Vol. 71 — No. 7 University of Chicago, Tuesday, October 2, 1962 31Olson, Lowrey head sectionsj| Send cards to Miss.A nationwide student postcardcampaign to the University ofMississippi has begun. The Illinois* branch of the National StudentAssociation (NSA* has asked UCstudents to join the campaign.Thousands of postcanls from in¬dividual students at Harvard, Yaleand other eastern schools weresent to Oxford. Mississippi to pro¬test to the legal devices and mobviolence used to prevent GeorgeMeredith from registering at thestate university. Most of the post¬cards expressed outrage at theviolence and strong support of theKennedy administration’s decisionto call in national troops.Postcards from UC studentsmay be addressed to the studentbody president at the University.Everett C. Olson and Per¬rin Lowrey have recently beenappointed section heads forthe Physical Sciences and theHumanities sections in the Col¬lege. respectively. Olson succeeds NormanNnchtrleb, who resigned his postduring the summer to becomeChairman of the Department ofChemistry.From 1948 until 1960, Olsonwas Associate Dean of the De¬partment of Physical Sciences,and from 1956 until 1961, Chair¬man of the Department of Ge¬ology. He is now Professor ofVertebrate Palentology.Olson received his BS in Geol¬ogy from the University of Chi¬cago in 1932, followed by the MSin 1933 and 1935.He has done research in theprinciples of evolution, the originof mammals, and Biometry as ap¬plied to extinct life. Lowrey, Associate Professor inthe College, has succeeded GwinW. Kolb as Head of the Human¬ities section in the college.For the past year, Lowrey hasserved as Chairman of the Hu¬manities staff of the College.In 1954. Lowrey was granted aFord Foundation Fellowship forwriting. Since then he has pub¬lished works on Faulkner, War¬ren, and William Styron, in ad¬dition to having published invarious magazines, including theSewanee Review.The other two section heads arcSol Tax. Social Sciences, andBenson Ginsburg. Biological Sci¬ences.UC receives grant from BritannicaThe University of Chicago has received a grant to pro¬vide support for the training and research of individuals“who show promise of making important contributions tothe advancement of learning.”The $62,000 gift from William Benton will establish the Ency¬clopedia Britannica Films Fund for Studies of Teaching and Learn¬ing. Benton is the chairman of the board of Encyclopedia Britannicaand a trustee of the University.“The Fund will stimulate broad and imaginative inquiry into theuses of modern scientific advances in helping both student andteacher in the nation’s classrooms meet the challenges of the times.”UC President George Wells Beadle and Warren Everote, Presidentof Encyclopedia Britannica Films announced in a joint statement.“The freedom which the fund will give for new and bold re¬search activity is in keeping with the most productive scholarlytraditions of the University,” said Beadle.• Awards from the fund will be made by a committee appointedby Francis Chase, dean of the Graduate School of Education. “Spe¬cial attention will be given to research on learning involving theuse of modern technological resources,” Chase said.“Education is America’s biggest ‘industry’,” Benton said, “butit is in many respects a backward industry. Technology, includingdevelopments of great potential value for education, grows at anever-accelerating pace. But many schools seem unaware of this;they carry on much as they did half a century ago.” The University of Chicago I^raryPepodiwJ & Microfilm Room ^Plan memorialfor Hillel's Rabbi programPekarskyA special memorial pro¬gram will be held for RabbiMaurice B. Pekarsky tomor¬row. The memorial is be¬ing arranged by the B’nai B’rithHillel Foundation and the HillelFaculty Gi'oup. It will be held atMandel Hall at 4:30 p.m. nally had his office in the base¬ment of Rockerfeller Chapel. In1945 Hillel’s Raymond KarasikHouse, 5715 Woodlawn was dedi¬cated.From 1950 to 1955, he took aleave from his Chicago post toestablish Hillel activities at theRabbi Pekarsky was director ofHillel at UC from its founding in1940 until his death on July 11.He died at Michael Reese hospitalfour days after suffering a heartattack. He was'57 years old.The program will honor the lateRabbi by describing the variedaspects of his career and the im¬pact of his life upon students, col¬leagues, and friends.Ruth O. McCarn, former Assist¬ant dean of students. Louis Gotts-chalk, Gustavus F. and Ann M.Swift Distinguished service pro¬fessor in the department of his¬tory, Rabbi Harry Kaplan, direc¬tor of Hillel at Ohio State Univer¬sity, and Maynard Wishner, Chi¬cago attorney will also speak. Hebrew University in Jerusalem.In recent years he served as Hil¬lers national director of leader¬ship .training.Reverend Barnett Blakemore ofRockefeller Chapel commentedthat Rabbi Pekarsky’s death is aloss to everyone involved in reli¬gious programs on campus. Pekar¬sky, more than anyone else, knewhow to run a successful program,Blakemore said.Sol Tax. professor of anthro¬pology, referred to the loss ofRabbi Pekarsky as the loss of agreat man which will be deeplyfelt by those who knew him. TaxStart memorial fundThe Hillel Faculty Group, to¬gether with the Foundation, is es¬tablishing a special fund in RabbiPekar^ky’s memory. Money fromthis fund will be applied to spe¬cial educational projects in thespirit of Rabbi Pekarsky’s inter¬ests and concerns.Rabbi Pekarsky, a native of Po¬land, emigrated with his family tothe United States and spent hisboyhood in Grand Rapids. Michi¬gan. He received his undergrad¬uate degree from the Universityof Michigan in 1930 and did grad¬uate work in social psychologywith Kurt Lewin at the Univer¬sity of Iowa.Following his ordination by theHebrew Union College — JewishInstitute of Religion in 1933. Rab¬bi Pekarsky began his life-longcareer with the Hillel program.In 1933 he established the Foun¬dation at Cornell University, in1937 at Northwestern University,and in 1940 here.The Hillel program was the firstof the denominational programson campus. Rabbi Pekarsky origi- Maurice Pekarskywras sure, however, that the insti¬tution he founded will go on withthe spirit he imbued in it.Rabbi Richard Winograd. whoworked as Rabbi Pekarsky’s as¬sistant in the Hillel program, willdirect the Hillel House programthis year.Senate repeals NDEA disclaimer affidavitThe Senate vo.ted late lastweek to repeal the Commun¬ist disclaimer affidavit fromthe National Defense Educa¬tion .Act (NDEA> college studentloan program.The repeal, introduced in a sur¬prise move by Senator WayneMorse tD. Ore.), chairman of theSenate Education Subcommittee,was adopted without explanation<*r debate as an amendment to oneof a series of minor House billsrushed through the Senate onThursday. House agreement wallbe necessary if the repeal is tobecome effective.The Senate would substitute forthe aifidavit a criminal provision,living a $10,000 maximum fine andtip to five years’ imprisonment forany member of a subversiveorganization w'ho received anNDEA loan.Signing an Oath of Allegianceh> the United States would stillremain a requirement for receiv¬ing loans.Thirty-one universities, inclu¬ding the University of Chicago,withdrew, in whole or in part,'i’om the program because of thedisclaimer affidavit.Many universities, including UC,have been actively lobbying for(he repeal of the affidavit.The affidavit states: “I (name),do solemnly swear (or affirm) thatl do not believe in, and am not amember of and do not support anyorganization that believes in orteaches the overthrow of the USGovernment by force or violenceor by illegal or unconstitutionalmethods.’* *In addition, students must signan Oath of Allegiance: “I (name),do solemnly swear (or affirm) thatt will bear true faith and allegi¬ance to the United States ofAmerica and will support and de¬ fend the Constitution and laws ofthe United States of Americaagainst all its enemies, foreign anddomestic.’’In withdrawing from the NDEAloan program, UC’s Board ofTrustees emphasized that the Uni¬versity of Chicago raised no ob¬jection to the oath of allegiance.“A clear-cut distinction must bemade between the Ooath of Allegi¬ance and the Affidavit of Disbe¬lief.” said Glen A. Lloyd, chair-main of the Board. “The clear andsimple Oath of Allegiance lieswithin the American tradition.The Affidavit does not. It couldlead to star chamber investiga¬tions into a man’s belief, and togovernmental interference in theconduct of universities.’’If the affidavit were removed,UC would consider participation inthe NDEA. said outgoing directorof financial aid. George Hopwood.The Board of Trustees wouldstudy any new' legislation and would then decide on UC partici¬pation, he explained.The University has this year, asin past years, filed a tentative ap¬plication for allocation of NDEAloan funds, contingent upon a re¬peal of the affidavit or modifica¬tion of the legislation controllingit.In June. The University wasnotified that it has received atentative appropriation of $133,333pending legislative action on theaffidavit.UC qualifies for the maximumamount of federal funds in theNDEA program. $250,000. Themonies UC receives from theNDEA barely meet half of thefinancial aid offices’s student loanneeds, said Hopwood.To compensate for the lostNDEA funds, UC expands its pro¬gram of.tuition loans, which area form of deferred payment.Under the mechanics of the UCtuition loan program, which is similar technically to the NDEA,students borrow' tuition and neednot repay it while they are stillin school. Upon leaving school,they start to repay the loan, at3% annual interest. “Borrowing”tuition in this case means post¬poning payment, rather thantaking money from one source toapply to tuition.No cosh in UC loonsThe money involved in the de¬ferred payment plan is money “wedo without,” explained Hopw'ood.In making up the budget, this sumis subtracted from revenues ex¬pected from tuition payments, andthe University operates withoutthis cash until it is repaid.NDEA backgroundThe NDEA was first passed in1958. Its passage showed Con¬gress’ approval of a new' principleof federal aid to education: federalexpenditures to promote educationwhich strengthens national securi¬ty are perfectly proper.In addition to providing studentloan and fellowship programs, theNDEA provides funds for thefollowing:• Maintaining training insti¬tutes for counselling and guidancepersonnel.• Promoting a specialized pro¬ gram of training for foreignlanguage instructors. *• Conducting research and dis¬seminating information aboutspecial educational methods anddevices, such as educational tele¬vision.Loan program explainedThe loan program authorizesover $300,000,000 to be used forcollege students. Student loanfunds are administered by theparticipating institutions of higherlearning in accordance with agree¬ments between such institutionsand the Commissioner of US Edu¬cation.The federal government contri¬butes eight-ninths of the studentloan fund under this program: theparticipating institution contri¬butes one-ninth. All administrativecosts including those for disburse¬ment and collection must be paidby the participating institution.The maximum amount that aninstitution of higher learning mayreceive annually for the studentloan program is $250,000.The institution, after checkingthe student’s needs and resources,determines the sizes of the loamHowever, no single loan to an in¬dividual can exceed $1,000 annu¬ally or a total of $5,000.(continued from page 51Student loans given at UC 1957-62Yeor NDEA Funds UC Funds1957 -1958 $333,0001958 -1959 $ 53,000 397.0001959 -1960 301,000 224,0001960 -1961 72,000* 597,0001961 -1962 729,000^Summer quarter 1960, carry-over from previous yearUC sends highest percentage to grad workby Murray SchacherA recent report by the Na¬tional Opinion Research Cen¬ter (NORC) suggests thatthe University of Chicagodoes- an unusually good job in pre¬paring its undergraduates forgraduate school.The University of Chicago hasa higher percentage of its stu¬dents going on to graduate schoolthan any other United States col¬lege.UC's graduates as a group, how¬ever encounter the greatest finan¬cial difficulties in going on tograduate school, according to thestudy.The Center’s report was basedon a survey of June 1961 gradu¬ates from UC and various schoolselsewhere in the country.The authors. Dick McKinlay,Peter Rossi, and James Davis ofNORC. state in the introductionto their analysis: “Postgraduatetraining is playing an increasinglyimportant role in the career linesof scientists and professionals; somuch so that a critical measureof the character of an under¬graduate school is the extent towhich its graduates go on to seekadvanced training.”Chicago students are then ana¬lyzed in this perspective. Since“schools differ in every possibledimension,’' comparisons are madewith four groups of undergradu¬ ate bodies where meaningful com¬parison is possible:The “high quality” private uni¬versities and colleges (Columbia,Haverford, Oberlin);The “super-ivy group (Harvard-Radcliffe, Princeton, University ofPennsylvania);Midwest liberal arts collegesand;The Big Ten.90% plan to continueThe survey shows that Chicagois the highest producer of gradu¬ate students in the arts and sci¬ences and the major professions.Nine out of ten June 1961 UCgraduates planned to attendgraduate school eventually; sevenout of ten planned graduate studyas soon as fall 1961. No school inthe comparison fared nearly aswell, and in (his regard UC is farabove the national average.Further, Chicago is by far thehighest producer of scientists andscholars (graduates in arts andscience as opposed to law, busi¬ness etc.) Three out of five June’61 graduates entered graduatestudy in these disciplines; this isfour times greater than the na¬tional average.UC is relatively an even higherproducer of graduates in the phy¬sical sciences. One-fifth of UCstudents graduate in the physicalsciences.The authors suggest that theUniversity of Chicago should beduly proud of these results. Credit> *;• •;* •> v •> •> ❖ •> •> is not given, however, for creatingScholars and scientists, hut forattracting students oriented to¬ward scholarly and scientificcareers.“Chicago is different primarilybecause the students it attractsPeter Rossi, Professor ofSociology anti Director ofthe Notional Opinion Re¬search Center. aare different; a fact which lays aheavy burden on recruitment poli¬cy , and popular images of theschool as major determinants ofits character.”The survey outlined in somedetail the type of student Chi¬cago attracts. The Chicago stu¬ dent tends to come from largemetropolitan areas.Chicago students are from vary¬ing religious backgrounds; UCattracts more Jews than rivalschools, students who “show agreater tendency to drop awayfrom the faith in which they werereared.”Moreover, UC students “reflectfaintly the bohemian qualitywhich popular mythology has at¬tributed to them.” They are morelikely to consider themselves un¬conventional, liberal, and intellec¬tual.By far most Chicago graduatesconsider that the most importantcontribution of their undergradu¬ate work is in providing “a basicgeneral education and appreciationof idea.”More money problemsThe NORC study also revealsthat UC undergraduales as agroup suffer financial anxietiesfor more than their counterpartsin “super-ivy” or "high qualityprivate” schools.They show a great deal of loy¬alty to UC and wish to returnhere for graduate study, but areoften frustrated by financial con¬sideration since the possibilities offinancial aid are much greaterelsewhere.It is still true, however, thatUC students going to graduateschool are more likely to beawarded stipends than their com¬petitors. The survey’s findings on finan¬cial worries of UC undergraduatesprompted Dean Warner Wick toconclude in a summary of the re¬port:“This reinforces our hunch thathigh tuition rates are apt to hemore serious for our students thanfor those in the other universitieswhich we regard as providing ourprincipal competition.”Chicago students not only out¬shine their counterparts in plan¬ning to go to graduate school, butalso have much less trouble get¬ting accepted to graduate schools.Fifty-four percent of the June1961 class was already acceptedin graduate school by the time otgraduation. The high quality pri¬vate schools rival this figure hav¬ing 51% already accepted byJune 1961 convocation, but thenational average was only 20%."THE truth IS that we cannot con¬tain Cuba — now that it has becomean active base ol the world Communistenterprise — any more than we couldcontain the Soviet Union. ThrouthCuba, by all the mechanisms ol Com¬munist political warfare. Communistpower will spread, will inevitablyspread, elsewhere in the Caribbean,in Central and South America; isalready spreading. Every day theroad hack will beharder; thusevery day deci¬sion will becomemore difficult." I for tti# current itsueof NATIONAL REVIEWWrit* for free copy.150 f. 35 St., N«*yYork 16, N.Y,' + + ■ •> ❖ ❖ ❖ * ■> •> m+•> •*❖V<•❖V*Grubys Rambler^The Best Values in Chicago on Used Cars Are OfferedOnly to Wise Buyers. Each Day Gruby s Will Presentan Exceptional Buy IN THIS NEWSPAPER ONLY!_ THESE BUYS AVAILABLE ONLY UPON PRESENTATION OF AD QUOTING PRICE _WATCH FOR THE FIRST WISE BUYER AD: TUES., OCT. 2ndSEE THESEMENSAM GRUBY STIVE NOBLE VIC GRUBY1962 CLEARANCE SALE!♦ Join the Shrewdest Car Buyers in Town!!♦ Amazingly Low Year-End Prices on All Ramblers in Stock♦ SEE US AND SAVE!!♦ BONNIE TRADE-IN ALLOWANCE♦ EVERY MODEL MUST CO!♦ COME IN AND TAKEADVANTAGE OF US AT:Gruby's Rambler4555 So. Cottage Grove BO 8-111136 • CHICAGO MAROON ♦ Sept. 28, 1962 •:* *:• *:• •:* •> -> * •>* .> *.%* *** • ■*-Vol. 71 — No. 7 University of Chicago, Tuesday, October 2, 1962 31Olson, Lowrey head sectionsEverett C. Olson and Per¬rin Lowrey have recently beenappointed section heads forthe Physical Sciences and theHumanities sections in the Col¬lege. respectively.Jl Send cards to Miss.A nationwide student postcardcampaign to the University ofMississippi has begun. The Illinoisbranch of the National StudentAssociation (NSA» has asked UCstudents to join the campaign.Thousands of postcanis from in¬dividual students at Harvard, Yaleand other eastern schools weresent to Oxford. Mississippi to pro¬test to the legal devices and mobviolence used to prevent GeorgeMeredith from registering at thestate university. Most of the post¬cards expressed outrage at theviolence and strong support of theKennedy administration's decisionto call in national troops.Postcards from UC studentsmay be addressed to the studentbody president at the University. Olson succeeds NormanNachtrieb, who resigned Ids postduring the summer to becomeChairman of the Department ofChemistry.From 1948 until 1960, Olsonwas Associate Dean of the De¬partment of Physical Sciences,and from 1956 until 1961. Chair¬man of the Department of Ge¬ology. He is now Professor ofVertebrate Palentology.Olson received his BS in Geol¬ogy from the University of Chi¬cago in 1932, followed by the MSin 1933 and 1935.He has done research in theprinciples of evolution, the originof mammals, and Biometry as ap¬plied to extinct life. Lowrey, Associate Professor inthe College, has succeeded GwinW. Kolb as Head of the Human¬ities section in the college.For the past year, Lowrey hasserved as Chairman of the Hu¬manities staff of the College.Tn 1954. Lowrey was granted aFord Foundation Fellowship forwriting. Since then he has pub¬lished works on Faulkner, War¬ren, and William Styron, in ad¬dition to having published invarious magazines, including theSewanee Review.The other two section heads areSol Tax. Social Sciences, andBenson Ginsburg, Biological Sci¬ences.UC receives grant from BritannicaThe University of Chicago has received a grant to pro¬vide support for the training and research of individuals“who show promise of making important contributions tothe advancement of learning.”The $62,000 gift from William Benton will establish the Ency¬clopedia Britannica Films Fund for Studies of Teaching and Learn¬ing. Benton is the chairman of the board of Encyclopedia Britannicaand a trustee of the University.“The Fund will stimulate broad and imaginative inquiry into theuses of modern scientific advances in helping both student andteacher in the nation’s classrooms meet the challenges of the times,”UC President George Wells Beadle and Warren Everote, Presidentof Encyclopedia Britannica Films announced in a joint statement.“The freedom which the fund will give for new and bold re¬search activity is in keeping with the most productive scholarlytraditions of the University,” said Beadle..Awards from the fund will be made by a committee appointedby Francis Chase, dean of the Graduate School of Education. “Spe¬cial attention will be given to research on learning involving theuse of modern technological resources,” Chase said.“Education is America’s biggest ‘industry’,” Benton said, “butit is in many respects a backvvaid industry. Technology, includingdevelopments of great potential value for education, grows at anever-accelerating pace. But many schools seem unaware of this;they carry on much as they did half a century ago.” The University of Chicago Urary__ Pepc<liwl & Microfilm RoomPlan memorial programfor Hillel's Rabbi PekarskyA special memorial pro¬gram will be held for RabbiMaurice B. Pekarsky tomor¬row. The memorial is be¬ing arranged by the B’nai B’rithHillel Foundation and the HillelFaculty Group. It will be held atMandel Hall at 4:30 p.m. nally had his office in the base¬ment of Roekerfeller Chapel. In1945 Hillel’s Raymond KarasikHouse, 5715 Woodlavvn was dedi¬cated.From 1950 to 1955, he took aleave from his Chicago post toestablish Hillel activities at theRabbi Pekarsky was director ofHillel at UC from its founding in1940 until his death on July 11.He died at Michael Reese hospitalfour days after suffering a heartattack. He was'57 years old.The program will honor the lateRabbi by describing the variedaspects of his career and the im¬pact of his life upon students, col¬leagues, and friends.Ruth O. McCarn, former Assist¬ant dean of students, Louis Gotts-chalk, Gustav us F. and Ann M.Swift Distinguished service pro¬fessor in the department of his¬tory. Rabbi Harry Kaplan, direc¬tor of Hillel at Ohio State Univer¬sity, and Maynard Wishner, Chi¬cago attorney will also speak. Hebrew University in Jerusalem.In recent years he served as Hil¬lers national director of leader¬ship training.Reverend Barnett Blakemore ofRockefeller Chapel commentedthat Rabbi Pekarsky’s death is aloss to everyone involved in reli¬gious programs on campus. Pekar¬sky, more than anyone else, knewhow to run a successful program,Blakemore said.Sol Tax. professor of anthro¬pology, referred to the loss ofRabbi Pekarsky as the loss of agreat man which will be deeplyfelt by those who knew him. TaxStart memorial fundThe Hillel Faculty Group, to¬gether with the Foundation, is es¬tablishing a special fund in RabbiPeka inky’s memory. Money fromthis fund will be applied to spe¬cial educational projects in thespirit of Rabbi Pekarsky’s inter¬ests and concerns.Rabbi Pekarsky, a native of Po¬land, emigrated with his family tothe United States and spent hisboyhood in Grand Rapids, Michi¬gan. He received his undergrad¬uate degree from the Universityof Michigan in 1930 and did grad¬uate work in social psychologywith Kurt Lewin at the Univer¬sity of Iowa.Following his ordination by theHebrew Union College — JewishInstitute of Religion in 1933, Rab¬bi Pekarsky began his life-longcareer with the Hillel program.In 1933 he established the Foun¬dation at Cornell University, in1937 at Northwestern University,and in 1940 here.The Hillel program was the firstof the denominational programson campus. Rabbi Pekarsky origi- Maurice Pekarskywas sure, however, that the insti¬tution he founded will go on withthe spirit he imbued in it.Rabbi Richard Winograd, whoworked as Rabbi Pekarsky’s as¬sistant in the Hillel program, willdirect the Hillel House programthis year.Senate repeals NDEA disclaimer affidavitThe Senate vo.ted late lastweek to repeal the Commun¬ist disclaimer affidavit fromthe National Defense Educa¬tion ^ct fNDEAi college studentloan program.The repeal, introduced in a sur¬prise move by Senator WayneMorse tD, Ore.), chairman of theSenate Education Subcommittee,was adopted without explanationof debate as an amendment to oneof a series of minor House billsrushed through the Senate onThursday. House agreement willIh* necessary if the repeal is tobecome effective.The Senate would substitute forthe affidavit a criminal provision,fixing a $10,000 maximum fine andup to five years’ imprisonment forany member of a subversiveorganization who received anNDEA loan., Signing an Oath of AllegianceTo the United States would stillremain a requirement for receiv¬ing loans.Thirty-one universities, inclu¬ding the University of Chicago,withdrew, in whole or in part.Tom the program because of thedisclaimer affidavit.Many universities, including UC,have been actively lobbying forthe repeal of the affidavit.The affidavit states: “I (name),do solemnly swear (or affirm» thatl do not believe in, and am not amember of and do not support anyorganization that believes in orteaches the overthrow of the USGovernment by force or violenceor by illegal or unconstitutionalmethods."In addition, students must signan Oath of Allegiance: “I (name),do solemnly swear (or affirm) thatI will bear true faith and allegi¬ance to the United States ofAmerica and will support and de¬ fend the Constitution and laws ofthe United States of Americaagainst all its enemies, foreign anddomestic.”In withdrawing from fhe NDEAloan program, UC’s Board ofTrustees emphasized that the Uni¬versity of Chicago raised no ob¬jection to the oath of allegiance.“A clear-cut distinction must bemade between the Ooath of Allegi¬ance and the Affidavit of Disbe¬lief," said Glen A. Lloyd, chair-main of the Board. “The clear andsimple Oath of Allegiance lieswithin the American tradition.The Affidavit does not. It couldlead to star chamber investiga¬tions into a man’s belief, and togovernmental interference in theconduct of universities.”If the affidavit were removed,UC would consider participation inthe NDEA, said outgoing directorof financial aid, George Hopwood.The Board of Trustees wouldstudy any new' legislation and would then decide on UC partici¬pation. he explained.The University has this year, asin past years, filed a tentative ap¬plication for allocation of NDEAloan funds, contingent upon a re¬peal of the affidavit or modifica¬tion of the legislation controllingit.In June, The University wrasnotified that it has received atentative appropriation of $133,333pending legislative action on theaffidavit.UC qualifies for the maximumamount of federal funds in theNDEA program. $250,000. Themonies UC receives from theNDEA barely meet half of thefinancial aid offices’s student loanneeds, said Hopwood.To compensate for the lost:NDEA funds, UC expands its pro¬gram of tuition loans, which area form of deferred payment.Under the mechanics of the UCtuition loan program, which isGeorge Hopwood similar technically to the NDEA,students borrow tuition and neednot repay it while they are stillin school. Upon leaving school,they start to repay the loan, at3% annual interest. “Borrowing”tuition in this case means post¬poning payment, rather thantaking money from one source toapply to tuition.No cosh in UC loonsThe money involved in the de¬ferred payment plan is money “wedo without,” explained Hopwood.In making up the budget, this sumis subtracted from revenues ex¬pected from tuition payments, andthe University operates withoutthis cash until it is repaid.NDEA backgroundThe NDEA was first passed in1958. Its passage showed Con¬gress' approval of a new principleof federal aid to education: federalexpenditures to promote educationwhich strengthens national securi¬ty are perfectly proper.In addition to providing studentloan and fellowship programs, theNDEA provides funds for thefollowing:• Maintaining training insti¬tutes for counselling and guidancepersonnel.• Promoting a specialized pro¬ gram of training for foreignlanguage instructors. *• Conducting research and dis¬seminating information about,special educational methods anddevices, such as educational tele¬vision.Loon program explainedThe loan program authorizesover $300,000,000 to he used forcollege students. Student loanfunds are administered by theparticipating institutions of higherlearning in accordance with agree¬ments between such institutionsand the Commissioner of US Edu¬cation.The federal government contri¬butes eight-ninths of the studentloan fund under this program: theparticipating institution contri¬butes one-ninth. All administrativecosts including those for disburse¬ment and collection must be paidby the participating institution.The maximum amount that aninstitution of higher learning mayreceive annually for the studentloan program is $250,000.The institution, after checkingthe student’s needs and resources,determines the sizes of the loan.However, no single loan to an in¬dividual can exceed $1,000 annu¬ally or a total of $5,000.(continued from page S)Student loans given at UC 1957-62Year NDEA Funds UC Funds1957 -1958 $333,0001958 -1959 $ 53,000 397.0001959 -1960 301,000 224,0001960 -1961 72,000* 597,0001961 -1962 729,000^Summer quarter 1960, carry-over from previous yearUC grads lead housing fight Set buTGd UC t& CV SG MGS77- | '•II* I . I ' 7 -. jjOKlib Oil d I itdMrod (mm'CilaTl O H £ * • ‘ ’ <h * a^nd 1>» .n social Science 122. f the- Centre de Sociologle EuropfjMU uu,!u]l,y \ lUianyio tbjThe -lecturefsei ns u ill c oniinue eane. in&Paris, ^France; will -it afl|*• l-S ,, V* .v' • >t . . , , I!,,-, o,\, ,„#j1 ,7 „ I'i eneh Hun ,iu« i.iiic Oi ganizat ior|jK 3 . * n, * . |6r^)cto’i?cr.r■?#®hv October :5«» V i . « , V* X 4 m, ’js, " , 7 1 v, i ' *vice|pgesidcnt-«-. -,y.. „•*. ‘V'... 11 i aMK^SMBi . . ,. 1 pisssl . 1 m ,‘n.be®t^diI l> t ■ hi v will ho at-4 00 7ii nftSdcia Of ScrenceM22/?‘.'JM. nw.i,.,Si IN n >v * *ap Jf||t 2f:v®;7S”7'77;: ' : :7KMaytu >ctober)ftl2Sgil laSjjijSpfo-t 11 odIgtoBjureaucra f iza|non i"l_ mlm.m ""\“ in ,.Foi ni.il • >,?"■ini/.-it ionv ,A' < ontempoiai v \ *;,l11 ; I ..i-n t-obb' Hall I'I117777777'. 7:47^•■rilopK.;'. . „ „ >, .in.lx-i. the la< nil \:pbor!PHB |S | 1'<^02^T hTs^!^■alFtho|)<'< iui rs' e^ai^op|j|144? m v 4 1 , i i i (| j?hvv 1 he ^Fi p u ' ■ So< ioIo'k>|■ ' :, '; '4’7 ’ ’> 7 .. 7 ” *U.’lli. ; nr; 1 ■ '.,|Stall 7i ,,... ., i'i, ml 'il,,' l'it i Iv . V, , ,17 w ■> J if*. - -•*«j< "i.m i .i S«m u )lop-\ it u hich;.-\\ iiv> ■ "■ '■• ' ■ ’*i' ^^o^p^BcigE^rdW-l^gipcning,e i ,■, I I,., i ,.;.K iplan ..Sc hool • ofr,< i. 11 ;>< a i ii a an In I hi a toy :.l> Hi-1,v ^ | **v 111 v M |ff| v i^^Vilachfdju^spioif^ogoni UlianaFr-noriMIlSbUIiy | HU l<J It" »i«nus^binMiii > he- ^ „ ":v ' ITiftldMcif m n (EuWmMf*t ... ^'. ' 2*<i. .'-1 ' ' »i'" -7 . S .■'■■■.. A . i .1sMu It ni-;,mi‘Ci nu: a (>om>o-.i<■«''■)ni.-i■ i, • ■ ■ ■. , ■ 7. "OihI-;7' -7 7' ■ ■ I " ; ; 7'-t . ^ T '' , i | ).. * O ' ? . ■ V p )' | - H ■ 7Baevas W ' 4" I ft •■■. ■ v' ii’r■/' f . • ;!• ;’n" ^ I.;- :i ■■ •,, . ,]7 ^., f 'f: ::v77v^, ,.....r ,4.4: ,.: 44i 4i- ,x,\ ;;- . ,. ':■£'.’'4; :jKwyaMF4CTilEKi^..;''«4^g«4^yf^i4.. s "f.’ I .„'^7 '•_•], %7 %\ ,4 '$ ‘iwnoa^i^BaB 5*>1^|ConimitteelhoDes;MBBai■’ 71 ■■*. ■■ 4 '.' x ” ;^'#, av.;..;- ■ / •'• i[4; • ’ 7 7 7 ’ ,., ,4. " 4 .'.'.., ■'■’ r. " ;r " • -*.t' ■ 7 "'v 7 '•• ■;;'^ ' 7 f* T^ z x ' ¥ ^ 'jk $ „ w.-sfeiJ’ ’■’ J"tr 4> ::^.'‘77 ” <4l .' . 4 af . 7/ !:v. r< . ."». ' JM®Sir;;bf:-Events- 4{■SB-'il- ;i^» F, liic;'i'iaiaiva-)1ji .'pa i'lTaaj^S^WMa^ayilMl'lMlMWplfcjSluliS^-v;,Ipi^ 1 p?nt®cTP?ma|lri Sri I gjmg^tn|^n{V'^BK7ilttRmiayip3|BmaWBtb oMB7-'.’■;’-ffi;'£/*'}• •;4’W‘^' > ,T "7,'*^5lTl7WlA'-'io^l i^ipi no^ja^Sn^M^i^pioi.1 11 nT 7 I *- 'C.tsl rom 1 »>t m.i Ip SrminirFH;liri;77: M V 7 ;7*- - • -,7B^lfrclu^pl : jv , 77' : v:? -'-7''"!" 7 '!rn ({ineer*^' mtttini.^< ii i kw 11 t7,i^ 1 '77f 7^71^1'"i,L777|f.i 1 *|■gFoliMU.t^in^F^aB»irii»n?i'~■'• -M7 ni'^nj*ji ‘nraei iMFSl klD^^i nifISBSfunf:Pfilfhf^s’band^loffnotlFi^to^^^^jgi^MWit h!hi«Swinf MSltB|y|B|fpHBitiipled a band’-^gj<4^:iSWINGLINE7: 7STAPLER7 f>'mws*■ nctuil.nij 1000 stawl«»)t«rs«f SWO CU9 DeskSt&pt»r only ♦' *0..No bigger than a pack of gum• Unconditionally guaranteed'• Refills available anywhere'r • Gel it at any stationery, 7.* vaiiety, or book store!• S»f>« in your own Swinqtint CtfelePn?*» t«t IhOSe u»ett <—Sw»»y4^»t* UK. tONC iSimo tlTY l.N X.s^lppSa.l'e hr»OTCTifnbwe»W^ichrTOBioco|tastefKmodem5filteiiftooRepeal affidavit4 continued from page 1Tlie rate of interest on the stu¬dent loans is three per cent annu¬ally. However, interest does notaen ue while the borrower pursuesa full-time course of study at aninstitution of higher education orfor a period, not to exceed threeyears, during which he is a mom-in., of the Armed Forces of theUnited States. Interest starts toaccrue when the repayments mustJ begin-Repayments of the student loanbegin one year after the borrowerceases to pursue a full time courseol study at an institution of highereducation except that no repay¬ments need to be made for aperiod, not to exceed three years,during which he is a member ofthe Armed Forces.The loan must bo repaid within10 years, except that the borrow¬er's service (not to exceed threeyears) in the armed forces is notto he included in determining the’• ten-year period within which theloan must be repaid.l’l> to fifty per cent of a studentloan, plus interest, will be can¬celled if the borrower serves as afull-time teacher in a publicelementary or secondary school inam state. For each completeacademic year of such service, tenper cent of the loan is cancelleduntil the loan is repaid or themaximum of 50% is reached.Also, the liability to repay iscanceled if the borrower dies orbecomes totally and permanentlydisabled.The University of Chicago be¬gan to take part in the NDEAloan program in the spring of 1959.Very few loans were processedthat spring, however, because itwas late in the academic year andmost students had already madetheir financial plans.In the academic fiscal year students received loans totalling$229,736.00 under the program atUC. Each student signed both theoath of allegiance and the affidavitof disbelief. The average studentloan at UC that year was $688.Tuition was $1,070.00 a year.The borrowers were dividedabout equally between graduateand undergraduate.While participating in theNDEA. the University loaned over$100,000 from its regular funds toother students. Students need notsign either an affidavit or an oathof allegiance to obtain loans underthe UC’s program.Charge chem. feeA $5 fee for chemistry labora¬tory courses will be assessedstarting this fall, announced theCollege chemistry staff.This fee will be used to re¬plenish used chemicals. The chargewill not be made in physicalsciences 105-8. Most entering students had heardabout sit-ins before coming hereAlthough most entering "open occupancy” or “managedstudents had heard about last integration.”year’s sit-in demonstrations Like older students and facultyat the University, few were “!^rslvery clear about the issues and mented on the complexity of thesituation and expressed concernover conflicts between ethical po¬sitions and practical considera¬tions.The sympathy of the new stu¬dents was with the sit-inners, butthey expressed reservations aboutthe method of protest. As one stu¬dent remarked, "Even if theirmethods were wrong, at least theycared and after all. something hadto be done.”Of those who felt they knewenough now to make a judgmentabout the action, twenty-nine saidthat the UC chapter of the Con¬gress of Racial Equality (UCCORE* was right. Only four werewilling to brand the sit-ins aswrong.Fifteen students announced thatthey would be willing to sit-in foropen occupancy in University-owned or city housing. Eight ofthose questioned did not feel theycould sit-in but several of thosePay scales for undergraduates working in the biologi- students wished they had enough, , i - , • A , . , ,, courage to take part in suchcal and physical sciences have been raised recently.circumstances involved, accordingto a Maroon survey.Forty-one of fifty-eight enter¬ing students interviewed duringOrientation w7eek had some know¬ledge before arriving on the cam¬pus of the demonstrations pro¬testing segregation in the Univer¬sity-owned housing.Several students thought stu¬dent groups were complainingabout segregation in dorms andone or two believed that the sit-ins occurred within PresidentBeadle’s house.Practically all had heard aboutthe sit-ins since coming to cam¬pus this fall.The concern expressed about in¬tegration problems was signifi¬cant, although the new7 studentswere unable to define completelyRaise salaries in scienceJanet Kerridge, assistant director of the PersonnelOffice, explained that the increases were part of a regularreappraisal by her office of all University salaries. Salaries areexamined periodically, she continued, to see whether or not a payincrease is called for. * v action.Some students indicated presentmembership in CORE and many were planning to join. A few stu¬dents thought that the w7hole pro¬test was "silly” or "crazy.”One big question in the mindof the students was the workabil¬ity of open occupancy, but eventhose who felt it couldn’t possiblywork were usually concernedabout manager integration poli¬cies.One said, "Even if managed in¬tegration is the only way, it isn’ta fair policy and therefore I carevery much about the problem.”The entering students couldoffer no quick solutions for thecommunity nor suggestions forCORE.Several students were shockedJo hear the University was as¬sociated w7ith any kind of dis¬crimination. This group w7aspleased, however, that the Univer¬sity allowed such demonstrations.Most were unaware of the an¬nounced policy of suspension forparticipation in sit-ins.No student questioned felt thesit-ins in any way discouragedhim from coming to the Univer¬sity. Several commented that theywere even more eager to comehere after they heard that stu¬dents here cared enough aboutcivil rights to protest their in¬fringement.Vote Negro endowmentStudents at the University of Rochester voted to es-Salaries of students working in the tw7o sciences divisions are tablish an endowment fund for Negro students with $2,000determined by the division and the Personnel office. The pay of stu¬dents working as technicians or assistants in the biological scienceswas raised last May. Salaries of physical sciences students were in¬creased July 30.According to undergraduates working in these fields, the payfor third and fourth year students was raised from $1.55 to $1.65 anhour and that for first and second year students, from $1.40 to $1.50an hour.Mrs. Kerridge declined to reveal the new salary scales becausestarling July 1, 3959, about 330 "we’ve found that people don’t understand them if wre publish them. won on the College Bowl recently.Overriding cries of “discriminating and exclusive” ac¬tion, the College Cabinet voted unanimously to award the dividendsfrom these funds to four Negro students annually.It is hoped that scholarships ear-marked specifically for Negrostudents w'ill encourage more “. . . qualified applications” thanhave been received in the past from this racial group.The Scholarships will be awarded by the University’s regularscholarship committee.v SSSBSSBBBHHBBBBBtlu*!»M»»»USEDkew TEXT BOOKSSTUDENT SUPPLIES\FOUNTAIN PENS - NOTE BOOKS — STATIONERY— LAUNDRY CASESBRIEF CASES - SPORTING GOODSTYPEWRITERS sold -rented-repaired XPOSTAL STATION RENTAL LIBRARYWOODWORTH’SBOOKSTORE1311 IAST 57th STREET2 Bfl.OCKS EAST INK MAN DEI, HAI LSTOftf HOURS; DAILY 8tO0 AM. fro 6:00 P.M. . . . EVENINGS — Monday, Wednesday, Friday fro 9:00 P.M.Oct. 2, m2 • CHICAGO M A ROO N • 3Award UC scientists Wayne bansCheeks Cashed, Money Orders ,Pay Gas, Light, Phone Billsv •; .Auto License ServiceNotary Services--. Traveler*' ChecksWoodlawn Currency Exchange1173 E. 55th Street/ BU S-0945 ' matioii on proposed speakers i h5j“their sludy of his backgrounds^.'experience piov ides no proofhis appearance would be in.fliet with the concurrent resoj||ltion" ef the legislature. |S;The ban "which: was written^^/conform with a resolution of traMichigan legislature; st’atosf.thl|^(appearances of Communist spealyi, eis-at state*!ax-supported'j>o1Teg$jMs and universities ''doesnot advat.cj|► the search for truth and is eorltiary,to the public policy of lira-slate gof Michigan”' ► / ym_ 11,1'lu 11 \ wn>t<- lo the stat* -1.1'~i |WSU’s, prev ious policy on outside^speakers which,set *‘aeademic,corrl'tpefence 1* discuss the suhje* t mail"tet” as Hi* • h:e ie nilei ion |*r!cut's! le.-.nirers.Kl.Mlht'ii v explained ‘thal.- tra% ban goes h**\ond po'nieaj"air acadi miy'! i * United States''Public lhe kidnovs and umu:\ ►vMrm. Detroit's Wayne State Uni-has - awarded*^ Dr. John d. -Arnold, associate, diversity >(\\/SU) <will bar allmf the dop.utmont vof^Uommunist \speakeis —■* ve-and | Dr, Benjamin ftai (Hess;of the proposed topic«,ociate pioicssor in the )|()nl ^snig campus faei)Hnc. e\-t oL*4pathologyr|$16-497^. p|am0(}^\vsU'' Pi esident? ClajcnceIges m the earl.\ stages . Tlu. ,)<m which applies only lo «foi ms ot kidnc> disease U!)CM1 ni( H mus of student otgam-rew Thomas, ^assistant nations'will be* in effect until the^ *rri|^th<^d®pai?thyen|l(|ofpMib|ugar^^^o|drdinatm^^^)unci^pS14f283^toiMn\estigate, foi 'Public-Education reaehesVde-^’le value of (urease in-£ ^cision^on a unified speakoi policy.*^od ‘stream* of<patients^gislaiure*f Uiat ^studoiyt - organi/a-disotdeis pH lions >would\ha\e to submit uifoi-J e | o I ns h i s t o ry facultythe u,l,u, liia..n;,..f —‘d States, is joining the tacultv'oi the department pp tkeij^V. ats’tlu* t;ni\;orsil V of ('liicago. (M.; ■* \ ), ciius-anif, covers:•om 10^7 to 1001 Wade was an assistant |H "iVsNor. ......feij&ytyi%p3ocho^vWiNere sit-insjin j^yain/j jgfH, -**:?s?M'Institute m ottan ffl Meadvillef-'Tlieolofticalf.-Sd.m^reeentlv announce one pe.jjl Studies a \\ hingion maneiit appointment -""1 two visiting |.io!«-ss..iships t«. i *yily, St.. Missouri i;-: .facility <>f the school * 1•. :?■ .. ‘ - .uu, IhM. and piescntU cha,>l.m of .h. ' mv.is.tv of «g»j■■ , . s md Hospitals has beer, appo.nle*! assistant ,.infr«so. od' pastm.il ,theolo<'\ .*nd * hm< .lj pis' ii.■*: ,h4iecenlHs.t-.ns^heVe^^ HeC*?HatVy^smei4Sh6t^enovyned4Enel.sh Unitarian m.mste.1told that th* ln.vers.tys »>«“ »>**•■" M poml* d v.s.t.mi ’‘”(1 " jjf«, * f- -v s ^ teach |two courses in! the 4wintei quarter., ^ | $£ ^i|to cp her st udeni /or tacult \ - the. larult-v.-ol >.t he ■ s< >i it hern? I Ihnois,.!' niv * i si 13 ;|>hdo -ophv ,«W o.iiJj.. . r ‘ .. .. ......... ■. I — . r ..TilHealth^/Servicegrants ^totalling| more | tharn professor,$190,000 to nine University {>f ^cdicineChicago scient ist s f*>r n‘sea 1 cli, in l>*ir^0> dpsl't i-t^x:%sj.fe^ax.„'^‘,t!apdepartmei- « the,coming year. '«n -t v\, i,; v> - ' • W - for fleetr, •’ The recipients and their grants J|wJ0 (.,1;T, * \ 1Klwood V. Jensen, professoi in Dr. And,?l |thjeTUniv ersity’s Ben" ?May„ Laboi ||g|ofess^or\J'afbiy tor "Cancel "Research,*’$66me(jILmerv7(00 for' studies'* tiacing^ minute ’ thp. ^^1| amounts’ of* radioactively'Magged/jecll()nsMofemale se\ hormones in the bodies, )n Jh<lif"1Dr. iiTing-Wa^Wong, ;|inst ructorS^fe^i"v ill the -depai tment ot pai holoev. \A/ pf: $22,242 tor research on the " V ^I median 1-m bv which some .eon -|t»pjex '>'(hvdi()( a»hon comiKiunds _ hiM^eause cancer, in- laboiatoiK am-±the tTll'T'Dr., Donald FT Stein*‘r,_. assist ant- T,vrd,l-*|pirofessor ,,jn T t he 'department assoeiah^biochemisti>,^$21 844 VforWt tidies * at^the,^JvTt htfei’rfh^rsT^iivMu ri ima l^ipfedi\Tfefesiifce,> t f®S*meTaT)0h's mwmgdi f#b 1 s.f 6> '.. I > r \:mn F:. Ha riier, as s< >e>. 11 < . -^piole-sn, III the department of J’p"innajjirp.ithologv” STS S‘N to, ^indies* of. 1 nivei.sgyirculat mn, inT.the :'nvero-eopic , p . ■^blood-vessels in,'the: pancreas of' 1^laboratory.-animals with diabetes ■;;/ |(, ,|,^ Dr. Robert H . * Wissler, profes-»\«^sor^nd» (chairman’ ofithe);depat 'J?®^n1^f:||^pjp^|!^i628^t^^|r<^studresfon^the^efTect^df^dret^ and ! polic^c^PtSerif act drsdintatheros(rieix>sisiTJgCni vers:||w%i »Wprofessor and bead of^the urology-^, housing,l's( ctiori on'tlie dep.u tment of sut -- elTi'et "'of diet and other ;factors".cent,yl&-on the'- developmentj^of; stones - in.,,?ea!5.%iDeor Carol.i ?Guitar strings plus $<>.95Followays' Records - <3> fJliZ'■ ' *■ ■.. * '" ' V-. y 'cTHE fret shop.as'.'t&f't* . 'i tr *.*?“., Wmm. >14M:-- • • * ,l.v ASS Textbooks and School Suptslieswplt- < * .tfThe; University of Chiccgo Bookstore■' d -Bjwntown Center Courses|wnfown^ Center Branch'"'•4 "’For Evening Program Courses- -The School of'Education Branch, Itm. 138, Belfield Hall ;TWr Hours thru .October 13: Mon. thru Fri. 8 A.M.-8:30 P.M.; Sot.' 8 - 12 tv ISfffitfs l|SING OUT^ REPRINTS 48'R. A. ZIMBLER, Oplomctiist-T;if. NEW HYDE PARK SHOPPING^ENTER“•- •“"***STUDENT?DlSCOUNT # ; > f , %§,w 7:30 sfBPP -j' • late show 3 o.m.; T ' 0 , • ladies day fridayAtd'fcqa l^:|;odm iss ia nJ?2 Sc®-TlllZrZo^i 5X^clcfrk;Vpdrlc in gCn.e xf?dc dr2#>|HI g«-4:hfs.-»5e'«ftef:-5;>.mf §|I!i ;?t:lark and madisonWi 44/movpay* LOM.FiorK TTuT yi'vifi:i>( > Xt'essfe® -,r «■ p k * •^N‘a©x:yiM E?b xf&MHK i:i:i,pe'Tv4■:T • . . ... i". Tm:Ti*Ti<feONE|^;BAaj:iiEeKY.v5UiJ4hf Wen knowsMil',' Al.I.lsON'hi.ueT’noel;*?|rRT:E:fr,;AN,f;MURDERS H K1IV<RISK. K I A 1.1.OF.y.E»fS, ^ *'DIAMOND, vPRf:trYm0BOYM^SSlfS‘BI-AST OP' '.SILENCE , « a'.v-'-a-s.>: .THE QUIETAMERICANSURPRISES -j.(p,ATiKtA,_;E:fs«§f? OIRLTOFFTHE-.MtK < \ p k 1 h: a RNORTH TO..ALASKA d*#* ’4 * >4rPAVIDSgANDBAIHSHEBA;,t.H^UTA^dKA!SS,.•ItA'RK'LY#*^-^,1SU;M M E U^yfel-T HI:moN-ika-a^&I^ F.XPERIMENIN . TERROR’vO'R'IME'&TPUN'1st 1M ENT; “ USA• *MtM’J; RI l A nS' i,:T-mm#A!TTI»H r;RCU.I-.E.StfM|tWp '* 5• A-;,. • ■Wm^iWiIOwe^tomet& b Ack‘tf|%,. 2 fjWARRIORdd(empress?®wafiwii*|M.ERRILLiS«MARAUDERS'' *•: f ' mm ■■SUNDOWNERS"M- I I .' i?h. M^ ^:'SP I RlIrST;«3 .rs^mT^ii ■&}$&%, ''JlNP-RI;.N«.E^5;Tlt:EsHkWOIRI.1 ; SPIR,AL RO'AD^ sgy\r ■* t2^WEKK,-S.N ^ANOTHER TOWN^Se?,DECI-L0N^&and other fine JpK&E slide rulesat your"college store. ? H .-• *gfW;H1 ST LE'?; DO W. N;THE WIND | -Ql h FION ' 7. _ ►t u *.ni ut .... •‘Of®; 1 A\(E^|pmm i U- > «M VN.-1N I PK », •M1VDOW. ;av=;malm; a/ DESIRE-UNDER-T H E... ELM SMsjL'jkjiACROSS THEBRIDGE . . s',IMK LIMIT “4* |i|P||g|§• HI 1.1 'HEN'SHOUR iteVlCTORTV^i 'j*. ifUERONlMOT% LS '4';5T' MOD'lt;i-:fAN;I^l- UT'A M ARC®|Pitr , OfV'Vomi T)). *■■?» "-T.P^^lfo'fMKcr Jspecial|'coMege"^f;f student price ;v(bring id J^m;ost|^'MAN*' M| % ’ ‘‘ COVERSf ^KILLER ■?1 ’ EAt ;;(j EMO k|:;3<,EN,Tf.EMh;N:UT HEiVM' ups tairs > ■hNiT.ovE-.45P«|N;iMw:A'R-5KtUFFEL A ESSER CQhHoboken, N.J* 4»t»Typing errors never show on Corrasable. The special sur¬face of this paper makes it possible to erase without atrace—with just an ordinary pencil eraser. Results: clean¬looking, perfectly typed papers. Next time you sit downat the keyboard, make no mistake—type on Corrasable!Your choice of Corrasable inlight, medium, heavy weights andOnion Skin. In handy 100-sheet packets and 500-sheetboxes. Only Eaton makesCorrasable.A Berkshire Typewriter PaperEATON PAPER CORPORATION (^ PITTSFIELD, MASS. Cool, clean Old Spice After Shave lotion alwaysgets you off to a fast, smooth start. Feels just asgood between shaves as it does after shaving.Rates A-OK with dates. 1.25 and 2.00 plus taxshu trr o ml $//ice AFTER SHAVELOTIONiEditor’s note: Professor ofAnthropology Sol Too; wrote thefallowing article last spring afterparticipating in a series ofst mien t - faculty discussions de¬stined to improve communicationsamong the rarious parts of theUniversity community. Mr. Taxhas consented to the Maroon'sreprinting his narrative, whichhas already been circulated amongmembers of the College socialst-tences staff, of which Mr. Taxis the head.)The first word that Juliehad from the University wash copy of Cap and (Jown,19fi6, which had just replaced(he Announcements.Edited and published by Ohirngostudents as usual, it described thecampus, and Hyde Park, and Ohi-cpp'o in realistic terms: it also de¬scribed the faculty and the coursesr-’d the new system Tt warnedJulie not to come to Chicago un¬ices she wanted to educate her-e'df; hut if she did, she wouldhave the best facilities—and com¬pany — in which to do it.Then it described the colleges—v -|oo Fermf. Robert Morse Lov¬ett, John Dewey, Thorstein VebJen,Thornton Wilder, Sewell Wright—pod how to annjy to enter one oranother, and the advantages andI'Undvantages of living “imat-t-whed.”Then tbe*-o wee an tm iteOori inrnnlv for the Diagnostic Exami¬nation.The prognosisSince Julie had just placed hieh1 the Junior Year Trial National'"'"’it Examination •— which wasv by Cap and Gown had come inthe first place — she read with'••'terest that this exam would tellVr fl) how well she was likelyIn fare at Chicago; (?) whether'’’c would he admitted, either atthe end of this Junior year, or a■ Anr later; (3) how much seholar-sbin aid she could expect if sher™ded it; and 14) how far and in\ hat directions she was alreadyadvanced toward a bachelor’s tie¬rce.Julie liked the sound of Thorn¬ton Wilder College in which 50%ef the members were in the hu-r'^nities (the other 50% dividedamong social sciences, physical sciences, biological sciences — nomore than 20% in each) and ask¬ed for an examination. She mighthave preferred Lovett, but it wasreported full up for the time beingbecause an unusual number of re¬cent baccalaureates were stayingon for graduate work.In three days there was a notefrom George B. Holly, the chair¬man of the Wilder AdmissionsCommittee, welcoming Julie’s in¬quiry. He said he w'as in his thirdyear in Wilder and the University;he said the examination was beingarranged for in Julie’s own highschool, in a period that she andher teachers agreed was conveni¬ent; and he asked her to write ashort account of herself and herinterests and her hopes so thathis Committee could jfidge wheth¬er Wilder would indeed providethe most suitable atmosphere andcompanionship. The colleges, ofcourse, had distinct characters.Although CAP AND GOWN hadindicated that students at Chicagocarried the maior burden of stu¬dent administration and advising,this was something of a surpriseto Julie.’Communities of Scholars’Back in Cap and Gown shelearned that the colleges had stu¬dents of all years, and faculty;that they were self-governing“communities of scholars;” andthat in most of them students hadmajor responsibilities as advisers,tutors, rheord keepers, etc., andso incidentally earned part oftheir keep. As an entering stu¬dent she wmuld have a choice ofcommittee assignments, and possi¬bly be on her way to a responsibleassignment.As she read J'die realized thata college of 1,000 persons — 500of them in its residential center—renuired considerable government;and she saw that there were alsomany intercollege and all-univer¬sity administrative functions forstudents who joined with facultyin many of them.Julie still liked the sound ofWilder, and George Holly, andwrote him about herself; she alsosent a poem that the school paperhad published, and a long essayshe had just written for her so¬cial studies class.Then — it was already May — came the examination. First therewere four three-hour sessions ofmultiple-choice general educationtests, and a short achievement-motivation test.After three days she had a good-news telephone call: she couldtake the essay questions — threetwo-hour sessions of longer andshorter pieees on a whole rangeof topics. In a week, the secondphone call, which surprisinglyturned out to be a half-hour’sconversation which was recordedin Chicago as part of the exami¬nation.Good news! On May 31 therewas a letter from George Hollyagain: it enclosed a “profile” fromthe University Examiner, with anote also from the UniversityScholarship Office saying thatJulie would be awarded an HonorScholarship—with actual financialaid dependent on need—for eitherthis autumn fif she and her highschool thought that she shouldcome as an early entrant) or thefollowing year.George Holly w'rote congratula¬tions on behalf of the Committee,and reported that the Wilder Ad¬missions Committee w’ould be hap¬py to have her either year. Hewent on to say that since sheseemed to be getting along wellin her high school they thoughtshe might better stay there, en¬joy her senior year, and come thefollowing autumn.They would advise her tostrengthen her mathematics inher last year. Meanw'hile, shewould get the Wilder newsletterand perhaps visit the Universityduring one of her holiday periods;they would have a guest room forher at minimum cost.Boys and girls togetherJulie couldn’t w’ait longer thanthe Thanksgiving holiday; and toChicago she flew. It w’as an ex¬citing time, what with the girls“taking her in,” and the boysand girls together land somefaculty and families) in the Wild¬er dining hall — though on Sun¬day she went with an “exchange” group to Fermi, (Each collegedining hall was quite different infood — since the students had de¬veloped different traditions—andSunday was a favorite day for“exchange for a change”).There was discussion of “Re¬ligion and Freud’’ at the regularFriday seminar group to whichshe was particularly attracted(there were three or four tochoose from on Friday evenings).Football, dress ballThere was also the Saturdayafternoon football game (Fermivs. Lovett) in Stagg Field; theband played too. And there wasthe annual Town-Gown Thanks¬giving Ball in the new Hyde ParkCommunity Center.Best of all, for the first timeJulie understood the structure ofthe University; the descriptionwas a bit confusing in the Capand Gown.As she summarized in herdiary, “The eight thousand stu¬dents and faculty (she found) aredivided among six colleges, .eachlimited to one thousand and withcertain proportions of graduates,undergraduates, faculty, etc. Twothousand are unaffiliated, some bypreference and resignation andothers waiting for an opening ina college of their choice. Each col¬lege has its Residence Centerwhere about half its memberslive, and to which other memberscome to dine.Veblen is the only college com¬pletely in apartments—it occupieslarge twin buildings on an islandon 55th Street, with many of itsfaculty living in “town houses” oneither side; Veblen has no dininghall, since each apartment group“cooks its own,” but on SundayVeblenites take over HutchinsonCommons for dinner.The newest college is Dewey,in many ways the most interest¬ing because it occupies severalblocks of "rehabilitated” housesbetween 61st and 63rd Street, in¬cluding several that were oncerather disreputable hotels; they have a large "international dininghall” to which outsiders alsocome, which is said to have someof the best food in Chicago.Wilder occupies what some stillcall the “new dorms,’’ Fermi thelarge two-towered building nearthe Field House, and Lovett thebuildings near the Law School.Sewell Wright College is scattereda little among some old buildingson the quadrangles.The unaffiUated“The undergraduate division hasover 3,000 students, the graduatedivisions and professional schoolsa little over 4,000. There arenearly 1,000 faculty members ofwhich nearly 300 form an “auton¬omous undergraduate faculty”whose members are most all con¬nected with departments andschools, where many of them alsoteach.About 3,000 of the undergrad¬uates and undergraduate facultybelongs to colleges, and about2,000 of the 3,000 live in theresidential centers. In contrastonly about 3,000 of the nearly5,000 ‘graduate studenis and re¬search faculty belong to colleges,and of these only about 500 are“resident”—most of these havingbeen undergraduate residentsearlier.“The ‘unaffiliated’ are in largepart graduate students who havecome from elsewhere, have famil¬ies,. and stick pretty close to theircontinued on page 8Gadfly policyGadfly is an attempt on the partof the Maroon to provide provoca¬tive ideas to the campus at large.The column is meant to be writtenby students and faculty memberswho wish to have their ideas ex¬pressed in the Maroon, and is nota Maroon staff editorial column.Articles may be printed unsignedand the author’s name will be heldin the strictest confidence by theGadfly editor.The opinions expressed in thecolumn Gadfly do not necessarilyrepresent the editorial policy ot theMaroon, or its staff!Readers are invited to expresstheir views in Gadfly articles aswell as in the “Letters to Editor.”We all make mistakes.• •ERASE WITHOUT A TRACEON EATON’S CORRASABLE BONDGAD F LY• .3; 9Is it possible? A proposal in slight narrative formPugwash conference is evaluatedby Leslie Kondor“The prestige and strengththat the Pugwash Conferen¬ces on Science and World Af- The Pugwash movement is aspontaneous movement in whichscientists from many nations cometogether for periodic conferences.come tish Atomic Scientists Association.The movement officially beganwith a declaration issued in July, foi. tho conference if it were heldAristotle Onasis, the Greek ship prominent world politicians andowner, offered to pay all expenses government heads.1955, by Bertrand Russell, signedby Albert Einstein and nine otherscientists, among whom were sev¬en Nobel Prize winners. President Kennedy assuved theAlthough there were difficulties, Conference participantsails have steadily acquiied solely as individuals, representingwas evident at this summers con- no organizations or governments,ference, according to Mrs. Ruth an(j subject to no direct govern- *n establishing this InternationalAdams, managing editor of the menf control. * “ * ” —Bulletin of Atomic Scientists. , , ,,, A , , , , fhey meet to consider role of been solved.Mrs. Adams attended the tenth scientists in contemporary life andPugwash conference in London to discuss means by which science sent ouj to a number of wealthyearlier this month. She has par- can be devoted to constructiveticipated in three previous confer- purposes, rather than to destruc-ences. five ends.Robert Gomer, professor of che- The present movement wasmistry; and David Inglis. a mem- foreshadowed i n conversationsber of the staff of Argonne Nfc- which took place in 1953 andtional Laboratories, also attended 1954 between the Federation of there were two which carried athis summer’s conference. American Scientists and the Bri- conditional offer of help. in Monte Carlo; and Cyrus Eaton, participants in the conference thatthe Cleveland industrialist, made he is “willing to give serious at-a similar offer for a conference tention to any suggestion for cre-held in Pugwash, Nova Scotia. ating a disarmed world which, , ., . „ . ' would not jeopardize the securityLord Russell decided that Eat-* m,. country.wAtomic Scientists Organization, 0n’s offer should be followed up.financial problems have essentially Mrs. Adams described this Russian Premier Khruschevyear’s conference as very depres- noted that scientists who clearlyalthough she found some realize the disastrous consequen-In September, 1956, letters were sing.people in various countries askingfor financial support.A few small contributions werereceived, but most of those ap¬proached refused.Among these refusals, however,Attention, all witty, urbane college students:Get Lucky!^^■■1 / or would you \HiSh I like to try for 1fclf V, *50? JENTER LUCKY STRIKES' ZANY NEW"Crazy Questions” Contest(Bored on the hiloriout book "The Question Mon.“Ihope for the future. ces of thermonuclear war have a“Characteristically, the formal very important and honorable partagreements at the end of the con- to play in this struggle.”ference in Ixindon were less signi- it is clear that the Pugwashficant and hopeful than the ex- movement is an attempt by thoseample of the discussions them- 0f ono calling, the scientists toselves,” she said. come together from all over theThe 1962 Pugwash conference world, to evaluate what they candid not escape the attentions of and cannot do to help mankindthrough the present dangerousworld situation.Pugwash was born out of asense of responsibility, a feelingthat science is developing at sucha vertiginous rate that the scien¬tist cannot stand aside and leavethe decisions to national govern-^ ments without making his voiceheard, not only nationally, but al¬so internationally.It was born out of the wish tohelp overcome the “cultural lag,”or the general tendency of nonscientists to treat scientific deve¬lopment as if it were the one be¬fore the last.50 CASH AWARDS A MONTH. ENTER NOW. HERE’S HOW:First, think of an answer. Any answer. Then come up witha nutty, surprising question for it, and you've done a“Crazy Question." It’s the easy new way for students tomake loot. Study the examples below, then do your own.Send them, with your name, address, college and class,to GET LUCKY, Box 64F, Mt. Verjion 10, N. Y. Winningentries will be awarded $25.00. Winning entries sub¬mitted on the inside of a Lucky Strike wr$25.00 bonus. Enter as often as you likeTHE ANSWER;A MONKEY WRENCH;Ad>juouj dsooi e uaiqSq o\asn noA pino* •N0llS3nC> 3HiTHE ANSWER:Rlma Materiatueu s.Jdisi.ss.jnew S' •N0llS3n& 3Hi apper will get aStart right now! RULES: The Reuben H. Donnelley Corp. will judge entries on the basis ofhumor (up to V4), clarity and freshness (up to Yt) and appropriateness (upto V4), and their decisions will be final. Duplicate prizes will be awardedin the event of ties. Entries must be the original works of the entrants andmust be submitted in the entrant’s own name. There will be 50 awardsevery month, October through April. Entries received during each monthwill be considered for that month’s awards. Any entry received after April30, 1963, will not be eligible, and all become the property of The AmericanTobacco Company. Any college student may enter the contest, except em¬ployees of The American Tobacco Company, its advertising agencies andReuben H. Donnelley, and relatives of the said employees. Winners will benotified by mail. Contest subject to all federal, state, and local regulations.THE ANSWER:iZAXMAOlyQdONWWIHdSaOV sapisoq Siamaoiqi auieu noA ubq :NOIJLS3n0 3H1THE ANSWER:TUgktc^tex nightok that log ccldCkieitiuioedfy firelight'yood oslysate s.aqv si XqM :N0llS3nd 3Hi THE ANSWER:One Hamburger,One Frankfurteriuuojj spuauj omi jnoX ajeXueuuao U| ajoqM :NOIlS3n0 3H1THE ANSWER:a;eai jo dno 3uojjs X||edJe neo noA pinoM *eqM WOliSSfld 3H1The answer is:Get Luckythe taste to start with.. .the taste to stay with It sssLThe question is: WHAT CIGARETTE SLOGAN HAS THE INITIALS GL tttsw . . .tttsw? No question about it, the taste of a Lucky spoils you for other cigarettes.This taste is the best reason to start with Luckies.. .the big reason Lucky smokersstay Lucky smokers. This taste makes Luckies the favorite regular cigarette ofcollege students. Try a pack today. Get Lucky. REPORTS ON DISARMAMENTAND PEACE byDR. DALE PONTIUS. Assoc. Prof, ofPol.-Sci., at Roosevelt Univ., andmain speaker of Hie AmericanDelegation at "THE WORLD PEACECONGRESS” in MoscowandMRS. CHRISTINE C. JOHNSON,delegate to the Ghana Conferenceon "THE WORLD WITHOUT THEBOMI"Friday, Oct. 5, 8:00 pm. Hall A-1,9th fir., 32 W. Randolph St., Chgo.Donation $1.00, Students 50c; byChicago Council of Amer.-Sov.Friendship, Inc.ATTENTION STUDENTS!BOOKS FOR SALEOrder your current text books,references books, etc., etc.,from a wholesale house direct.Hard cover or paper back. Newor slightly used. The largestselection in the market on allsubjects. Catalog sent on re¬quest. Send 25c coin or stampsfor handling and postage. ( De¬ductible from first order).Prompt service.MIDWEST BOOK CENTER7635 N. Paulina St.Chicago 26, IllinoisREADMORE,RETAINMORE,four-bagger I GETGRADESOA. T. Co, Product of c/& idrnt/tiecvti <J(ini£e&-£o»y*ar^ — c/o&veeo- is our middle name Learn to read ?>to 10 times fast¬er — with under¬standing and en-RETTFB J°yment im-DEi 1 1 CilV p o s sible inconvention¬al readingmethods. This new wayto read will help you do bet¬ter on exams, cut your hoursof study to give you morefor extracurricular activities.Taught with personal atten¬tion by skilled teachers. Eve¬ning classes now forming.Call for our FREE brochure.EVELYN WOODReading Dynamics Instituteof Chicago, Inc.180 West Adams St., Suite 300Chicago 6, IllinoisSTate 2-7014CEntral 6-8600Culturecalendar \Music series offers outstanding artistsv DANCEFolk dancing, tonight, 8-10|>m, In¬ternational House assembly hall.EXHIBITSTreasures of Versailles, 184 paintings,sculpture, furnishings, and works ofart on loan from the French Govern¬ment, at. the Art Institute, Michigan andAdams.FILMSBells are Ringing;, musical comedywith Judy Holliday, International Hoyse,8 pm, 50c admission, next Monday.Ingmar Bergman festival at the TownTheatre, 2000 N. Clark. Through Thurs¬day, The Seventh Seal and Smiles of aSummer Night. Friday through Sunday,Torment and Wild Strawberries. Mon¬day, The Virgin Spring and The Devil’sEye.At the Hyde Park. Judgment at Nu-remburg, 2 academy awards, throughFriday, October 12.MUSICMusic at Hillet, the hi-fi systemavailable for use Sunday through Thurs¬day afternoon and evenings, Fridayafternoons. Also classical and Hebraicrecordings. 5715 Woodlawn.Universal Symphony rehearsal tomor¬row, 7:30 pm. in Mandel Hall. Posi¬tions are still open for oboe and vio-lon sections; contact H. Colin Slim,ext. 3885.Chicago Symphony, opening concertat Orchestra Hall, Thursday at 8:15and Friday 2 pm. Leopold Stokowskiguest conductor. Program includes Bach,Beethoven’s Symphony No. 2, Shosta¬kovich, Gliere. Saturday, 8:30 pm, pro¬gram includes Berlioz, Tchaikovsky,Ravel, Gliere.Obernkirchen Children’s Choir, Orches¬tra HhII. Sunday afternoon, 2 pm.Tickets $2 through $5.CAMPUS THEATREActor’s Company will hold tryoutsthis Friday and Saturday at 8:80 pm,Sunday at 2:00 pm in the 3rd floortheatre of Ida Noyes, for Merry Wivesof Windsor, to be presented November1-3. Previous productions have includedThe Bedbug and Iphigenia in Aulis.For further information, call ext. 3883.University Theatre meeting and elec¬tions, Friday, 3:30 pm. Reynolds Clubnorth lounge. Major shows will be dis¬cussed for the next year; refreshmentsserved. by Pete RobinowitzMusic EditorWhat is certainly one ofthe most exciting musicalevents in recent UC historywill inaugurate the 1962-63Chamber Music Series.Gunther Schuller, famous asconductor and performer in jazz,classical, and Third Stream musicwill conduct the opening concerton Friday, October 19,Members of the Chicago Sym¬phony and jazz musicians fromboth New York and Chicago willjoin Schuller to perform a pro¬gram of compositions in whichtwo or more groups of instrument¬alists play different music simul-1 aneously.Music by Mozart and Gabrielli,as well as the twentieth centurycomposers Stravinsky, Ives, and Schuller, will be performed.The remainder of the series isfar from anti-climactic. IrmgardSCefried, world famous sopranowho has made significant contrib¬utions to both the fields of operaand lieder, will perform on Nov¬ember 17. Highlighting the con¬cert will be Moussorgsky’s In theNursery, and songs by Schubert,Brahms, Wolf, and Hindemith.Contrast is a major feature ofthe two concerts scheduled forIhe winter quarter. On January12, the Collegium Musicum of theUniversity of Illinois will presenta program of music from the lateMiddle Ages and the Renaissance,the majop offering consisting ofDufay’s Missa L’Homme Arme.Four weeks later, on February9, Paul Jacobs, pianist of the NowYork Philharmonic and noted ex¬ponent of twentieth century mu¬ sic, will play a concert of diversi¬fied contemporary piano music,ranging from Debussy’s Etudes,Book II to Stockhausen’s ThreePiano Pieces, as well as works bySessions and Stravinsky.No chamber music series couldbe complete without a BeethovenQuartet, and the first concert ofthe spring quarter will featurejust that; the Quartet Opus 130,complete with the Grosse Fugueas the finale, performed by theLenox Quartet.This internationally famousgroup will also perform the secondString Quartet of Assistant Pro¬fessor of Music Easley Blackwood,as well as Schoenberg’s rarelyheai-d String Trio.Isadore Cohen, known not only as a solo violinist but also as amember of the Juilliard StringQuartet will close out the Cham¬ber Music Season on May 4 witha concert of violin and pianoworks including Blackwood’s So¬nata No. 1, Opus 7, Bach’s EMajor Sonata and Bartok’s SonataNo. 2. One work remains to beannounced.Series tickets for all six con¬certs are $6 for UC students, $10for non-students. Those personswho wish to forego the advantagesof purchasing a series ticket(w’hich includes superior seat, lo¬cation, minimum of waiting online, and ,of course, lower prices)will be able to purchase singletickets at $1.50 for students, $3.00for non-students.South Asian dance groupsto perform in Mandel Hall CLASSIFIED ADSShorelane apts. 5135 S. Kenwood offers1 to 3 x/s room efficiency units. Attrac¬tively appointed, month - to - monthoccupancy. $80 and up. Elevator, fire¬proof building. Manager on premises. HYDE PARK2 bedrooms. 2nd floor, 5515 Everett.$187.50. Mr. Weiss, MI 8-9345. Draper& Kramer, SA 1-3762,The University of Chicago’sCommittee on Southern AsianStudies wil present the secondAsian Arts Series, consistingof three evenings of South Asiandance and music, CommitteeChairman George V. Bobrinskoyannounced.The Series will open next Fri¬day with Phakavali, The Dancersof Thailand accompanied by thePi-Phat Orchestra who are mak¬ing their first tour beyond theAsian continent.On October 27, Sangeeta Mad¬ras, a group of leading musiciansfrom South India, led by Balach-ander, India’s virtuoso of the Vina,will present a concert of Carnatic Wanted: Spinet piano.IN 8-5379.music.~~ Bharatiya Kala Kendra, one ofIndia’s foremost dance groups willpresent Kathak the dance of-North India on March 15, 1963.Admission to each of the threeperformances is $2.50 for individ¬ual tickets on the main floor andboxes, $1.50 for balcony seats.Faculty members and studentsmay purchase main floor and boxseat series tickets (to the threeperformances) for $4.00.Tickets are now’ available atRoom 204 of the social sciencebuilding and at the Mandel HallBox Office.All performances will be givenin Mandel Hall and-will begin at8:30 p.m. Roommate wanted: to share large furn*Reasonable, ished apt. with 2 med students. $42per mo. MI 3-7092.Part time group leaders afternoonsand/or evenings, experience with chil¬dren necessary. Call Mr. Abels or Mrs.Johnson. YMJC Youth Center. RE1-0444.South Shore, sublease 6 rooms, 1st floor,$140, call Mrs. Gordon, MU 4-2900.After 6, HY 3-1544. Oct. rent free.Wanted: partner for STAR CLASS sailboat. Morning in Jackson Park Harbor.Call BU 8-5799, eveningsr-CA 5-9900,ext. 2422, days.For sale: upright piano. I>0 3-276 2. Sleeper wanted, female student to baby¬sit. etc. with 2 children, in return forown room, bath, meals near campus,MU 4-4688 after 5:30 P.M.Free room and board in exchange forbaby-sitting, misc. Starting immediatelywith congenial family near campus. Fe¬male only. FA. 4-8384.Faculty family has apartment for 2girls in exchange for baby sitting,housework. MI 3-2328.Room and kitchen privileges in exchangefor baby sitting. Female, BU 8-66 72,Now available...a special opportunityTO REPRESENT AVON COSMETICSON CAMPUSBy special arrangement with the college, an opportunity is offered to a resi¬dent student to represent Avon, world’s largest cosmetic company. This girlwill enjoy a unique earning opportunity: an exclusive franchise to offer fellowstudents Avon’s famous cosmetics on campus. Because Avon has an inter¬national reputation, the high quality cosmetics, not available in stores, are ingreat demand. They are the newest, the best, beautifully packaged, and fullyguaranteed. Student Representatives in other colleges are pleased with theacceptance of Avon, and with their substantial earnings.For more information, please contactMRS. WEINERPlacement Office RITTER THlNC-5 fCR BURK iiyiNv ..777WC'JQil CliLV:$W^W7,The sculptured knit:very in, very “Orion Sayelle^V.*ruc rt-RHUNTINGDON’S smarhing ski-county sweater: a rich, soft, brg-stitch knit of ioo?o"0i Ion Sayelle"*.,. Du Pont’s newest luxurysweat*er fiber. Which makes it rugged, but lightweight, full of bounce. Andunusually good-looking. Easy to machine-wash, machine-dry.Orwashit by hand and lay on a flat surface to dry. “Mont Blanc" in steelgreen, curry, nickel, blue, white. Sizes S.M.L and XL. About $16.00.♦Du Pent's reE;:!«:eJ Pademark for its bt-corpofient ao>"c fber. Du Pent makes fib'vr,net fabrics er slothes, Enjoy the "Du Pent Show of Ike Week" Senile/ nights, NBC-TY,SPECTORS LAD LIKE DAD SHOPCHICAGOOct. 2. 1962 • CHICAGO MAROON • 2The adventures of Julie(continued on page 3)departments; some of them—andmost faculty—seem to ‘join’ col¬leges. if they can get in. afterbeing here a year or two.“There are several fraternityhouses too where students live;these students generally resignfrom their colleges when they joinfraternities, since they can't ‘keepup’ both. There are two frater¬nities that have sprung up in col¬leges—one in Wright and the otherin Lovett; in each case they livetogether in one part of the Resi¬dence Center.”Julie couldn’t visit many class¬es because of the holiday; she wasimpressed with the freedom ofstudents to go or not to go toclass. “This has always been thetradition at Chicago; now that wedon’t even register for courses,most of us go to more classes thanformerly.”Julie didn’t quite understandthis. Before leaving Julie dis¬cussed her coming living quarterswith the House Committee, andwas so impressed that she askedif she could serve on it; she wasalso asked to join the Bridge (theliterary workshop of Wilder).In May Julie arranged to takeher Diagnostics again, so shewouldn’t have to take them duringOrientation Week. She was pleas¬ed that she had not only picked upher math but had gained generallymore than the 20% expectableduring the year. She was well offat entrance.Orientation was exciting. It wasa University-wide affair, but donethrough the Sub-O-Board of Wil¬der College. There were threemain objects: to get to under¬stand the mechanics of the Uni¬versity, the neighborhood, and thecity; to get to know the peopleand the system in Wilder and theResidence—on this Julie had ahead start; and to get “curric¬ulum wise.”The last was the hard part, and(everybody said* the most im¬portant. Cap ami Gown had de¬scribed the “resources of the Uni¬versity” in interesting detail; butit was a veritable jungle. Juliefelt as though she were on a partyin a great restaurant and handeda tremendous menu, in French;she just wished her friends wouldorder and she could just say. “thesame.”She asked about “requirements’’but people smiled and said therewere none, but not to worry; hertutor would help her. Olt yes, theWilder tutor—that was one of theadvantages of joining a college.Every new student was attachedto an upperclassman (or gradu¬ate student) who guided himthrough the maze, helping him tounderstand liis own “profile” andrelate his needs and his . intereststo the resources available. Heknew where to go for help ininterpretation, usually a Wilderfaculty person or another studentwith special knowledge of the case—sometimes somebody else in theUniversity.Most new students turned outto fit “standard" programs, of coilrse — classified by what theyknew, their general interests, tal¬ents, ambitions, and what thefaculty had set up as “normal pro¬grams” for such cases. There wereno “requirements” but there wasa program for nearly every case—and a good deal of the fuss wasreally there for the unusual case.“You see.” her tutor explainedto Julie, “it’s really simple. Youhave twice taken the Diagnostic,so you know what it is like—ex¬cept for the creative part whichyou can’t really plan for anyway,and which you’ll take for the firsttime next spring. If you are wise,you’ll take a similar Diagnosticevery spring, and see where youare going. Eventually you’ll hit itat a level where the faculty willaward you your BA (or PhD orBS. depending on the profile!.Meanwhile, you just enjoy joureducation—feed off the rich menuaccording to j-our appetite butwith an eye on the scale always!If you are wise you won’t just‘nosh’ at the smorgasbord table:it works for some people, butmost of us commit ourselves toa program of courses, and workat them just as though somebodysaid we had to.There are several reasons forthis. One is that you will haveregular companj- in classes; peoplewill be listening, reading, discuss¬ing along with you; and in factyou’ll find yourself shut out of thecommunity if jou don’t take manyof the courses of the regular pro¬grams.Second, you will want gradeson your record when it comes toapplying to graduate schools, andfor fellowships. It’s OK to tellyourself you are improving yourDiagnostic — but who knows howwell that tests what? and it’ssatisfying to have other work un¬der your belt — and the outsideworld lives by that sort of evi¬dence.So, generally speaking here, wefirst study alternative coursesthat might suit us; then wesample some, and after the firstweek or two pick three or fourthat seem best and commit our¬selves to do the work. How? Well,all >'ou do is tell the instructor,so that you can talk to him aboutpapers to write and so on (andgenerally get in contact with him— profs like to know students,and you should get to know themwhen you have an excuse).Then when you have done thework — papers, exams, or whatnot. pick up a grade record slip,write your name on it, with thecourse name and number, andask him to fill in a grade andturn it in to the Registrar. You’llknow- that he’s done it when theRegistrar sends you the carbon."A week later Julie was settledinto four course,s three in oneof the “normal” programs andthe fourth in a creative writingcourse offered by a distinguishedvisitor (this was limited andeven some graduate students were refused admission — but sheshowed the professor her storypublished in the Yearbook, andby some miracle he liked it).Meanwhile she was fully enter¬ed into Wilder life and work; shealso signed up for the dailyMa-roon and University Theater —recruited b>' upperclassmen inWilder who w ere involved inthese activities.It was at University Theaterthat she met Bill, a 3rd year stu¬dent in Fermi; he invited her toExchange dinner, and they went toa movie together. She had manyfriends in Wilder by now7, includ¬ing bojs; but there seemed to bea tradition (as Bill explained it)of college out-dating — most ofthe relations within a college weresmall-group-eomradeship in style.Bill had had a social sciencecourse, and thought the systemfunctioned like a unilineal society.Exogamous clans operate (hesaid) to integrate the whole so¬ciety through intermarrying atthe same time that sex tabooskeep relations within the clanfrom becoming confused. Juliewondered what happened then tostudents who married. A collegecould evidently have boys andgirls as brothers and sisters, butnot as married couples; or wasthere a college for couples? Per¬haps Veblen, with all those apart¬ments? But no — Bill said —Veblen is the same as the others;married students probably becomeinactive, or choose one of, or al¬ternate between, their respectivecolleges.Another week passed: Julie waslunching with her tutor, and re¬porting her successes — she hadreally made a' “coup” in her hu¬manities discussion that morning— when he said. “Julie, you’vegot to choose your faculty tutornow. Have you met any in theCollege you would especially liketo work with? You could getone outside, but it’s much betterto have a Wilder man, since you’llsee him at meals occasionally: andof course you can often find himin his study here.”For the first time Julie realizedthat 50 Wilder faculty had roomsin the Residence, though all hadoffices elsewhere and most livedwith their families. One of thesehappened to be Mr. Michaels, herinstructor in French, and sheliked him—she had tried twoother French sections before set¬tling on Michaels—so her tutorproposed the relationship to Mich¬aels, who fortunately was not“overloaded,” and the matter wasquickty arranged.The very next day Mr. Michaelswent over with Julie all of therecords that thej- together had;and he complimented her on herchoice of courses. He pointed outovith a smile that she had showedwell on her achievement motiva¬tion test.The narrative is left as a frag¬ment at this point; it will tooobviously have a happy ending..Sol TaxCOLOR DEVELOPINGPREPAID MAILERS3 mm Roll, 3 mm 20 exp. $1.2955 mm, 36 exp. $1.98MODEL CAMERA1342 E. 55th HY 3-9259NSA DISCOUNTSToday’sStudentSpecialmeSTUDEBAKER 549500Bring in Ad for This PriceGruby's Rambler4555 S. CottageBO 84411 'SPECIAL STUDENT DISCOUNT''PHILLIPS JEWELRY CO.DIAMONDS • WATCHES • JEWELRY * RINGS • SILVERWARELayaway PEARLS • RELIGIOUS GOODS • APPLIANCES LayawayDiamond S£RVJNG C0LLEGE STUDENTS AT WHOLESALE Dia™ondXmas Now PRICES FOR THE PAST 20 YEARS Xmas Now"50% OFF ON ALL DIAMONDS"ENGAGEMENT & WEDDING RINGS"CHRISTMAS SALE"WATCH AND JEWELRY REPAIRING67 E. MADISON ROOM 1101CHICAGO DE 2-6508ON CAMPUS — INFORMATIONKENNETH C. HEYL CAMPUS EXT. 326SHI CAGO MAROON • Oct. A 1962 Minister s role discussedThe Chicago TheologicalSeminary (CTS) opened theacademic year with a con¬ference last weekend onFrontiers of the Ministry Today.”CTS is an independent institu¬tion, located on Woodlawn be¬tween 57 and 58 streets. Althoughan independent institution, CTSand UC shares many faculty mem¬bers.Each of the three sessions com¬prising the conference was ad¬dressed by a Christian leader w hois playing an active part in solv¬ing the various problems facingChristianity today.First speaker and keynoter forthe three sessions was the Rever¬end Fred L. Shuttsworth, founderand leader of the Alabama Christ¬ian Movement for Human Rights,Dedmon to talkto Maroon staffEmmot Dedmon, author andmanaging editor of the ChicagoSun-Times, will bo the firstspeaker in the Maroon’s Fridayafternoon seminars.He will discuss the relationshipsand contrasts between the studentpress and the metropolitan press.Dedmon. a former editor of theMaroon, has been on the staff ofthe Sun-Times since 1940, withthe exception of five years servicewith the Air Force during WorldWar II. He has been assistantforeign editor, book and dramacritic, and was for several yearsassistant managing editor beforebeing named to his present posi¬tion in February, 1958.He is the author of four books:Duty To Live, a war novel pub¬lished in 1946; Fabulous C hicago,a national best-seller published in1953; Great Enterprises, the cen¬tennial history of the YMCA ofmetropolitan Chicago, issued in1957; and A History of The Chi¬cago Club, published in 1960.He is a graduate of the Univer¬sity of Chicago where he majoredin economics and served as a Uni¬versity marshall. He is a memberof the Alumni Senate of thecollege of the University. *The seminar will begin 4 pmin the Maroon office. All formerstaff members and interestedapplicants may attend. Reverend Shuttsworth has playeda leading role in desegregationefforts in the South and is con¬sidered by many to be an expertin the Negro-white race problemboth in the North and South.The speaker of the second ses¬sion was Dr. Heinrich Grue-ber, the administrative dean ofProtestant churches in Berlinsince 1945. Dr. Grueber discuss¬ed his work during and afterWorld War II with the savingand rehabilitation of the GermanJews and his own more recentexperiences with Communism inGermany.Speaker during the third sessionwas Rev. George Webber, oneof the founders of the East Har¬lem Protestant parish.SportsThe varsity soccer teamwill have its tirst practice to¬day at 3:30 p.m. on StagrgField. Interested studentsshould see Coach Retell aboutequipment.There are ten games scheduledincluding a trip to St. Louis, Mis¬souri.• ——■' i— him , »Dr. MargaretMead writes ofSEXON THECAMPUS:THE NEWM0RM.IIYin OctoberREDBOOkon sale nowI SOUSTI Dl ZAGREBFamed Yugoslavian Chamber EnsembleANTONIA JANIGRO — Conductor-soloistSUN., OCT. 14, 3:30 P. M.STUDEBAKER THEATREFirst of Four Concert in the Artists SeriesPresented by Chicago Musical College of Roosevelt UniversitySingle Admission: $4, $3.50, $2.50, $2 •For resevation and information, write or telephoneRoosevelt University Public ConcertsRoom 928 • 430 $. Michigan Ave.. Chicago 5; WA 2-3S8S. Ext. 359| WELCOME BACK!| We have in our North Self Service Area| Textbooks Student Supplies| Trade books Magazines and Newspapers1 In our South Clerk Service Area we havet Typewriters Gifts and Novelties2 Tape Recorders IMen's and Women's WearJ Photographic Supplies Snack ®ari Tobacco CounterV For your convenience while shopping, please use the free coin returnilockers at the South East EntranceThe University of Chicago Bookstore5802 ELLIS AVENUEHours: Mon. thru Fri. 8 - 5; Sat. 8 • 12Z Open AH Day Sat, Oct. 6