Slate TV UnWenitj at CW «*"■»mte.1 & IVcun*-"' Rcr™new courses Kathleen-Raine givesi! Four new courses will be omic Development,” assistant pro- as viewing the historical events Ik A ^ _ I ■ J — I ■■ I-» -i-ared next quarter by mem- h^°r1>acfobtchrct leadine to and including the pres- lYlOOCly IGC I UTG TOniCJnTent administration.English poetess, critic, and Pythoness, The Year One, andBlake scholar, Kathleen Raine, Collected Poems, will also readwill deliver the 221st William from her own puems'are designed abstract the foreigneconomic policies from the otherforeign policies and consider the Since these courses will em-to impact of this policy on the other phasize individual work and writ-ofleicu * . " . ~ derbers of the social sciencesstaff.The coursesdevelop some ot the general foreign policies. The course will ing, there will be a small numberthemes discussed in social sciences also. view the development of of classes and enrollment will be Vaughn Moody lectureI and 11, and specifically to fill these policies in this country since limited to 20 students. Both tonight, “Poetry and Rememb-the void which was left by the 1890. graduates and undergraduates ranee: A Defense of the tradi-elimination of social science III, Gerhard Meyer, associate pro- may enroll as the courses are of- tional view of poetry,ottered for the last time in 1961- fess0r of economics, in “Economic fered j°intly by the college and Miss Raine,'6-. Freedom” will first discuss pat- the divisions.They are to bo considered as terns of economic freedoms inintermediary between general free-private-enterprise models andeducation and divisional social historical approximations. In thesciences courses, according to second half of the course, possi-Uouald Meikeljohn, professor of bilities of maintaining or realiz-philosopliy. ing certain economic freedoms inThe theme of “Social Analysis various types of socialism will beof Art.” offered by associate pro- investigated,lessor Cesar Grana. will be “The author of Stone Although she writes usually intraditional forms of verse, shehas been described as using alanguage and a subject matter of“searching contemporary insightHutchinson commonsreopens for dinnerCi<v in Modern European andAmerican Painting.” After an in-troductory discussion of art socio¬logy. sociology of the city will becovered. Then the course willconsider the urban traits seen insuch painters as Eugene Delacroix,George Bellows, and and Flower, Living in Time, The and significance and a style ofstrong personal quality. She hasbeen recognized for two decadesas one of the most serious andoriginal writers of her generation.Miss Raine, a fellow of GirtonCollege at Cambridge, is currentlygiving the Mellon Lectures at theNational gallery of art in Wash-Hutcliinson commons will reopen for dinner service in£ton on "Blake and the WisdomCountervailing Power, Mon- March 5, due to “numerous requests from students and other °‘ the, age|V. sl?e ls a,so ,lec*ul‘opoly and Public Policy ’ will use , f„ H ing and reading her poems in NewGalbraith’s Countervaiiing Power Patrons- York and at several Americanas a point of departure, accord- Lylas Kav, director of residence halls and commons, colleges and universities.ing to professor of economics, announced the resumption of din-Abraham Harris, who is teaching ner and snack service at the iestU(*y °f menu selection,the course. It will survey the commons. other ideas.” Miss KayEdward ideas of 80016 major economists “Suggestions have been made “Some of these suggestions wiU open to the public,who have dealt with market im- f0r cutting costs, such as self- be incorpora ted in the serviceand Tonight’s lecture, to be deliv-ered in Mandel hall, 57 street andsaid. University, at 8:30, is free andHopper.In “American Foreign Econ- perfections and monopoly as well bussing during the evening meal, when it is resumed.’i a cnicaqom araon The commons discontinued din¬ner service on February 2, de¬spite a petition signed by over100 patrons and- a threatened“eat-in.” Miss Kay stated at thattime that the cafeteria, located inthe Reynolds club, was “accumu¬lating a deficit and suffering fromdecreasing patronage ovyears.” E. Dedmonof Sun-Timesspeaks hereVol. 70 — No. 64 University of Chicago, Tuesday, Feb. 27, 1962 31University of Pennsylvaniasuspends student newspaper Emmot Dedmon, authorthe and managing editor of theChicago Sun-Times, will speakat a “My Life and Yours’'The new commons hours, ef- progl.am Thursday.fective March 5, are: Dedmon. a former editor of theLunch 11:30 am to 1:30 pm Maroon, has been on the staff ofSnacks 2 pm to 4:30 pm the Sun-Times since 1940, withDinner 5:15 pm to 6:45 pm the exception of five years serv¬ice with the Air I-orce duringThe C-shop, which had expanded World War II. He has been as-service until 7 pm, Monday sistant toreign editor, book and,, . „ ... , drama critic, and was for severalthrough Friday, will reduce oper- a r .’ years assistant managing editorating hours. It will be open lot jjefore being named to his presentvending machine service only position in February, 1958.Publication of the Univer¬sity of Pennsylvania student,,v the Daily Pennsyl¬vanian, was suspended Satur¬day in what the paper’s editortermed an “unwarranted breachof academic freedom.”The order was handed down byRobert Langley, dean of men atthe university, upon the recom¬mendation of the student govern¬ment.I.ast Friday, the Pennsylvanianhad published a front page edito¬rial entitled “Abolished studentgovernment.”Saturday, in what seemed to liea response to the editorial, thestudent government held a secretmeeting. At that time, a resolu¬tion was passed asking the sus¬pension of the paper.According to the student gov¬ernment president, “we wanted re¬moval of the editor and the edi¬torial board. Suspension was a| means to this end.”The resolution cited disagree-Iment with the Pennsylvanian’sIcditoiial policy, criticizing lack ot(coverage of athletic and other stu-Ment activities, misrepresentationsland innacuracies, biased attacks,[Unwarranted criticisms of faculty•members, and an abundance ofdestructive, rather than construc¬tive critlshm. “Mr. Langley is merely hidingbehind the skirts of student gov¬ernment, using it a* « ‘®o1-t.is levengc on the Daily Pennsyl¬vanian for past editorial criticismot him,” he continued.Several hunderd students dem¬onstrated outside Longley’s homeon Sunday, to protest the dean’saction.Yesterday, the Harvard Crimsonpublished an edition in behalf of the Pennsylvanian. They were notable, however^ to djs.tEUhutQ.it onme Philadelphia campus.The Pennsylvania attack on thegovernment followed the resigna¬tion of four SG members lastWednesday. The resigning mem¬bers, who claimed the governmentwas run by campus political“hacks” were the assembly’s vicepresident and three committeechairmen. from 7:30 am until 4:45 pm,Monday through Friday, and from8 am until 4 pm on Saturdays.There will be no breakfastservice except that provided bythe C-shop vending machines.Miss Kay emphasized that only“sustained patronage” of thecommons will make it possible tocontinue dinner service.SG reorganization askedPOLIT will introduce a con¬stitutional amendment to cutthe size of the Student gov¬ernment assembly from 50 to40 at tonight’s SG meeting.The proposal, adopted atSunday’s POLIT caucus, calls for15 representatives at large to beelected by the entire University.In addition there would be 25 rep¬resentatives divided proportionallyamong the rest of the Universityand elected only by members oftheir own schools.There are currently 19 repre¬sentatives from the College and32 from the graduate schools inSG. Under the proposed plan, therewould be 9 College representativesand 19 from the graduate schools,in addition to the 15 at largedelegates. POUT’S plan is expected to in¬crease tthe number of undergra¬duates in the Assembly and givegraduate students greater influ¬ence in determining the composi¬tion of the assembly, accordingto Len Friedman, president of SGand a POLIT member.In addition, it is expected tosolve the problems of an assemblywith a majority of graduate re¬presentatives and a minority ofgraduate interest and participa¬tion, while continuing a jointgraduate-undergraduate assembly.If adopted by SG, the proposalwould not go into effect until nextyear, as it must be submitted toan all-campus referendum in thisspring’s elections. A proposed change in the by¬laws would make all fourth yearstudents planning to return toUC as graduate students run asat large delegates.Friedman explained the consti¬tutional procedure for determiningthe number of representativesfrom each academic unit. First,the number of seats in the assem¬bly is determined. This number,is then divided in proportion tothe enrollment of each division,with the proviso that no divisiongets less than one seat.The chart on this page showspresent and proposed represen¬tation in the assembly.Informally dressed Newtform residents, forming re¬viewing stand, applaud forwore formally r|ad Wssh-•ngton promgoers. RepresentationSchool Present Pro-posedCollege 19 9Law School 3 2SSA 2 1GLS 1 1School of Education 1 1Physical Science 4 2Medical school 2 1Biological Science 2 1FTS 3 2humanities 4 2business school 3 2social science 7 4at large 0 15SSA is the school of social ser-vice administration.GLS is the graduate libraryschool.FTS is the federated t! eologi -cal school. Coop has spring listBooks for some of nextquarter’s courses, as well asitems such as cameras andmicroscopes, can now be or¬dered at the Student Governmentcooperative bookstore.“If books are ordered by thisFriday, March 2,” stated LeonardFriedman, president of SG, weguarantee that they can be pickedup on the first day of the quarter,or your money back.”Books for biology 113, 117, 150and 203; English 311 and 337:French 102, 103, and 203; German103; humanities 113 and 126; phy¬sics 201 and 237; social science113: Spanish 103: and zoology220, can be ordered. There is a 10to 25 percent discount, depending on the individual texts.The coop a branch of the In¬ternational Student Cooperationunion also has tape recorders, AM-FM radios, television Dynacromeand Technicolor film, andKodak black and white film at a25 percent discount. Microscopesand telescopes are avaailable at10 per cent off list price.Coop officials announced thatmembers have saved almost $2,600on books since the coop opened,and that the total volume of coopsales to date (in list prices) is$13,363.45.The coop is located in the Rey¬nolds club basement, and is openfrom 11:30 am to 5 pm. Mondaythrough Friday. A membership feeof one dollar entitles a student tobuy books at the coop. He is the author of four books:“Duty To Live,” a war novel pub¬lished in 1946; “Fabulous Chi¬cago,” a national best-seller pub¬lished in 1953; “Great Enter¬prises,” the centennial history ofthe YMCA of metropolitan Chi¬cago, issued in 1957; and “AHistory of The Chicago Club,”published in 1960.During World War II, he en¬listed as a private in the AirForce, later rising to the rankof captain. He was a squadronna>igator in the first B-17 bombergroup to fly non-stop across theAtlantic and was also the firstnavigation staff officer at EighthBomber Command. While flyinga mission to Hanover, Germany,in the summer of 1943, his planewas shot down by enemy fightersand he was forced to parachute toearth, where he was captured andheld as a prisoner-of-war fortwo years.He is a graduate of the Uni¬versity of Chicago where hemajored in economics and servedas a University marshall. He isa member of the Alumni Senateof the college of the University.He and his family recently re¬turned from a six weeks tripabroad including visits to Russia,Germany and East and WestBerlin.Fifty places at Dedmon’s talkwill be held for college studentswho sign up in Dean of the Col¬lege Alan Simpson’s office (C.ates-Blake 132) by 5 pm today.Other students, selected bythree faculty members, whothought their interests and Ded¬mon’s coincided, were invited bySimpson.“My Life and Yours” is a seriesof informal discussions at whichundergraduates meet informallywith distinguished representativesof various fields.The series w-as begun two yearsago by Alan Simpson, dean of thecollege.It has featured such speakersas authors J. P. Donleavy, EudoraWelly, Lionel Trilling; assistant toPresident Kennedy Frederick Hoiburn, and French diplomat JeanBeliard.T IN ORIGINALLetters Asks new peace groupCorrects Alptlcl S HT13.£*0 to cooperate with SPUTo the editor:I, the president of the Alphaclub, wish to make clear our con¬nection with the University party(UP). As a social club, it is notour intention to take any politicalStands or to support any politicalparty. However, we feel that allstudent opinions should be repre¬sented, and it is not beyond ourscope to give a helping hand to anew student organization as longas it does not commit us to itspolicies.It is a common practice for onerecognized organization to approveposters of a new organization thathas not yet received recognition,although we did not know oursymbol would appear on the poster. The approval of a majorityof the officers of the Alpha clubto sponsor a poster of a new poli¬tical party did not mean that theclub supported the party itself(actually, many of the membersbelong to other political parties).The action taken by these officerswas in the spirit of giving a neworganization the opportunity to ex¬press itself even though the clubcould not, did not, and will notsupport it.Furthermore, we feel that theMaroon was obnoxious and unjust in criticising an organization be¬fore it knows what this organiza¬tion’s policiees are. We also objectto their obvious attempt to des¬troy our own club by making anaccusation that has no basis intruth (you didn’t even ask mefor a statement or explanation).Therefore, I hope that in thefuture you, as a student-financedpublication, will avoid condemningan organization, action, or policyuntil you have all the facts.Mike Yesner, presidentAlpha clubGroup may changeforeign car hospitalsee page 4 The music department isconsidering revamping theChoral society into a glee cluband chorus.The purpose of the proposedchange is to provide chorus forcampus musicals as well as per¬form at its own concerts, accord¬ing to Jerry Cina, a student in¬ terested in organizing the chorus.Howard Brown, assistant profes¬sor of music, has stated that ‘‘Nomusical knowledge is required (forthe chorus). All we need is stu¬dent interest.”Cina has requested that inter¬ested students leave a messagewith the secretary of the musicdepartment for Brown or contactTiim in 3414 East house. To the editor:The Maroon of February 23rdcarried a story telling about theformation of a new campus peacegroup. According to David Levey,indentified in the story as one ofthe founders of the new group,the Student Peace union ‘‘is in¬capable of expanding into a groupwhich would attract students ofdiffering ideologies and approch-es of the problem of peace.” Healso stated that a group is neededto cooperate with other local peacegroups.From my experience, the charg¬es are groundless. I am not a mem¬ber ol SPU - my recent associa¬tion with the peace movementhas been in conection with theSzilard movement. Although someof the SPU members seem tohave some disagreement with Szi¬lard’s views, and mine, SPU hasprovided space in its building forSzilard movement activities andhas been generous in allowing usto use its facilities. This seemsto belie the charge that SPU can¬not work with other local groupsGirl watching is not strenuous©a Advantages over bird watchingAlthough girl watching will inevitably be compared withbird watching, it enjoys many obvious advantages. Forone thing, it is less strenuous.The bird watcher usually has to hike out into thewoods where there is often a great deal of climbing overrocks and fallen trees and, occasionally, some swimmingC«»»ate all three! Seeks "traveled” through fine tobacco tastes best.See the difference! With Pa'I Mall, you get that famous lengthof the finest tobaccos money can buy. Pail Mali's famous lengthtravels and gentles the smoke naturally... over, under, aroundand through Pall Mall's fine, mellow tobaccos. Makes it mild. . . but does not filter out that satisfying flavor! across rushing streams. Girl watching sites, however, aregenerally accessible to the watcher’s home, school orplace of business and can usually be reached withoutgreat effort. Perhaps no other hobby is so easy to enjoy.(Pall Mall is easy to enjoy, too.That’s because Pall Mali’snatural mildness is so good to your taste!)Pall Mali’snatural mildnessis so goodto your taste!So smooth, so satisfying,so downright smokeable!> Co Prciutt ej firfZuCttr&nyxiny'II eur middle nameThis ad based on the book, "The Girl Watcher’s Guide." Text: Copyright by Donald J. Sauers. DfiwiiHi:Copyright by Eldon Oedini. Reprinted by permission ol Harper & Brothers. because of its national structure.The cooperation between SPU antiother campus groups on the Wash¬ington Action project also showsthis.The charge of inflexiible ideo¬logy is likewise spurious. Thestatement of purpose of the Peaceunion says, “The SPU recognizesthat there are many methods ofworking toward the goal of worldpeace and that all sincere effortson this behalf are worthy; there¬fore the SPU is conceived of as anattempt to coordinate the workfor peace among students andyoung people rather than as analtempt to formulate their poli¬cies. Since the SPU acknowledgesthe independence of thought andaction of its constituents, the actsand policies of one member ormember-group are not necessarily. . . those of the organization asa whole.” SPU activities seem tobo consonant with this policy.In view of the above, and be¬cause creation of a new organiza¬tion tends to waste valuable ef¬fort through duplication and lackof cordination, I strongly urgethose forming the new group, andthose contemplating joining it, towork through the Student Peaceunion. If their intentions are whatIhey say, there seems to be nobarrier, and much to gain. If onthe contrary they intend to workfor particular goals by a particu¬lar set of methods, as the Szilardmovement does, this should bemade clear.David Greenberg99c SPECIALSWITH THIS ADBrake Adjustment99cONLYFla! Tire RepairsTube Type 99cOnlyRotation of 5 WheelsONLY 99°Wheel BalancingPlus QQcWeights UU[hSfsthe]'mj that!00CSN7 IteTTIflEoiU.S. Royal SAFE-WAY TiresDiscounts to UC students& FacultyAL SAX TIRE CO.6052 Cottage GroveDOrchester 3-55542 • CHICAGO MAROON • Feb. 27, 1962For Rent and For Sale Wanted- family dwelling, near 97th and Vin-' ’nnes, 6 rooms up and 6 rooms down:r|iod. kitchens and bath; large improvedtard and 2 car garage; rent from up-ans apt. will pay mortgage; ideal?* m»rried stud, or instr. with family;■'Oie to commuter lines and shopping;*1,500, Call PR 9-3368, after 6 pm.lluom for rent, single man with refer-'"es, $12 |>er week. Near bus and^ tram. Call all day to 6 pm andJ'nday 8 to 10 am. MI 3-3524.*°!!e?e<* work* of Abraham Lincoln:..lit0! 1?es including index, brand new,«iited by Roy p Easier, $40. Phone*-9500, room 11022x.large unfurn. 3 room apt.iv,, North, near the lake. $90 month.aU M 8*6168 evenings. Driver wanted (over 25) to drive carto Tuscon, Arizona. Cas and oil plusallowance. 842-0321, after 5 pm.NJB's Comtact GBG’s.PersonalsExperienced Russian tutor avail^tblevCall MU 4-3504 or FR 2-1789.The Collegiate Sports Car Club:Ivy League International Motoring As¬sociation needs active members for itscoming events. Club meets every 1stand 3rd Weds, in the month. RiversideField House. 5100 N. Francisco ave.Call Bob at MI 3-3116, for information.New York to Chicago, March 25, only$13 — split $6 bus fare. Call Vicky,2119 North. ^ 60 million times a day people get that refreshing new feelingwith ice-cold Coca-Cola!THE COCA-COLA BOTTLINGBottled under authority o( The Coca-Cola Company by COMPANY OF CHICAGONewsbits imHimiimmiimimmmiimiiiimmmmimiimmimiimmmiimiimiiiimiimiimmmYPSL to sponsor Norman Thomas talkNorman Thomas will lec-ture on “The Military Indus¬trial Elite” at Internationalhouse Friday. The meeting,at g pm, is sponsored by theyoung People’s Socialist league.Norman Thomas ran six timesfrom 1928 to 1948 on the Socialistticket tor president of the UniledSlates and twice for mayor ofNew York City. He has writtenseveral books on Socialism, amongthem "War - No Profit, No Glory,No Need”, and a “Socialist’sFaith”, and many pamphlets.At ihe present time, Thomashas been lecturing to variousgroups and organizations through¬out the United States. He spokeat the final rally in Washington,p.C, before the marchers of theTurn Toward Peace project. Tho¬mas advocates the abandonmentof weapons of destruction.$2,000 offered for sforyCollege authors can win$2,000 for their short storiesin a contest now conductedby Story magazine. The 21top authors will receive cashprizes and their stories will bepublished in an annual anthology,Best C ollege Writing.Manuscripts should be from1,500 to 9,000 words, and must besubmitted by April 20. For furtherinformation, contact: Story Maga¬zine College contest, c/o TheHeader's Digest, Pleasant\ ille, NewYork.Debaters place thirdA third place prize waswon by the Debate team invarsity debate at the Nor¬thern Illinois National De¬bate tournament at DeKalb. Illi¬nois, Friday and Saturday.Twenty-four schools completed inthe tournament.Jerry McReath. second-year stu¬dent in the College, and MikeSilverman, first year student, rep¬resented the University. Theirrecord of five wins and one losswas comniled against St. Mary’scollege, Illinois State Normal uni-'r's/fy. Southeastern Missouri,1 diversity of Wisconsin, LakeForest, and Loras college.Of a possible 90 points. Silver-man totalled 70 and McReath 72for the six debates. They arguedthe negative on “Resolved: thatlabor unions be under the juris¬diction of anti-trust legislation,”'be national collegiate debate topicfor ihe year.Alumnus Werfs appointedass'f secretary of laborLeo B. Werts, a Universityof Chicago alumnus, wasrecently promoted to theposition of assistant United•States secretary of labor.He is credited with developingan exchange program of laborleaders between this country andGermany in 1948 which has re¬sulted in a non-communist Ger¬man labor movement friendly to'he US.Werts was selected by the Fordfoundation in {1959 to conduct as'udy of labor problems in India,and make recommeridation forsolving that country’s criticalmanpower situation.He made a fundamental review1 of labor department programs andadministration for former secre¬tary of labor Mitchell, for whichhe received the department’s dis¬tinguished service award, itshighest honor.2nd SG bus scheduledStudent Government hasannounced that it will senda second bus to New Yorkduring spring interim.“We hope to fill a bus to leavearound 7 pm on Thursday, March15,” said Sue Goldberg, coordina¬tor of the trip. “Otherwise, we willsend two busses on Friday even¬ing, March 16.The return trip will leave NewYork during the afternoon of Sun¬day, March 25, and will return tocampus early the following morn¬ing. The round trip cost is $26.25.Ten dollar deposits are beingaccepted this week at the SGoffice in Ida Noyes hall between3 and 5 pm on Monday and be¬tween 1 and 2:30 pm on Tuesdayand Thursday./The $16.25 balancemust be paid by next Monday. NUT art exhibitAn exhibition of the art workof Cecily Diamond, associate edi¬tor of New University Thought(NUT), is now on display in theNUT office.The show includes four largeoils, two mosaics, and a tapestry.The office, at 5478 South Wood-lawn, is open to the public from11 am to 1 pm this week.Flight to NYDeposits for a $65 roundtrip charter flight to NewYork’s La Guardia airport arenow being accepted by StuartFischer, 839A Salisbury house.The flight will leave ChircagoFriday evening, March 16, andwill return Sunday evening,March 25.72 register for springterm at Argonne labsSome 72 scientists and engi¬neers from 18 countries haveregistered for the springterm of an international “atoms for peace” training andresearch program at the Argonnelaboratory. The term began Feb¬ruary 12 and will continue throughJune 1.Participants, coming with therecommendation of their homecountries’ atomic energy author¬ity will study peaceful uses ofatomic energy. Many will takepart in nuclear research projectswith Argonne scientists.These scientists and engineerscome from government agencies,from colleges and universities, andfrom industrial organizations.Those from the United States aresponsored by government agenciesor private firms in the nuclearfield.Japan will have 18 registrantsin the new session. Seventeen willcome from India, eleven from Yu¬goslavia, and four each from SouthAfrica and the United States.Three will come from Spain, andtwo each from Austria, Brazil andIsrael.Other countries represented inthe training program are China,Appoint anatomy professorRonald Singer, a member of the department of anatomy of the faculty of medicineat the University of Cape Town in South Africa, has been appointed professor of anatomyat UC.Singer, 37, will also work with the department of anthropology in the division ofsocial sciences. He is an autho-sciences. He is anrity on the evolution of man, andon physical anthropology - a fieldwhere anatomy, genetics, and an¬thropology meet.For more than ten years, Sin¬ger has been investigating geneticsdifferences in such characteristicsas hair form, frequency of ginger-print patterns the age at whichcranial sutures close, blood types,biochemical patterns, and the con¬formation of the arteries, study¬ing groups ranging from whiteSouth Africans to the Hottentotsof the African veld and the Mala¬gasy of Madagascar.Singer is particularly intrestedin the problems of Done formationand development of sickle celldisease. This is a conditionmarked by the appearance of sick¬le-shaped blood cells in the bloodstreams and is related to the dis¬tribution of malaria.Singer, a native of Africa, re¬ceived his MB and ChB degrees,the equivalent of the AmericanMI) degree, at the University ofCape Town in 1947. In 1951-52 he13 months in resarch at JohnsHopkins university and the Carne¬gie institute of Washington on aRotary foundation fellowship.Two years ago Singer returned1o the US as visiting professor inthe University of Illinois collegeof medicine. He has also visitedand lectured at many other in¬stitutions in this country, GreatBritain, Europe, and the MiddleEast.In announcing the appointment,Dr. H. Stanley Bennett, dean ofthe division of biological sciences,stated:“Dr. Singer is a scholar of out¬standing stature. He will contri¬bute significantly to the traditionof teaching and research in threeim|H>rtant areas of scientific in¬vestigation at the University . . ”The author of more than 60 published scientific papers, Singeris president of the South Africanarchaeological sociely, Vice presi¬dent of the South African asso¬ciation for the advancement ofscience, and chairman of theScience education committee ofthe Cape council of the association.In 1950, Singer was awardedSouth Africa’s annual Cornwall and York prize for his thesis,“Discoveries in southern AfricaContributiont to our Knowledgeof the Ancestry of Man.” Thethesis is now being expanded forpublication as a text book of phy¬sical anthropology.His appointment will become ef¬fective on July 1.Third year student Rosemary Hanson (left) was chosenUC queen at Saturday's Washington promenade. MissHanson was crowned by president George Beadle(centre). Ida Noyes hall guard Walter Jeschke servedas grand marshall for the dance. France, Germany, Italy, Pakistan,Switzerland, Thailand, the UnitedArab Republic, and Vietnam.Barnard, South exchangeBarnard college has initi¬ated a “southern exchangeplan” with integrated and all-Negro schools in the South.Twelve Barnard undergraduateshave changed places with twelvestudents from Southern collegesfor a nine day period.Southern schools participatingare Wake Forest college, a for¬merly all-white, co-educationalprivate institution, which beganintegration in 1961; Bennett col¬lege, North Carolina, a Negrogirls’ denomination school; andWest Virginia State college, WestVirginia, a fully integrated col¬lege.Smith suspends classesfor 3 week experimentSmith college suspended allclasses for a three week pe¬riod last month to try aunique educational experi¬ment. The program, designated“interim session” had as itspurpose “to give all students anopportunity for independent studyand discussion.”According to programs workedout by their departments, juniorsand seniors at Smith investigatedspecial topics in their major fields.Freshmen and sophomores wereassisted in determining fields ofmajor interest.A highlight of the program wasa series of lectures by severalguest authorities, among themHerrlee G. Creel, chairman of theUC department of oriental lang¬uages ami civilizations.Creel spoke in one of the twolectures series, “China: An Areastudy.” Both this and the other,“Radio-activity,” were designed forstudents with no background inthe areas.European guide publishedHarvard Student agencies hasjust published its second editionof Let’s Go, a student guide toEurope.Unique in that it is writtensolely by and for studenls, Let’sGo, priced at $1.00 is available inlocal bookstores.foreign car salessee page 4COPYRIGHT 1961. THE COCA COLA COMPANY COCA-COLA AND COKE ARE REGISTERED TRADEMARKSClassified AdsFeb. 27, 1962 • CHICAGO MAROON • 3Thomas' new book discusses general educationColleges and universitiesdeclare that their primary-purpose is to give students“a broad foundation of knowl¬edge," but disagree on what thatfoundation is or should be, statesRussell Thomas. professor ofhumanities, in The Xeareh for aCommon Learning: General Edu¬cation. 1800-1960, published todayby McGraw-Hill Book Company.Thomas, who is also senior ad¬visor in the college and tutorialstudies advisor, wrote his bookunder a project supported by theCarnegie corporation.Defines termsThe term "general education”refers to the kind of knowledgethat man needs to help himunderstand the world about himand that aids him in making thejudgments and decisions that arerequired of him, as a member ofa free society. It cannot be de¬fined as a particular kind of col¬lege course, such as an introduc¬tory, survey, or inter-disciplinarycourse. The ends of general edu¬cation are not to be confused, hewrites, with the means of attain¬ing it.Thomas believes that the con¬cept of general education “as¬sumes an area of common respon¬sibilities and common pleasureswhich are ours by virtue of ourcommon manhood.” To him thesearch for a common learning isa search for an education thatunites a man with his fellow menrather than dividing men by in¬dividual competences.Since institutions differ in theirview's on v'hat general education is, they end to be even furtherpart in their practices for attain¬ing it. The first part of Thomas’book surveys the development ofgeneral education from 1800, whenvocationally-oriented courses firstbegan to infiltrate the classicalcollege curriculum, to the pres¬ent. He shows how the tremen¬dous growth of learning and thepolitical and social ideas thatcharacterize American democracyhave brought about differences inconcept and practice in generaleducation.The second part of the bookcontains detailed analyses of thegeneral education policies andpractices of 18 representativeliberal arts colleges and divisionsof universities. Tables showingthese colleges’ admissions require¬ments and their requirements ingeneral education for graduationare appended to the book. A col¬lege staff member or potentialcollege student can thus comparethe program in general educationat one institution against the pro¬grams at a representative sampleof liberal arts colleges.Conclusion drawnFrom his analyses, Mr. Thomasdraws a number of general con¬clusions:1. The requirement that gen¬eral courses precede special¬ization in college fosters the at¬titude that general education isterminal and demands less matur¬ity than specialization. Collegesthat lose a large percentage oftheir students at the end of theirsophomore year can justify thispractice. There is a trend in someToday’s EventsTuesday, 27 FebruaryLutheran communion service: Bondchapel. 1 1 :30 am.Lecture: "Becoming righteous — thepositive,” Paul Fromer, Swift hall208. 12:30-1:20 pm.Meeting: Faculty of the College, Eck-haPt 133, 3:30 pm.Lecture series: “The use of dimen¬sionless numbers for design of bio¬logical models,” Dimensional artdsimilarity methods in biology. Dr.Walter R. Stahl, 57 41 Drexel avenue,room 311, 4 pm.Rifle club: Fieldhouse, 4-6 and 7-10 inn.Colloquium: “Recent progress in crystalfield theory,” James C. Phillips, ■ Re¬search institute 211, 4:15 pm.Meeting: Christian science testimony,Thorndike Hilton chapel, 7:13 pm.Israeli folk dance: Hillel, 8 pm.Films: “People of a ctiy,” “Pertainingto Chicago,” “Fires were started,"films on the city, Judd 126, 7:30 pm. International folk dancing: Internationalhouse, 8 pm.Motion picture: "Strangers to hope.”sponsored by Quaker student fellow¬ship, 5615 Wood lawn avenue. 8 pm.William Vaughn Moody lecture: “Poetryand remembrance: the traditionalview of poetry,” followed by read¬ings of her own poems, KathleenRaine,. Mandel hall, 8:30 pm.THE GALLERY• Paintings • Prints• Framing • Restoration1168 E. 55th St.288 - 5645' foreign or hospital & clinicdealers in;• mg• morris• austin• riley ,• lambretta5340 s. lake park. do 3-0707service clinic: 2306 e. 71stmi 3-3113bob lestermg psychiatrist Study inGuadalajara, MexicoThe Guadalajara Summer School, afully accredited University of Arizonaprogram, conducted in cooperationwith professors from Stanford Uni¬versity, University of California, andGuadalajara.v yill offer July 2 toAugust 10,, art, folklore, geogra¬phy, history, language and literaturecourses. Tuition, board and room is$245.Write Prof. Juan B. Rael,P.O. Box 7227, Stanford, Calif. colleges, however, to distributegeneral requirements over fouryears.Z. The w'ide variation in highschool preparation for collegemakes it impossible for collegesto plan courses that will beequally fresh and stimulating toall entering students. Generaleducation is, in fact, the jointresponsibility of high schools andcolleges and thus there should be a clearer distinction between theircurricula.S. Despite the differences instudents’ backgrounds, the con¬cept of general education presentsa strong argument for uniformlyprescribed general educationcourses for all students ratherthan optional courses within broadsubject-matter fields. Some in¬stitutions offer variant courses onthe basis of student aptitudes, in¬cluding special programs for bothCagers lose to I ITby Chuck BernsteinIIT battled to a 59-47 vic¬tory over an undermannedMaroon five last night at Dun¬bar High.Chicago played w'ithout Joel(Big Zl Zemans who is ill withthe flu. It w'as the first varsitygame the all-American missedsince he donned the Maroon uni¬form as a freshman 62 games ago.Gene Erickson who was in uni¬form did not see action becausehe is recovering from the flu.The game was close in the firsthalf as both teams played delib¬erate ball.Despite numerous IIT miscuesin the second half, UC couldn’tcapitalize because of the tremen¬dous Techawk 2-2-1 zone. The out¬side shooting of Connie Caswickcoupled with the inside moves ofBig Dan Bcnovich and Nick Ma-thys enabled IIT to open up aten-point lead with 34 minutesto go. In addition, the Maroonscouldn’t contend with the beef-trust of Benovich, Mathys, andDick Seibert under the boards.In the preliminary game BigEd Custer 6'6” freshman tipped ina shot with 3 seconds to go togive the Maroon fledglings a 64-62 win over the IIT freshmen.VOLKSWAGEN, 1956, 2-doorTn excellent condition. One owner,my clean car. Can be seen atHYDE PARK CHEVROLET5506 LAKE PARK AVE. DO 3-8600Open Sunday 11-4; Evenings tilt 9$50 RewardNEW Russian typwriter Royal,elite type, Futura 800 was stolenfrom CROSS WORLD Books andPeriodicals. (A Russian bookstore).We offer $50 reward leading to therecovery of the typewriter.No questions asked and no prose¬cution.Phone or see C. B LotsmanCROSS WORLD BOOKS ANDPERIODICALS, INC.333 S. Wacker DriveChicago 6, IllinoisHA 7-1042Pre-Spring Quarter SaleNew and UsedTypewriter, Photographic A TapeRecorder ItemsFor as long as they lastSee our South display window forsome of the following values:TYPEWRITERS — 6 mo. guaranteeSale Price - plus taxItemOlympia SM 3 PortableOlympia FS ” • •.Smith Elec. ” •..Royal Deluxe ” i«.Smith Skyriter ” • •Cole Steel ” . •Olivetti ” • •Olivetti ” • •Hermes — StandardOlympia SGlRemingtonUnderwoodUnderwoodRoyal KMG $65.00. 61.00. 110.00. 48.00. 29.00. 60.00. 46.00. 48.00. 85.00. 135.00. 95.00. 45.00. 50.00. 85.00TAPE RECORDERSRevere $29.00PHOTOGRAPHIC ITEMSBaskow 8mm. Projector .... $29.50Mansfield 35 mm. Projector 15.00Aires Speed lite Photo Flash 26.00Agfa Optima 35 mm. Camera 49.00Agfa Optima 35 mm. Case . . 6.00Lite Bar 6.50UNIVERSITY OF CHICAGOBOOKSTORE5802 ELLIS AVENUEHours: Mon.-Frl, 8-5; Sat. 8-12 SCANDINAVIAN IMPORTSHOME OF MULTIFORM — THE UNIQUE STORAGE UNITS1542 EAST 57th STREETOpen Daily 12 noon to 8 p.m.DR. A. ZIMBLER, OptometristIN THENEW HYDE PARK SHOPPING CENTER1510 E. 55th St. DO 3-7644EYE EXAMINATIONSPRESCRIPTIONS FILLED CONTACT LENSESNEWEST STYLING IN FRAMESSTUDENT DISCOUNTFACULTY, INSTRUCTORS and STUDENTSare invited to participate in the regular TUESDAY evening meetings ofChristian Science Organizationat the U of CThese meetings are designed to illustrate the practicalapplications of the Bible teachings to one’s experiencein the academic community.EACH TUESDAY AT 7:15 P.M.THORNDIKE HILTON CHAPEL11 SO EAST 58th STREET Darryl O’Seen paced UC with 16points.The Maroons take their disap¬pointing 12-6 record out east thisweekend to play MIT and Tuftsfor the season’s finale.Chicago 47B F PTomasoyie ... 2- 3Uss 2- 3llllmann 0- 0 2Cost in 2- 3Lahti 7- 9 5W'inter 0- 1Lubitz 0- 0Brier 0- 0 0Totals 13-19 19IIT 59B F PSeibert 4- 4 4Mathys 4- 5 2Kenevich 3- 6 1Bngley 2 4- 5 3Waeltz 2- 2Kolifratl 0 1- 2 0Caswirk I- 1 1Totals 19-25 IS highly-gifted students and the les«able.4. The entire faculty of a col¬lege or university shares respo»-sibility for its general educationprogram. Without their confidenceand cooperation the program willnever achieve its ends.5. The development of individualtalents is an obligation of a freesociety, but the individual mustalso accept the responsibilities ofa member of that society. It iswith this latter goal that generaleducation is concerned.The Search for a CommonLearning is the 11th book in TheCarnegie series in American edu¬cation. It is available at $6.95.Anthology needs poemsThe American College Poetrysociety is seeking contributions toits fifth semesterly anthology.Poets may submit up to five poemsdealing with any subject, as longas they do not exceed 48 lineseach.Recognition awards of five dol¬lars each will be offered to fiveoutstanding college poets.Entries should be sent to theAmerican College Poetry society,Box 24083, Eos Angeles 24, Cali¬fornia, before April 12.calls forBudweiser./ Enjoy l( the King\ of Beers! | wherethere’s life..#there’s Bud®ANHEUSER-BUSCH, INC. • ST.LOUIS • NEWARK* LOS ANGELES • TAMPA4 • CHICAGO MAROON Feb. 27. 1962