Ger¬man, British, Italian, Spanish,Polish, Yugoslavian, Indian, Jap¬anese or Russian families willprovide homes for University (ofCalifornia) students next sun*mer. . . . These are but 10 of 25countries cited by “Experiment In International Living," a notvprofit educational institution fortravel opportunities abroad.The Reed college Quest: StolenBlankets — “The Outing clubwould appreciate the return often blankets. . . . These blanketsare expensive, and the Outingclub shudders at the thought . . ,of having to pay for them."The Daily Texan, University ofTexas, “Something different as arelief from those long schoolhours in Squaresville is the MadPad, a pillow for the Beatnik-Seatniks. Mad pads are 15 by 15and come in four colors — red,blue, yellow and white. . .The University of CaliforniaDaily Californian: “Paddles, wide¬ly recognized as a hazing instru-ment. will no longer be on sale inthe ASUC (student) store, accord¬ing to Clyde Evans, ASUC storemanager."The Antioch college Record:“There are books one approacheswith trepidation and ill will.Classics. Formidable sets of threeand four volumes. We know with¬out ever having looked insidethem that they demand a mar-tyr’s patience. And when forcedto read them for some reason, weare amazed to find out that theyare interesting. . . .“ New?Smith college Sophian: “Slen-derella salons are not the originalusers of the ‘electric hobby horse’as a means of keeping trim." Ac¬cording to the Sophian, CalvinCoolidge “made use of this devicesome forty years before commer¬cial enterprisers ever thought ofit." The iron horse was not usedonly by the former President butalso Vincent Astor, CharlesSchwab and John D. RockefellerJr.”New York Times: Landlordsseeking to rent living quarters toYale students must sign nondis¬crimination agreements beforetheir properties will be listed bythe university’s housing bureau.The Yale corporation, govern¬ing body of the university, votedthe suggestion of Dr. A. WhitneyGriswold, president of the univer¬sity. Harvard and Cornell also re¬quire such pledges. Under thepolicy the Yale housing bureauwill not accept listings of roomsor apartments from landlordswho are unwilling to sign anagreement not to discriminate forreasons of race, creed or coloragainst applicants for quarters."From the Christian ScienceMonitor we learn of ‘-Higher Ho¬rizons” a talent search of NewYork City schools conducted bythe National Scholarship Serviceand Fund for Negro Students. Theproject thus far “has raised thechildren not only out of discipli¬nary dilemmas, but into the classof* likely college candidates," ac¬cording to the group’s annual re¬port.*Get satisfying f!avor...so friendly to your taste!Set how Pall Mail’s famous length of fine, rich*tasting tobacco travels and gentles the smoke—makes it mild—but does not filter outthat satisfying flavor IHERE’S WHY SMOKE "TRAVELED* THROUGH FINE TOBACCO TASTES BESTOutstanding... |and they are Mild! You get Pall Mall’sfamous length of thffinest tobaccosmoney can buy. Pall Mall’s famouslength travels andgentles the smokenaturally., * Travels it over, under,around and throughPail Mall’s fine tobaccos... and makes it mild!©* T-C* Product of J&nvifcan is our middle nameM • CHICAGO MAROON • November 13, 1959 Teen-age MarriagesWhere arethey sleepingtonight?They just got married thismorning. Where will they sleeptonight? It hadn’t crossed theirminds..What will they do formoney? They hadn't thoughtof it. Are they in love? Oh yes.Violently. Passionately.What's in their future? Lone¬liness and tragedy. Who is toblame? YOU! No social prob¬lem in America today is morefrightening than the rapidrise in teen marriages. Nofamily is exempt from thebitter consequences. The cur¬rent issue of McCall’s tellswhy teen-agers marry, whytheir marriages fail, how toavoid premature marriages orsave them when they becomea reality. Now, today, readthe incredible, documentedfacts in November McCall S.On sale at all newsstands.-Indoor sportsUniversity liquors (next door)tarries a complete line.New catalog 'impressiveby Selma MeyerCollege catalogs are firstreferences, second “promotionpieces/’ and third — perhapsjast books qua books. A catalognmst contain the usual, necessaryinformation about its college; allother considerations are second¬ary. The result is usually a color¬less. tasteless compendium; mileafter mile of gray type, read onlywhen absolutely necessary.The new College announce¬ments, issued yesterday, cometherefore as a distinct and verypleasant surprise. With certainqualifications — mostly Ideolog¬ical _ the book deserves extrava¬gant praise. More important, itwill probably produce its intendedeffect, attracting more applica¬tions for enrollment in the Col¬lege.Through handsome design andcompetent writing, the catalog isaitractive and readable. In physi¬cal format and organization, itimplies that the College — what¬ever that is — is also well organ¬ized and an interesting place tobe. The implication in tutn canbe justified by the fond hopes ofthose involved in constructing thenewest College; after all, the Uni¬versity ought to be optimisticabout its own programs.There are, however, several sig¬nificant — and obviously delib¬erate — statements and omissionsin the new catalog. Aside fromtwo short, general statementsabout what the “old College” wasand what it accomplished, I foundno description of that College,how and why it was constructedand developed, what effects ithad upon college education in theUS, and so on.Perhaps the University is em¬barrassed by its own history; itshould be embarrassed by its ap¬parent retreat in the midst ofwidespread acceptance of impor¬tant parts of the College curricu¬lum and philosophy. At any rate,thirty years of thoughtful devel¬opment should hardly be dismis¬sed in two half-paragraphs. ForCollege alumni and for new stu¬dents who still arrive looking for"an education,” the omission isInexcusable.Statements ConflictAnother point of interest is thecontrast between the catalog’s statement and Chancellor Law¬rence A. Kimpton’s "State of theUniversity” remarks on the rela¬tionship between teaching andresearch.For example, the Chancellorsays; “. . .(the essence of theUniversity’s character) is a pas¬sionate dedication to pure re¬search and scholarship. Every¬thing else is secondary and deri¬vative. ... To teach as a part ofthe quest for new knowledge hasits dignity; only to teach has noneat this University.” The catalogsays; "The University valuesgood teaching, giving it the samerecognition accorded to researchachievement ... All (Collegefaculty) give College courses be¬cause they like to teach and doit well.”The impression is that the Uni¬versity administration is not wellcoordinated in its statements ofpolicy: "research first and fore¬most” pleases the faculty; “excel¬lence in teaching” lures new stu¬dents; use whichever happens tofit.A third matter of interest is thesection on student activities.There are:,• One and one-fourth inches ofspace devoted to an introductorystatement on activities; to theeffect that there are some;• Three inches on social life,fraternities, and women’s clubs;• Five inches (covering nearlyfour pages, with pictures) onsports.No mention is made of Uni¬versity Theatre, of the variety ofinterest groups and departmentalclubs, of the publications andWUCB, of the honor societies, orof the music organizations. Thestatement used to be, “We havelots of student activities. We alsohave lots of sports.” It is now,“We have social clubs and sports.There are some other activities.”Flaws IrrelevantNone of these considerations is,of course, relevant to the Univer¬sity’s purpose in publishing thecatalog as it is. It was not con¬structed for friends of the “oldCollege.” And nothing can detractfrom the real quality of the workas it appears.I might wish for better, moreinteresting photographs — butthose that appear are carefully selected, and the balance of sub¬ject matter, "between scenery andpeople, and between "social life”and the University's serious busi¬ness is good. Pictures in the cata¬log section are like windows intothe academic world.I might long for the inspired,exciting writing of “If You Wantan Education,” but the text of thecatalog is well written anderally imparts its informationwith a minimum of pain to thereader.I do wish there were an index; adetailed table of contents is notthe same thing at all. And withoutthe titles, the pictures of theChancellor and dean of the Col¬lege (page 39) are unimpressive.Could Be BetterIn sum: it could have been donebetter, but not much. It is ashame that such a publicationmust, unavoidably, be anonymous.Produced by Geoffrey Plampinof the omniscient office of offi¬cial publications, the new an¬nouncements were designed byGreer Allen of the UniversityPress and rewritten by WilliamMorgenstern.Job interviews scheduledThe following organizations will be conducting student interviews during the week ofNovember 16 in the office of vocational guidance and placement. Interview appointmentsmay be scheduled through Lowell S. Calvin, room 200, Reynolds club.November 16 — California Research corporation, San Francisco, will interview prospectiveSM and PhD candidates in mathematics and statistics.November 16 and 17 — Los Alamos Scientific laboratory, Los Alamos, New Mexico, wininterview chemists, mathemati-cians, and physicists at all degree wjh interview prospective gradu- For men or women—For studylevels, and in addition students ates in mathematics and physics in international relations leadingwho will receive at least SB de- at aji degree levels and SM and to the MA at the University t*grees by June 1960 who are inter- PhD candidates in chemistry. Denver, with tuition up to $1,600^ested in summer work. The office for vocational guid- the requirement is a BA by Sep-November 17—US department anCe and placement also lists the tember 1, 1960, with an outstand-of defense, Washington, DC, will following opportunities for gradu- ing undergraduate record. Filingdiscuss management opportuni- ate study with financial help in date is March 1, 1960.ties for students who successfully 1960.6i: The Institute of Paper Chemia-pass the management internship For women only — At Mount try at Lawrence college offers aexamination (US civil service). Holyoke college, open to all generous subsidy for single c*November 18 — Texas Instru- WOmen with bachelor’s degrees, married students for work towardstruments, Dallas, Texas, will in- are fellowships, scholarships, and a PhD degree. A bachelor’s do-terview prospective graduates at assistantships in varying gree in chemistry or chemical e*.all degree levels in chemistry, amounts. The filing date is March gineering is required.1, 1960, for graduate work lead¬ing to MA and MA in teachingdegrees.The Soroptimist club of LosAnother reactor grows upat Argonne laboratoriesAnother operating reactor has been added to the growinglist of nuclear research facilities at the US atomic energycommission’s national reactor testing station. Meyer Novick,director of the Idaho division of Argonne national laboratory,announced that a self-sustainingchain reaction had been attained one o{ the reactor concepts Ar-in the Argonne "fast source re- gonne has pioneered,actor (AFSR) located at the di- The AFSR is a small accessiblevisions test site 50 miles west of reactor which will extend theIdaho Falls. laboratory’s research capabilities mathematics, and physics.November 18—Connecticut Gen¬eral Life Insurance company,Hartford, Connecticut, will inter¬view for administrative training Angeles is open to women whoprogram, actuarial, data proces- are residents of the greater Lossing and programming, and in- Angeles metropolitan area forvestment analysis (MBA gradu- study in any accredited school,ates in finance). For women residents outsideNovember 19—Fansteel Metal- the area, the fellowship is forlurgical corporation, North Chi- study in a graduate school in thecago, Illinois, will interview chem- greater Los Angeles area. Theists and physicists at all degree minimum requirement is a bache-levels. The corporation’s interest ]or’s degree, and the applicationis restricted to physical chemists, deadline for the $1,500 fellow-Noveniber 19 — Cummins En¬gine company, Columbus, Indiana,will interview for positions in ac¬counting, business trainees, eco¬nomics, finance, production, psy¬chology, purchasing, sales andstatistics.November 20 — National Aero¬nautics and Space administration,Ohio, Virginia, and California, ►bicycles. Parts, Accessoriesspeciol student offerACE CYCLE SHOP1621 «. 55th it.ship is February 1, 1960.The CoUegeLAUNDERETTE1449 Ea«t 57th St.MU 4-9236I lie laboratory, whose main by making available a “guineasite is near Lemont, Illinois, 30 pjg» source Qf neutrons for usemi os southwest of Chicago, is op- jn developing experimental tech-eia ed by the University under niques. Present fast reactors atton ract to the AEC. the site cannot spare the timeie $125,000 facility will serve from their heavy research pro-as an imP°rtant laboratory tpol grams for this type of study.,n augmenting studies of fastreactor physics now being carriedout in Argonne’s “zero power crit¬ical facility” at the Idaho site.The fast reactor (so called be-eause it is a reactor in which fis¬sion is sustained by neutrons notslowed down from original fis¬sion energies by moderators) is Dr. N. J. DeFrancoOPTOMETRISTEyes exomined Glasses fittedHY 3-5352ITALIAN FIESTA PIZZERIAspaghetti sandw iches:ravioli beef,mostaccioli sausage Gr meatballFree Delivery Over $2.00MU 4-9022, 1014, 10151427 East 67th st. PHOTOGRAPHIC HUNGA Complete Custom Service• Fine Grain Developing • Enlarging • Copying• Black and White Roll Films Received Before 5by 2 PM the Following Day• All Block tr White Finishing Processed at This Address• 35mm SpecialistsPM Will Be ReadyACADEMY PRINTSStudent Discount5309 KIMBARK MU 4-5454 < L'HOMMEAVERTIsait que seule 1’assurance-vie peut lui creer une suc¬cession •— immediatement— et que la Sun Life duCanada lui offre le meil-leur service et les plans depolice les plus A jour.Reprecentativ#Je represents la Compagnied’ussuratue-vie Sun Life duCanada. Nos plans modernespeuvent &tre adapter d vosFropres heroins. Puis-je avoiroccasion de vous exposerquclques-uns de ces plans?Sans obligation, tvidemment.SUN LIFE ASSURANCECOMPANYOF CANADARalph J. Wood Jr., ’48I N. LoSalleFR 2-2390 Chicago, Ilf,• FA 4-6800November 13, 1959 • CHICAGO MAROON • IS¥ ’■-UC teams have winning week UftUB EfelE tSQJBKiMBBlsbmuMSoccer squadupsets IllinoisHeads-up team play andstrong determination paid offfor Chicago’s varsity soccersquad, as the Maroons stunnedhighly favored Illinois 2-1 atStagg field last Saturday in agame which gave coach AltfarHermanson's charges their first1959 victory and some needed con¬fidence in preparation for theirfinal match of the season againstWheaton tomorrow afternoon.The win came somewhat as asurprise to Hermanson, who fig¬ured that his players would notbe able to cope with the speed ofthe Illinois team. But the Maroonsproved that working the ball welland taking advantage of accuratepasses strongly offset a speed ad¬vantage.“The boys really played well,’*eommented Hermanson. “Illinoiswas very tough, but our boys played very well. We stayed Inposition and worked the ball verywell while their faster playersoften left their territory."‘They had some very goodstars, but as a team ours wasmuch better. Our boys reallymade up their minds to win. Youmight say the game was partiallywon in the locker room,’’ he add-ed.Roman Wirsczcuk, Wally Kas-zuba, and goalie Neeman Taylorwere selected as the outstandingChicago players by the game of¬ficials. Hermanson also commend¬ed Randy Denny and Russ Zajt-chuk on fine performances.Illinois scored first, gettingtheir only goal in the first quar¬ter, but Kaszuba evened the scorein the third stanza with a goalfrom the outside on the left. Laterin the period, Wirsczcuk scoredthe deciding goal, and the Ma¬roons held on to win.Tomorrow’s clash at Wheaton will mark the end of the Maroons*season, and a Chicago victorywould please Hermanson consid¬erably. “Wheaton is very fast,’*he explained.Tennismen win againWith first and second year stu¬dents playing the key roles, coachBill Moyle’s fall tennis squadtrimmed an experienced contin¬gent from Wheaton 7-3 atWheaton last Friday. The vic¬torious Maroons extended theirrecord from last spring to ninewins, one loss, and a lone tie.Chicago’s No. 1 man. first yearstudent Gary Cook, went threesets to trip Wheaton’s Elenbom4-6, 7-5, 6-4. Len Friedman lost toHogan 7-5, 6-4; while Jon Beralltrimmed Olson 6-4, 4-6, 9-7. First-year man Larry Weiss dropped athree set match to Kozlak 2-6, 6-4,6-2.Veterans Max Liberies and Ber-nie Hoffman each gained wins,Liberies stopping Macalum 6-1,UC and Illinois soccer players fight for ball during game. UC won 2-1.Photo by Sealine..vas-iSf* **3ZIS-ONIM30H1N1M Ott*J •<u<0 OODSqojL UMU1»!|UM * UMOJH 'acat (3H1 Q33N BOAa si ri * ^••■e6ueip feai epeau nloAh6ueip e jqj. auiq sjjj ncAS]|sq >eou{j -incA7 i ~u ffritzr it or 6Z 8C ze 9C szMl J | | a■.oe■ 6ZJ Lesirti >ova>iOlL HOOON3 a9 Zn .. 7 1 naoxni OA 31 zzit 01 61•t ■ Zt91 91n X, 1 < Ztu ot 6 zm U 9 s c z 1Lmo N auoMssoux q«m8oy ztMOP«eW -[3ia UIO)8(l3ddifs *ofJaxod sued0103 -gg8Asf33Q JOJ»ou pxoMy '8(, (■«qq'»)B.pXopj igJL»83« XqoaSi»| « a; e,ij -<»gH*q■,JO|aq3eg fig3,081 3310 A■••hum. ze3J op sjbs*) -9gBiBq u; (sapoq* udtuwjBy -sguaqooi poo*) 9Zjaqumaeiraoddo 8,a; xy •zznoAoaw*i s|ooy -fg£3ABqBosnoiS }BqM otL3!PnV3noqB i|3j -$tSaipBOJ 3JBJS 91Iuuojjo |bjo|j -3100X11331 uipunoj saiBf)Suuunoj■,oqM joj otjotbh 6pdUllUJ.l^piCyjBd )nq*»3Bjno3B[Q -g(MOM iiq^i tB8B3JB3 B■! pnnoj iog »Sip 8JrfS3ippi°8 qj»A StSurj^aJf) -p£ 0301134431■oiun Aq ujoy\ '8(«W«T) @ao| i -g JO 008SaioBoiu vijoj j -|NMOaOUI no A -itu*ohSjo.i;»oi ijb)8 v 93j«|BaiAotq 033JBd oiAopq -ppUio. psq oigig gpB)OdBB|qBJou|nA '96d8Bj8oqx UI sqBus >8J3I|3Jjo puiq b 8,11 £88|U3UiUJOpBqiuiBog -jg!»•< * JIBH 'IE»dAi Ajjox 06J3|BO[i omn -ggpunojB jpiis '8ZJopuo j|oy LI3|oq oqi0| XpuKq s.ij -gg(aisqojB)joaojoj fzll»«“S WPOIJJBUJ 180UI|B8,oq,vi |b;> ZZ08 isnui noA■ijbj oi io8 ox '6J•AI13B jo puiy -gi|jj8 j»Aiy it338 J3A3U 8|OOT(ouioj|3.« jo puiy -91iBIJBOq poojBB3| JO »BnB3 etpU3[jj qauojj Zlpddd;|883101131008S,1Bqi 81B|J *8^ qoBqoiuos« 83)fBUJ SB*) ‘9panos jo poodjj -jSSOIOV 3-6, 62, and Hoffman bestingWoodleridge 8-6, 6-3. Robin Radirof UC trounced Weber 6-1, 6-0,and Jim Zagel spilled Steltrnan6 3, 11 9 to close the singles scor¬ing.The doubles team of Cook andFriedman lost to the hosts’ firstpair 8-6 in a pro set, and the Ma¬roons’ number 2 duo won a tight8-7 set against Kozlak and Weberto climax the match scoring. TheMaroons will continue to practicethroughout the fall and winter inthe Fieldhouse.Swimmers trainfor rugged seasonSwimming coach Bill Moylewelcomed the largest turnout ofvarsity swimming prospects inthe past several years, when offi¬cial workouts began last week.A nucleus of strong veteransfrom last year’s record-breakingteam returned this year, whichMoyle can supplement with anabundance of new talent.The thirty-man squad faces theroughest schedule since Moylehas been coach, including meetswith Minnesota, Northwestern,Wisconsin, Notre Dame, SouthernIllinois, Washington University,and Illinois. Workopts empha¬size conditioning and individualspecialties, as the team preparesfor its December 1 opener.Psi U, CTS favoredin playoffsTuesday was the final day offraternity-league intramural foot¬ball action. Psi U captured thecrown with a perfect 7-0 recordand is a favorite to top the houseleague champs this afternoon at4 pm on the Midway. East II andEast III battled yesterday for thehouse championship, and the win¬ners will have their hands fulltoday.CTS leads the divisional leaguewith a 3-0 mark, and should theymaintain their lead they will facethe winner of the B league, inwhich Vincent B now holds thelead. It is likely that CTS willface Psi U for the all-Universitytitle next week.Final fraternity league stand¬ings are: (1) Psi Upsilon, (2) PhiKappa Psi, (3) Phi Gamma Delta,(4) Phi Delta Theta, (5) Zeta BetaTau, (6) Delta Upsilon, (7) BetaTheta Pi, and (8) Phi SigmaDelta.The all-University golf cham¬pion for 1959 is Fred Paulsell of S XJ3 Aa.iOPUWMNottonoNamom no* 9RJ9M,■aivio d l3 3aMODEL CAMERAWholesaleCatalogue Prices onCameras, Projectors, Recorders1342 E. 55th HY 3-9259 ESI1BQ HESS]EEDBSBESQEEEEBemHEfejQH mmi>ii oi > \\kfl/v\SNV TQDHEast II- who fired a 73, and witha handicap of 2*4 earned a finaltotal of 70V* to beat runner-upBob Burkhart of Beta by >4 4stroke. Participation was high de-spite the bad weather.The all-University tennis tour,nament is drawing to a close, withonly three more rounds to b*played to determine the 1959 all-University champion.Track club places fifthThe UC Track club placed fifthin the National AAU junior 10,000meter cross-country champion¬ship run at Warren Valley golfcourse in Detroit, Michigan, No¬vember 7. The championship waswon officially by Central Mich¬igan university, due to a mix upin the chute after the finish.Scoring for the Track club wereWayne Duff, Bob Saddler, PrestonGrant, Patrick Pa|mer and TomLennox with Syl Robinson on hisheels, in 13th, 18th. 24th, 26th and30th places, respectively.Members of the UCTC teamwhich won the National Jr. AAUChampionship last year were in¬eligible to vie for the title thisyear. A new team ran for the clubthis year.Gar Williams was ineligible be¬cause he won the National Jr.AAU 3 mile championship. PhilColeman was ineligible becausehe was a member of an Olympicteam.Cross-country seasonends with a winThe cross-country team endedthe dual-meet season by defeat¬ing the University of Illinois atChicago 23-35 (lowest score wins!,at Montrose beach last Tuesday.The season record stands at threewins and nine losses.The Maroons’ previous meetwas a loss to the University ofWisconsin - Milwaukee 40 -19, inMilwaukee November 4.Against Navy Pier, PrestonGrant won over Wayne Petersonof Navy Pier, a former LaneTech teammate, in 16 minutesflat. Patrick Palmer, Dave Houk,Walter Perschke and DennisRusche with Tom Clarke on hisheels, finished the scoring for theMaroon by placing third, fourth,seventh, and eighth, respectively.W1LDR00T CREAM-OILKEEPS HAIR GROOMED LONGER!MAKES HNR FEB STRONGER!.KJDH “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-OILI• November 13, 1959— vmmmEducators need to cooperate: Kimpton(continued from page 5)„ faint beginning in this statement, though I insist thatit must be done if we are to meet one of the real issuesbefore us.May I dismiss quickly those private institutions whichare church-related, experimental, or devoted to somespecial subject matter or issue. These institutions con¬tribute to the diversity of the American educationalscene and allow our citizens the value of a happy va¬riety of choice. But I think that the major case for majorprivate education must turn upon a different issue.Aristocratic theoryWhy shouldn’t we in private education admit veryfrankly and without invidious comparison that we existto train an intellectual elite who have already provedthat they are worthy of a higher education? This mightbe called the aristocratic theory of higher education,and I don’t see anything wrong with it except therhetoric, which many people, of course, will find of¬fensive. These same people display a curious ignoranceof both history and human nature. There have alwaysbeen some superior individuals, and true democracy de¬pends upon this aristocracy.Our private institutions should be highly selective atall levels of entrance, and as a result they will be andshould remain comparatively small. TJke most otheraristocratic organizations, they will charge all the trafficwill bear, but no more than the traffic will bear. I meanby this that the tuition charge will be high enough sothat it will bear a substantial part of the cost or evenmore than that of the education of the young person, buta number of scholarships will be provided for those whoare aristocratic in brains but not in purse.If we are honest and forthright about all this, we canmake some other statements which I think are true.Classes will be smaller and more attention will be paidto the individual. There will be more opportunity forflexibility and experimentation in curriculum and teach¬ing methodology. The private university does not haveto be so immediately responsive to public needs, and itshould and indeed must be prepared to experiment, tofind new ways, and provide a stimulating leadership forall higher education. It can make more mistakes thanthe public university—-and I ought to know. And, allright, let’s throw in a little snob appeal. We do every¬place else in American life and I don’t know why edu¬cators have to hold up their hands in holy horror at sucha thought. The appeal is snobbism at its highest level.You will be with an intellectual elite where the very bestattention possible will be given to your education fromthe beginning.These are the rudiments of a case, I suggest, for pri¬vate higher education. It is limited to those who havealready proved tliemselv^i to be outstanding; it issmall enough to be flexible and viable; and particularcare and attention will be lavished upon those fortunateones who belong to this intellectual elite. People ofmeans can be asked to contribute to such an enterpriseout of their desire to encourage the recognition and theprogress of the uncommon man.The case for public higher education is the oppositeof this in most ways. There is a great need for a regionalinstitution of higher learning that is immediately respon¬sive to the needs of its own area because it is a creatureand a creation of its public. Moreover, we have neverdeveloped or will ever develop testing instruments suffi¬ciently sensitive to predict success. Every young personin America is entitled to the opportunity for an educa¬ tion, and the public university symbolizes the kind ofhope and promise that America has always represented.Of course it will be larger—it has to be. Of course it willhave a higher percentage who drop out because theyare unequal to the opportunity. But the opportunitymust exist. I don’t want to grow mystical about this,but the states of Illinois, Nebraska, and Minnesota wouldbe very different places if it were not for their stateuniversities. My father was a poor farm boy from Kan¬sas, and my name is not by accident Lawrence. The Uni¬versity of Kansas meant for him a whole new way oflife that otherwise would have been beyond his and hisfamily’s wildest dreams. The public university as itmeets the needs, both individual and regional, of its area,is the symbol and the actuality of the democracy that isAmerica.This is a big country and it has room within it forgenuine diversity. I find nothing offensive in the devel¬opment of two cases for higher education, one of anintellectual elite and the other of a broad democraticmajority. I believe, furthermore, that each of thesecases could be developed with thought and study to giveno offense to the other, and at the same time both wouldbe true statements of the meaning and value and indeednecessity of public and private higher education in thiscountry.Tuition problemThe second issue is this deeply troubling matter oftuition, and here I suggest the outlines of a solutionwhich may be unsatisfactory to the public group, but letme have a try at it. All of us here would agree that wemust have more money for all higher education, publicand private. In what I have said before, I have been con¬cerned to emphasize the needs of the private institutions, but you are really no better off than we. Your legisla¬tive appropriations, while they have increased substan¬tially in the past ten years, have not kept pace with theinflation, and there is no one of you who has a physicalplant adequate, even in prospect, to meet the needs of1975. You are well aware, too, that the demands uponyour state are increasing constantly for all sorts of goodsand services and for additional educational services aswell. Every state I know of is contributing more andmore to the local community colleges and is of necessityabsorbing within the state system, institutions once pro¬vided for by municipal or other funds. You need all themoney you can get or are even likely to get and youknow it. Is there anything intrinsically wrong with yourtuition well beyond the present levels though still wellbelow the private university tuition, so long as you donot exclude anyone in your state from receiving theopportunity for an education? This means only that youask the young people of your state to contribute to theireducation what they can afford but no more than that.Then you could still say with all honesty that anyonein your state is entitled to an education and will receiveit if he is concerned to have that opportunity. We ofprivate education would enthusiastically join you mselling this idea to your legislators and to the peopleof your states.You mght well ask me at this point what differencewould remain between public and private education. Aworld of difference would still remain, for the principleof private education would be careful selection and theprinciple of public education would be broad inclusion.But this proposal would be a way of assisting the privateinstitutions in doing something they have to do andassisting yourselves in something that you also aregoing to have to do in some fashion at some point.State scholarshipsThere may be variations on this theme that can beplayed to advantage. The State of Illinois, for example—and Dave Henry joined me in recommending this action— has created a system of state scholarships which areawarded to Illinois students and which can be used inany institution of higher education in the state, whetherpublic or private. This tends to equalize the tuition be¬tween pubic and private and channels more state moneyinto the entire field of higher education. There are doubt¬less other devices which will allow the private collegeand university to survive and the public university toguarantee that all who desire may learn.I do not pretend that these suggestions are a finalsolution to our problem, but they may have some valuein providing guidelines for men of good will who hon¬estly wish to see an end to this divisiveness. Diversity,however, is a virtue, and we need to agree, with no over¬tones of invidious comparison, upon what each of usuniquely contributes to this great institution of highereducation in America. And we must help each other inthe coming days to bring more support to both ourhouses or surely a plague will fall upon them. Whenwe have realistically faced the issues and have startedtoward their solution, then the exhortations of honestcounseling may move us to further action.We do live and our children and our children’s childrenwill live in a divided world. The future of Western civil-iaation does lie far more in our hands than in those ofstatesmen, soldiers and the makers of munitions. Weare indeed the custodians of the values of our world,and these are not the times to go quarreling amongourselves.Colors Matched - Vamps LoweredPlotforms Removed - Toes Cut OutARISTOCRATSHOE REPAIR1749 E. 55thFAirfax 4-9622One of Hyde Pork's FinestProfessional Dyeing and Refinishingof Shoes end HandbagsEquipped te RepairLadies* Narrow* HeelsHeels Changed - Any StyleAny Color - Backstraps Removedand Springalators InsertedShoes Stretched - Zippers RepairedOrthopedic Work dealers in:castrol lubricantslucas electrical partsarmstrong shockspirelli & michelin tiresvandervell bearingsbeck distributors linespecialists in: speed tuningcustom engine installationsclutchgear boxelectricsbrakessuperchargingcustom coachworkbob tester MG psychiatrist7215 exchange ave. •Chicago 90,Illinois Any registered campus student iseligible ta receive a $10 two-weekloon immediately upon presentationof his validated ID card.Student Service CenterReynolds Club BasementHours: 11:15 - 1:15,3:30- 5:30 Mon-Fri1411 E. 53rd FA 4-5525 — HY 3-5300Cafe Enrico & GalleryNEW POLICY• Open 7 nights• Closed tue. and wed. lunch• Featuring — Complete wine menuand Hors d'oeuvre TableCheese Small12"Combination . .. Smoll12"....225Sausage Mushroom ....Anchovy ....1.65 Shrimp 2.25Pepper & Onion ....1.50 Bacon & Onion ....2,00Free Delivery on All Pizza to VC StudentsAttention Chow Hounds!Special every Tuesday night — all the fried chickenyou can eat . . . $1.95November 13, 1959 • CHICAGO MAROON • 17rvwusirtk&OMMtEX0> LAWMAN''Pepel' is lively productionby Rolf ForsbergDirector-producer at WTTW“Pepel, the Unburied Russian,” a Charles H. Sergei drama prize winner written by JimDamico, is being given a lively production by Marvin E. Phillips and the University Theatreat Mandel haH. * * ’, VThe play, labeled a “black farce,” is peppered with laugh lines, stewed for hours on analmost marrowless bone of a plot, and dished up on the hearty black bread of politicalsatire. ■"aIp modern Moscow, an oldpeasant woman goes to bury hergrandsotV Pepel. at the Tchernev-sky certetery. The cemetery direc¬tor. a slick egoist named Lubakov,attempts to bleed the old womanfor more rubles than she has. She,wanting desperately to have thedecomposing corpse of her be¬loved Pepel safely under t he good ure,” this chilly farce ends on a who plays Polina. The only critic-stark note Conscience, ias symbol- ism in this instance is thaj herized in the memory of a mother easy, pleasant style is not theand a suicide, is ignored. The un- style in which the other actorsburied dead succeeds in burying are performing,the living. An audience, which The two settings by Kazdailis,had laughed freely throughout an exterior and an interior, corn-most of the evening, is stunned. pletely capture the spirit of theBoth the cast and direction of play. Phillip Hyde’s lighting doesRussian soil, complains to the Mr. Phillips were sufficiently in- justice to the set.Commissar of the Distri -t (>ff 1 (•<» Icicsting to keep “Pepel above There may be those who feelof the People’s Protectorate, a ground to the final curtain. ^eT)- that Mr. Damico has written abombastic egoist named Dragan-.. ncth Atkatz, though not suffi-sky <>! ihr cemottM v dtic< 1 skilled in the kind of play-exorbitant charge. As is true with required for the boorish trans-ain i.i: ,• I'T MI i-Miis - '' Dr.ig.uiskv neverthelessa snowballing of events which succeeds in giving the role a vital-make no claim on credulity. . jty and.a vigor that m a k e himAf!"r i\ui ;trs of m a:-e di-- :!1’''eating.guises than “Measure for * Meas- Another talent is Dorothy Datz,Mathis, Fabian, Kingstons to sing farce which ends on a note asBrechtian as it is black. Othersmay regard this play as a Soviet"Charley’s Aunt.” One could askif ‘‘Pepel" is an anagram for‘‘People.’* And some may thinkthat the author is really writingabout the USA. not the USSR.Whatever the reaction, we cansay safely that the audiencewhich remained to the final cur-The International Music fair professional who does not already tain was not left unmoved.Will !;• .< plan' at Chicago's have a recording contract is cli- “Pepel” plays again at MandelNavv pier November 13 gible for the auditions, to be hall on Saturday, November 14,through 22. The Kingston taP°r^d on the spot. Winners will anci Sunday. November 15. Cur-Trio. Johnny Mathis, and Fabian receive recording contracts. tain is at 8:30 pm.arc 1 r.i t ic ten 11> ex ' \....... • . Richard Vikstrom, director of the UC choir. The ChicagoSymphony will accompany George London and the choir in aBrahms festival this Sunday in Rockefeller chapel at 3 pm.■posi l lo’>.vi^Son C.; dH t®>n il stars set to ap¬pear are Tom Bennett, the OscarPeterson trio, Pete Seeger. TheF Warfield,I ;.P r ! '1 ' <- Tile Pl.it tei S P..Mi:/olu son . at d Lurlean Hunter.Y . w ;!! a Is.) tie show-'eased John Gary, who sang atP senhower’s birthdayn < " • . '..>,1(1 a 1 i n c r> of“M ,, - " . ' ' ' 'The recording stars will, per¬form in ‘Hall of Fame" music-fes-f|\ 1 ■ \ ’<'S . oniuli'te root it u-.ou> suites of popular, jazz, classi¬cal and folk music.Seats for the revues will bereserved.Undiscovered talent will get achance to audition on November13 IT . Any professional or non- Carnovsky speaks to 100 UC studentsWhile many persons in Chi¬cago were relaxing and enjoy¬ing the usual parades, onehundred UC students weregiven an exceptional treat inthe informal atmosphere ofthe Ida-Noyes library, lounge.Morris Carnovsky, renownedmember of the Broadway and Yid¬dish stages, held forth on: ‘‘Anactor’s approach to Shakespeare.”Carnovsky s fated that anyplay of Shakespeare’s in “itsformlessness, richness of imageryand apparently chaotic forms ofTANENBAUM PHARMACY1 1 42 E. 55th 5500 CornedBU S ! 1 42 Ml 3-5300Free DeliveryStudent and Faculty Discount oh AllYour Drug .Seeds life that roar through it” is a dis¬maying form of play for one whois studying or acting plays.On the other hand he feels thatlife is a rich, lusty, rough andtumble sort of experience andthat “Shakespeare came closest ofall writers in portraying it as itreally is.”He said that there is now agreat interest in Shakespeare iriall of his facets and that thereis extensive investigation goingon as to his works and what theytell us of the man himself. Hefully supports this research forhe feels that “one is apt to bediscouraged in examining Willbecause it is hard to pierce to thecore of his works and yet it isvery necessary to do this.... It isnecessary for the director and theactors so that they can present abetter play, for the teacher soHave a real cigarette-have a CAMEL. The best tobacco makes the best smoke!B. J. Tobtcw C*v WiMtos-fefca, K. 4. that he may better lead his stu¬dents to an understanding of thework, and for the student so thathe may better understand life.”Carnovsky feels that by study¬ing Shakespeare we get a betterinsight into the meaning of theword “genius” and afterwardsfeel free to apply it to Shake¬speare,He believes that “Will has agenius because of his fantastical¬ly unbounded subconscious andhis incomprehensible ability tobring ideas up from his subcon¬scious and grab them so that hecould put them down on paperfor the world to see. I also have afeeling that something in his earlyyears was very much complicatedin his family life which changedhis feelings about his motherlandlater on, love and all women. Thisexplains the unusual approach heseems to have towards love andalso explains the ‘Dark Lady’who seems to haunt his worksin one way or another.” Carnov¬sky offers this as a reason for theidea that much of Shakespeare’sreal thoughts were intimated andtheir meaning submerged.Carnovsky also concerned him¬CINEMATHEATREChicago at MichiganStudent Rate.75upon presentation of currentI.D. cardEvery Day Excepf Sat. self with Shakespeare’s charac¬ters and noted that they have apeculiar haunting reality and thatone feels as if he really knowsthem. He feels that this is veryimportant, for the' actor as anactor is involved in approachinga oneness with the character, fiistby observation and then by ab¬sorption of the analyzed, and noweven more real, person.“We know Shakespeare’s char¬acters, each alone in his peculiarlife and being. These charactersface us, they are here, and theychallenge us to say to them ‘Whoare you?’ ‘What are you sayingto me?’ even though they aiemute. We are involved in thesearch into the characters or wearen’t cultured people.”Carnovsky said that “the manShakespeare” is in his works andthe more we study his works, themore we know of him. He believesthat “He was able to create a per¬son because that person was inhim and t h because Shake¬speare was a man, the characterthat lie created is in all of us forwe are all men. The reason thatwe can identify with his people isthat they are made of the samethings as wc ourselves ami so lieseems to have written about us,too.”Carnovsky closed his remarkson his subject by offering a trib¬ute to the man he feels was thegreatest playwright of all time.“We are Lilliputians by the mag¬nitude of the Gulliver (Shake¬speare) that we are trying to ex¬plore.”Hyde pork's first* cafeespresso'Vyopen daily till 1open weekends till 21369 East 57th StreetClark theatre50e dark & modisoa;at all timesspecial student price open 7:30 o.m.late show 4 o.m.fr. 2-2845just present your i.d. card to the cashier at tha boxofficetriday is ladies' day —— women admitted tor 25c“fri. 20th“designing woman"“dr. in the house"sat. 21st“horse soldiers"“watusl”everyfri. 13th“peyton place"“la parisienne"sat. 14th“hole in the head"“the restless years"sun. 15th“love in the after¬noon"“this could he thenight” sun. 22nd“from here toeternity” *“people will talk" fri. 27 th“reluctantdebutante"“the matchmaker"sat. 28th“the big circus"“the hangman"sun. 29th“the diary ofanne frank"“law and disorder*• CHICAGO MAROON • November 13.1959Culture Vulture"lt'f getting to be that I can believe six impossible things before breakfast," as the Red Queen said to Alice, and this is no mean feat, if you considerthat most breakfasts around here aren t worth eating and no one is ever up for the rest. But aside from that, I can almost believe that George London willbe here this Sunday (at long, long last), and that the Rockefeller Chapel Carillon bells will be tuned, or that they won't wake up a poor hard-workinq vul-an ideathis sel-culture.be here this Sunday <at long, long last), and that the Rockefeller Chapel Carillon bells will be tuned, or that they won't wake up a poor hard-workture on Sunday morning, at ten thirty ack emma. And when the prospect ofporridge at breakfast renders me particularly cheerful, I think thatfor the week s introduction to that calumnious column, the Culture Vulture will present itself. Unfortunately, and despite all positive thinking, idom happens (in fact, it never happens at all), so having driveled on for the required space about absolutely nothing at all, let us proceed to theON CAMPUSTheatrePepel, the Unburled Russian isstill rising and falling into hiscoffin with the regularity of thetides. However, the end of hisworld is Sunday night, and thetides will cease to wash him inand out of Mandel hall. Whichmeans, go see it this weekend orfeel forever that you have missedsomething basically fine, basical¬ly true and noble, and basicallyfunny.Time Will Tell, Robert Poliakand Robert Ashenhurst’s musicalcomedy about Darwin, will burstloose with costumes and music(of course) galore November 26-28 in Mandel hall. It seems thateverybody in the cast is, in every Criminals are featured in this week's films. bother about writing the CultureVulture. There is no culture butWest Side Story and the vultureis its prophet. The heading forthis week is: Sets and Staging inW. S. S. No-one seeing the showfor the first time even noticesthem (the sets, that is), becausethe songs, dances and the actionitself compel so much attention.By the second time around, thesets are a little more apparent,and by the third time, you canstop watching the dancing, andlook at the surroundings. But togo on with the sets. In the firstplace, they are magnificently de¬signed, and in the second, theynever distract the audience’s at¬tention from the actors. Thereare actually no sets in the oldscene, making like his sisters and different ways to $ay that, and and abolishment of national ego- meaning of box sets that are sethis cousins and his aunts with say it interestingly, he’s a better ism. Next week’s movie is "M,” up during a blackout or when thelots of patter songs. In fact, from vulture than I am, Gunga Din. starring Peter Lorre. The German curtains are closed. The W. S. S.all the reports that have filtered The Alfred Deller Trio will pre- film makers display a rather am- sets are changed during songs,through the echelons, Gilbert and sent a program of songs and in- bivalent attitude between anarchy scenes, dialogues, or wheneverSullivan should do so well. Tick- strumental pieces tonight at 8:30 and authority. “M” is the last pre- there is a hint, real or fancied,ets are $1.00 to $3.00. in Mandel hall. Deller, a counter- war film to be shown in this se- that a scene is placed in a newMusic tenor, Desmond Dupre, lutanist ries. Doc Films are presented in location. This constant moving ishurrah and whee and viola-da-gamba-ist, and Rob- social science 122 at 7:15 and in no way distracting or irritat-George London will be here this ert Conant, harpsichordist, will 9:15 pm. tag. instead it stresses the fastSunday and I won’t have to think play selections from the works International House is showing actlon of the show. Also, the setsof different ways to say the same of Purcell, Dowland, Handel, and Vittorio da Sica’s picture Alone and Properties are no more thanthine every week viz.: The Rock- Buxtehude. Tickets are available In the Street at 8:00 in Int house suggestlons of locale. A ladderefeller-Chapel-Concert-Series-with at the door. east lounge. hanging fifteen f eet frmembers - of - the - Chicago - Sym- Motion Picturesphony • Orchestra - Richard - Vik- Tonight’s B-J film is the Pris-strom-conducting-is-sponsoring- oner, starring Alec Guinness andGeorge-London-of-the-Metropoli- Jack Hawkins. The plot concernstan-Opera-Company-in-the-first- a Cardinal and former resistanceconcert-of-the-series-in-Rockefel- leader who is arrested and triedler-Chapel-November-15-at-three- for treason. The picture coversp.m. Pant, heave, long breath. And the months during which he isthat is all there is to say about interrogated. Showings are at 8him except that there are only and 10 in Judson dining hall,a few tickets left (available at The Doc Films movie this weekthe music department) and that is Kameradschaft, which sociallythe concert is a Brahms festival, and paeifistically advocates inter-And if anyone can think of six national solidarity of the workers'8:30' scripts wanted"Original scripts are an integral part of University Theatre’sTonight at 8:30’ series,” said Neal Johnston and Ozzie Conk¬lin, co-presidents of University Theatre.Speaking for the board, Johnston went on to say that "To¬night at 8:30” is a series of original or little-known one-actplays, written, produced, and directed by students. UniversityTheatre is looking for students :with plays they would like to di- Fistell at the Maroon office orreet, original scripts, with or with- brought to the Reynolds clubout directors, and students who theatre.want to direct, but have no par- The date and place of a meetingticular play in mind. for students interested in any as-Scripts may be submitted to pect of the series will be an-Neal Johnston, Ozzie Conklin, Ira nounced in next week’s Maroon. OFF CAMPUSTheatre hanging fifteen feet from thestage floor is enough to indicateand place the fire escape of atenement building. In other Symphony, and Rorem’s DesignCarnovsky is this Sunday at 7:30in Goodman Theatre. The showhas received good reviews andthere are few enough competentproductions of Shakespearearound at any time to warrantmissing this one. A word to thetheatre wise, and all that.Schiller's Maria Stuart will beplaying the Civic theatre untilNovember 22.Eva Le Galliene, “America’sonly woman star-producer-direc¬tor” (that’s almost as good (orbad) as a movie blurb) playsQueen Elizabeth to Signe Hasso’sMary. Tickets are $2 to $5.95.MusicThe Art Institute is presentingimpecunious students and anyoneelse who wants good music witha Gallery concert this Sunday at3:30. The program includes piecesby Handel, Killmeyer, Nielson,and Schubert.Today and next Friday’s con¬certs seems to have been plannedwith UC hum 1 students in mind.Of six pieces in two concerts,three are on the humanities cal¬endar. Today, Reiner conducts theorchestra and the Chicago Sym¬phony chorus in the Stravinsky-Bach Choral Variations on VonHinimel H o c h , Brahms’ Firstwords, the W. S. S. sets are subtleand extremely well engineered.West Side Story should have a But enough of this. After all,heading all its own, something there are other things to be seen,like the one that says Off Cam- even though they all seem to suf-pus. Then there could be sub- ler by comparison to West Sideheads and more subheads, and Story.West Side Story would be a whole The last performance of the will be at the Orchestra hall thixcolumn and no-one would have to Merchant of Venice with Morris Saturday night at 8:30.for Orchestra. Next Friday, theearnest student may revel inCopland’s Appalachian Spring,and the Firebird Suite by Stravin¬sky.Herbert von Karajan and theVienna Philharmonic orchestraL^M-t <4 S3 I-'10)1yde park theatre Student rate 65cupon presentation of ID cardStarts Friday, four days onlyEngland's . . . France's . . . Poland's . . . and nowthe American angry young moderns.THE YOUNG PHILADELPHIANSPaul Newman— and —Alfred Hitchcock'sSTRANGERS ON A TRAINStarts Tuesday for three days onlySTALAG 17, and SINGING IN THE RAINStarts Friday, November 20A French thriller by one of the new "wove of French directors."BACK TO THE WALLstarring Jeanne Moreau— and —Based on the best-selling English novel by Kingsley Amis.LUCKY JIMstarring Ian Carmichael and Terry Thomas✓Starts Friday, November 27Ingrid Bergman'sWILD STRAWBERRIES favh■Q* I NAVY PIER^ V UAVCMBBB 19 TUDII -FOR $2.00 RESERVED ADMISSIONYOU GET1• GATE ADMISSION• RESERVED ADMISSION TOREVUE OF YOUR CHOICE• Plus Continuous Entertainment In3 Theatres• ADMISSIONS TO ALL EXHISITSTHE WORLD'S FAIR OF MUSICIN PERSON!KINGSTON TRIO*TONY BENNETT *:JOHNNY MATHIS*!FABIAN* iPETE SEEGER* IIN PERSON — The Greatest Array ofTalent Ever Assembled for one Show!!THE PLATTERS ANITA BRYANTJIMMIE RODGERS LLOYD PRICEW. WARFIELD THE FOUR LADSODETTA JOHN GARYOSCAR PETERSON "JIMMY"BETTY JOHNSONSEE: • Tht Avenue of Golden Records• The Music Hell of Fame• Nickelodeon Theatre• Musical exhibits of componentsets, records & Instruments.NOVEMBER 13 THRU 22EESERVED ADMISSIONS AVAILABLE for FOLLOWINGREVUES: I la order of opening datoil7ooy Nov. 13, 14, ISPete Seeger Nov. 14, 11, 14Klnesten Trio Nov. H, 17, IBJohnny Mathis Nov. IB. If. 20, 21, 22Fahiaa Nov. 20, 21, 22Oscar Potorson Nov. 13 thro 22Tho Platters ....Nov. 13. 14, IB, H. 17, 10. IfI Enclosed find.(Ant. snrisMd)want to see (eheek ene): □ Tony Bennett □ Oseor Petersen□ The Platter* □ Pete Seegar □ Kingston Trie□ Johnny Mathis □ FabianTICKETS AVAILABLE NOW:LITTLE AL'S RECORD SHOPS3210 Lawrence2735 Milwaukee3171 Lincoln619 Diversey180 W. Randolph2333 W. Madison329 Howard, EvanstonDEVON RECORDS2746 W. DevonABC RECORDTERIA9037 S. CommercialRECORD CENTER3942 W. Northde Haon HI-FIEvergreen Shopping Plaza! ’fHHHHHHHUr***** AAA A *****STUDENT SERVICE CENTERREYNOLDS CLUB BASEMENTfor @ $2.00 each<N*. et tlakete)Send Tickets tot (Please Print)Name!AddreistCity. Phonet. Moil Coupon totInternational Music Fair435 No. LaSalle StreetChicago 10, IllinoisMO 4-75IBTICKETS ONSALE AT 11:15 - 1:153:30- 5:30 M-FNovember 13, 1959 • CHICAGO MAROON • 19SO • CHICAGO MAROON • November 13, 1959by Henrietta Herbolsheimer, M.D.director of student health serviceAt left: World University service assists in building and equiping muchneeded college plants by providing equipment, books and scientific journalsfor institutions like this new Technical faculty at Bonding.Below: The chemistry laboratory of the University<of Saigon, Vietnam.Textbooks and scientific journals have been contributed by World Universi*ty service.Every year, about this time, students begin fraternizing with the squirrels. The healthservice would like to issue a word of caution about this association, even though some mayhold that in a free country, the choice of companions is a personal matter.We really have nothing against the squirrels. They are fine folks. Those along the Mid¬way seem friendly enough, playful and apparently enjoy the association as well as thepeanuts, popcorn and tidbits offered them. But occasionally one bites the hand that feeds it.1 his we find objectionable; for man trough contact with affect-then the question of prophylaxis d members of th<,w 5pecles.Af rnhino onmoo nn •Salt on the tail has some ad¬herents.WUCB to applyfor FM licenseAn application for an edu-are the odds? Why is risk of ra- Iab™»tory accident creates no cati0nal broadcasting licensebies different from and more se- antmaV o*" Ph° ^ C^USej will be made to the Federalanimal can be observed and theof rabies comes upShould students with a fewdainty teeth marks from a squir¬rel be subjected to the risks ofrabies immunization or be let togamble against the onset of clin¬ical disease from rabies? What Student health service eachyear treats a number of studentsbitten chiefly by the campussquirrels, by dogs or cats rarelyon the street, more often at homeor in laboratories. The home orrious than tetanus or typhoid or•ven polio or smallpox?The only firm statistic pertinentto the above is that rabies in iuanIs always fatal. No one has everreported a clinical case of rabies treatment of the bitten studentscan be adjusted in accordancewith the actual presence or ab¬sence of disease in the known ani¬mal. In the case of bites fromstray cats and dogs and all squir-wliich survived. Therefore, if the rels> the problem before SHS andanimal is carrying the virus ofrabies at the time of the bite andSome infected saliva gets throughthe human skin, it is safest to as¬sume that the person may In* in¬fected and needs rabies immuniza¬tion.Unfortunately, the rabies im¬munizations require a great manyshots — 14 or more, and the im¬munizing agent has the possibilityof creating a highly undesirableside reaction — paralysis (fromthe materials in which the Pas¬teur or Semple vaccine is pre¬pared*. The best data availableindicate that the risk of paralysisfrom the immunization is 1 to 500or 600 persons receiving the vac¬cine. So the question is — doesthe bite warrant even this degreeOf risk?The World Health organizationand the Illinois department ofpublic health recommend that theanimal be considered potentially the Chicago Board of Health isnot so simple. Therefore:Leave the squirrels alone.If, however, it is impossible to Communications commissionsoon, possibly in two weeks, nowthat FM transmitting by WUCBhas been approved by the deanof students and the staff of thestudent radio station.Since it takes a maximum oftwo months for the FCC to ap¬prove an application, and equip¬ment such as a ten-watt transmit¬ter and antenna m u s t be pur¬chased and installed, FM trans-be this asocial and one bites you mission will probably not startbe prepared to cateli it (don t ask the beginning of the springquarter. The station’s broadcast-preparedme how*) and bring it to NathanBrewer, superintendent of Cell¬ ing radius will be between fivetral animal quarters, in Abbott and jon mijeshall for observation. WUCB will continue AM broadReport to SHS or to the emer- casting to the dormitories andgency room at once (if SHS is will probably continue rebroad-elosed) for local treatment of the casting WFMT on AM when thebite and reporting to the Chicago campus station is not transmit-Board of Health. ting.Brown gets SG seatIn its meeting of Tuesday, Nov. 10, the Executive councilof Student Government, on the direction of the assembly,voted to seat Robert Brown in one of the existing assemblyvacancies. There are seven vacancies now remaining, theseto be filled by the executive council on Nov. 24, after inter-infectious if it disappears after views with all applicants for seats,biting or cannot be definitely iden- jn other business, the council As a result of the lack of sufficient accomodation in uni.versify hostels, it is estimated that over 1000 students inThailand are unable to find lodging. World University serv.ice has assisted by working toward enlarging and improvingexisting hostel facilities and organizing co-operative hostels,canteens, and common-rooms.WUS fund campaignlaunched on campusThe UC branch of World emergency relief where required.University service starts its >t is not strictly a relief organize1959-60 fund-raising cam¬paign today. tion.In past years, WUS projectshave included aid to refugee stu-rea5^ their goal dents the construction of dormt-of $3,000, WUS members andI vol- torics &nd student health wnter,unteers will solicite contributions in undeVeloped nations, scholar-in all dormitories and fraternity ships t0 needy students, and thehouses, and have booths at Cobb sending of where they arehall and the corridor of Mandelhall where off-campus studentsmay make contributions. Much ofthe campaigning is being done byvolunteers from the girls’ clubs,service clubs, and religiousgroups. needed.The organization was foundedshortly after World War I, in an¬swer to the needs of destroyed anddestitute universities all over Eu¬rope. Since then it has attemptedto aid students everywhere, pro-SSSS.‘of tST&X! -.-a*-*the biting, the circumstances prac- dent association at the Universitytically dictate the full 14 doses 0f Wisconsin and recommendedof the Pasteur treatment for all six people as our official delega-cases. In instances where the ani- tion to the conference. The namesmal can be caught and kept under 0f these proposed delegates willveterinary observation, the cir- t>e announced on the floor of theeumstances are different; for if next assembly meeting,the animal remains well for five It was suggested by the execu-days. the series of vaccinations hve council that the flight leaderfor the SG flight to Europe forsummer 1960 be chosen as soon processed. A list of those organi- WUS is International, with viding an organization on whichheadquarters located in Geneva, students of nations in need, andSwitzerland. While it always tries refugee students in a new nation,to provide both long-term and can always depend for help.official recognition will be readat the next assembly meeting.'Renewal aids racial biasean be stopped and the risk ofparalysis greatly reduced.Rabies is endemic in rodents;Other animals and man becomeInfected when bitten by a rabid Debbie Meier, former UC student and leader in the now defunct Hyde Park chapter ofthe National Association for the Advancement of Colored People, criticized Hyde Park rede¬velopment at a recent meeting of the UC chapter of the NAACP.“An indication of the intent of the plan is the fact displaced negro families who usedas possible so that necessary ar- the redevelopers’ relocation agency ended up living outside Hyde Park, whereas familiesrangements for the flight may be who hunted for accommodations on their own often found homes in the area,” commentedmade. Applications are now being Mrs. Meier.accepted for the position and may "Redevelopment in Hyde Park does not provide. x . . -.I- • u- » _ _, ,,, ,, , . a useful model for projects of this kind as isrodent. This year in Illinois rabies be left with the secretary in the claimed. Mrs Meier £,ntinued. ■•Economic restnc.student activities office on thehas been found in the rat, bat,oow. cat, dog, squirrel, fox. rac¬coon and skunk. The number ofInstances of disease in any one ofthese animal groups has been second floor of Ida Noyes hall.Ken Nordin, the chairman ofthe committee on recognized stu-d e n t organizations, announcedWnall, but there is evidence that that applications for recognitionHie disease can be propagated to of student organizations are being eluded Mrs. Meier.tions like these being erected in Hyde Park meanmore racial distinction in this era of discriminatoryhiring.’*“The cultural and financial attainments describedas desirable by Chancellor Kimpton and othersprobably eliminate ninety per cent of Chicago’sresidents as suitable residents of Hyde Park,” con- Lula White, president of the chapter, reportedthat she had been unable to get a job as waitressat the Hobby House restaurant although she hadbefore that the job was open. The owner had notknown she was a negro until she appeared for theInterview, at which time she was told the jobwas not open.The Restaurant committee asked for a recom¬mendation of action on this issue. The Educationcommittee announced that it will tutor negrostudents in public schools in the neighborhood.Don't feed the squirrels