Government hurting laborby Michael Kaufmanand Sue GoldbergToday’s labor unions arelosing their rights as a resultof government legislation,said James R. Hoffa Fridaynight.Speaking to an audience ofabout 800 in Mandel hail, Holla,president of the InternationalBrotherhood of Teamsters (IBTt,slated that the government istaking a role in destroying theviability of unions.Hermit Eby, professor in U(”ssocial science division, and unionorganizer in the J930’s, intro¬duced Hoffa as a dedicated“fighter” whose union is the onewhich is growing and making itsimpact on the country. Ebypointed out that Hoffa's positionin today’s labor movement issimilar to that held by John L.|.cwis in the movement of themid-1080's. Lewis’ opposition,which then called him a “bogeyman," now considers him a hero.Hoffa attacked the Landrum-C.riffin act passed in 1959, and theMcClellan Senate sub-committeehealings held in 1957, both ofwhich he claimed hurt the labormovement.One provision ot the Landrum-Griffin act outlaws the secondarystrike so that members of theTeamsters union cannot refuse tomake pick-ups and deliveries tos(ruck-bound industries. Withoutthe support of the sympathystrike, Hoffa explained, the prim¬ary strike is ineffective.By coordingating expirationdates of contracts in various in¬dustries, Hoffa stated, the unionscan transform secondary strikesinto primary strikes. If thecontracts expire during the in¬dustry’s peak season union de¬mands will be filled, he added,since the threat of production and transport strikes will havesignificant [rower.Hofl'a predicted that if govern¬ment restrictions continue, Ameri¬can strikes will take on thecharacteristics of Europe whichinvolve up to 80 thousand peopleat one time.The McClellan subcommitteeinvestigates “improper activitiesin the labor and managementfield.” The committee, said Hoffa,was set up under the influence ofbig business interests when theyfound they could no longer fightorganized labor, especially theIBT, by means of strike-breaking,hiring scab labor, and bribingjudges. The committee pickedthe Teamsters, Hoffa stated, be¬cause of their militancy andstrength.Hoffa said that the committee,which allows no right of counsel,cross-examination, or research tothose subpoenaed to testify, hadas its aim the restoration ofdemocracy to unions—“as thoughthis is something new to unions.”The witnesses are “harassed, har¬angued, and abused by so-calledindividuals who have the union atheart.” However, Hoffa com¬mented, these same Congressmen“never voted for anything decentfor the worker.”Also responsible for the forma¬tion of the McClellan committeewas the “screaming press” whichheld that it was “unfair” for thecompanies to bargain with suchstrong unions. During the hear¬ings several witnesses, who, out offear of being tricked by commit¬tee lawyers, took the fifth amend¬ment, were “blasted by the pressfor taking their constitutionalrights.”Hoffa said his union will notcease lighting until they get w’ageincreases which keep pace withthe rising standard of living, in addition to the improved workingconditions, the pensions, and theunemployment insurance they re¬quest. In these years of boomingautomation, workers need finan¬cial protection as they are beingreplaced by machines. “We wantthe right of a job at a wage sowe can have everything we tellthe world we have. We also wantthe right to organize, to strike,to have a democracy which wetell the people behind the IronCurtain we have,” Hoffa con¬tinued.Nationwide unionization is nec¬essary to compete with the grow¬ing organization and concentra¬tion of big business, Hoffa em¬phasized. Such organization beganin 1935 when areawide truckingcontracts were made and a cen¬tralization program was institutedto unite all Mid Western truckingin Chicago. James Hoffa, Teamster800 students at UC's Mandel union president, addresseshall Friday.Psychologists to leave UCMiss Codofsky elected1962-63 Maroon editor Three University of Chi¬cago biopsychologists have re¬signed their posts to acceptteaching and administrativepositions elsewhere.Howard Hunt, professor andchairman of the department ofpsychology; Austin Riesen, pro¬fessor of psychology; and Theo¬dore Schaefer, assistant professorof biology in the College and ofpsychology, will leave UC duringthe summer.Hunt will be director of psychi¬atric research (psychology) andprofessor of medical psychology atColumbia college of physicians andsurgeons, and professor of medicalpsychology at Columbia university.Schaefer will also go to Colum¬bia, where he will become an as¬sistant professor in the psychology gram,” said Hunt. Most schools,he explained, have, at most, threemen in the physiological area;whereas there are nine men inbiopsychology at UC.A committee composed of thetenure faculty of the psychologydepartment currently has a num¬ber of candidates under considera¬tion for the chairmanship of thedepartment.The committee is also “activelyconsidering an array of very ex¬cellent replacements” for the menwho will be leaving, said Schafer.Schaefer wants changeSchaefer said that he is leavingbecause, having been here sincehis 1947 student days, he would“like to see what it is like else¬where” and “teach in a new’ en¬vironment,” using UC methods andprinciples^He added that he would like adepartment.Riesen will asstime the chair¬manship of the psychology depart¬ment at the University of Califor¬nia at Riverside (UCR), where hewill set up a graduate program. chance to influence others in “theideas and approaches that charac¬terize the UC psychology depart¬ment.”Schaefer has done research onbrain chemistry and behavior,„ .... effects of early experience on laterT „ , . . , None of us is leaving ecause behavjor and invertebrate be-Laura Godofsky, a second Choice. I am confident that the of any dissatisfaction at all with havioryear student in the College, new editor will serve both the the University of Chicago,” saidwas elected editor of the Maroon and the campus in an ex- Schaefer, “but because of the very' euuui U1emplary manner.” Greenberg attractive prospects elsewhere.”will become editor emeritus of the The University of Chicago, de¬newspaper with the beginning of Ue the three departures, still hasthe summer quarter.Maroon for the next year onFriday.Miss Godofsky takes oft ice withthe beginning of summer quarterand will serve for one year.She succeeds Jay Greenberg, athird year student in the College.The newly elected editor hasserved as news editor of theMaroon during the past year. Shehas also been active on the new'sstaff of campus radio stationWUCB. At UC, in addition to teaching,he was an assistant resident headin Rurton-Jndson from 1949-51 andhas worked with Student unionand Orientation board.His wife, Judith, is a researcha “very strong biopsychology pro-NPEA disclaimer affidavitProspects for repeal dimMuroon press serviceWASHINGTON, DC — Prospects appear very dim for Congressional action this yearon legislation to repeal the so-called disclaimer affidavit in the National Defense Educa-Miss Godofsky immediately an- tion act (NDEA).nounced the reappointment of A bill to extend NDEA for three years with some revisions, including eliminationAvima Ruder, fourth year student 0f [he disclaimer affidavit, hasm th« College, as managing edi- been on the Senate calendar since Senator Wayne Morse (D-Ore.), The Senate bill would amend thelot and of Kenneth Heyl, second last fall Similar legislation is bot- whose education committee ap- P^sent law to remove the require-year student in the College, as tied up in the House rules com- proved the three-year Senate bill, ment that individual recipients ofbusiness manager. Other appoint- mittee. is still pressing for floor action Payments or loans under the^ actmerits w'ill be made soon, she The only remote chaVrce for this year. But with the NDEA in " ~~',lated- action this year rests with the no danger of expiring before nextSpeaking of plans for the com- Senate bill. How’ever, the Senate year, the pressure is off the leader-ing year, Miss Godofsky said leadership has shown no indication ship for action in 1962.1 anticipate no drastic change of calline up the measure for a educators also havein the general character of the vote and it is doubtful that action . Lading eduea o . .ome general tnaracier oi me . . _ „„„„ joined in urging immediate action•unon. We hope to be publish- . , . to repeal the disclaimer affidavitmg larger issues, to expand our (ongress passed last year a reau:rement Thev teel that it nutsstaff and to imnrove feature ®lmI‘,e two-year extension 0f requirement. Iheyteel that it puts’ l° impiove featuie NDEA without change when the too much responsibility on collegeslaw threatened to expire in the ,n(tu‘le ,nto iPohtlcal bcliefs offight over the administration’s al1 student appl,cants-aid-to-education program. Among the prominent educators virtually every educational oigani-Senate sources said that the ap- who have urged action on the hi!! nation also felt that the diai.ai.iu iproval ot this extension took away are Presidents Nathan M. Pusey affidavit is unnecessary anmost of the impetus for action on of Harvard. W. Whitney Griswold . ca"ie® with it an unwarrantedOutgoing editor Greenberg said the more comprehensive bill to of Yale, and Chancellor George W. imP*lca ,0,j that students ^ and01 Miss Godofsky’s election, “I am knock out the disclaimer provision Beadle of the University of Chi- teachers loyalty is suspect,extremely pleased with the staff’s and make other revisions. cago, (continued on page 3)coverage. We fully expect to keep°ur present four times weeklyPublication schedule.” (TheMaroon began publishing fourtimes weekly last October. Itpreviously appeared weekly.) execute an affidavit disclaimingsubversive beliefs and affiliations.How’ever, the requirement for anaffirmative oath of allegiance onthe part of the recipients wouldremain in the law.Both President Eisenhower, in1960, and President Kennedyrecommended such a change inNDEA.Morse’s committee reported that assistant on the committee onhuman development.Hunt wants researchHunt said he would like to “getback in the laboratory” to do full¬time research, although he mayalso teach a graduate course atColumbia.He explained that as chief ofpsychiatric research, he will be the“head of a small department atthe New’ York state psychiatricinstitute,” w’hich is Columbia’s de¬partment of psychology.He w'ill study animal behavior,emotional conditioning, drugs’ in¬fluence on behavior. His experi¬mental psychology work will bedone with human and animal sub¬jects.At UC, Hunt has recently beenW'orking on animals’ conditioningand their learning with drugs, andhe has been teaching graduateseminars.Hunt has written many tech¬nical papers and chapters onstudies of the effects of brain in¬jury, intelligence, psychologicalpersonality tests; and in the past10 years, has been writing on con¬ditioning and physiological psy¬chology.He was made chairman of thedepartment in 1925. When, in 1959-60, he took a leave of absence tostudy behavioral science at Stan¬ford at Palo Alto, Riesen was act¬ing chairman of the department.Riesen builds programRiesen explained that he is leav¬ing mainly for the chall* nge ofbuilding a new graduate programat UCR.“UCR is a new campus at theUniversity of California,” he said.“It has had undergraduate worksince 1954. The physical science*went into PhD programs this year;whereas, in other areas, includingpsychology, there is no graduatework as yet.” Rie*en hopes to startthe graduate program in 1963.He has been working on “theeffects of specialized environmentson vision.” These environments in¬clude total darkness, diffused light,and restrictions of colors or pat¬terns, he explained.Riesen has written one mono¬graph and one book on chimpanzeebehavior, which was the subjectof his PhD thesis, done at Yale in1939. For his degree he did a“study of chimpanzees’ capacitiesfor delayed response and for dis¬crimination learning, with delayof rew’ard.”Riesen’s recent articles havedealt with “neuro-changes and be¬havioral changes following re¬stricted stimulations.” These arethe same restrictions he used inrelation with vision studies.Tlit University of Chico#} LtbaatyVol. 70 — No. 99 University of Chicago, Tuesday, May 22, 1962 31Reuel Denney resignsReuel Denney has resigned from his position as profes¬sor of social sciences m the College to accept a post at theAmerican institute, a subdivision of the East-West centerat the University of Hawaii. Aims of educationExaminer's role explainedDenney, who has taught socialsciences and humanities at UCsince 1947, is spending this yearat Hawaii’s center for culturaland technical interchange betweenthe East and West (the East-West center), on a leave of ab¬sence. In a letter to Dean of theCollege Alan Simpson, he an¬nounced his resignation, but didnot explain what his new postwould entail. waii campus, and will representan investment of $50 million.Denney joined the East-Westcenter as a visiting professor this aminer at the University ofyear. He is the author of The Chicago is responsible, first ofby David G. WilliamsCollege examinerThe office of the College ex-The two year old East-Westcenter has as its goal the servingof three continents. At the com¬pletion of a staged-out develop¬ment program in 1967, it willhouse more than 1,000 Americanand Asian students on the Ha- Conneotieut River, a collection ofpoems; The Lonely Crowd; TheAstonished Muse; and most re¬cently, In Praise of Adam, an¬other book of poems.Denney received his BA degreefrom Dartmouth college in 1932.Before joining the UC faculty,he was associate editor for Time *he C ollege examiner and his .-tamagazine and Fortune. of course examiners with the ainvt mco u • ... , of education is complicated by theIn 1952 he was visiting profes- number of topics, they would de¬vote their major attention to thesetopics."If, however, they thought thatthe examination would sample avery broad range of material in-all, for the comprehensive ex- eluded in a course, they preparedaminations given in the generaleducation courses of the first twoyears. In what follows I shall limitmyself to this aspect of the exam¬iner’s work.Discussion of the involvement ofsor at the Universities of Minnes¬ota and Puerto Rico. In 1955 heserved as lecturer to the Americanseminar in Salzburg, Austria. fact that the examiners are at tnetime members of the teachingstaffs of the College: they areteachers as w’ell as examiners.They may also be membei s ofexecutive or policy committees ofa staff or of the College. Theymay be academic advisers. There-. fore, in one capacity or another.An exhibition of the public hall and lecturer in the College 1hey are aIways involved with theSculpture exhibitedart department. The figure ison a limestone cross which formsj., ... , . ... ,, part of the w'all of the mausoleumlaft, will be on view with the an(j has become a kind of shrine.sculpture of Freeman School¬craft, a protege of LaredoTaft exhibition this month at Mid¬way studios, 6016 Ingleside.The sculpture, “Christ on theCross,” is a nine-foot figure inbronze, commissioned by theQueen of Heaven mausoleum inHillside, Illinois.It was executed in 1961 bySchoolcraft, director of the cam¬pus studio gallery in LexingtonMODEL CAMERALeica, Bolex, Nikon,Hasselblad Dealer1342 E. 55th HY 3-9259NSA DISCOUNTTypewritersTwo free type change* withthe new Olympia Model SM-5at $99.50 plus tax. Free type¬writer table with each OlympiaSM-7 or Smith Corona ElectricPortable.The University ofChicago Bookstore5802 ELLIS AVENUESheraton~ Hotels rfStudent-Faculty ^l Discounts Heap'V. fine news for The plaster figure from whichthe bronze cast was taken is“a fine and impressive work,” ac¬cording to Harold Haydon, di¬rector of the studios, and “isquite appropriately shown withthe current exhibition of modelsand photographs of Taft’s publicsculpture.”"A LITTLE FURTHER, now, fromthe heat of the President’s explosionat the steel industry, it is possible tosurmise that the captains of Ameri¬can industry collapsed not becausethey were overwhelmed by force butbecause they were surprised. The po¬litically studious had marked, for de¬cades, the gradual accumulations ofpower in the central administration,and the more gloomy prophets hadbeen saying that power, once col¬lected in Unan-Mfor th* current issue aims of education. The area ofconcern with aims which is theirbusiness as examiners can be ab¬stracted, in theory, however, fromtheir general preocupation withaims.Students have little difficulty inperforming such an abstraction;unfortunately when they do sothey make the mistake of identi¬fying the examination with theeducational goal.Benjamin Bloom, who togetherwith Ralph Tyler established thetraditions of examining in the Col¬lege of the University of Chicago,has given the following descriptionof what waj observed at one pointearly in the history of our exam¬ining: “It was soon discovered thatthe nature of the examination hada profound influence on the extentand kind of preparation the stu¬dents made. Students quickly dis¬covered the kinds of questions for such a range of questions. Ifthe students discovered that for aparticular examination they wouldbe held only for such things asthey could memorize, their prep¬aration stressed the memorizing ofa great many particular items ofinformation and they made effortsto ‘learn’ as much as possible atthe last minute."Again, if students discoveredthat the examination would re¬quire applications of the ideas djs-cussed in lectures and classes, theywould devote a great deal of at¬tention in their preparation tothinking about possible applica¬tions of such ideas.”It may be regrettable that stu¬dents should make the examinationitself a goal, as appears from thedescription of their behavior above,but the moral for examiners is ob¬vious: the examiners must see toit that the examinations test withprecision and lullness, with proper dicates the failures and successesas I indicated earlier, not the ex¬aminer, is charged with the de¬termination of aims. Has the ex¬aminer then no influence on thisdetermination beyond that of be¬ing a stimulus? The answer is thathe is a valuable source of guid¬ance, not as to what the aimsshould be, but as to what in thisimperfect world they can be.Comprehensive examinations andquarterly examination at tlieirbest tell us a good deal more thanhow a partieular student’s totalscore measures up against the to¬tal score of other students. If astaff derives nothing more fromthe examinations than grades forits students, it is ignoring a valu¬able source of knowledge aboutwhich methods or texts, whichlines of inquiry and discussion,serve to further the accomplish¬ment of the eourse objectives andwhich do not.It is possible to plan an exami¬nation so that it can for analyticalpurj)oses be divided into parts invarious ways, and these parts canthen be scored so that the achieve¬ment of students in each part in-swerable propor- lof NATIONAL review which they would be expected totions,willevertiu-Ww'H' for copy> answer on theally be exercised.So it has.” answer on the various examina-130E.35St.,N*wYork tions. If the students expected to14# N-Y. be questioned on only a limitedWithin the cultural and sophisticated atmosphere ofHYDE PARKThis elegant two-apartment brick building, 6 rooms each, 1 (aceramic baths. Spacious rooms designed for gracious living.Replacement value: $50,000. Full price, $26,500. Call RE 1-8444DR. A. ZIMBLER, OptometristIN THENEW HYDE PARK SHOPPING CENTER1510 E. 55th St. DO 3-7644EYE EXAMINATIONSPRESCRIPTIONS FILLED CONTACT LENSESNEWEST STYLING IN FRAMESSTUDENT DISCOUNT proportion and emphasis, the at¬tainment of the real aims of thecourses.The first obligation of an exam¬iner with respeet to educationalaims now becomes clear: he mustknow what the objectives of acourse are. And it is just here thatthe first impingement of the exam¬iner on the determination of aimsof a Course occurs. Objectives ofcourses are set by the College fa¬culty in general and by the eoursestaffs in particular. They shouldnot be set by examiners.But objectives tend toward astate of diffusion as well-estab¬lished courses are related througha series of years. New personnelcome onto the teaching staff;changes in details of conlent, read¬ing, method are introduced fromyear to year, not always with athorough consideration of the bear¬ing of these changes upon the ob¬jectives of the course.All members of a staff may bewell-intentioned in these matters,but it is the examiner who is con¬stituted in particular to be a gad¬fly. He must insist on knowingwhat everything that goes into acourse has to do with the aims ofthe course. If he doesn’t, he can¬not produce an examination worthyof our College. The goading andprodding, the recall to first prin¬ciples, the insistence that objec¬tives be sharp and clear and up-to-date, are not always popular,but they are important not only tothe examination but to the course.The fact remains that the staff,COPYKlOMT © IM1, THE COCA-COLA COMPANY. COCA-COLA AND COKE IStudents, faculty <and other members 1of college tribe getplenty good service at plenty lowrates. All because Sheraton’s spe¬cial rates help Buck travel verylong way. If you’re hunting fortravel bargains — you’ll findSheraton Hotels the best place tostay.Qenerous group rates arrangedfor teams, clubs and ^thercollege groups on the move.Get these discounts at any ofSheraton’s 61 hotels in the U.S.A.,Hawaii and Canada by presentinga Sheraton Card. To get aSheraton I.D. Card or FacultyGuest Card with credit privi¬leges, write us. Please state whereyou are a full time faculty memberor student.Mr. Patrick GreenCollege Relations Dept.Sheraton Corporation470 Atlantic AvonueBoston 10, Mass.>v-: of the various facets of the course.Even when the examination is notplanned with this sort of diagnosisin mind, an analysis of parts canbe made from which much can belearned.Here the technical staff of thecollege examiner’s office is mostuseful. Course examiners, as Ihave said, are initially teachersrather than examiners. There ismuch that is now’ to them aboutthe possibilities of diagnostic ex¬amining. They turn therefore tothe professional research person¬nel of the examiner’s office for as¬sistance in the discovery of exam¬ining and scoring procedures w hichw'ill afford most information tocourse staffs.A good deal of what diagnosticexaminations disclose has refer¬ence to the success or failure ofspecific means in the achievementof the intended ends; it follows,however, that much can be learnedabout the feasibility of tho pndsthemselves, or about their approp¬riateness given the conditions un¬der which a course must operate.Aims thus are modified from >earto year as a direct result of theactivity of the examiner.Special evaluation examinationsare sometimes given; occasionallythese are administered long alterthe conclusion of a course, to testthe durability of the achievementof some of its objectives. Moreimportant is the annually recur¬ring battery of placement tests atthe beginning of the student’s stayhere, for which the examiner’svllice is responsible.Herein the examiners uncoverinformation of prime importancein the determination of appropri¬ate objectives for the generalcourses, since the results of thesetests tell where the courses shouldstart—what objectives have al¬ready been fulfilled, field by field,before entrance, and what remains.The compactness of the adminis¬tration of the placement tests, allwithin a week, carries my thoughtfrom the particular course to ageneral view of the curriculumand hence to a realization thatwhile what the examinations dis¬close may be of greatest use tothe separate staffs, each thinkingthrough the objectives of the par¬ticular course, some of the dis¬coveries stemming from placementand comprehensive examinationsoffer broad enough informationabout the feasibility of this aimor that to be of use to the Collegefaculty as a whole is its delibera¬tions about the curriculum.OPEN WIDE and SAY A-H-H-H!Get that refreshing new feeling with Coke/Bottled under authority of Th« Coca-Colt Company Ay THE COCA-COLA BOTTLINGCOMPANY OF CHICAGO FOR THE BEST DEAL IN TOWNJOIN THE TRADE PARADETOGRUBY'S RAMBLER4555 S. Cottage Grove Ave.BO 8-11112 • CHICAGO MAP.OON • May 22, 1962Criticizes '8:3 0' shows -^The Actor’s company pre-1 Sented Edward Albee’s “TheSandbox” and Moliere’s “Thedoctor in Spite of Himself”last weekend during their"Tonight at 8:30” series.The two works provided an en¬tertaining evening, though the Al-bee seemed hardly worthy of thename “a play” and the Moliereindulged too much in rowdy funand too little in solid drama."The Sandbox,” directed byMarty Rabinowitz, appeared to beno more than a dramatic sketch.The action consists of domineeringMommy and brow-beaten Daddytaking 86 year-old Grandma tothe beach to die. And die she does,alter a long speech to the audienceexplaining her plight in the wov d.Jane Whitehill’s Grandma wasa convincing 86-year-old, whosevoice tone at times bespoke herportrayer’s actual years, and whosefaces were delightful as a six-year-old’s. The combination of youthand age made grandma a fascinat¬ing child-like character.Maggie Stinson and Pat Cainwere effective as Mommy andDaddy, and Lew Goldwyn’s fewlines as the Young Man (wherelie tells Grandma he is the Angelof Death) were nicely spoken,though they didn’t help the audi¬ence find anything in the play tosink their teeth into.The set and the costumes forthe 14 minute Albee work wereuniformly unexciting, though thelighting on the Young Man wasa bright spot. Miss Whitehill’smake-up was a stylistic triumphw hich convincingly added 66 yearsto her age.Director Bob Reiser set himselfa difficult task when he attemptedto adapt a full-length Molierecomedy into three scenes, andthough he got most of the spot¬line into his version, he necessari¬ly lost much of the Moliere touchwhich makes his plays comedyrather than buffoonery.Reiser’s "The Doctor in Spite of ery, but the directional hand,which made sure that someonewas getting flogged, pinched,mauled or tripped almost everyminute, led it very close to thatdramatic backdoor.The most satisfying humorcame in the final scene as DavidSchoenwetter (playing the "doc¬tor" Sganarelle) delivered somehighly comic thrusts at the medi¬cal profession. Schoenwettershould be commended for main¬taining his glibness of tonguethroughout aforesaid floggings,pinchings, maulings, et cetera.The strongest performance inthe play was that of Leo Krug(as Geronte) who has the controlof movement and of voice sonecessary in rowdy comedy. RonInglehart’s short bit as Mon¬sieur Robert had vestiges of thesame control and sparked theopening scene which otherwiselacked the punch it should havehad.Anna Berndtsen, as Sganarelle’swife, didn’t fall into the spirit ofthe show as successfully as didthe others. Nor did Miss White-hill whose role as Valere unfor¬tunately had the brunt of the ex¬positionary material heaped uponit. Carole Hughes as Jacquelinewould have done better to rely onher natural voice than to try tosimulate a country accent.Alex Holm portrayed a strongcharicature of Leandre the lover,and Harriet Rosenstein's one tor¬ rential speech as Lucinde wasadmirably overwhelming. JerryLaPointe as the halfwit, Lucas,had the audience guffawing at hisskillful mugging, but he unfor¬tunately tended to steal people’sattention from the main action ina few too many spots.Dorothy SharplessCulture editorSet Hum CourseAn undergraduate course onthe nature of the humanitieshas been established by thecommittee on ideas andmethods.The course, set up at the sug¬gestion of dean of the CollegeAlan Simpson, is scheduled to begiven in the winter quarters of1963 and 1964. It will be taughtby Richard P. McKeon, CharlesF. Grey distinguished service pro¬fessor in the departments of phil¬osophy and classics and chairmanof the committee on analysis ofideas and study of methods, onMondays from 3:30 to 3:30 pm.According to McKeon, Ideas andMethods 292 will be “an examina¬tion of the nature of the human¬ities and the history of theirevolution. Classical formulationsof the liberal arts will be read,and philosophies which determinethe nature, interrelations, anduses of the interpretation of artand nature will be discussed.” Asks pay for studentsAlternates proposed(continued from page 1)In place of the disclaimer pro-'ision, the Senate bill w'ould pro-vide criminal penalties for anynu mber of a Communist organiza¬tion who applies for or uses anytunds available under NDEA. Thepenalty could range up to $10,000tine and five years in prison.• According to a spokesman forthe University there is a goodchance that the disclaimer affida¬vits may be eliminated from boththe National Science foundationact and NDEA).The penalty would apply to anymember of a Communist organiza¬tion, as defined in the SubversiveActivities Control act of 1950, withI Classified jfor Sale:Binocular microscope — mode) TBR-4,Bausch & Lomb. Ext. 3126, HildaSteinle. Essex 5-7287 evenings.1 Ro^ral - 1 Smith typewriter. Excel¬lent cond. $50 each. Priv. PL 2-5046,Camp counsellors (men) for privateMichigan summer camp. Experience pre¬ferred. Write or phone Mr. Sceger,MI 3-6800, 8741 S. Cregier Ave.,Chicago.Summer Maroon mailed anywhere. CallExt. 3265 or write 1212 E. 59th St.CMQ: thanks for use of typewriter,but would have preferred bacon andeggs.—MDK and SJG.One stray parakeet found on Midway,Owner please call BU 8-9165, eves. knowledge and notice that suchorganization is registered or tinderfinal order to register.Morse’s committee said it did American school at Corinth,not intend that this provisionshould impose any duty uponeither institutions or the US com¬missioner of education "to initiateor carry on investigations of in¬dividuals.”"Rather,” the committee reportsaid, "it is the intent of the com¬mittee that notice to individuals His lecture is sponsored by theapplying for awards or other pay- UC archaeological society. It willments of the existence of this pro- be delivered in the Ida Noyesvision of the act.” library at 8 pm.SALELibrary Discardsand DuplicatesThrough Friday. May 2510c & UPThe University ofChicago Bookstore5802 ELLIS AVENUE Erik the Red had no choice-but Vitalis with V-7will keep your hair neat all day without grease.Naturally. V-7 is the greaseless grooming discovery. Vitalis® j JSLjwith V-7® fights embarrassing dandruff, prevents dryness,keeps your hair neat all day without grease. Try Vitalis today! ktsT Sociologist Margaret Meadsaid recently that all collegestudents should be paid salar¬ies for performing their schoolwork. She said they should nolonger be financially penalizedfor the time they spend studying;time during which their less in¬telligent, ambitious or creativecontemporaries are earning moneyand gaining experience in theirchosen fields.Writing in the June issue ofRedbook, Dr. Mead deplored thecustom of making college students "suffer now for what they maybe able to do later.”Dr. Mead does not consider"free” education sufficient, sinceit does not account for the stu¬dent’s living costs. She cites thefact that one third of the youngpeople who are clearly collegematerial do not go to college,and maintains that the reason forthis is their unwillingness to eithergo on being supported by theirparents, or to scrimp along on themoney they can earn at part timejobs which actually interfere withtheir studies.Scranton to discussclassic architectureRobert L. Scranton, professor in the departments ofclassics and art, will speak this evening on Greek and Romanarchitecture.An expert in the field, Scranton has published severalworks, including a volume on "Greek architecture for a world ing "Roman Buildings in the Low-architecture series, published this er Agors of Corinth,” and "Med-spring. Among his publications ieyal Architecture in Corinth.”are several papers in the Resultsof Excavations of the American Scranton received his BA fromHimself" was not strictly buffoon- School of Classical Studies, includ- Mt. Union college, Alliance, Ohio,in 1932, and his MA from UC in1934. From 1934 to 1938 he stu¬died at the American School ofClassical Studies in Athens, hisfirst year as a student on aRyerson fellowship in archaeologythe next three as a fellow of theIn 1939 he received his PhD inclassical art and archeology atUC. He has taught at Illinoiscollege in Jacksonville, at Vassar,and at Emory college in Atlanta.In 1953-54 he was a Guggenheimfellow in Athens. QnCanyms withhfexShokan(Author of “I Was a Teen-age Dwarf”,“The ManyLoves of Dobie Gillis”, etc.)TILL WE MEET AGAINTliis is the final column of my eighth year of writing for themakers of Marlboro Cigarettes, and this year, as in every pre¬ceding year, when I come to the last column of the season, Icome to a problem.My contract with the makers of Marlboro calls for me towrite a humor column and, truly, I do the best I can—all thingsconsidered, I am not, I should explain, a jolly man by nature.Why should I be? First of all, I am shorter than everybody.Second, there are moths in my cashmere jacket. Third, I workin television.All the same, when it comes time to write this column, I lighta good Marlboro Cigarette, put aside my trauma, and try withall the strength in my tiny body to make some jokes. Some¬times it works better than others, but on the last column of theyear, it just flatly doesn’t work at all.Even in the very beginning this was true—and that, you will re¬call, was eight years ago when I was relatively young and strongand had not yet developed that nasty knock in my transmission.Well do I remember sitting down to write the final column of myfirst year. Day followed barren day, and not a yock, not a boff,not a zinger did I produce. I was about to give up humor andtake a job selling mechanical dogs when all of a sudden, in ablinding flash, I realized why I couldn’t think of any jokes!I leapt up from my typewriter and ran as fast as my littlefat legs would carry me to the makers of Marlboro Cigarettes,and I tugged my forelock, and I said, "Sirs, I am well awarethat you have engaged me to write a humor column, but today,as I approach the final column of the season, I am far too mistyto lie funny, for the final column of the season is, after all, aleave-taking, and when I think of saying goodbye to my audience— the swellest audience any columnist ever had—the collegestudents of America—wonderful human beings, every man and\& Wmftfflult kvtmpfMmfcwoman of them—wise but kindly—astute but; compassionate-perspicacious but forbearing—when, sirs, I think of saying good¬bye to such an audience, I am too shook up even to considerlevity, and so I ask you, sirs<+o let me, in the final column of theyear, forego humor and instead write a simple, dignified,straightforward farewell.”Then I took out my bandanna, wiped my eyes, ears, nose, andthroat and waited for a reply from the makers of Marlboro.They sat around the polished board room table, the makers,their handsome brows knit in concentration, puffing thought¬fully on the Marlboros in their tattooed hands. At length theyspoke. “Yes,” they said simply.I never doubted they would say yes. People who make acigarette as good as Marlboro must themselves be good. Peoplewho lavish such care on blending tobaccos so mild and flavor¬ful, on devising a filter so clean and white, on boxing a flip-topbox so flip-top, on packing a soft pack so soft—people like that•re one hundred percent with me!And so from that day forward, the final column of the year—including the one you are, I devoutly hope, now reading-makes no attempt to be funny, but is instead a simple thankyou and au revoir.Thank you and au revoir, makers of Marlboro. The memory©f our eight years together will remain ever fresh in my heart,and I would like to state for all the world to hear that if youwant me back again next year, I shall expect a substantialraise in salary.Thank you and au revoir, college students of America. Maygood luck attend all your ventures. Stay well. Stay happy.Stay loose. © m2 m»* $huim*n* • *Small Max has said it all. We, the makers of Marlboro Ciga¬rettes, can only add a heartfelt second chorus: Stay well*Stay liuppy, Sivy loose*May 22. 1962 • CHICAGO$ . MAROON* ) ‘»o--Three scientists appointed students for YatesThree scientists whose specialties extend from the sun to the earth and its atmos- hold planning meetingphere have been apointed to the faculty of the department of geophysical sciences. The " ~appointments were announced by Sverre Petterssen, professor and chairman of the de- A group of students met serving his seventh consecutivepartment. ~ ; r~T :—:— last Saturday to discuss fu- tfrm *s us representative froma cn. t 5n *ar llte work- whlch now also ,nc,udes has studied the balance between ture nlans for the recently !he ninth conSress,onal district.Cohn Hines, a .pecia ist in sola a soiution to the problem of identi- . P , . located on the north side ofphysics, earth-sun interactions at various minerals m objects from organized campus orgamza- Chicaeounder whichfringe of space, and the upper at- hving the location ^ of the heatmosphere, will become professor radiation measurements taken by space to determine the^ tempera-of aeronomy. Tiros.Tetsuya Fujita, who will assume Fujita, 41. has done pioneeringthe title of associate professor of. .. ... , , ,. , . . investigations of the structure ofmeteorology, is an expert on °severe local weather and the de- thunderstorms, squall lines, torna-veloper of the method now in does and hailstorms, using dataworld wide use for interpreting gathered from airplane, radar.Tiros weather satellite photo- satellite and ground-based sourcesgraphs. jn concert to obtain a fuller, three-Robert Mueller will become as- dimensional portrait of the lifesistant professor of petrology. He cycle of meso-scale storm systems. ganized campus organiza¬tion Students for Yates.Sidney Yates is the candidateture and pressure u..«Ci w....... for the United States Senator fromsthey originally formed. He is now I1Iinois who will attempt to un-a research geologist at Scripps seat the incumbent Everret Dirk-institute in La Jolla, California. sen in November. Yates is nowHarriers beat De Paulis an authority on the prehistoric Mueller, 38, won his PhD at the Cliff Cox led the Maroons to a close 66*/.» - 63*4 win overDe Paul university Saturday. Cox won the 100 and 220yard dashes, as well as running on the victorious mile relayformation of rocks and ores in the xjniversity of Chicago in 1959. He team, coming in second in the broad jump, and third in theholds a BS from the University of high jump.earth’s crust.Hines holds two degrees from Wisconsin. 1953. Mueller has ap- Unfortunately for the Maroons,the University of Toronto and a plied the laws of thermodynamics cox is not attracted to the hurdlePhD in applied mathematics from to a wide range of studies in geol- races. If Doug McBroom had notuniversity. England. Ggy, particularly the prehistories placed third in the low hurdles,De Paul would have completelyMore recently he has begun toCambridgeHe and a colleague recently pro- formation of iron ore.posed a unifying theory of highlatitude geophysical phenomenasuch as the aurora and magnetic study the structure and formationof meteorites, the cosmic messen¬gers which strike the earthstorms.He has also developed a hvpoth ..... IT . , , «esis to explain the observations Periodically. Using techniques de-of irregular, turbulent motion inthe upper atmosphere, suggestingthat the motions are due to wavesgenerated in the “energy-bearingregions of the lower atmosphere”by the force of gravity and spread¬ing outward like the ripple ofwaves from a rock thrown in a swept the two hurdle events.De Paul did manage to sweepthe mile run, with Fry winning itin 4:42. Fry was made a doublewinner when he coasted in aheadveloped in the study of earth- of Fred Kurz and John Bolton ofbound ores and minerals, Mueller Chicago in the two mile run. De Paul’s Tom Sloan copped the880 yard run with Hal Liebermanand Tom Clarke, both of Chicago,taking second and third, respect¬ively. The mile relay was run offin a snappy 3:28.4, Chicago win¬ning by thirty yards.Glenn Weyhrich, Coach Hay¬den's top man in the weightevents, won both the discussthrow and shot put. Dave Krollwon the pole vault at 11' 6". Chicago.A liberal democrat, Yates re^ceived his BA from the UC in1931 and his JD from the sameschool in 1933. His son Steve ispresently a third-year studenthere in the College.Students for Yates expects todraw its support from diverseelements of campus political in¬terest. Similar groups are beingformed on campuses throughoutthe state. Activities on a state¬wide basis are being coordinatedby the central committee, whichis located at Illinois State col¬lege in Bloomington. Illinois.The executive committee hereat the university, composed ofDave Wolff, vice chairman ofIndependent Voters of Illinois;Walter Miale, president of theyoung Democrats; Gene Vinograd-off, one of the leaders of Studentsfor Kennedy; and Rich Epstein, isplanning most of its activities torthe fall quarter. Students forYates is planning on a speech byrepresentative Yates in October.lively Jessica Darling, 0. of Texas ’64| Calendar of events |Lutheran Communion service: Bondchapel, 11:30 am.Discussion series: J. B. Phillips’ Godour Contemporary, Swift 208, 12:30pm. Kleanor Donaldson.Meeting of the faculty of the divisionof the physical sciences, Eckhart 133,3:30 pm.Varsity baseball game: Stagg field. 3:30pm. Chicago vs. University of Illi¬nois (Chicago).Colloquium (Institute for the study of.metals), Research Institutes 211, 4:15pm. "Exciton Recombination radia¬tion and phonon spectrum of 6HSiC,’*Lyle Patrick, research and develop¬ment center, Westinghouse Electriecorporation.Baptist sermon vespers, Bond chapel,5:05 pm.International folk dancing: International Brown-eyed Jessica Oarltng certainly is. Sea's also a cheerleader at the University ol Te>as m Austin.pond.Hines, 34. is presently head ofthe theoretical studies group, De¬fense Research board of Canada.Fujita, who has been thescientist in charge of the Univer¬sity of Chicago’s project in meso-meteorology, the branch of atmos¬pheric science dealing with small-scale weather systems embeddedin broad frontal air masses whichbreed most severe weather, nowbecomes a member of the faculty.With the support of the NationalAeronautics and Space administra¬tion, Fujita, in 1961. solved theproblem of identifying the preciselocation on earth of satellitecloud photographs, an importantstep in integrating this new sourceof global weather data into theregular, day-to-day system of fore¬casting.He was born in Japan and holdsa BS degree from Meiji College ofEngineering in his homeland anda DSc degree from the Universityof Tokyo. In addition to his satel-house, 7-10 pm.Christian Science testimony meeting,Thorndike Hilton chapel. 7:15 pm.Lecture: "On Bread and Wine." GammaAlpha Scientific society. 5621 Uni¬versity. 7:30 pm. Angelo Pellegrini,professor of English and Americanliterature. University of Washington.Lecture to be followed by a tasting ofthe fine wines of California.Lecture (UC Archaeological society),Ida Noyes library. 8 pm, "The Greekcity." L. Scranton, departments ofclassics and art.Lecture series: Anthropology and theModern World (department of an¬thropology). social science 122, 8 pm."Utopias and world problems." SolTax, professor, department of an¬thropology.i lives it cp will) this lively One ftmttom'62: the New falcon Sports futuRa!Our Longhorn Lively One plays piano, is one of Texas’“10 Most Beautiful” girls, and an avid Falcon SportsFutura fan. This spirited compact handles sowell you'llfigure the controls should be indicated in Italian. Newbucket seats are separated by a personal console, and the rakish “Son of Thunderbird” roof can be covered invinyl. No wonder all the liveliest student bodies are cruis¬ing the campus in the new Falcon Sports awouctofFutura. See it, and all the Lively Ones at yourFord Dealer’s... the liveliest place in townl motoroompany' foreign car hospital & clinicdeaters in:• rug• morris• austin• riley• lambretta5340 s. lake parkdo 3-0707service clinic: 2306 e. 71stmi 3-3113bob (estermg psychiatrist4 • CHICAGO MAROON • May 23. 1942