University of Chicago - Cap and Gown Yearbook (Chicago, IL)
- Class of 1954
Page 1 of 272
Cover
Pages 6 - 7
Pages 10 - 11
Pages 14 - 15
Pages 8 - 9
Pages 12 - 13
Pages 16 - 17
Text from Pages 1 - 272 of the 1954 volume:
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3716 llmmsity 0f Kilicago gap and WW, I 95 4 3 aw f: 601x1tmt5 oThe University Page 7 oChicago Today Page 53 0 Housing Page 69 oActivities Page 89 o Graduates Page l95 3716 university l 11 12 THE CHANCELLOR WHEN Chancellor Kimpton look office in 1951, he inherited three major problems: deteriora- tion of the neighborhood, an unbalanced budg- et, and a shrinking student body. Since then, most of his efforts have been directed toward finding solu- tions for them. This year the first results were begin- ning to be apparent: at well organized neighborhood campaign was getting blight areas cleared, and the budget achieved an iiuneasyhi balance. The student population continued to drop; so the Chancellor spent a great deal of time during the autumn quarter tour- ing the country meeting high school officials to ex- plain the college and to encourage them to send their students here. In addition to all this, the Chancellor and his wife tto whom a separate page should be devotedi have made a real effort to meet the faculty and stu- dents. The Kimptons were very popular ... particu- larly with the students e when he was Dean at Stan- ford. In fact they are still recalled from time to time in the student newspaper there. This popularity promises to grow here. The ieaders of most student activities were invited to form a Chanceiioris Council this year, and meetings have been marked by ex- tremely frank communication on the problems of the University. Chancellor and Mrs. Kimpzon greet Marie Schroer at reception in, Ida Noyes. In background, Unieersity Marshall Harold Anderson and Student Aide Nancy Cushwa. Below, left: The Kimptons with students at Inter-Club Dance. Right: A meeting ofthe Chancellgris smieht council. This particular occasion was probably the first time students have seen, the Inside of the Manse m many years. 13 Dyan Simmer Dean Strozier piays Santa for settiwmem chiMr-Pn. THE DEAN'S OFFICE HE Dull! uf Sllldt'nls' Uffiljlr. lilldl'l' tlll' Ilil'm'v Ttinn of Dunn Ruhm't .Vl. Slt'c'aziel; nl'gullizw alml m-nrllinutw Unhu-rsil-x' rvlalinm m Hllllivnls. This offlit'v appoints under its jurimlivtiun anti Hupvr- viniun a dull! of erdrnts fur t'urh nvlmnl um! tlvfinrs his dllliCH. TIN: ol'l'ic't' 0f Sludt'lll Arlivities ill the Rtlynolds CIIIII i5 u Ial'am'h amrl t'xlvnsilm 0f lhv Dam 0f SllIdPIIFS uffim- and the DiT'HJIUF 0f Sludl-nl Ar- liviiiL's i9. uppuinti'li IJy Donn Sll'ozit-I'. le ufficf is also in cllzll'gt- uf c-um'tlinuling 1hr student n'lulinm 0f sIHhh organizatimh amrl H'I'Vil'PF as the nffit'v nf Mhnissions. Test Adminielmtitm. Atlvimrs. Cullnwl- ing. Alhlr-Iir-s, Sludvnl Hmltin, Rt-gistrul'. zlm'l Fullumv ships and Su-hulunhips. The University Housing SYritem, Uffirfal Pllhlil'iltitnlh'. and VDIPIHHF Admin- istration are under the supervision and direr-tinn 0f tht D6311 of Students office. BURSAWS OFFICE Lr-fr: Bumm- slerr Carton pauses fur a mnmmt. Right: :1 staff rnsmrmg of minumion r'rmrzsvlm's. :Urx. :1chan am! Miss Wiriu'wm. N'mm 19f! to rigl'rH Charla WCman. Jlfisx Wit-Hrem. Gloria Barbra, Mrs Ruff: Bonner, MrCren Hazlett .-4 9. :'5:0;1: Dirpclor 0f Admissionsk rum Dorothy :11. N. Slmrrirllr mmr ,-'Issi5fmzr Dmn Ruth s'h'rCam. Below: The Btu'sar'k office on m: arrange rfrn'. ADMISSIONS, AND THE REGISTRAR Regisimr Wilfiam E. .1Coffpilfrhf15 in rm HM 2033 Cmnmf Rvm'mmirm. ACTIVITIES OFFICE HI.q anit'v haul .'I Irig war in 1053.1. Nut rmly u'vl'n' vfmngvs in r-tllilvlll :Iviixiliw lvrlwll'd MT? in Tirnynulds Hull 2H2. Juut tht' muff arm took llw Imul in rvjmrmmling urn! vnruulxlging m-rtuin uf tht' kt'y iniViliPF. Big prnjr'vt E-nn' III f.':';l1' um meh Pl'nnl. 113, Gravel Srhr'wlm. N'I'I'I'IHI'IX' tn lllw IIJII'VE'TIJI' fur mnw lu'n yearn. lvft fur ullnthm' inla. mllrh In lhl' l'vgrvt of many students who had fnulul hrr palivnlw pleaunnl. uml nnxiuw In In- he-IpfuJ. siborp 50ft Dr'rpr'nn' H'ENirm: Birmhmmr um n-m'z'mf I0 Ms Fair for this sfmf. .4 wry nnm'vm fair. Left: 3111's. Ruff: Hnrwenr'r. H'w npu' .N'Pt'r'PffH'-1'. 01'? 31W first day. Below Jeff: sixxfsfrm! Di'rPr'mr .Urs. NuHin m anoihnr iH'rn'r, picruw. Bainw: Mm. MuNinas first name is .Hnm. rm! LUMP- n'a. but this piciurr' from HIP Student! Union Remix 399mm! mo good rm: to 1:50. 8716 ' WWW gdumtiwxz 1': Severn! of rho arn'clvs on Chicago Education which. follow were u-WerH: by members of Hm administration and faculty of the schools. Karin Humor mu given complete editorial freedom. As a rcsul'! the mrinfm differ in both subject maner am! rreamrent. I: THE COLLEGE Author Robert. Streetcar became Dean of Ike Coffege lhis winter when Dean Ward joined the Ford Foundai tion. The new Dean reaches English in the College. By RmaI-rn'r STREI-z'rI-HL Dmn of 1M CnHPgP h HUME crenicrs 0f thc: highvr learning. thv Imdor- gmtluarlc i UFI'il'llllJlll has a lletw-y to slay put. in hv al slalimmry uml urnunmntul feature of lhe academic landscape, juhl like lht- flagpoh- and the slulm- 0f Mina Mult'r in frnnl of llm shult'nl union building. This is a grml mnvenicncc for whims of yearhnnkn. Una: they get in type a reasonably ac- curate elvmunl 0f n-hul lhv aluulmnic: program i5. 1ht'i1' annual vhnre of revision is not at all taxing: freshen up a metaphor here and HIPI'H. overhaul the syntax. and include mention of the new senior smninar de- signed to integrate the work in animal hushanrlry emcl philoaophy Hhe course ulrmdy popularly knmvn 0n campm as Ham Hf Hegr-IL This tag! course is: not available to the editors of CAP AND GUWN. The University of Chivago. from the lime of William Raincy Harper, the first presi- dent, haH maintained an awtivc interest in undergrad- uate education: the livelinms: of this mnvcrn has resulted in frequent. sometimes drastic. reshaping oi the currir-uhnn. The year we are :rhl'onicling hag heen no exception 10 this traditinn of inquiry. argument. and alteration in undergraduate education at Chicago. The Iasl time we looked. the B.A. was one place; since them it has moved a year or two farther along in the studenfs career. The itinerant scholar has been a Stock figure since the dawn of learning. hut at Chi- cago even the degrees are poripatetic. 2U The College program for the past tlei'a-ule ezln he. summed up in the relatively simple equation: AB. equals general edut'atinn. Most 0f the new prngrums which go into effect next autumn. and whit-h will aim be available to students now in lhe University. yield a somewhat more rmnplii'aled equation: AB. tor 5.3.. as the. case may hel equals general edut-ation plus specialized education. That is, students entering the University from now on will, in addition to re.- ceiving a substantial and integrated general etlueatinn in the College. have an opportunity to inelucle within their undergraduate enurRe slurly in history. 01' geolo- gyt 0r botany. or economics, 01' other speriul fields. It in expeeted that theqe joint huehelnrls programs. eomhining general and specialized education. van normally he completed in fan r years following grud- uatimi from high st'hrml. The basic equation mentioned earlier e A.B. equals general education e i5 nut to he diseartled in the new curriculum. For the student who wishes to devote ilir- undergraduate Clillt'ulilltl tu developing skills and acquiring perspective in the lilieral arts and sciences, the Ct'allege will offer its own luu'helur's degree. program. In this program, al'ler mmpleting the required general courses in the College. the stu- dent will enter a yearlong tutorial course in which he will pursue mm'e lhm'oughly am individual interest which he has discovered during his earlier years in the College. In individual Hllltlit'h' under the direction of his tutor, the student will take a limited number of courses pertinent to his special interest, will write a bachelor-s essay on a topic suggested hy llllh interest, and will have an unusual amount of freeilnm to make use of the resources of the University. The. College has long been interested in experimenting with dif- ferent methods of developing students, capacity for independent work; pi'eceptmtial courses and the hon- ors program represented earlier attach! on this proh- lem. The new tutorial program may provide an effective solution hy adding to the curriculum in gen- eral education a real opportunity for the student to work independently in a field that he. has ehcsen and, to some extent, defined. Top right: Smiling John Davey, Demi- of Students in the col- lege. Bottom right: fuseph Schwab, William Rainey Harper Professor of Natural Sciences. : As a result of the eunienlar Changes of the paint yea 1,, then. the Chicago student will hate to :leeitle for l11111selfwhat he wants l'Ilr- haehelorie degree to lltl'lllLll? and to mean. He may ehuose t0 det'ole his years Of undergraduate study 111 general education in the Col- lege. with the year of added tutorial work. If he is; accepted for graduate unrk in lam business. mt lihrary science. 01' if he enteru' the Social Scieneen Division. he ltiay, 1111011 r-uwessi'nl eu111pletion of at year Of atl- Vanced study. FH't-thtf the new College BA. Ur he may wish to ClJI'Illtlllt general educaticm with spe- cialized we-rk in the lJiviAions 0f the l'hnnunitiee. Biological Sciener-s. nr Physical Seienees. Whichever tlerisjun llll' etudent makes. he will have eonsicleruhh: n-xperieltee with the unusual eur- rieulum which College students ltttt't' known during the past ten years. Although the amount of College work varies- somewhat from program to program. all the new pathway; to the hnehelorie degree were ere- aletl in the light til the lfnivrsrnity's mntinning mn Vietimt that at thoughllttlly-planned ancl vigornusly taught general ultn'zttinn lH essential In any serious undergraduate progrmn. Urc'linal'ily. tum the work in general erlurralinn will he heavily mntrmitrntetl i Iltt' early years of the c-111'1'ir.-11l11111 m that the utntlent who is lltttlez'irh-Il allmut hi.- lnlure t'ltlll'r-t' will have 21 chance in reflw-I. to investigate. and In 1111111111119 helht't- making 1111 hin 1111111l. Ix; 't-S. Above: ttThe Lonely Cmn-rlf' Dm-r'd Riesnmn and Rene! Denney. ca-authars of Left: Cobb Lerture Hall. Although the development of the curricula out- lined ahmre was spurred by the desire to achieve. more effective artienlation of general and speeialized edu- cation for the student who comes to Chicago after finishing high selinol. the University will continue to welemne qualified entrants who have mmpleted the sophomore or junior year of high sehonl. In the case of high :ehnnl sophomores these programs uill 11019- mallV 191111ire a total of five. team of study. palt or all of the additional new being dext'oted to studies flom Wllltll qualified high- school g1 dtluates are ex- empted hy plaeement test 01' hecanse of the nature of their haehelmiis programs. The high-sehool sopho- more thus saves at leaet a full year. Thm. the event; of the past year have produced a Te-tiefinitinn and relocation of the Chicago bach- elm q degree. ac well as a new and closer relation between the College and the reset of the Universitv. The new titrettigmnents do not clisplaee 9 instead. they inempntate 9 the hest elements of the Univer- sitfs work in general education. which 111ight he enumerated as ft'tllows: First. 1111 integrated program of liberal studies, l01'11111h1tetl and taught hy a College Faculty whose major intereats annl energies are devoted to this task. Seemnl, 11 traulilion of placement tests which take acemmt not only of the entering student's formal schooling hut ulm of knowledge and emupetence he may have. auluirml in the EJLlthlii of spwiai intvrusth in muaic. 01' art. or literature. or Sl il'llt't .'. and a tradi- tion of comprehensive examitmtiom whit-h nwasure the studentss rate of progress through hie Qitltiit??? imlc- pendentiy 0f 11121.45 attendance and lilt' mhjec-tivc opin- ions of his instrmtors. Third clasu'oum materialis itllti twhnitlucs through which the student is- im-ited nnt to nhsm'h precligestwcl utTrJullts of what has happenmi in the arts or in society or in the scivnmbsi nm- to iicten to an imtntvtnr? moun- Ingue mi :1 favorite suhje-c-t; hut rather to immmw himself in nriginui thwnments and art works! nmi under a skiihzti inr-trurtmk guirlamre t0 ham to dis- cuss them in a mature funhitm with hi; feihm's. These t'iEi'TNuIHS aw cvntl'ul tn the mmlutrl of gen- eral education at Chirugn. They are present under the m-w dispvnsalinn. us: lht-y were under the old. They will IW malh'lttlinmi anti Sll'PllgIhEIlPd. This is not to Rely. nf r t.:L1:'.-w, that mmlifit'ations will never occur. It Ilow mean that. if aml when modift'ations take phure. they will not hr the resuit of a citi'f'nds, an inviaihie drift like that rnf thr: lemmings tnwat'ti the mini walt-I's 0f thr- Nr'rrwngian fifII'Ii-ii they Will spring. i'zllhmx mit 0f t-IhIt-ulintml debate and dew iiheratiml. A Fab experiment in in. Sci. F1 .x- E $- 6 W; H .2- Ex 2? MARK ASHIN .kxblum PI'HIt'M-nr ml Engiihh EDWARD BXSTIKK .Muialanl Prufussur :If Humanitits IR; MAI RICE B. KRAMER Prufrp-ur uml lllmirman Hi Illnnanhic; JOHN R. DAVEY 'Xsmlciatzr mersaur Dean nil Htmicnli oi llHl'llClTlilil'n' Hmfl itfsi i 1e. : ALBERT 3L II 8 YES Aasociatc Professnr KNOX tI IIILL Abt-iirlalll Prnl'ersa'nr nf Englixh uf Humanities RillH-Hin I.. LEVIN Anwlanl Prnh-saur ml Endish 3: I 1,,- Al GI'STI'S F. B:H'SCII .-'sz.-'l:'-1am Prnfremmr rJf Mallwmmivg EIL-xRIJ-IS C. RICH. :Uwiutanl Profumr rlf Humanities REI'EL N DENNEY Ahairriate PIan-mr IRVING T. DIAMOND -hai-alant Prnirnnr ml Siincial Sviuncee nf Natural Sciz-nm-s STANLEY P. Ill'ClHRT Ham Pfllft'FFl'T MEYER W. ISENBERG .Xsbislunl Prulesn-nr nf llallwmativs OI Humaniiies tJIIRISTHN W. M M IRA l 'l-IR .IK-Hn'iuh- PrUfIH-r-ur VIOLA MANDERFELD . issuciatv Prnlrssur uml ilhuirman nl nf IIiSmry Cr'rmam SIaH .7 f 0 2. MANl'EL BILSKY Assislant Prnfcesur nf Elwlish WILMA R, EBBITT KSHMHIII Prnfrswr and Chairman Hf English StaH - . V. ILLIAM KARI SH shenuiulr Pruft-ssm nE Mallu'matirs v; 1 - av aid JOHN ti. JHYHELD Asmslam I'rnfrrgmr nl Nallrrul Sc-icncvs Uta 6allcye MiLLARD PE BINYON Asmcia'le Prufwsnr of Humanities DONALD L FABIAN Assistant Professor and Acting Chairman of Spanish Siafi BENJAMIN S. BLOOM Profuar-nr :Jf Dcparnm-nl of Educalion i: g. Elf. E? AE HAROLD J. F. CALL Assistant Professor of Natural Sciences GLAD Y8 CAMPBELL AFFIH'iJIt' PI'HIQ'SH'HI uf Humunjlit'x BENSON E. CINSBURG Associale Prufeasur and Chairman of Natural Suiencts FRITZ CASPARI hssistunl PrtJt-smr d German aml Hislnry HERBERT LAMM Asmz'iale Prtitfez'sor 0f Philosophy WILLIAM H. MCNEILI. :F-i's'lanl mer-smr HHII Chairman of Histnrju EDWARD M. IIAYDON Associate Professor Uf Art GWIN J. KOLB Assistant Professor of English Assistant Professur of English ALEXAN DER KOLIN Associate Prnfcssnr of Physio; CHRISTINE M. MCGUIRE Assistant Professor and Examiner ?mdty I ROBERT L. McCAUL MARGARET KRAEMER Assistam Professor of Natural Sciences CROSVENOR W. COOPER Associate Professor and Chairman of the Department of Music Associate Professor of Humanities MAYNARD C. KRUEGER Associate Professor of Economies JOHN G. HAWTHORNE Associate Prolessor of Classical Languages and Chairman of Greek and Latin . .9; 9:- 0-. W DONALD MEIKLEJOHN Assodale Professor of Philosophy JANE OVERTON tMrs. Georgel Assistant Professor uf Namtal Sciences JOEL SEIDMAN Associate Professor and Chairman uf Social Sciences Staff ii i g GEORGE J. GERHARD E. O. MARVIN MAYERS HELEN S. MIMS METCALF MEYER Assistant Professor Assistant Professor Associate Professor Associate Professor of Social Science of Social Science of German 01 Economics A Vlrmv '. vu- th ; lg GEORGE L. PLAYE Assistant Professor and Chairman of French Slaff m V $ HENRY RACO Assislam Professor of Humanities EA ; $3 ALFRED L. PI'TNAM Associ alt: Professor EDWARD W. ROSENHEIM JR. and Chairman of Assislant Professor Mathematics Staff of Humanities V 17 7x I $ur- y lb 4; SIDNEY J'. HOWARD STEIN CALVIN W. RICHARD J. SOCOLAR Assistant Prolessor STILLMAN STORE Assistant Professor of Natural Sciences Assistant Professor Assistant Professor of Phybical Sciences of Social Scicnces of History RICHARD M. CHARLES W, DAVID C. WEAVER WEGENER WILLIAMS Associale Professor Assistant Professor Associate Profesezor of English of Humanities of Humanities Chairman of UMP. Staff 3715 60mm BEATRICE MINTZ LEO NEDELSKY Assislan! Professor Assnciale Profesmr 0f Biological Science of Natural Scienn- DURBIN HENRY W1 SANS ROW'LAND Associalr Profrwnr Associate Professor of English of French ROBERT E. JOSHUA C. STREETER TAYLOR Associate Professor Asaiaranl Prufesgnr of English of An Dean of L'nliege l. W 4 In. W IZAAK WIRSZUP RICHARD R Assistant Professor WOH'L of Mathematics Associate Professor of Social Sciences ?mlty E. Su- 3 EUGENE R WILLIAM O'MEARA CIIY C OMEH JR, NORTHROP Professnr 0f Pllilnsnphy Assislam Professor William Rainey nf Nalural Frience Harper Professor of Maihcmatits :43 3 f t. .adlv ,......- .n 4-K r? w a AARON SAYVETZ STEFl-KN IL HCHI'LTZ JOSEPH J. SCHWAB Associate Profescor Associate Prufmmr Wilfiam Rainey of Nalural SCIENCES of German Harper Professor of Nalural Scicnrrs 7: , .- 1M W- 4' .4 A: 3K . I $ E :5 X f xii ' f RUSSELL B. SYLVIA L. THRFPP ROSALIF. H. WAX THOMAS Associalc Pruivssur flirt Murray! Professor of of Social Scienct-s Agsislan'r Prniessor Humanities of Anthropology HAROLD ZYSKIND Assistant Professor Of I'lllmanilit's 2: BIOLOGICAL SCIENCES hr Merle C. Cott-teri P1113. Professor of Botany. Associate Dean Division of Biologicat Sciences IGH-SCHOOL graduates of 1953 will have the opportunityr to commence a three-year me. medical curriculum at the University of Chi- cago uhieh provides all the principal educational values of the previous four-yeal' course. This eurrieu- him is the result of the eonihinetl educational expe- rience 0f the College and the Division of Biological Sciences. 1t retains the advantages of superior general education and a thorough pre-profeseional training. For a good many years the education at premedi- cal students at the University Of Chicago has been of the highest caliber. This is evident hy the perfonn ance of the Chieago-prepaired students on the Medieal College Admission Test. by their performance in medical Schools. and by their performance after they have graduated. Dr. Lowell T. Coggeshatt, Frederick H. Rmvson. Professor of Medicine. Dean of the Division of Biological Sciences. um, .. .........t..w,-M-w-o,wt The results of the Medical College Admission Test give what at present is the most objective evidence of the comparative quality of premedieal training of- fered in the country. Year after year the classes that have received their trainingr at Chicago have made distinguished records: on this; test. In the years that the Chicago group has not rated firFt nalionaiiy, it has been topped by the groups of only one or two small and highly selective colleges. This distin- guished record has been maintained consistently down to the present time. Complete and ohjeetive data 011 the performance of Chicago-prepared students in the medical schools throughout the country have become available only recently through the services 01 the Association of American Medical Colleges. These data show an im- pressively greater number of Chicago-prepared stu- dents in the highest third of their medical school classes than in the lowest third. This was to be ex- pected, since it was already known that there was a significant positive correlation hetween the Medical College Admission Test and the giadee subsequently made in the Course work of the medical coileges. Lev cally, it i? the opinion of the medieal school faculty that Stlldents receiving their premedival school train- ing at Chicago rank higher, on the average, than those from elsewhere. Perfonnanee after graduation from medical school is imposaihle to evaluate ohjeetively. One must de- pend on general impressions gained from various: sources. In connection with the twenty-fifth anniver- sary of Billings Hospital, whir-h was celebrated in October, 1952, the roster of the WLDCS that had been graduated in the last quarterveentury was examined with some care. The distinguished accomplishments of these graduates added up to an impressive total, and it was noted that many of the outstanding mem- bers of the group had received their prernedical as well as their medical training at the University of Chicago. When we attempt to understand what mayr have led to these: t'PRlIitS. we are forced to recognize that a good many factors are involved. The most readily identified factor is a Characteristic policy of the Uni- versity of Chicago which has aiieeted its premedical as well as most of its other students. The University has not only maintaineci high Standards in the essen- tial pre-pmfessional course; hut has- eoneerned itself intensively with the general edueation components of the premedieal curriculum. Though the general education components: of pre- medieal education at Chicago have continued to he very effective for over two decades. this does not mean that they have remained static. They have been re- peatedly modified with steady improvement in qual- ity but also substantial increase in quantity. As a re- suit.- most of the high school graduates of recent years Seu'ati 11 t'i'ght. Earnest D. Burton Distinguished Service Professor of Zoology. have found it necessary to spend a full four wars in eompieting the premedieal curriculum. Mum mo;- pective premedies. together with their parents. are reacting to this situation in a perfectly underctand- able way. Although they recognize that the i'uur-ycar premedicai unl'iculum is ext'ellent. they feel that they cannot afford that much time. If the. principal educa- tional values of the fr'Jmu-vear curriculum cotlhl. through readjustment. he retained in a next program which would occupy only three years, the f.ihit.'ago Curriculum would become available to many prospetu tive premediea who could not uthtrmise afhml it. This readjustment hae: now ht-en acemnplisheti. The new thl'ee-year program ie the result of the com- bined educational experience of the College and the Division of Biological SI'iEl'lCEH. It is ehal'm-tei'ized by a sound articulation of the course work that i-a' pre- sented by the. two faculties. Both faculties arr.- now confident that the new arrangement will retain the. ad- vantages of superior general education and a thorough pre-professional education. The fourteen comprehensive examinations leading to the Chicago HA. enter a hme of suhjet't matter Which includes relatively little natural Science. FOIL when the College expanded its ti'urrit-uhim from seven to fourteen eomprehensivesi most of the expansion was in the nonseience au' ms. Furthmimorei the seiem-e which remained in the College mn'rieuhlm was re- duced in stihjeet-matter t'tmrerage in favor of hustainecl treatment of fewer topic-g. a change which mew well have served the educatimial interests of many stu- dents but which furnished the premedic with it rather meager natural science coverage for his purposes. The total etiect of these several changes forced the Chicago premedic to ispend fnur years following high school in qualifying for our School of Medicine: i Joseph I. Ceifhumt. Associate Professor of the Department of Biochemistry. and a fraction years covering the nevesadry achlilicmal pre-pmfr:resir.mai sc-ience trounce. The training u 8.:- excellent. hut. as pointed out hefm'e. the time re- quired was felt tn he exorhitunt by a great many pros: pective premedies. It ix hoped that this pit-ture will ehange in the neat r future a: the result of articulation hetween College and upper Division course work H'itittil u'iii i-nnhle high sr-hool gmrhmtert to t-nmpiete pt'mtledimi imrL in three yti'atttin The 3.8. in Biologieai Ha-ient-ez-s haul heen dropped shortiy after the College etul'twi to award ite- B.A.t with the result that students could seeure nr; rie- Dr. Anton I. Carlson Fronts P. Hiron Distinguished Service Projesmr Emeritus of Department of Physiology. two and a fraction years in preparing for the ten in eleven comprehensix-Fes needed for his HA. mul i'me gree in this area ehort 01 the N15. This required the BA. 0f the College plus three alltlilimml years of work in the upper Division 01' a total nl six yeait'e of work for the typical high school gi'm'ltlate. A new 3.3. degree ill the University of Chimgn will now he availahle, and it will require only inm- yeat's of work hy the typieal high school graduate tthe M.Su when properly planned. will require one Lllltli- tional yearl. It should he elliphasized that this iu not a return to the BS. of the earlier era it is instead a return to a degree that will he awarded jointly by the College and the Division of Biological Seieiteesi It provides a unique opportunity for distribution of both specialized courses and courses in general t'tltl- cation ever the entire four years. It does Hut theres- sal'ilyl include complete fullillment of BA. require- ments but does include a suhstantial and halaneetl general education in the major arts and seieneee. It also includes fulfillment of the major sequence re- quiremente 0f the particular department that awards the. degree tag... Botany, Zoology. ete..1. The establishment of the new BS. program has been made possible. by adjustments of two types. tat High school graduates who are candidates for the BS. in Biological Sciences are to he held for a iitaximum of ten College compi'eheneives. tbl 0f the courses which prepare the students for these ten comprehen- sives, three have. heen adjusted to serve the pre-pro- feesinnal needs of biology students: a college physics course with laboratory work may he suhstituted for the. more generalized physical science course that is taken by other College Students: First-Vear hiology has been recast so that it will provide. a more serviceable preparation for secondiyear biology; and the alterna- tive form of second-year hiolngy that will he avail- able to biology maiors is the. Divisional Biology Se- quence that i: administered hy the faculty of the Di- vision of Biological Sciences. The. College Adminietration has indicated that ad. justmente tal and NH. available for future BS. can- didates, Should he made available. for premeclic'al students aleo. BV taking advantage of these adjust- Top: Dr. Leon. 0. Jacobson. Director of Argonne Cancer Research Hospital, and Dr. Robert I. Hasterlik. Associate Director. Middle tin white coalt : Dr. Dwight E. Clark. Professor and Secretary of the Deparnnent of Surgery. Bottom: Carl R. Moore, Professor aiid Chairman of the Department of Zoology. mellls, high school graduates mm satisfy ullmiesiml re- quirements for medical school in three years. In thom- thl'ee years they will covmt the essentials of lllt' 3.5. program except for the major sequence in ;1 spvt-ihl- department. They will he ahlr' to include all lllt' prru professional work in physica PllE'llllFllty. and biology that is required hy most Ittt'tlit'al sthools. And they will have a type of comprehemivc course work in the nonscience areas of general mlumlion that ia a prod- uct of over twenty years of vxpurienw on thr part ol- the College Faculty. In addition. an arl'ungmwut is now heng COIlSideIWl wlwI'PIJy SOI'I'IE 0f thv lhreeivear premedica may I'PL'II'lYE the 3.5. after mmpletimt 0f the Freshman yPa r in medical srhool. Many medical srhools haw lwen and still are en- couraging their applit.-aut-; to prepare llwmwlvw hy four years of premedical erhwation in college. This i9 an exceedingly sound recmmm-mlatirm. sinr-r: tho premeclimtl students who llU cmly thrw years of um'k at most colleges fail to imhu'le any very suhstalaliul general education in the nr'nnsciem'w areas. Unclcr lhv new arrangement at the University of Chicago. how- ever. highly satisfut'tnw training in the nc'mm-iernw areas will he provided tn the thrw-year Hlulh'nl. In this connection it Should ht: noted that repent g?nr'rul education that; adminiktrrrml on 21 national scale haw- made possihle a Cmnparlsun of Chicago BAX: turm- ally thrvc-year thlentsl uml the BAA- of other in- stitutions tusually hmr-year stutlentsl. In all the component areas of them: general mlucaltimt tests the average performami-t- 0f the Chivagu students fell either in the top 10 penwnt 0r lllt' Fit't ljtllE.l 10 perr-ent of the national scale for scnior ' mujurs in llluul- areas. The l-'nr'ver5itjy Hashim! Sun'm n, 31 Trrptier Irit't't'. Heart of NW Dirinun ixmw'utw meemor .W'nr'mmi Mat'tetm. tituttrmmt of the Committee rm Hie -'iifrt.tfr'3 t Ut'gree in Ummmttir'a. n J 1? 3: THE HUMANITIES From 6 Tail: given by A. S. P. WOODHOUSE 0 PHRASE comes more trippingly from the tongue of University Presidents, and others set in authority over 115. than i'the plight of the Humanities today? And if there is a note of genuine concern there is also very often an overtone of accu- sation. Humanists, it is impiied, have failed to adjust their efforts to the world as it is in this year of grace or, at the very least, have failed to take. a sufficiently positive line in explaining what the Humanities are and what they can aeenmplish. I do not propose to talk about the plight of the Humanities: e there are few more dreary, platitudinous, or unprofitable suh- jeete e but to take 11p the second challenge and see once more what can he said about their nature and their special function in Liberal Education. For. 1111- like the Sciences and the Social Sciences. their fune- tion is; purely educational. Too often, I think, we Humanism are put on the defensive because. without protest, we. allow 0111' critics to formulate 0111' ends for 119 and then to re- proach us for not attaining them. Too often, indeed. we are tempted to acquiesce in the formulations he- eause they seem to assign to the Humanities an impmu tant and varied role. But1 to Say nothing of honesty. it is bad poiicy to accept orders for goats which you cannot deliver. The public mind is pathetically conscious of i11v security at every levei of contemporary life. The thoughtless knew enough to he afraid. The more thoughtful suspect that the twentieth century has gained the whole. world and lost its 90111. and that the very world which it has gained is. 011 these terms. insecureiy held and full of menace. T0 901119 peren- nial questions the Physical and Biological Sciences have no direct answer, and the answers returned by the Social Sciences: are at best incomplete. So the public. mind turns in mingled hope and despair t0 the Humanities. What peepte hope. hut do not veryr confidently expect. of the Humanities. at teaet as: humanistic edu- cation is at present organized. may he summarized under three captions. 1. The first is Eriifimtion. Unlike the Sciences, and even the Social Seieneest the Humanities tit is: saidt are concerned with iivaiuee. And they are urgently needed in the world today. to balance, if not indeed to counteract. the influence of Science with its emphasis upon hrute fact. One of their principal functions: is to transmit to the present whatever can be salvaged 0f the wisdom of the past. 011 the extent and diffieutty of this operation there is sharp diver- gence of opinion, partly concealed by the widerread assumption that the Humanities are. after 311. less concerned with the miiture 0f the mind them with the culture of the feelings. They are not, it is held. solely or mainly intetlectual in scope and purpohe. hut ethical and even in a vague. and undogmatie way religious. Certainly in large areas of the Western world the. Humanities have tended to he. regarded as in some sort the handmaids of religion. Today thew:f are often cast for the yet more cluhious role of its residuary legatees, charged to supply the patent defi- ciencies in a Wehanschmumg dominated hy the Phys- ical and Biological Sciences. So much for the first and most Compiifaled series: of ends thrust upon the Humanities. 2. A second group of demands may he gathered under the caption Democracy. The Humanities. we are told, should he iiemocratized and pull their weight in the great venture of educating in and for democracy. Here confusion is compounded, since quite as few people are ahie to define denim- racy as to define the. Humanities. The ta st; of educat- ing in and for democracy. the Humanities are tn Rhare with the Social Sciences. which are to study and ad- vance the techniques of democracy while the Humani- ties tby means never very elearlv speeifiedt are to foster and inculcate its spirit and, if possible. keep it from destroying itself. 3. The third and final group mav he Rttmmed up under the Caption of the Practicaf or the Productive: they are variants of the. same demand. When the emphasie fails on the Pradiml. the role assigned to the Humanities is-a definite and r-m'resprmri- ingly humhle. It is virtually rvs'trieteti tn the tech- niques 0f t'ontmunir-atimi: haw tn read. iieten. speak. and write. with the requisite degree of etfieiencv. The practical aim, in proportion as it is narrowly conceived, eliminates half the. tiiHcipiittes in the Hu- manities. But the kindred emphasis, which we have desig- nated the HPmdtwtive, seems to he increasingly common. By its exponents the Humanities arc exhort- ed to Come out from the shadow of the past. zthamion their salvage work, which ire men: zmtiquurianimi any- way, and address themselvm tn the present am! the. future. AH training in the Sciences prrntur-es Htfittll' tists who in turn prorhIr-e more science. su training in the Humanities should iHsue in t-reative effort. Engv lish studies, for examphr. a'houhl pmdunse poets and novelists, and might. much mme than at prwenl. to he directed to that end. At the very least. the Humani- ties should pl'ndur'e critim and r-ommenlatom ready to pronounce 011 the eontemponn'y St'f'ttf'. and to do so economically should rrmr-entrate their attention mt the. products 0f Our own LI'JY. not forgetting the metiizl of mass comnumir'atiom the tuikiesa, the radio, and television. Thus tltt' pnwsription mm. Now what we are to seek in our diwussinn is a point of view. and a definition of the Hunmnities. from which to criticize these and similar asslmmtimw. not with a detel'miimtimt to reject them ttttt 0t hancL hut rather to inquire what elements of truth lhvv may contain, or riietm't, or suppress. Left: 865501 Franzen, Associate Professor of the Department of Cemmnfc Languages. Right: Warner A. Wick, Associate Professor of the Delmrtment of Philosophy. II What then. do we mean by the Humanities? His:- toricaliy considered. the term seems to indicate tyou will agreet three or four distinct hut not unrelated ideas or centres of meaning. 1. Etymology emphasize; the eonneetion with man. The Humanities: ai'e subjects of sludv eentering upon the life of man. But it may he ohieeted with justice that this does not sufficiently distinguish the Humanities: from the Sor-iai Scieneest which also deal with man. in a particular aspeet. or even from hintngy when it Chooses to direct its attention to him. 2. Well. to take for a moment another line: from an early date at Tenet as early :18 Caxton i the term Humanities tor. in strict aeeuraey. the singular. Hitmanityi was contrasted with Divinity, as: the one dealt with man on the merely human level. and the other embraced the whole theme of revealed truth and Christian doctrine. If this distinction he insisted upon, it evidently hm: its hearing on the grand Renais- sance-effort at compromise. at a dual frame of refer- ence. later to be known as Christian Humanism. and not less certainly itC hearing on the question of the relation of the Humanities to religion today. 3. A third meaning attached to the term Humanity- heips to narrow the issue in another way. and to sug- gest one distinetion between the Humanities and other studies: which bear on the life of man. By Cicero the word humanities had been used to mean something like intellectual euitivatimi Ot' tas we might sayt the proc- ess and remit; of liheral. and indeed literary. educa- tion. And here we should oheewe that. while achieved by and with the acquisition of knowledge. the end product was not simply a more iearned heing hut a more cultivated: one who had somehow responded to the union of humane t'ontenl and perfect form in what he. etudietL and had thereinr succeeded in developing and in measure l'ierfeeting his Specifically human capacities of thought, feeiing. and hehas'iour. Htt- mmtitas was the very antithesia of izharharitv? one of whose aeeeptahie renderings in classical Latin is inhmnanitas: and the term humanitv was: thus from the first not merely deSI.'riptix-'e hut nonnative. For three eenttll'iee after the Renaissance came to England. the dominant role of the Humanitiec in tiherai edueution remained unquestioned: and in the fourth century of rapid change. when the Sciences and Social Seienees made good their claim to a Dtaee heeide the Humanities. and the. Humanities: them- selves underwent important extension and multiplica- Top: Cllraxw'm am? Wiebofrfr. Bottom: Wiitiam T. Hutchinson. Professor of the Depart ment of History. Top: H. G. Creel, Projessm of the Departments of Oriental Languages and Literature and History. Chairman of the Committee on Far Eastern Civilizations. Bottom: Tsuen-hsyin Tsicn, Professor of the Department of Oriental Languages and Literature, Librarian of the Far Eastern Library. lion, their special connection with liberal education. while challenged. has not been broken. ln one's more hopeful moods it seems probable that the disaonear- ance of the Humanities will be postponed till our professional educationiets have completed the destrur- tion of liberal education itself. 41. In one respect the meaning of the term Hu- manities has changed since they first assumed their dominant role in liberal education. Then they meant tas everyone knowsl Greek and Latin. The Humanist was a student of the classics; the classics were pre- eminent, not only for their form. hut for their Content of human tas distinguished from divinel truth and wisdom; and the outcome Of their study was humanities in Cieerols sense. This historical situation is recorded in such phrases as studia humaniora and literae I'm- maniores. Times have Changed; and the decline of the classics must be matter of deep concern to every Humanist, not only because it is a portent and a warn- ing, but because it means a withering of the parent root. We may be thankful, however, that the tree has had sufficient vigour to strike new roots. And actu- ally it is possible to exaggerate, not the reality of the loss, but its extent and the degree to which it has altered the essential content of the Humanities. For the great Humanists of the Renaissance, the classics did not connote linguistic study alone, but nearly all the best literature, philosophy, and history then avail- able. The humanistic disciplines which have since emerged cannot, and should not attempt to replace the classics; but they have in fact exploited and ex- tended the fields once occupied by classical studies alone. 35 4: PHYSICAL SCIENCES The follmving is an artiele m1 basir reward: issuer! by the Division ASIC RESEARCH is the key to the mysteries of the univm-Re. It is the pathway along which man has traveled in his conquest over nature. Its discoveries have changed every aspect of our daily lives. Industry. wan; government, transportation. in- ternational polities. philosophyiall these and all other aspectt: of human life have been modified by the knowledge whirl: hasic t'eeearch has given us. But why basit' researchewhy not research in gen- eral why not just Hseience ? Because there is one fundamental tliflerence between basic research and applied research. The investigator in applied or developmental re- search takes the basic diacoveries and puts them to practical industrial use. Writhout him the basic dis- coveries would remain interesting, hut useless, ideas buried in academic journals in our libraries. But the investigator in basic research takes only the raw ma- terial of his own imagination and, with his disciplined curiosity, tries to answer the questions about the world surrounding him. Basic research is intended solely to extend matfs knowledge about the world of nature. It diflers from applied research in that it is not harnessed to the needs of the moment. Basic research poses its own questions and looks for its own answers in its own way. It must be allowed to operate freely, subject only to the discipline of scientific method. It cannot be con- trolled or hurried: it can only be encouraged and fostered. In an immediate practical sense, basic re- search cannot answer the question, LLW-hat good is itm? But without basic research, modem technology could not exist. Industry wants: all the new ideas it can get, and its laboratories have been stupendously successful in Kent Hall. known to college students as ttDisma! Seepage. The Institute of Nuclear Studies. taking fundamental ideas and turning them into use- ful products and processes. By and large, however, they have not generated fundamental knowledge them- selves. Where do the new ideas come from? Most of the great basic ideas that have Changed the face of our civilization have come from universities, and they have come from those universities which are inter- ested in fundamental knowledge and which foster its discovery. The University of Chicago is such an institution. Its program of basic scientific investigation should he of interest for five reasons: It has a staff which has demonstrated its ability to add to manis knowledge of the world about him. It has, throughout its history, fostered fundamen- tal scientific research. Six Nobel award winners have been members of its faculty. It has the tools with which men can work and without which even the best investigator today can do little. It has recently added an eleven-million dollar research laboratory to its facilities. It has the administrative organization which is most likely to foster scientific discovery. It has devised a plan which provides the needed link between fundamental basic research and the in- dustrial applied research which makes use of the new knowledge. In the past, the University of Chicago has seen such men as Michelson, Millikan, Compton, Dempster, Koch, and Ricketts. Todayis scientists at the Univer- sity of Chicago are equal to their predecessors. In the laboratories today are: Harold C. Urey, Nobel Prize winner for his dis- covery oi Deuterium. Enrico Fermi, Nobel Prize winner, inventor of the uranium itpile. James Franck, Nobel Prize winner, eminent au- thority on photosynthesis. Sewall Wright, .3: leader in the field of genetics. Morris Kharasch, distinguished theoretical or- ganic chemist. Charles Huggins, discovered the use of female sex hormones in the treatment of prostatic ulcers. Lester Dragstedt, originator of vagotomy, an op- eration for the relief of peptic ulcers. Horace R. Byers, meteorologist who has shed new light in the nature of thunderstorms. Leo Szilard, one of the first Scientists to interest the government in wartime atomic research. Willard F. Libby, discoverer of the use of radio- active carbon content measurement as a means of ac- curately determining archeologieal and geological dates. Eugene M. K. Ceiling, eminent pharmacologist. He is studying the mechanism by which such im- portant drugs as digitalis, act. The University of Chicago believes that men with ideas must be given the facilities with which to work. It has constructed three research laboratories, one for each of the three fundamental scientific Institutes, and em Am-elvrutm' Building for the work with Lll't'tti' erntt'li Il'dl'lit'it'ri. iliht-He four huihlings, t-mtritrttrled at cl rust of mine thtm eh'u-n-million dollars. supple- ment the iuhnrutm'ivs previuttnly available in the ten physit-al science Iiuildings 0n the campus. These huiltiings contain the tools which are essen- tial for Studiee 0n the frontiers of knowledge. The 450-million-VOIL 170-ineh Hynt'hroeyelotron. a powerful atom smasher. is now in use for exploring the forces that hold the nucleus of the atom together. It will also he used to discover what effect a heam of high-energy protons will have on living tissue. The lOO-million-volt hetatron, also housed in the Accelerator Building. is making possible the Study of the effect; of high-energy X-ray hcams on the chemical elements. The Van cle Craaf generator, a third form of atom- smasher. produces a high-energy proton heam and is heing used in studying the effects of high-energy radiations on various parts of a single cell. Basie research cannot be directed toward any pre- determined goal other than the acquisition of knowl- edge. The adminietrators directing an organization of scientists: doing basic research should have two uh- jeetives: they should provide the framework in which there can he the greatest amount of communication between scientists working in related problems; they should assume these responsibilities which will free the investigators: of their primary activities. These two objectives are achieved at the University of Chi- cago hy the Division of Physical Sciences and the Division of the Biological Sciences. which are con- eerned with both research Institutes tVuclear Studiest Metals, and Radiobinlngy and Biophysiesll which are cotteemed solely with research. The Institute for Nuclear Studies. for the Insti- tute for the Study of Metals. and the Institute of Radinhiology and Biophysics stem direetlv from the scientific nrganization which produced the world? first atomic pile in the West Stands 0f Slagg Field on Yerkes Observatory Marshall H. Stonet Andrett' McLeish Distinguished Service Professor of Mathematics. December 2. 1942. At the war's: end1 conscious: of the unusual abilities of the scientists who had teamed to- gether to do this tremendously im portant fundamental research and aware of the vast, unsolved problems still waiting to he attacked, the University of Chicago organized the three Institutes. Here Scientists work- ing in many fields pool their talents and knowledge for the solution of problems beyond the scope of any individual field. Not only do the Institutes provide a framework for eo-operation between scientists within the Univer- sity but they form a medium through which the Uni- versity works within the University both in industry and in such government institutions as the Argonne National Lahoratm'y. Today we know that an incredible force holds the protons and neutrons of an atom'; nucleus together. We know that, in the ease of uranium and plutonium. this binding energy can he released through atomic fission. Scientists in this Institute want to fmd out what this binding force is and why it exists. They are Prof. Walter Newhouse. Chairman of the Deparmtent of Geology. HaroM Urey. Martin .4. Ryerson Distinguished Service Pro- fessor of Chemistry am! Nuclear Studies. trying to understand the hush: forces whirh hold all matter together. Another group of problems under hwcstigatinn at the Institute for Nuclear Studies involves the thee 0f the radioactive isotope Carlmn H. As a tnu-er. it can he used in industrial pmhlvms In study. for example. the mcchanimns of reactions and the ctTit-iency of catalysts. In medicine. it may give ue clues to the understanding of fumlume-nlul life processey. The Institute For The Study Of Metals has heen established to investigatv the nature of metals aml 01 other substances in the Folitl state. It i9 conducting fundamental imrestigutimls which lay the groundwork for a science of mt'tals and a theory of alloys which will replavP existing lrial-aml-error methods. By Lt. Owens am! RieM. Associate Professor of Meteorology. draw,- 5'. q' ., .. 1V 9. h.gare , , , J T M. , ' f XI. r I a MS I Enrico Fermi, Charles H. Swift Distinguished Service Prol fessor of Physics am! Nuclear Studies. studying the structure and behavior of metals. sri- entists in the Institute are discovering fundamental knowledge which will prove invaluable to engineers and technologists. The Institute of Radiohiology and Biophygiw was formed to investigate the hiolt.1gical effects of radio- activity. The scope of the research it carries and also covers the. hash: problems nf plant. animal. and human growth. Scientists- in this Institute are applying the methods and techniques: of the physical St-ie-nct-s t0 the studyr of such problems as nerve behavior and genetics. Out of its laboratories have come svintilla- tion Counters. a method for electronic amplification of X-l'ay' images. and the chemostat fur awmatvlv regulating the growth of bacteria. .35- 5: SOCIAL SCIENCES By MORTON GRODZINS Dean of the Division of the Social Sciences from a talk given at a meeting of the Division ROM the Hi'sttdays of this Divisionifor all the singularity of the name on the btliIdingeSociaI Science has been more than one thing. It has been the collection of data for the formulation and the test- ing of hypotheses. It has been the study of social and political philosophy. It has been preoccupation with problems of method. It has been probing into times past. It has been formuiation of action programs looking to induced Social change. It has been comhi- nations of these. I believe the Division has at times Spread itself too thinly over diverse areas. But I also believe that this muiti-faeet approach is sound and must he con- tinued. The aim is: not a Single, rigidly defined social science. The aim, rather, is the utmost excellence in every area of a variously defined discipIine; and a mutuaIIy enriching conversation among those areas. In one of his brilliant reports concerning the Divi- sion, Ralph Tyler described an intolerance among COI- Ieagues that, in his view, couIcI result in a serious di- minution of freedom. I agree with him. The need for tolerance is all the greater in an institution, such as ours, which is dedicated to new work, to searches on the edges of knowledge and understanding. Our proud boast, perhaps our greatest asset, is the relative freedom we enjoy, as compared with our coIIeaguee in other institutions, from those on the outside who are antagonistic to freedom. It would be ironic to find that we had generated threats: to freedom within our own group. This point was sharpIy brought home as I recentIy read Ernest Jones' biography of Sigmund Freud. In 1896. Freud gave his first paper on the sexual eti- ology of hysteria. He already had eoIIected and an- aIyzed a considerable number of case histories and his evidence. to a reader of today, seems weIIeordered and convincing. But his audience of scientists and physicians in Vienna was incredulous. I'Iir: paper was greeted with complete eiIenee. Finally, a single com- ment was made. IIDr. Freud, one person remarked, Itthis sounds like a scientific fairy tale. Top left: The new Dean insiued his picture he captioned I7W. Crodzins. Deming am! Pressing. 24 hrs. a dayf, Outgoing Social Science Dean Ralph W, Tyler, who re- signed during the winter quarter. :1: a This. I believe, is a sobering story. We smile tolerantly when we think of Galileo being forced to his knees: after all. that was 4-00 year; ago. But we cannot smile so easily when we think of Freud. He was looked upon as a crank and a ehar'lalan by many who should have been his colleagues: and within the lifetime of many people in this room today. One point of the story is to ask ourselves how many of us, at that time. and in those circumstances. would have Supported Freud rather than joining his detractors. I Can easily imagine myself in the latter group. I will try to cultivate the hahit of thought that will keep me out of such groups. I pledge myself to more and better scientific fairy lallt'h. I am eoneeioue of hoth our past and the present as I undertake this new task. But I am far more con. seious of the future. It rests primarily not with the Dean, but with the faeulty. l have faith in that faculty emany of them are my own teacherseand l have faith in the future. I believe we can find support for our endeavors. not only as they may he molded hy grant: from foundations for specific projects, but also as we ourselves conceive the image of the future. Po- tential donors; muet he led to l'Jelieve, as I so firmlyr believe? that our work will be best advanced as the general strength of the Division is advanced, that piecemeal support for Specific projects. without gen eral support, may skew and dissipate our strength. Prof. R. 84 Plan, chairman of the Department of Geography. Prof. Friedrich A. van Hny'ek 0f the Committee on Social Thought. One of my first tasks will he to test thie helief in conversations with foundation riffieials. The Chan- cellor will join me in this effort And he has gone fur- ther: he has pledged additional University funds available for immediate expenditure: for several major appointments. for a new program of scholar- Herman Finer, Professor ol Political Science. 41 ship aid. and fur sump n-Iief in the potentially self-de- eruelixrt- prm'erw that ix' euphonicmsiy labeled budg- etvsaavings. I :larl my tank not only with optimistic energy. hut, more impm-Ianliy. with some cash. And I also start with certainty of the Chancellofs utmost aid. I hope that we Can FOOH turn our thought from Saving to spending. from restriction to expansion, from jeremiads t0 hosannaa. This is important not only for us but for our several pubiics, not least of which is our public among teachers in colleges throughout the country. We depend upon them to send us their best students. We need, as W. 1. Thomas used Eronomics and History Professor John Nef, Chairrrmn of Her: Commim'v on Social Thought. to say. to achieve a peak and then 10 jump from peak to peak. The difficulty with a trough, W. I. explained, is that when you jumped you were apt to sail over the nearest high Spot and land in another trough. The supportemateriai and moralethat is already pledged will, I hope. start us to our first new peak. We must then continue the pace. I told the Chancellor, in our first discussion, that I thought Deans had to be considered as expendihle material. I was referring then to the risk of a Dean, who conveives his role to be an active one, running out of constructive ideas 01' becoming progreSSively ineffective through time in his relations with the Professor Bruno BerieHm'm z's principal of the Sonia Shank: mun Orihogenic School faculty. As I consider the matter, the active Dean? expendihility may also result from another fat'tm: his decreasing effectiveness in representing the Di- visionha cause before. those in the Central Administra- tion. I do not believe in the inevitability of either set of circumstances. But I believe I must act in fun knowledge that my effective haH-life as Dean may be Short. I will not propose to stay through that portion of the Deane half-Iife that is: mere paper pushing. Whatever the period of my effectivenerfas, I pledge my- self to work for you, with you, and through yOLt-for the progressively greater excellence of our Divisiont our University, and our field of scholarship. 50cm! Sciences Bm'l'ding. 43 Above: john E, leuck. Dean of the School of Business. Be- low: Haskeh Hall. 6: BUSINESS SCHOOL From a. tail: by Dean John Jeuck HILE we must not fail t0 reconsider our 0h- jectives as circumstances require, I believe that our traditional ends are still the correct ones. I conceive them to be these: First, to provide a broad, basic program of professional education relevant to the preparation of informed, literate, and responsible business managers. Second, to contrib- ute to the development of new knowledge and under- standing of business problems and the role of business as a social institution. This is necessary in order that management may become more effective. But it is also necessary if the future leaders of the business community are to develop a true understanding of the place of business enterprise in the larger social system. Only by such understanding can we hope for the emergence of that economic statesmanship which is essential if we are to continue to enjoy both high levels of production and employment and the largest measure of political and economic freedom. It is appropriate here to note what kind of student product we ought to turn out. There are two extreme possibilities. At one extreme1 if we decide that the essence of executive performance is decisiveness and action, we may oHer a program with such a high premium on action that we produce graduates marked by an offensive degree of naive self-confidence. An equally undesirable consequence, however, is the sort of educational program that will produce students given to over-inteilectualizing e students incapable of decision because theyr are too self-consciously aware that everything is related to everything else. We must seek, of course, a balance between the values of analysis and the necessity for decisiveness and action. Another kind of balance which we must seek to maintain is that between breadth and specialization. It is the fashion now to talk of the objectives of pro- fessional business schools primarily in terms of the economic statesmanship goals. These are terribly im- portant, but an excessive preoccupation with the con- cerns of top management may result in a stream of graduates with delusions of grandeur, ill equipped for a fruitful and satisfving experience in the early stages of their careers. I am reminded of the place- ment officer of one large corporation who remarked after interviewing the current crop of MBA graduates that they seemed a fine bunch of young men, but un- fortunately, the company had no vacancies for vice- chairmen! Excessive specialization is however, more dan- gerous than its foil, for few of our students are cer- tain of their futures, and in any case the most effi- cient way to train people. for particular jttltt-i con- tinues to be training on the job. While graduates of our School should have acquired the breadth of train- ing and the attitudes which will help to fit them for the responsibilities of top management, they mint also be equipped with at least minimal techniwi skills 21ml substantial knowiedge 0f the problems of at given area of management responsibility. This is desirable both because the interests of different students 'ctl'e dif- ferent and because there are important stuff require- ments in business. preparation for which is' properly a responsibility of our professional school. Business managers must deal with situations in their totality, and the art of administration demands that its practitioners deal with the subject matter of many different specialized fields. The economist. the psychologist, and the sociologist often focus narrowly on those elements of a total business situation that are of professional interest narrowly defined. A challenge which the graduate business school must face is the development of a curriculum which will effectively integrate the various disciplines of the social sciences and provide both a superior educational preparation for executive performance and a more realistic orien- tation of research for the parent disciplines. We must continue to develop the significant area of professional education in which we have enjoyed a pioneeris role. The School has clear responsibili- ties for making available the means for on-going edu- cation for men in management, and such is the rote of our Executive Program, which continues to enjoy a unique place of distinction among programs for peo- ple of substantial experience. For persons with some- what less extensive experience, we intend to expand the facilities for late afternoon and evening study in our regular MBA program. Our present adult education programs suffer one grave limitation: they are available only to companies and persons in the Chicago area. As soon as our faculty resources and physical plant are adequate for the job, we should plan a resident management pro- gram to which we may attract people from across the nation and, indeed, from across the world. The work we have so far done with educational programs for business people has inevitably influ- enced and strengthened our regular campus offerings. In order to further strengthen that program, we plan Top: Garfield i'. Cor, Dean oj the Business School, Bottom: Fern N. Giciser, Professor of fnstitution of Economics and Management. to establish an aggressive program of recruiting new students for the School. A professional school, no matter how good, Cannot perform miracles. If it is to train the business leaders of the future. it must make every attempt to select those students who show promise of leadership. We are joining with such other graduate httsineSs schoois as Hattvard and C0- lumbia in a cooperative effort to develop admission tests to supplement the selection processes already in use. 46 7: DIVINITY SCHOOL By SEWARD HILTNER Acting Dean of the Federation of Theological Schools HE Federated Theological Faculty was created on July 1, 194-3. Since that time it has served as the faculty of the Divinity School of the Uni- versity of Chicago, 0f the Chicago Theological Sem- inary, of the Disciples Divinity House, and of the Meadville Theological School. Prior to 1943, the Divinity School and the Chicago Theological Sem- inary had each maintained Complete faculties of their own, and the other two schools had maintained partial faculties while also drawing upon the resources of the faculty of the Divinity School. Since the creation of the Federated Theological Faculty, separate facul- ties of the four schools have ceased to exist. To be a member of the Federated Theological Faculty is to be, automatically, 3 member of the faculty of each school. All regular members of the Federated Theo- logical Faculty have their appointments confirmed by all Boards of Directors of Trustees of each school and of the University of Chicago. The total theological enterprise on our campus is sometimes referred to as the ltFederation 0f Theolog- ical Schools or the HFederated Theological Schools. These terms are not inaccurate. since the creation of a single faculty, 3 single curriculum, and a single policy on academic matters does justify the use of such terms. But we do not have a federation of schools in the sense that several schools have merged all their interests into a single corporate or legal body. Each school retains its own property. its own student body, its own financial policies texcept for purposes of in- struction and researehl , its relations to its own church constituency, and holds residually all its own aca- demic powers talthough these are, for the life of the agreement, in the hands of the Federated Theological Facultyt. This is a unique experiment in an ecumenical approach to theological education. During its first ten years.. many problems in connection with this pio- neering attempt at coopel'ations were solved, and others emerged that call for continued effort at solu- tion. In 1953 certain changes were made in the terms of the agreement among the several schools and the University. in order to make for more efficient opera- tion. At the present time, the following is a summary description of the way the agreement operates. Leadership of all academic affairs is vested in the Dean of the Federated Theological Faculty. The Top left: Associate Professor Bernard Loomer, who restgned from his post as Dean this year. BottOm left: Assistant Pro- fessor Presser: Roberts. Dean operates with the advice and counsel of the entire Faculty. and also has available the counsel of the Academic Policy Committee of the Faculty. elect- ed by the Faculty. The Dean may set up such com- mittees. divisions. fieldst 0r departments of the fac- ulty as seem to him best equipped to fulfill the total purposes. All students do their work under the direction of the Federated Theological Faculty. The indication that any,r student has satisfactorily Completed a course of studies leading to E1 degree can be given only by the Faculty itself, 01' by its appropriate committee, or by its Dean. The A.M. and PhD. degrees. are actually awarded, however, only by the University of Chicago; while the DB. degree may be awarded by the Univer- sity alone, or by the University in collaboration with the Chicago Theological Seminary, the Disciples Divinity House. 01' the Meadville Theohagicai School. There is no difference in the basic curriculum for the DB. degree between students enrolled in the Divinity School and those enrolled through the other schools except that any school may require certain courses of its students over and above those generally re- quired. The principal difference is the way in which the degree is actually awarded. Although each school maintains its own financial affairs, takes care of its own buildings, scholarship aid for its students, and similar matters, it makes an appropriate contribution toward a general budget for the work of the Faculty. Thus, all expenditures for instruction and research tincluding the salariew of all members of the Facultyt appear on a general Fed- erated Theological Faculty,r Budget. This budget must of course be approved each year by the Boards and appropriate officers of each school. The formal agreement among the several schools and the University specified t:e:tain ether matters that are important for our actual work. For example, provision is made for a Cabinet consisting of the administrative heads of each of the four schools. The Cabinet is charged with handling the relations; he- tween the several schools and the Dean of the Faculty. There is also permissive pl'OviF-iun for an Inter-Board Committee on Academic Affairs, in order to serve as a channel of communication umong the Beards 0f the. respective schooist and between the Beards and the Dean of the Faculty. The agreement also speeifies the way in which persons may he appointed to the Faculty. mining through regularly estahlished faculty procedures; to the Dean, and approved by each of the Board; mn- eemed. Exception is made in that any school may appoint special lecturers: or part-time instructors for its own purposes. although such persons are not reg . Tar members of the. Faculty. Each school may. according to the agreement. maintain an Administrative Council Consisting of ant' members of the Faculty it chooses plus such persons as it may wish to appoint. Such a Council may do various things to promote the particuiar interests of the school.- but it does not Serve as an academic hodv. Below left: Professor Joachim Week. Right: Aerial view of Chicago Theological Seminary. 8. THE LAW SCHOOL HE modem hm bt'hOUl must adapt its currimthtm t0 the growing t'equirmnent; 0f the practice of law. The relationship of some fields of taw to Other diseiplinee. such as: armunting. has: made de- sirable training in added hkitls and the devetomnent of new method: nf inelttlll'tlirm. Ever ruinee the piov neet'ing work nf Ernst Freund in the field of admin- istrative law. the curriculum at Chicago has reflected the changing needs of the profession. The tearthing 0f aemtmting in law sr-hnnls was a Chimgn innova- tiom and the tutorial wstem. a? an Htlttlttf't 10 the trase method. was developed at Chicago and has since heen adopted by must leading st-hnols. But. leadership in tegat education requires more than the inclusion of added :auhiet-t matter or the development of new ler-hniques. It requires a well rounded program whir-h. while moving toward with the new. yet preaerves the sound tradition and disci- pline of the old. It requires a Hll'Otlg faculty: an able. student bodyn and close working relationshim with the alumni and the Bar generalty. It requires the development of Student life and the creation of new research programs and facilities as part of a unified program. Student life at the Law School has been greatly enriched by taking over Beecher Hall as the Law School Residence e a dormitory and meeting place directly opposite the Law Building. Among distin- guished guests who have met each week with the stu- dents have been M1: Justice Hugo Black, Mr. Justice Felix Frankfurter. Roscoe Pound, and John Harlan. The tutorial program under the supervision of the Bigelow Fellows. haa heen augmented. Each week law students have had informal luncheon seminars with members of the. Bar or Judiciary. The three public conferences held eaeh year have also added to the life of the students. The Law School has become a center for scien- tific inquiry into the law. In connection with the re- search programs, Professor Hans Zeiset, formerly of Rutgers and Cutumhia and president of the Market Research Council of New York, and Professor Ft'edv erick Strodtheck of Yale, have joined the law faculty. Professor John Jewkes 0f Merton College, Oxford, has come to us as Visiting Professor of Industrial Organizations. Left top: Dean Sturges fYate Law SchooU and Dean Lari fChicago Law Schoob. Left bottom: Professors Aaron Director and John Iewkes. Below: Staff of the Law Review. Front. left to right: Hugh Brodkey, George Kaufman. Paul Wenger, IL, WiHis Hannav watt, Alan Rosenbtatt. Second row: William fodtem, David Bremen Oliver Axster. Etatne Goldman, Theodore Rose- nak. Harlan Blake. Third row: Renato Beghe. Isaac Cotd- man, Wz'ftfmn Browne 1:; Gordon Ralph. Back row: Hat Smith, Boris Auerbaeh. Ct'fbert Cornfichl. With the aid of grant: from foundations and eor- porations, the Law School is Conducting a seriee of studies in the law and economic area. Professor Max Rheinstein is directing a comparative law inquiry in the area of divorce and family breakdown. A grant from the Ford Foundation has made pos- sible three studies: tlt the operations: of the jury system. t2t the operations of arbitration as: a enh- legal system, and Bi :1 study of attitudes mneerning the distribution of the tax burden. Tn assaiet in these research programs. Victor J. Stone. Margaret Keeney Rosenheim i519. Richard Stillennan T33. and David Breeder ,53 have been appointed Research Aseistants. The Law Revision Program had begun operations with work on charitable trusts and 21an habitual 0f- fenders. Co-operative arrangements for the Law Re- vision work have been established with the Cmmeil of State Governments and with the Commiesioners on Uniform State Laws. Fred h'ierrifield 534 has re- turned to the School a: Research Asweiate on Law Revision. Further eo-Operative work for research and law revision should be facilitated by the establish- ment on the Midway 0f the. new center for the Ameri- can Bar Association. Since 1950, six additions have been made to the Law Faculty. Karl Nickereon Llewellyn, then presi- dent of the Aesociation of American Law Schools: and Chief Reporter for the Uniform Commercial Code, was brought from Columbia. The first woman law professor at Harvard. Soia Mentsehikoff. has become the first woman law professor at Chicago. Together with Roscoe T. Steffen, who came from the imruhv Professor and Mrs. Blunt welcome entering students at Beecher Hall reception. at the Yale Law St-hnnl in 1951-9 :19 John P. Wiison Professor of Law and Profesmr Mail'sohn Sham. whose casebook 0n Contracts has just been published. these appointments: gave to Chicago the Fll'ntlgPFI commercial law family in the L'nuntry. Allison Dun- ham, whose casebook nn Modern Real Estate Trans: actions- was published soon after he joined the Chi- cago faculty. was brought from the faculty at Colum- bia to join Shehhm'Teffl taim t-u-Pditm of a recent casebook on property htwl to give added strength to the teaching and res-eart'h in the real property field. In this academic year 1953-54. Brainerd Currie has left the Deamhip of the Pittsburgh Law School to become Profesmr of Law at Chicago. Phillip B. Kuriand. former law clerk to Judge Jerome N. Frank ,12 and to Mr. Justice Felix Frankfurter. has left the faculty of NI'JFIhWESlPt'H Universily School Of Law to become a member of our faculty and to head the research project on the jury Ryt-IPIH. J0 Deeha Lucas. a former Bigelow Tearhing Fellow at Chicago, has become Ahsistnnt Dean and Dean of Students at Chi- cago. James M. Rateliffe 150 has been appointed Assistant Dean and Direetor 0f Placement. The probiem of 0111' Law School and for every law school - is: to foster a baiam-ed development in which research and new techniques are given appro- priate emphasis within the traditional framework of legal education. This war has seen l'n'ngress of this integrated program: major ammintmentr: to the Law Faculty, 3 new sehoialehip program. and steps taken to enrich student life. to bring the School and the Bar into closer eo-opel'ation. and to establish a research center worthy of a learned profession. Architecfs model of Bar Association Headquarters being erected on the south side of the Midway. 9: LIBRARY SCHOOL By LESTER ASIIEIM Dean of the Graduate Library School HE Graduate Lihrary St'hool. .cinee it first hegan to offer mum' work in 1928, has been a tilt?- tim'tive institution in American liin'ary education. Estahlished thrnugh a grant from the Carnegie Cor- poration in 1926. it has heen from the heginning a trailvhlazing school. dedicated to research and experi- ment in the field of library theory, library practice, and lihiaty education. Below: Lester Asttetm, Dean of the Graduate Library School. Directly helow: Camousk-y. The program of the Graduate Library School is designed tll to offer instruction on a graduate basis in general librarianship and the special phases of library science; t2l to prepare students for profes- sional practice in librarianship and in the teaching of library subjects; t3l to train students in methods of investigating problems within the field: UH to 01'- ganize and conduct investigations not only through the personnel and students of the School but also in cooperation with other students and organizations in the field of lihl'arianship and related subjects; tSl to publish the results of such investigations; and t6l to experiment with the development of curricula, teaching methods. and courses of study in the field of education for librarianship. Until very recent years the GLS tas it is familiar- ly known throughout the library pt'ofessionl was the only school of librarianship which offered the Ph.D., and its. research and publication program has con- tributed some of the most important works in the field of library literature. Its faculty members are not only leaders in developing a philosophy of librarian- ship through the teaching program of the School, but also in putting theoretical principles into practice through their active membership in the professional organizations of the library field. A comparatively small school, its graduates hold library positions of authority and influence far out of proportion to their numbers, and through them also the ideals and ideas 01' the CLS have been carried into practice in li- ln'arianship, both here and abroad. Among its Ct'mtrihutions t0 the professions, the GLS can point to tl'l publication of The Library Quarterly, for twenty-five years the only learned jour- nal in English in the field; t2l the annual Confer- ences 011 current library problems, and the Proceed- ings volumes which have come from them; t3l the theoretical and practical writings on librarianship which make up the HUniversity of Chicago Studies in Library Seieneesll; Mt the experimental iicore cur- riculum program designed to evaluate critically as well as to demonstrate the efficacy of the core idea in library education: t51 the early Hcommunity studies: in reading which provided much of the basic data for current reading studies; and similar ac- tivitiee. In his 1952 HState 0f the Universityn report. Chan- eellor Kimpton referred. humorously, t0 the Grad- nate Lihrary School as the school which had invented the prc'lfeh'saion 0f librarianship. Thie was a joking exaggei'atimt. but it has a basis in this incontrovertible fact: that the. CLS has done more than any Other single sehnnl to emphasize the professional rather than the technical aspects of librarianship and to establish librarianship as an academic discipline of profes- sional nature. l0: SOCIAL SERVICE hy HELEN R. WRIGHT Dean. of the Sdmm'. of Soda! Sender: th'minixtmtimt HE School of Social Service Administration. one Tut the first at'rredileti sehoulg 0f weizll work, offers the Musteris degree in the theory and prac- tice of social work. Within the ltt-n-yeur t'ulIl'HE ap proximately half time is spent in actual Work 1with people in trouhle. learning. under r-lllJCH-'initlll. how to help men. women. and t-hihlrrn rope with their social and psychological problems. Concurrent class work provides the theory and prinviples Wltit'h govern this 1.1'1tactice.aiong with the knowledge Of what Imlkes people operate as they do. of the nature of sotniui proh- lcms, of the imtrumenls and methods by which the. social worker meets human needm and of the philoso- phy and ethics of this tapidly clewioping profession. The School has long held a position of iealdershil'i in social work education. More than twenty directors of other schools of surial work are its alumni; the publications of it: fuettity and the Sorta! Sertsice Review edited by them hold a unique place in the field. It was the. first graduate Ht'itlml of social work established in an American university. the El'st school of social work to grant tlnetorai degreem the first to organize and staff a research eenter to study social work practice. The. student body comes from many different States and from foreign cuuntries. it is made up of many young men and women who have just Completed their college work and a few somewhat older students who have worked in social agencies without profes- sional education or without full preparation. This mixing of experienced amd inexperienr-ed students offers real advantages in enriching the student life in extra-Cttrricuiar activities. A student organization, the SSA. Chlh. promotes professional interests by lectures and diacuseions and also carries on varied social activities. bridge parties. pitftttCF, and so forth. The need for professionally competent men and women in social work is 50 great that johs are. waiting for graduatea and the preparation they have received often leads to rapid ath'ant'Entent. The. numher 0f aiumni whn hold key positions in gm'erumenlal and privately supported agencies throughnut the world is striking testimony to the School's position of Teacher- ship. A't tuliahove: Dem! tam! authoresst Wright. Directly above: Tire 5.55! student r'rmnge in Cobb, ' HIGH LIGHTS OF THE FACULTY Richard P. i11f'KPOI2-, Professor of Philosophy and Classics, was elected Vice President of the Interna- tional Federation. of Philosophy. ONORS: Fem W. Cleiser', Professor of Institu- tion Economics and Management started off the year by being elected president of the American Dietetic: Association. . . . In December. Dr. H. Close Hessehime, meessor of Obstetric; and Gynct'olngy. received an official invitation from the govermnent of E1 Salvadm to attend the dedication of that countryW: first maternity hospital in San Sal- vador, its capital. . . . Professor of Education, Cyril 0. Hoyle, was elected vice president of the Adult Education Association of the United States. . . . And Robert RedfieM. Robert M. Hutchins Distinguished Service Professor in the Department of Anthropology. was named honorary Fellow of the Council of the Royal Anthropological Institute. . . . This yeargs presi- dent of the Society of American Babteriologists is Gail M. Deck. Professor. Department of Bacteriology and Paraaimlogy. . . Elected President of the Inter- national Institute of Philosophy . . . Dr. Frank W. NettleH, Associate Professor of Surgery. was awarded the Honor Key of the American Academy of Oph- thalmology and Otolaryngology for his contributions to graduate medical education. PPOINTMENTS: Raiph W. Tyler has a two- year leave of absence to serve as director of the Center for Behavioral Sciences, established by the. Ford Foundation. . . . Seward Hilmer, Asso- ciate Professor of Pasteral Theotogy. was named act- ing Dean of Federated Theological School, replacing Bernard M. Loomer, who resigned in January. . . . And Charles E. Olmsted wae appointed chairman of the Botany Department. Left: New Sorta! Srienre Dem: Morton Crmlzim. Right: Dr. Edith Potter, awarded an. honorary degree by the University of Brazil for Im- work in pm'iatrie pathology. ESEARCH: Leo Bogard, Assistant Professor of Botany, has received a grant from the National Science Foundation to continue his research on the biosynthesis of porphyrins t'sicH. . . . Harold A. Anderson, AssiRtant Professor of Education is as- sisting the Encyclopedia Britannit'a Films in prepar- ing a series on American pools. . . . Adm B. Meinpl, Associate Profeasor of Astronomy, was awarded the Helen Warner Prize of the American Astronomical Society in recognition of his research. He has aka been named Chairman of the United States Naiinnal Committee of the Internationa1 Geophyiical Year. . . . In order to serve a?- direclor 0f the Ford Founda- timfs program of University.r Surveys of the Beha- vioral System, W. Aflm. Waliis has been granted a yeafs leave from his position as Professor of Sta- tistics and Economics. UBLICATIONS: A Japanese translation of Hans Morgenthau-E In Defense of the National In- terest'j appeared in January . . . In March, aha University Press published the Poetry of Dylan Thomas? by Elder 015mm Associate Professor of English. EATHS: K. C. Hoizinger, Professor of Educa' tional Statistics since 1929, died suddanly on January 15. . . . Two days later. Leonard Dick- son, retired Professor Emeritus of iV'Iatht-matics. passed away. He was famed for his algebraic solu- tion of the Waring Theorum. . . . Harold H. I'Vefson, Egyptologist 0f the Oriental Institute, an authority on Joseph and Maria Mayer, who attended a r-mrfprmrp on theoretical physics in Japan in SPpIPmEJPr. the orgamzatinn of Egyptian temples. died the fol- lowing week. . . . And EMttJorzh Faris, Professor of Socielogy here for 20 years. also died that month. the facultfs participation in uextra-curricular activities ranged from speeches on contem- MISCELLANEOUS ACTIVITIES: On Campus, UNESCO has published the first results of Professor Crafs llefl, Imiowi study of the methods of IemJn'ng. reading, and writing. Right: Anthropologist Fred Eggan, recently granted $73,000 to riverea'op rmwr for research on Philippine problpms, is shown with Frpudamffriend. porai'y political affairs to Tome Back. Little. A3,, The Quadrangle Club revue given in March. . . . Scientifically speaking was Enrico Fermi, Charles H. Swift Distinguihhed Service Professor, 0n LhPhyaiics of High Energies in November. . . . While Malcolm Sharp, Professor of Law, and Hamid C. Urey, Dis- tinguished Service Professor of Chemistry, discussed Logic and Reason in the Rosenberg Case early in the Fall Quarter. . . . In his interpretive address on Machiavelli. Len Su'auss, Professor of Practical Philosophy; declared that HThe United States is the only country in the world founded in explicit opposi- tion to Machiavellian principles. . . . And James R. Arnold 0f the. Chemistry Department. speaking before the Scintillation Center Symposium in Washington, D. C.. announced a new technique that may extend the atomic calendar back 44,000 years. . . . Top, left: Louis Cottschalic, awarded French Legion of honor. Center, left Robert C. Bald, who discov- ered four rare documents of Elizabethan poet John Donne in the University Archives. Bottom, left: Ralph J. Green, In, who has received a gram from the P. K. Wrigley Company for research on pepper- mint. Below: 30! Tax, whose article on living in Cuatamala for 3160 a year was published by the Smithsonian Institute. Bhimyo today 53 .a vwvh: alwu, HICAGO students, it will he ohserved, do not breathe entirely in the pure air of higher learn- ing. Alongside their relentless pursuit of wis- dom they require in seemingly endless quantities such things as food, entertainment! clothes, and sometimes, it is rumored, a drink 01' two. 011 the basis of this though to feed Chicagols nml-intellectual and non- spiritual appetite, a thriving business community has flowered around the University which includes many institutions which have grown to assume a distinct place in Chicago's lore. Our students, needy: are not so different from other human heingsq that our neighbor- hood does not, at caeual glance, look unlike the nucleus. of any small American town. But this resemblance persists only' during the casual glance. An average American t'tmnmllttily would have great difficulty trying to at':t.:onnnmlate our neighborhood: families would have to eat nearly all their meals out to support the ox-fer-ahundalwe of swell eating-places. and nearly all their meals at home to satisfy the nver-aderiuate grocery stores; z'luthing UI C A stores would be much over-adjusted to the needs of young men; a disproportionate number of bookshops would have to fight savagely for almost no business; and the overflow of harhers would have to cut the ladies, hair as often as the menls. Nevertheless! our merchants are so well fitted to the studentsl demands that it is indeed a rare need which requires a considerable outside trip. Stores are constantly elbowing each other to Supply the student? with such eseentials as beer and used textbooks. and when the scholarly innards begin to gnaw of an eve- ning, half a dozen small eating plates are waiting to fill them. Each has its own dialinct. and sometimes pleasant, personality. NYONE at Chicago who has ever cherished the hope of preventing September from becoming the most expensive month of the year has be- come particularly familiar with the bookstores around the Quadrangles. Septemher is a textbooklmying month at Chicago. and the neighhm'hood shops sell every kind of used. battered. and annotated-iti-peneil- and-pen texts at the highest prices they can conceiv- ably get away with. Still, prices are helpfully lower than those encountered when the. hooks are acquired in their virgin form. Introducing some of these stores: on the one. side of 59th street, near Kimhark Ave: behind a neat and ever-changing window display, Woodworthis; across the street nestled in its basement apartment. the Red Door and on 55111 street. Clark and Clark. Although only limited statistics are availahie. it is reasonable to assume. that Woodworthis Bookstore is passed, entered. browsed in. and otherwise Pilll'nll- ized by more students- more frequently than any of its rivals in the University- neighborhood. The reasons for this are manifold. First is its location. In its plate on 57th street. the shop not only occupies a ventral location in the University hueiness community. hut must be passed to reach either of the at'eaas two most popular eating places and Can aiways he easily found. if through no other identification. by its position he hind what may well he the. most conspicuous tree in the whole south side of Chicago. Then there is the nature of reading matter found at Womiwm'tlfs. The store is a veritable browser's paradise. incomplete perhaps oniy in its line of comic hooks and pamphlets. Clark and Clark stands on 55th street, and for this reason is less passed than Winodworthh. None- theless, the shop is considerably known among stu- dents, especially for its mammoth niehei-a-pound book sales, which bring out most of the browsers. Serious; readers. and all of those many people who just ean't keep themselves from buying hooks they know the? will prohahiy never read but which are on satie. Dur- ing these sales, the place is chaotic. Tahies extending the. length of the shop are. piled high with scattered books of every conceivable description. white the whole store is litet'allv stacked with neonie rummag- ing, browsing, searching, occasionally buying. and always annihilating any semblance of order that conid eirer have existed. At these sales one. can procure any- thing from the Kinsey Reports to the Bengal Annual for 1832. It is a bit misleading to place the Red Door Book shop in the same class with Woodworthis and Clark and Clark. This basement shop has a special some- thing which strikes one as 30011 as he sees the green. house-like show window, and which, for lack of a more precise word. we. shall call atmosphere. In fact, to use an outwom cliche, the atmosphere in the shop is often described as being so thick that it can he cut Top: WoodwortEs. and Bottom: Clark and Clark, two of the best places to browse on campus. with a knife. The proprietor himself, however, may become so wrapped in his opposition to this idea of atmosphere that he. may, as in the case of this re- porter. forcihiy eject anyone who suggests it. One iGlen-at111ospheric thing which distinguishes the shop in Chicago is its huge Collectien of foreign language books, which draws scholars and polyglots from all over the city. The stir-Huf' is the place to buy the South Sideis best spare ribs and steaks. EADER'S and Slineway's me the two near-con- ventionat drug stores on campus. Reader's, whirh is prohahly the most cmnplainr-d ahout tjustiy ur injustiyt institution in the area. accom- modates the overflow B-J mouth but is littte- known or patronized by mnst 0f the test of the vampus: be- cause of its location on Glst streett far from the pulse of campm life. Stinm-vayas on 57th street is pretty much like any other Conventional drug htnre and cafeteria except for its one Uhlim t0 t'listinc'tion. a mural of Nobel Prize winners and tramps. and its varied mitt un- usual ciienteie. Nicky? wits pizza. It is thr- onlv plant in the Chittago arm whir-h Hperiuiizvsa in pizza without heing a tavmn at the same time. thn-u-r. Nit-kx'i: times not win 02111111115: patronage simpiv luv tit-tauh: tho pizza is: gant'it Thtx physiml nsl'wt'ils uf tilP I'PHIHIH'IIIH. are once again the familiar. mmIm-n -tt'rttrulvpf'5 Ameri- Can E'tatillg IJIEU'F. HIHI Dpilnilff l'al'tiiv guthvt'r fnl' UHV- thing hut tho ililllFll spvrtinitv. Bttl thv hnusw pr't'izliiV iii NifiiY-F i4 snmrtthing llml srwme In ?;tliHiK' a pnsiv five nPfjri nr Chiragzn stm'lmitF. far :1 night m-w-r grape: ht; when thr-- slump imil heuri'ngmi Inf teirtnhmtc r'HHH 60 from the dorms and fraternities asking for pizza de- livery for aII-night study hinges. For those who prefer beer with their pizza, or pizza with their beer, there is a nearby Shop speciaia izing in both: Ken and locks 0r Phil's Italian Res- taurant, depending upon which door you enter. Ken and Jockis is dimly lightetlt quiet. and provides as pieasant a place as one can find near the University for spending a peaceful evening quaffing stains of beer and munching pizza. Jimmy's, by far the best known drinking place around campus. is the closest Chicago comes to the traditional collegiate hangout and hat. Although the bulk of Jimmyis clientele does not come from our students. Jimmy considers them an important part of his customers, for the tavern is well furnished with Chicago crests and football relics. It is to Jimmy? that fraternity members. after Chapter meetings. tra- ditionally adjourn. The only other student hat in the area is University Tavern. The student t'i'ientelet while smaller. i5 faithfuL and the interior of U.T., particu- iariy its bemuralled back room. is not unfamiliar to most Chicago students. Gordon's is noted for its friendly waitresses: Mary, Margy, Terry, et aL gr. g5 TANDINC opposite each other on 57th street stand the University areefs: cloeest approxima- tions to ordinary collegiate restaurants. Neither. it is true. could he very easily identified as collegiate but both have. numerous honths which every evening can he found well-stoeked with our college students. In the Tropical Huh dim lights and a tropical interior provide an atmosphere. which is: quite distinc- tive, although one never really expects a monkey to swing down from one of the leafy hamhc'm raftera. The. T-Hut has no specialty besides. its atmosphere? but it holds a strong attraction for the after-sctudy and after-student government-dehate crowd. Gordmfs is modern. it has a sleek eminter: it is brightly lighted with fluorescent lights: its hooths have cushions on the seats, all of which hlends har- moniously into a pleasant. conventional. whole. No- body goes to Cortlmfs because of the atmosphere. Many go in the evenings just heeause of friendly spar- kling waitresses e Marie. Terry, and Maggie. Gor- donis is aiso the only eating phlee in the neighhor- hood where in the evening one can see from in front how many of his friends are there. for the restaurant each evening is full of couples enjoying a momentary relief together in a cup of coffee after an evening of tsotnetimesi hard study. There is one iieating place17 on campus of which it may be said that there is no real atmosphere. no personality. no specialty, and not even good food. In fact, to many students, particularly campus resi- dents. it is nothing;r but an ohecnre corner in a familiar shop which has a coke machine and sells hot dogs. But this iicorner. particularly for medical students. people with 12:301.: who are rushed for lunch? 01' too broke to eat anywhere else. becomes, at least at meat- timee one of the most crowded places in and around campus. This is the. food counter at the University Book Store. It deserves mention because of its multi- farious coke, mot-heer. and general soft drink. coffee. orange juice, pop-eom and peanut machines. its huge stock of ten at twelve. kinds of sandwiches character- istically excepting the kind you want twhieh has just run 0110, its hemmed-in display of boxed pies. pret- zels1 potato-chips, ice-cream hare, candy, cakes, sweet rolls, and all sorts of cookies and crackers. The hat. mosphere here is perhaps distinctive because it is so negatively less than an atmosphere. Top: The University Bookstore offers a range of wares from. sardines :0 Santyana. Below: Readers, with its ttCoUege hm attracts an even mixture of Hyde Pant- High School students and 8.! men tooking fm- an evening study-break. Bottom; Sam, behind 8-1. is known as the ciintelz'ecwal' barber, dis- penses political and social phitasaphjf with haircuts. i l,---. I Imam? I You ; umq :$S h. a J t! x H . u. - 5- .. J'l'IILIij, S'. lhv mmpm lmngmu' if such Ihere be at Chicago :?:I.s;:cn5r?$ Enm'r-Inpamh'a father?! for Irmh-semi'mg fm- br'bers am? the hes! martinis in NW area. Below: jimmy. mnsrw of Hm :1 :er Hm: erersf- University Tavern. or rather U. T. features a wide assort- mrn! of wines. N EVERY class that goes through Chicago, it is whispered, there are a few students who regularly go to the movies on the nights before exams. This has never been proved, but there is no reason for doubt in the face of the fact that the Hyde Park thea- tre, the campus area,s best and most popular cine- matic playhouse. is ideally equipped to handle just such patronage. Part of the Hyde Park equipment is standard. The theatre has comfortable and modern seats. It has a modern and exhaustively supplied candy and popcorn counter. The program changes- twice weekly. These aspects offer the student no more than he has a right to expect for the price of ad- mission. But the theatre is unique. Aside from showing movies, the theatre often plays host to art exhihitions, displaying paintings and photography on the lounge walls. The theatreis greatest claim to distinction is the unusually outstanding program of American and foreign films. The fare is appropriate to the patron- age, and reflects an unusual amount of intellectual acculturation. For those undergraduates tand there are manyi to whom c:intelleetual acculturation is of little importance, the Hyde Park is still one of the most comfortable places: around to spend three hours without being unduly submitted to mental strain. HE communityis musical establishments reflect the Universityjs high level of esoteric feeling to a sensitive degree. Whereas the average music shoppe of these United States features Len Trumpo on his trumpet or the latest URIGINAL-CAST-ORIG- INAL, around the Quadrangle: Mozart, Montverdii and Mahler, among others, axe staples here. For the fast-growing class of andiophiles and high fidelity addicts, the University neighborhood has one of Chieagds leading hirfi shops, the Disc. The Disc features nearly every kind of good hi-fi equipment alone and in their own matched systems, besides their mammoth stock of classical LP records. The Hyde Park Theater offers about the finest cinema enter- tainment hereabomt. Below: The marquee features a fh'ck by now forgotten. The ttOM EngHst group of stores on 615! Street behind BJ. The Reyotds Ciub Barbershop, one-time sponsor of the mats- tache race. is still the Fast outpost of Chicago football, other sports. A YEAR OF CHANGE, EXPERIMENT. By Janice Porter Miss University of Chicago, 1953 N THE Spring of 1953 the University announced its retum to a more conventional undergraduate program. A year of specialized study was added to the 01d general liberal 3113 AB. and several spe- cialized degrees were Created. Sincere and enthusiae- tic student protest took the form of rallies, a sit-down strike and a large meeting at Mandel Hall. The changes in the college program seemed indicative of other changes yet to come. In the Fall quarter of 1953 one of the pmhIems; that had prompted the administration to make the change i a decrease in enrollment. was again evie dent. Orientation Week. however. was executed with its usual success. In front of the Administration building students rally to protest college changes. Orientation boon! mes its annual picnic for new students. College courses were to he offered during the summer. Among the courses to be offered were the history course at Cambridge, England, French in Paris, German at Innsbruck, Austria, and Spanish at Madrid. When Student Government elections Came around we realized that the school year was under way. ISL once again claimed the majority and Clive Cray was elected president. The. big issue facing the govern- ment this year has been the status of the Chicago chapter of Phi Delta Theta. As this hook went to press, final settlement of the issue was dependent on whether the Phi Dells could eliminate the discrimina- tory clause from their national constitution. Fan Qualter Mamnn Headlines were: CHANGES NUT FXPEDIENT MOVE: LAK B-J RIOTS OVER TROPHY; LINN, COULTER STAGE RAIDS SHARP AND UREY PROBE ROSENBERG TRIAL SEE INJUSTICE, UNRELIABLE TESTIMONY HI FI CONCERTS AT REYNOLDS CLUB PHI DELTA THETA WINS SCHOLARSHIP TROPHIES HAYAKAWA JAZZMEN HOLD FORTH IN MANDEL EAST-WEST TRADE NEEDED, QUINCY WRIGHT TELLS FORUM HANCES in the college were not to be found only in the academic program. This has been the year of the intramural football proposals and possibility of inter-collegiate football. The Pop Club was formed. Presidecl over by Ralph Henkle, this organization provided basketball gamm with cheerleaders, the campus with rallies, and the Univer- sity community with a drive to seek athletir event; as legitimate outlets. The Pep Cluh, it would seem, was at least partially responsible for the comparative success of the basketball team. From Fall quarter we will remember: University Theatre's production of the Carnival of Thieves . . . Marianne Moorels reading of her poetry . . . Joyce Careyls lecture, The Novel of Ideas . . . The Choir ; performance of Handells Messiah . . . BJ-lDls Bad Luck Ball . . . and the Jimmyls ad, 6cDrink no longer water, but use a little wine for thy stomaclfs sake and thine often infirmitiesfl EXT year the University will be altered in still another respect. Causing much speculation as to the cause of his action, Dean Loomer re- signed from his position of Dean of the Divinity school and Acting Dean of the Federated Theological Far:- ulty. F. Champiou Villard7 who has been the Dean of the College for the past seven years1 took a leave of absence to work with the Ford Foundation in India. Robert Streeter was selected to fill Ward's position with the College. The College faculty will lose two of its members because of the expiration of their tenure. Henry Rago, assistant professor of Humani- ties, and Fritz Caspari, assistant professor of German. will leave the Quadrangles at the end of this year. The most successful Wash Prom in several years. was held on February 20. Woody Herman and his Third Herd were the big attraction, but the weekend of activities planned around the dance also provided excitement. These activities included a basketball game, several open houses, the matinee performance of University Theaterls ttPlayboy 0f the Western World, and a breakfast in Hutchinson Commons following the Prom. Janice Porter was crowned Miss U of C of 1954:. The first issue of Forecast, Student Union's newspaper, appeared at the Prom. The week- end preceding the dance, Cap and Gown published Phoenix, the yearbook Wash Prom supplement. Top: ISL cheers at SC vote counting. Bottom: Rah-rah ele: men: cheers at basketball game. Maroon headlines for the Winter Quarter: .l V CAGERS CLINCH LEAGUE TITLE UC TEAM DEFEATED ON NBC QUIZ SHOW FIRST MAJOR FULK-MUSIC IN RECENT YEARS FEATURES PETE SEECER. BIG BILL BROONZY VICTORY STRING BECOMES MAROON PARADOX; BASKETBALIJERS DRUB AURORA FOR FOURTH WIN WARD BACK FROM USSR COURT RULES ON SRP CASE FINDS GUILTY, ON PROBATION MARGARET MEAD DISCUSSES CULTURAL CHANGES OF MANUS KERMIT EBY TALKS ON WAR TRENDS CITES UNEMPLOYMENT. BUREAUCRACY HE annual mid-year alumni reunion attracted 1.000 alums t0 the campus the week-end of February 27. According to Howard Mort, alum- ni secretary, this yearis reunion was uquantitatively and qualitatively . . . by far our most successful. The alumni were led on tours by students, ate dinner in the Quadrangle Club, and were entertained by an ail-student show at Mandel. The Quadrangle Club Revels were presented on March 12 and 13. This yearis show, iiCome Back, Little AB? was a satire on the decrease in enroll- ment, College changes, and the Jenner Committee hearings. During the Winter quarter . . . fifty new students participated in the midyear orientation program . . . the Renaissance Society Gallery presented an exhibi- tion of 201h Century German Graphic Art . . . Chester Bowles spoke on American foreign policy in Asia . . . Erich Erickson presented a lecture on Psycho- analytic Observations of the Problems of Youth . . . and University Protestant groups observed a univer- sal day of prayer for students. ITHOUT warning, Spring quarter of 1954 was here. Our thoughts turned to outings, summer plans, and comps. But with the coming of Academic Freedom Week we were able to turn our thoughts to another equally important phase of stu- dent life. The National Student Association declared Top: Woody Herman rips mat iiCaEedonia. Middle: fan Porter is crowned Miss U. of C3, by Dean Strozier. Bot- tom: Chester Bowies discusses U. S. policy in India. April 11 to 17 as Academic Freedom Week, to he ob- served on NSA campuses throughout the country. During this week there were few people on cam- . . .- :1; .. . pus who were not touched in one way or another. I. HUI. 'Z'ILIK 'EA sump: Many attended lectures, discussions, and exhibits. About 2,500 students and faculty members reaffirmed their faith in the Bill of Rights by signing the scroll which was circulated during the week. Those who merely discussed and considered these vital issues for the first time played an important part in making the week especially meaningful. Still another accomplishment was SC'S Student Service Center. This consolidated the Student Book Exchange, the Loan Service and the Ticket Agency. The profit made by the Center evidences its success. The fund drive of World University Service, for- merly World Student Service Fund1 opened the week of April 5th with dormitory solicitations. The money raised will he used to better conditions of health and housing and to increase educational facilities for stu- dents in foreign countries. Other planned events were a dance and jazz concert. Spring Quarter Maroon headlines read: WALKOUTS, 3rd PARTY THREAT HIT CAMPUS POLITICAL PARTIES HILTNER TALKS 0N PSYCHOANALYS'IS: FREUD OBSESSED WITH RELIGION HITCHOCK CON MAN GIVEN YEAR IN PRISON TRACKMEN TROUNCE TEACHERS; END YEAR DEFEATED ONLY ONCE UC PHYSICISTS RALLY T0 AID OPPENHEIMER 0N DISLOYALTY CHARGE and though it wasnit a Maroon headiine . . . CAP AND GOWN WENT TO PRESS! Top: Card carrying party member scene in Faculty revels. Middle: Happy-go-lucky Dean Strozier and friends in i6Come back little Ab. Bottom: Cheerleaders confer before basketball game. Above: The Hutchinson Court side of Jr'amIP? Corridor after one of the few mm: heavyj snows of the year. Below: Several! college students in what might be termed an idyllic autumn scene in from of Kent Half. 19 31.. gr; 3' r' w. 70 ffwtsilng N THE Fall of 1953 the University Housing Sys- tem returned to its former policy of unrestricted housing aeeommodations. This system was rein- stated after a two-year experimental plan which lim- ited certain houses to specific age groups or educa- tional levels. During the past two years it was: found that University students are prompted hy a multitude of varied ideas and persist in such a diversity of interests: that it would he to the benefit of entering Students to hecome associated with as many types of personalities as possible. In this manner, no studenfs personal associations could he hindered or limited by the isolation which exists under a restricted housing policy. The women? dormitories consist of three within the C-Croup, on the. east side of the campus. and two across the quadrangle. located between Cobb and Goodspeed Halls. Eight melfs home: are located across the midway within the Burton-Jmlson Courts! and two are found on the northwest side at the calm pus behind the chemistry and anatomy buildings. The immediate problems of clermitory self-gov- ernment are handled by a student council, whose members are elected by and represent each of the individual houses. The purpose of theee councils is to mediate hetween student and administrative groups on matters relating to dormitory life. The ttetivities of the men's murts are regulated by the Burton-Jud- son CountriL whiie the C-Grmlp dUFttlF are under the councitship of an Inter-dormitm'y ussm-iation. In re.- eent months! however, Gates and Blake halts have also held memberships in the Inter-dorm Council. The other houses dinettss such problems within house meet- ings or by direct council with the administration. ITHIN the Burton-Judson Courts are found Dodd, Vincent. Linn, Coulter, Chamberlin, Mathews, Salisbury, and Mead Houses. The activities of these houses correspond to those of the C-Gronp dorms in that parties, exchange dinners, and sports events constitute the feature happenings of the year. Among the most notahle social events of the year was the first menis open house for the girls of the C-Croup, iiSin with Linn? Linn ttsinnedh 011 all four floors with drinking, gamhting, women, and song, punctuated hy the etick of dice and the fall of cards. Other attractions were the Vincent yacht party which took almost one hundred people for a cruise on Lake Michigan, and Coulter's invitation to the girls of the C-Group to a upep concert at Orchestra Hall and to the movie of ttJulius Caesar. Other houses had Halloween and Christmas parties with Foster, Gates, and Blake Halls. In the college and divisional intramural sports events for 1953-54, Linn House won the touchhall championship trophy, causing the Lieroulter foot- ball feud. Included in the rivalry between the two houses were the twice stolen trophy itself, the stealing 0f Coulter furniture, in retribution, water fights, paint smears, and the invasions of several individuals who were just trying to figure out if it all reFuIth from football rivalry or just because CLhoys will he boysf1 The swimming and haskethall events werv won by Coulter House. with Vincent taking the title in table tennis and Linn once again showing its: abil- ity in track. In the. Spring events of 1952-53, Snell House took the championships in tennis and volley ball, with victory for Beecher in softball. One, not so typical hut amusing; report of Burton- Judson activities has been suhmitted by 21 member of Chamberlin House who states. tcThis past year Chum- berlin House has pursued the oven tenor of its way guided by the Aristotlelian principle of moderatiom the Rabelaisian motto. tDo as you please, and Vol- laireas advice to cultivate 0:163: own garden. A per- fect chronicle of inactivity was marred only hy an ex- cellent record in intramurals. Otherwise. tHappy lht' people that has no history: and, in the words of Cicero, Magna di comm, perm negiegtmzf: Composed of two elected representatives from each of the eight dormitories of the House System. as a service organization. the B I. Council imple- ments a social, cultural, and athletic program for the residents on a court-wide basis. The body servos stu- dent needs and consolidates opinion on Court issuea Directly allow. Inter-rlnrm COEHTCH. First row: Janice Hub- I'm. Sun Mmmm; .flrr-Sfrr'h Chang. Dean McCarn. Second row: Mart? Srhrm'r. Fran Osiriag, rh'rlm'c'n Knmsm Bernice Yumn. Cum! Kmpm; .Uol'f:. vr1! Rupp. Dione Yak. Sam Per- kins. Rtrrfrm-er'snn Cnum-h'. First row: Nurt'eson. Fisher. Med- ant't'y. Bnhrmr. SPn-und row: Sr-xvhmr', Wilfmrson. Grip Swagger. SMH'HL Heurr'lfm Johnson. Thorium. Key. Prairie. PregaMo. The Jurfson gate. Mathews House. First Row: Feirlmrm, Mott, Hoffman, Youse, Hansen, Reichler, Nawesona Roam, CWS- berg. Second Row: Key, Nertlesfzip, Rosenberg, Huffaker, Waldman, Ruben, Lapidus, Cohen, Pashnw, Liza. Third Row: Perham, Mrs. Porimm, WiSP, Dondvrt Cottesman, Saada, Turner, Moltotoff, Crutchfield. Carr'- son, Cray, Kurlanrl, LWUI'nson. Linn House. First Row: Lva', Moorp, Dunning. Wofkoff, C09, Lloyd, Rappaport, Berger, Rogers. Second Row: Cordon, Dunham, Heawriiin, Carmef. FishPr, Newman, RoUrer, Cummings, Farrier. Third Row: Mrs. Ricks and children, Lyons, Berkout, Fenmore, Mitchell, Abeson, Prosterman, Engel, Adelman, Mmhozka. 117533071, Thorrem, Fukushima. Schiessinger. Horsmrm- ZippPrian-, Bacon, 51591.net Orlfnsky. TO while also representing;r the dorms in many campus activities. Under the leadership of Don Fisher, this Council, during the past nine months, has filled many student needs hy sponsoring varied activities to com- plement tflcu'tnitorj,r life. Among the. social activities have been the Friday and Sunday night feature films and the arrangements for dormitory men to meet student nurses from the surrounding areas. The cul- tural activities of the Council have. been the mainte' nance of the Judson Library and a hi-fidelity phono- graph room, and the continuance of a plan to obtain block discounts for residents on theatre plays and movies. Plans are also being made for tours of civic centers in Chicago. The Council Iiiaintainh and keeps in repair athletic equipment Lined in Burton recreation room and runs a year-rmmd intramural sports pm- gram in connection with the UC Athletic Department. The Council sends, members to the contmi hoards of the Snack Bar, Radio Midway, and the Student Laun- dry, and has representatives on the Campus Coordi- nating Committee, Alumni Committee, W'US. Waah Prom. and others. The future plans of the Council. with the present drafting of a new constitution, calls for the election of next year? members in the Spring quarter. This would enahle the returning Council to be back on campus during Orientation Week to act as Orientation Assistants in the timing. and to in- augurate the many Council functions before the year actually begins. The Inter-dorm Council, under the. ehaii'nmnship 0f An-Shih Cheng, has served much the same purpoae among the womenl dorms. The major problems dm- ing the year have centered around the hour system. student participation in seiecting dormitory menus. and the initiation of a policy which allows men ahove the first floor at certain times. These pi'ohlems have been solved by an appeal to the adiiiiriisti'ation for more liberal hours, a food committee which meets with the dietitian, and Sunday afternoon visiting hour for men Twice monthly the two councils meet together to discuss interrelated activities. In conjunction: the councils have sponsored a quarterly Heriii-formal campus dance which included the Bad Luck Bali and Esquire Escapade. The third quarter dance. was omitted and funds were used to support the W'US dance. The councils 3150 sponsored and participated in Parenfs W'eekend, Alumni Weekendt and Mid- Year Orientation, and maintained connection: and scheduling for the use. of Camp Farr, the work camp for the benefit of the Chicago settlement houses. HE C-Ci'oup women? dormitories ineiude Green. Kelly. and Foster Halls, whose. residents repre- sent an levels of the college program and almost every division of the Univei'eity system. The activi- ties of these houses emisist of various: parties, faculty ?hv e Top right: The day that Carl Grip had to sub at the snack-bar. Bottom, right: Service with a mustache. erts, Jordan, Vogefer. Coulter House. First row: WNPNL Gaynor. Theoharis, Moore, Dulin, Medlinskjr, Bobrow, Pope, Brown, Bosch. Second row: Pamer, Le-walski, Karros, Clams, Waharer, Stein, Friedman, Rob- fetlmv illllf'htfunh. ext'hunge dinners with the nimfs houmw. after-dinnm- speakers. open houses. and a Yearvrmmtl ttttt'I'-tlttt'111 leJt'ls-i program. Special fea- tures taf the dorm? this year have inchlded the initia- tion of a Snark Bar by Keily Hume and a Wednesday afternoon coffee hour hy' Green House. Beth activities have heen open In the campus and have proved successful. Nu I'I'Ifll't' excitement can be cited ether than the nm-ttsimiat t-I'I'PHJU of the fire'escape alarm and the one legitimate fire in Kelly H2111 which railed out half of the Chieugn Fire Department. This, we suppose. is the C-GI'OtIpah answer to the B. J. inno- vation of student nurses. NDER the names of WGUS. Radin Midway, and finally WUCB. the University radio sta- tinn has; a history which dates hack to 19416. From the time that the station was originated lay a group of ex-signul corpmten, up to the present date, it has steadily progressed uieepite tet'hnirul frustra- tiom and administrative diffimllties. In rt-r-cnt year; cnvet'age has het-n expanded to the girls dorms and the Chittugv International House. The main UIIHI'dt'iC thut Iitt' station it'dh em-uttnteted has hem the Cmttmi haunt whieh was appointed IIY the e'ttlminidtratimi and had athhIte authorityr over the .utatinnas npifl'tllifllH. Third row: Bitter. Rennert, Sherman, Loepold, Glatzer, Thompson, Kut- chins, Emrich, Silverman, George, Meyer. iquIPOIOff,HfZ-WIPL Neims. During the past year, however, the Station did manage to generate enough trust to get the Control Board eliminateda and installed Sheldon Danielson. a 1952 entrant, as technical director. With help and cooperation from station manager Rick Karlin and others, he designed, built, and installed completely new equipment which has been so successful that it has eliminated all technical failures, and has made WUCB one of the few AM Stations in the wot'hl which meets the. FCC standards for high fidelity. This was a factor in the increase in staff from five at the end of last year to nineteen this year. Autumn Quarter programming was: better by far, but still not professional. In January. John Lyon was elected station manager and, under his direction, the Staff increased to twenty-eight members. The biggest production of the Winter Quarter was the annual 24- hour marathon, presented this year in cooperation with Student Union. Called the iiPmmathon:1 it prompted the Wash Prom, and was the. most success- ful in two years from the standpoint of audience re- action. WUCB presented during the year a varied col- lection of programs:1 ranging from the greatest amount of good music on the AM hand HZ hours a day rebroadcast from WEFM and most of the statimfs live programmingt to poetry read hy the authors and spu-rielr t-wnia rm'm'ugv uf llw SC :Ian NHA t-lm'tiums and Mivhigam Wan hlflliilill'i'm Hlutirm mullalgM' Lynn ha? ll'ivtl In work lllfll'l' rlnan-Ix' uiHJ lehl'l'I111H'l1h0l'- gamimtinm llmll hen lwvn dnw- m lln- pawl in an t'ffm'i lu nmkv 111v Julinll. iII ilx valpallrily' ab :1 WI'VJ'I'I' m'ganizuliun. u mmw iIIlvgrnJ purl of Feimplh life. Thfshuslw'nHmw-I-u'ful IUHEIlllf'f'XN'IH.L1$ WWICH llilH aided 0r IJI'I'II :Iillvrf Iw Sitldl'lll Union. Stlllll'lll Cav- r'rnmrnt. Illu- Chimgn Rl'x'ivw. llw Maroon. the Cap LQ Cmm. llw HIII'IUHJIHINIH Crmnc-il. illlfl union: nlhm' grrmpm Thv ifIITI'dH'P in qlmlih' has iTIII'I't'FIE'Il lntvma- timmT Hmma uhiu'h hue Inmrn Ulll of llw ill'unlhllSlillg system fur llll' past flfh' yeura tinullgh Hull Mam! are being muriv In rvtln'n Iht-n- m-xt war with lmllm' qulipmi'lll. Expzlllainn intn San-Hilu'in'r'wk and PanlImHV CalM-Blakf' i5 c-xpl't'll'd to follow. Hunt of lhrr stallinn'; lmlt-nlial rc-muim ln hr rwplnilwf by a larger lell'f whirh Hwy hnlw ln nhlnm wal w-nr rm the hacis nf thih year's gI'I-nl m'vmli imprnwnwnt. . WUCB in action Mead Home. First row: Benjaminson, Winkdman. Dauphin, Brash SIPEmIP. Poroclmiak 3115?- 193. Second row: Kronenbprg, Sofoman., Sanders, 1-Wages. Smpi. Miriumis. Simmons, Lmrine. Third mw: Thompson, Mrs. Thompson, Castafng, Katie's: Inlmrmmt. Wm. Hudson, Leicht, Po- !ish, Prairie. e: E 3 ! 15: I ff 55$ Chamben'in House. First row: Godfrey. J'TIeyeJ', Grey, RPM. Howard. PhiHips. Brismw. Sec- ond row: Wu, Norton, Band. Pondron. Zak. Shela, Fencil, WDOIUWH, Alhamon, Su'zmutzivr. Third row: Periera, Gordon, Cronin, Carr, Cairzef, Benny, Spapth, Berrhold, Osborn. Sincork. Tfsuis, Richard, Griff. 4n uncomformbfe silenCE is on. the agenda as ProfPsA sor Urey 110M: discussion with Lima House. 81 1 Vincent House. First row: Mertz, Dawley, Pinney, Vandervorf, W00!- dridge, Zenner, Freeman, Seskiml, Coirihammer, Cohen, Strohl. Second row: Diamondstone, Newman, Karpen, Swagger. Coezesman, Smith, Saf ir, Lopas, Mandel, Pribe, Demery, Johnson. Third row: Gofriman. Mrs. Goldman, Kapanmis, Strader, Flannery, Benjaminson, Hoffman, Putzei, Horvitz, Stevens, Kuiick, Lundy, Bums. Howard, Grossman, Maas, Schuch, Staab. Football rears its head a: Burmn-Jua'son Below: Arts and the man Kelly Hall. From row: Berry Carrier. Barbara Vogelfanger, Adda Epstein. Carole Reevnmn, Sandy Epstein, Lucy Brundrett, Donna Van Nest. Second row: Joan Feinstein, Mary EUen Lieberman. lean Kiwm. Phyr'g'fs Schwadron, Charlene Ellinwood, Leah Condit, Lesairm Larsen. Carol Kasper. Back row: Efenie Ix'ostopouios, Mary Joan Spiegef. Dale Levy, Aim Schmidt, Betsy Kirtley, Kathryn Aifcr, Tucker Loam; Alice Zwoiinski, Phyllis Friedman, Barbara Horwitz. Green Hall. Front row: Penny Lease. Felice Wenslrom. Roberm Hopkins, Nicolletre Carey, Shirley Trogden, Gabby Coen, Matilyn- Vona'rack, Helen Fish, Sandy HonirIer. Second row: Nancy Hague, Kay Potter, Ann Koch, Janice Hubka, guest speaker Kermit Elly, An-Shih Chang. Berry Ferrar. Margaret Beaudet, once Hafjer, Charry Burns, Caro! Everett. Back row: Diane Oening, Ann Jacobson, Lang Collins. Christine Rimpila, Joyce Allen, Jean Hargeu, Mary Mauser, Arm lolfey, Carolyn Myers, Margaret Anderson, Lesl'ie Searles, Rosemarie Mandi, Haida Pockefelfer, Pam Morton .Uarge Rauitts, Mary Iorio. Foster Hall. First row: Brine Yawn. Sandy Mogt'L Meitcent Rupp. Him? Lynn Bull'ard, Marcia Stttircn, Ann Larimore, Pene- J'ope Weadock, Marilyn Vaughan, Naomi Noble. Second row: Diane Yak. Nancy thura, Juanita Cofficr, Lois Zoufal, Jean Nener, AUison Logan. Jackie Reid, Nancy Barth, Betty Brown, Midwife Herrmann, Karen Becker. Third row: Joanna Ho!- lenberg, Thet'ma Yawn, Maxine Berlinger, Nettie Stoneman, Putnam. Erlgeworth, st-Iary Ahice Ross, Fannvez'l Rinn, Ceiita Va- ccmni, Barbara Fredrick, Ethel Spector, Barbara Stech, Ethei Jones, Defares Renaux, Dorothy Harris, Cinema Reeves, Hazel Mason, Margery McCale. ITHIN the C-Group, but 0t Part Of 1'1: i5 year's party seam was inaugurated with a Home- Beecher Hall. Besides being the law school coming Party. so called hecaueae it Wm, an excuse for residence, it is the center of much activity. Beecher men to choose a queen. Charlene Suneaon Coffee breaks taken by the students and faculty every won the Coveted title V'Miss Beecher? afternoon and evening in the fashionable BCfThEI' The athletic achievements of Bcvcher I't'SAidents dining room are pleasant, sociable events. Informal are no less great than their cultural and H.?L'ial attain- meetings on Friday evenings enable the students to ments. They won the lilttt-Searzon irltl'almn-al elimina- hecome acquainted with members of the law school tion basketball tourney: and are defending Champions faculty and distinguished persons active in law and of the intramural Eofthall tournament. related fields. Among Beecher's guest speaker? this The greatest activity in Beecher. however. gng-rnlq year was M13 JHSUCC Black. to occur during the baseball and political campaign At irregular times festive parties enable the law seasons a around the television set. students to demonstrate their social prowess. This: 83 szt: Contrasamg conversations as the Kimptons dine at Green. Center: Did you my cable stitch? Right: Study in force vectors. Dodd House. First row: Hofbo, Cray, Swecker, Warren, Newman, Denlinger, Ugarrf, Hastings. Second row: EMS, Mart:- Iofj, Cotev, Patrick, Cameron, Thomas, Pregaldin, Pimnan, Thomsom Greenwood, Lowe. Salisbury House: First row: Reichman, Johnson, Larkim Ludgin, African Levy, G. Cohen. Second row: Abrams, Stauber, Thomas, Seymour, Coldsuitch, Harroa', Kidd, Gee, P. Cohen. DesPEre only the faintest resemblance behveen 3-! and Mad- Am and crafts in she Burton-Judson studia vine mighty Casey has struck 0M- 5m??? House. FirFt Row: Wan. BOWL Haws. Hunrprz Young. Second Row: Hinds Johrzsr'ud, Mann; Hpmi. Third ROW: Cmtlirtz. Bidmrrf. Walker. Norlwck. Oba Houdand, Cohen, Currie, Spmmr, Blown Rosmbaum, Srhedar. Fishpr, WorrPH. Rass Rnrmomf. .Tl'i'mmr. BPPCJNI' Hall. First Row: Dimes. Diana, Allison. Sztsler, Miran, CuRG-E, Doctor. Second Row: Stanford. McIntyre, VanArsdale. Hven Drunk. Andrews. Bekman, Landmark, Collard,Paunne. Third Row: Gibson, Ward, Cordon. Hamper. Pollock, Minkus. Frimf. Power, Bison, Yarowsky, Cook, Adier', Karze-n. Bolus. Young. C. J. Wang. Kaufman. Reese. Kersimw. Bepching. .- - h - GGEPS H033. First Row: Lenna SPIJIUPftzPr. Emzmah Finkfestein. Patsy Allen, Marty? MarshaH. Ruth Waf- Frlmfrzf. Lila. Roprrcher. Second Row: Hefpn Easton. Eva Pusstdnik, Vivienne BWWIPR IWW Piyf-l'laks .10 Hoh'lpn, Cara! Homing. Arlene. Myer. Joye? Nafzger. Birsy Dutkey. Blake H013. First How: .4nn Failn. Betty Wood Clam KPHPFzPr, Barbara Bencdfrt. Joan Bayfes. 99001111 Row: Lois Sunnw. Pat Dulychinda.. ijn Rudikoff. Shirley Dean, MarceHa Tihsn, Linda Djw-Er. Lois Fink. Lois Kev, EM! Fishdl, Barbara Birhtwright. Rose Koo, Elizabeth. McKorHP. Marlene 501W. IN'IiHiNAililtJN-U. HUIISF. i:- muw than :1 i'tlinl'tlitttlt rtrihh'ttvt' tul' i'mt'igll tlmi s'XIIICItii'ttII xtmlvutx in lill'r-t? many inrtiltltinm 01' hight'l' learning. It mmhu-ls u program of ztc'livitie-rH huth cduratinnai and mt-iai, in nrmmrthlllrc? uith tht' vx- pericnce 21ml l'nat'l-Lgrmtmiq oi ita' rtlt-mhel's am! the? manifahi facilities of the nwtropniilan mmmunily. This varied program is piannmi from ytralr tn year tn supplenwnt the reguiar ut'tu'icmiv work whit-h lhmsr' mmnhers nndertakv in their wwrui M'imuis. ttltti to acquaint them with the ut'hit-wmenls and pmhh-ms at the different nutimmlitiw reprvwntcd in 1hr Himsr membership. For the foreign stuclvnt thv House hi it phu-e where he ran feel compieteiy at home, and, at the same time. come into frivndiy mntm't with AIHCI'tlttllH amt nthm' pmpies iiVing umh-r thv FEIITIP mot. Thurt- i: no ut- tempt to imprcw unc- vulturt- cm emnllwr. 011 the mn- trary: lilt' program tlewlopcd at Interimtimmi House. keep? wcii in mind the nt-eth 0f the .n'tudt'nb who ex- pects to return to hit: native land after hi9 period of study in thr- United States. For that reason national group: are COHSREI'VEd in thc urganimtimt of the House; and thr- activitieg alre- pianned and carried out with tho aaaiwtam-e of a Studmt Cmmr'ii. Three hasic ideas are consistently kept in mind in thc prcpm'atimi and exemtitm of this program. Ono is that through personal tth-to-day aFHOCieltiOH in one farm or almtherx people of differtmt hack- gmumist raises. and Cl'ECtIH may learn to underatand each other hatter. The. second is that the youth of all International House In 3mm from Ute .Utrtit'n-t: In faregrrmmf. Hm Masaryk Monument. - wait '. t ' .. 3!,5'. tt'h Left: The main inungr. Intermm'mmi House features extensive grime mmr Sparta jaciittim. Director Right: The Library. Harrti' Fuh: is seated at Felt. The painting is of Adlai Stevenson. nations who undergo the experience of iiving in hi- ternational Home shall carry batik with them to their own communities and countries a hotter appreciation of the problems of international intercourse, and a greater will to 966 theee pi'ohiems amicably adjusted. The third idea is to make International House a new ter for a corregpmtding arsveptance on the part of Americans of the same rtpirit of inquiryr and tolerance. which motivates the entire program of the House. In its physical facilities. International House is equipped with every mnvenienee to fulfil its purpose as a complete student center. It has dormitory at:- commodatimts for five hundred and twenty-four men and women students. A large dining room offers ettfeteria service at reasonable rates! with varied menu 01 American and foreign dishes. In addition. there is a tifiin room open throughout the afternoon and evening for light refreshments. In the Spring and Summer this servive is extended to the open-ail' mum in the center of the House. Other facilitiest such as a harher shop. a valet shop, a gift shop, and the like. are maintained for the convenience of residents. and they help to make In- ternationai House a complete community. The House is particularly weil provided with we reationai facilities availahie to its members. On one floor are the National 300mm a series of six attrac- tively decorated meeting rooms where national and internutimtai groups gather for rlibtrllw-itnny. teas. mm- mittee meetings, informal dam-ex and similar affairs. These mama have kitt ilt?1191tr..'-' where groups may or- Caaionaiiy prepare their own national dishes if they so wish. Tennis: courts. a tahie-tennis mu'Jm. altlti a playing field offer uppnrtunitie.c for hpm'ts. Speciai mention should he made of the Asesemhiy Hall which i: avaiiahlo for many of the larger activi- ties. This- auditorium, seating nearly seven hundred peopie. is equipped with every facility of the modern theater and cinema. It i? fl'eqtlentiy mied for concerts. dramatir prndurtions, talking motion pictures.- dances. and banquets. An excellent recreational library provide; mun.- papers! magazines tincltiding a number of foreign periotiicaisi and hooks for the general use of 1'05i- dents 0f the House. It can he scent then. that international Home ie not oniy a convenient. comfortable residence for fur- eign and Amerimn students: it is also an institution concerned with the weiI-heing of its members an imii: viduah. and with their attitude: as a group. Ae indi- viduals they mm enjoy ail the mviul and cultural amenities the House ufiera' as well aw the Itttttt6t'tlllr physical Conveniences. As a group. they are expected to confmm with the ohjects for whit'h the institutinn was founded and exists e the promotion of good fei- Iowship between particular imiiVitlu-ttls itltti iiitkien-nt nationalities. ma: 33?;er w:?serzfifx 90 ivific's Act Debaiing the H-Hrhigan Firm STUDENT GOVERNMENT N THE. S. G. elections in UctoIJL-L the Independent Students League and the Student Representatitve Party ran slates for 4-3 seats in the AFsemhly. The campaigning was a particularly arduous one for both voters and Campaigners. ISL was attempting to re- gain its position as majority party in the Assembly which it had held for four 0f1he paet five years. SRP was attempting to retain or increase its margin which gave it the majority of thr- seatw in the last yeal'is Aiv semhly. In addition to these. political considerations, the fact that eiettlions were held for three days: rather than the usual twn inrreamd the htmin of campaign- ing. When the votes wr're all counted ISL had won 29 seats and SHP 11-. The ISL victory was not totally unexpertcd. An idea nf rumpus opiniun could he had from the NBA t-leinm in tln- Spring of 1953. In this elet'tion ail 15L i'alltiifltllt's piled up more votes than their 9RP rivals. The r-It-rktirmg. homw'cr. were heiri llmiCi' 3 System at prtmt'urtinlmi represelllulit'm whirh NfFllilltti in tlw ESL winning 12 piat-t-rs and the SRP 8 in HIV NSA tIn-lcgalinn. 9:1- Clive Gray. Social Sciences. was elerted President of Student Government. The ISL followed it-. tra- ditional position of filiing all the seats 011 the Exem- Live Council when it is in the majority and taking none when it is the minority tas occurred last yeart. So the Eighth ASSBmhiy settled down to the third retli year of party government in S. C. The most important and the thm'nieet issue hiring: the Government this year was the Michigan Plan, calling for loss of recognition by organizations: whir'h had not eliminated discriminatory membership Claus- es by October 1, 1953. One organization. Phi Delta Theta, fell under this ban. Early in the year. 3. G. was informed lhat the. Administration ware rehwlant to see any campus group which was actively working to remove discriminatory clauses from its national constitution thrown off campus. The S C. undertook hearings and negotiations- with the ArhniniatratimL the fraternitiest faeultv and other interehted organi- zations. After months of conferences, a revision of the Code acceptable to the Government and the Ad- ministration was agreed upon tover however; a strong minority protestt. Phi Delta Thetis recognition was extended thru the Summer to allow for its national convention. In the Fall of 1954, it will receive recog- Presideni Clive 5. Gray The Executive Council in session. Left to right ciockruise around the table: Emil Johnsen, N311 Com.- minee; Bruce Larkin, Actiuities Coordination; Monica. Kozasa, Secretary; Aubrey Gai-yon, Erst Chair- man; Herb Sbhwartz, Vice President; Clive Gray, President; Chuck Curtis, Treasurer; EH Stein, CORSO: Matt Prastein, Committee-m-Large; Jim Handler, Finance; Howard Turner, Student Needs. Right: Nego- tiations over increased power. Left to right: Aubrey Calyon, Anton W. DeParte, Clive Cray, Dean Strozier. Campaign ing nitiun only on one raf hm renditions: II J 1H national t'OHVt'lllilel must approve an amendment striking itra discriminatm'y clause: t2j Failing this, the 1003? chapter mum repudiate ilrl dist-riminatory clause and tleclan- itself no longer fmund 113' It. At't'tpidl'lft' of this propowul 13y Ihr- IHL majority came in a stormy session climaxed by a walkout 0f SRP lmt'ause the 1'ovi9i011 WalR considered completely unameptahle. Counting Voting The student needs program rtxrived its; biggest hon?! in year; with the establishment of the Student Services Center in the Reynolds Club basement. AM the Covemmenfs service projectsithe hook ex- change. the ticket agency lhe mimcograph service. the travel servica and the 10311 service were cen- tralized in a convenient campus location. This: ll'lDVE: more than doubTed the. hours per week that most of 55s k? . KA.K.UJ9$L q, '2! Km. these services previously were open. The. loan serv- ice is a new project by this yearTS government. A new phase of the S. G. Travel service was insti- tuted for the Spring interim. Around a thousand students who live in 01' near cities that are :el'ved by railroads offering reduced fares for group travel were culled from the Student Directory. These students were organized into sections and contacted to form discount travel groups. The College Quiz Bowt. Left to right: Stan Fox, Sylvia Boyd, Joel Kttpperman, Leonard Friedman. Voting A new venture for the Government this year was occasioned by an invitation to Chicago to participate in the NBC College Quizhmxl. The Government was- given the responsibility of selecting team of four un- dergraduates. Pelican; recommended hy advisers and Others as well as: volunteers were subjected to an awesome battery of teets. Some of these were sup- plied by NBC. Others were made up by various mem- bers of the Government. The aim and reault of these tests was the selectinn of a weii-l'ounded team of four. Chicago lost to WaRhington and Lee in a very ciose program whose nutemne was determined by one ques- tion. The Government? foreign exchange program brought two Student: from Frankfort and allowed two UCers to go to Germany for a yearn: study. Apart from putting the present exchange program on a sound financial hasis-g the Government undertook a study of how to obtain the necessary WilCI'EHithal to expand the program to inelude exchanges with an Indian Univereity. The Student-Faeuhy-AtiminiP-tration Court has played its nmst important role this year since its i11- eeptivn. The Covernment Spent longer attaining the necessary UVG-Ihit'iih' to eieel the Court members this year than heforektwo long elections occurring, the usual one in November for the coming year and then most of the winter quarter was spent before suitable candidate W :1 fuuntl to fill a vacancy. tAt press time it appeared that Ihe Spring Quarter would require coneideration of another Court replacementt. Once elected the Court had the busiest docket in its history. Its first case this year involred Violations of the rules regarding distribution of printed matter by one of the campus political parties. A unanimous deeision of the Court placed the group on probation. For the first time the Court was asked to rule 011 the constitu- 97 1 - Wm StmIPnt-Faculnr-Adminfsxmtion Court hmrirm the SC 1?. SRP msP. Left to right: Justices Meikleiohn am! DPPOFIP. Chief .Trtstir-p Kaufmnnn. Justirm Sriaky and FPMmrm. 4!?3ML' JuslirPs Woelfrzer and Sharp. tinnaIity of u By-hm of tlw Student ASFCIUIJIY. The Court ruled Ihal thc- Bylaw spccifying that Assembly var'anrtiws mural hr: filled by a member 0f the- Same pm'ly aw llw rr-signw- was uncmlulitutional becausc il phm-II Iimituliram Iwynnd the mmpvlcmv 0f the As- st'mlalv upon the Ext-t-utivr Council of the Cavern- mt'ntt- Ullwl' i'i-lP-PH rt-tm'rml tn the Court involve the at'liun nf the Dil'lf'l'tutt of Student Alitivitics Office in I'annh tn Rirfihh Pmm pllhiit'ity and additions to the Code and RPnglaltilms by the Deatfs Office. Top priority in yet lincompleted projects has been given to a housing m-op under S. G. supervision. A proposed building for conversion into the co-op has Iwen selected and the Government has entered nego- tiations with the Board of Trustees twho had given tentative approval at press timel for a loan to en- able it 10 purchaso the building and set up the hous- ing unit. W Student 1! 141'wa 99 After the coronation: Dean Strozfer escorts Miss U. of C. away from the throne. TUDENT Union activities began with the hrs! day of orientation week and will continue through the ordeal of comprehensive exams into the sum- mer quarter. SU members returned early to the quasi- rangles to greet entering students at the annual picnic and songfest in Hutchinson Court. The bonfireSeas usualewere late in heng started, the hot dogSwas usual-were burned on the outside and cold on the inside, and-was umalreven fourth year Students for- got the words: to Wave the Flag? But studentst new and old alike. had had a chance to get acquainted. mt! Above: Queen Jan Porter, in center, her attendants: Meh'rent Rttpp, Jamie Redmond, Barbara Horowitz. Jeanine 10?: neon . Within a few days the SU program was under way. Ida Noyes, Cloister Clubea dining hall within the memory of old-time studentSewas the Scene of two hLCrh-dances and the Chancellofs Reception dur- ing October. The dark mahogany walls and impos- ing portraits of Ida and LaVeme Noyes were witness to two evenings of gaiety and laughter during the autumn quarter: Ida Noyes Open House and chonte Bufoa, the Night of Sin. More in keeping with the atmosphere of the Hall was the prevChristmas Wassaii Party, reserved but relaxing and informal. But per- haps the greatest pleasure of the Wassail Party came in the prior preparations, when SU members joined with Ida Noyes staff in climbing ladders, throwing tinsel, and breaking fragile bulbs in the decoration of the 25-foot Christmas tree. Bruce Larkin. 1953-54 SU president, stated that he received the most personal satisfaction from the establishment of the tIOOtl-hout' hi-fi concerts in Rey- noldhs Club South Lounge. Music enthusiasts com- plained 0f the chatter1 and mnversationalists Com- plained of the noise. but the concerts drew a steady crowd of commuters, Common? patrons, and dormi- tory fugitives. The programs ranged from Schubert t0 Shaw, from Seeger to Schoenberg. Top: Woody Herman plays cUWew COMM Wedding? Middle: Students leave Bartlett for the Commons. Bottom: Breakfast after the Prom. The Union brought its name before the campus in another way: FORECAST, a planographed weekly, appeared to baHyhoo thsocial, cultural, and recrea- tional aetivities', 0n the quadrangles. Promoted by Bill Hillman, who began a yeafs term as 5U presi- dent in April, the publication found a large and sym- pathetic audience despite criticism and censure from the Maroon. But more outstanding than any other event was the Slst Annual Washington Promenade. Climaxing two months of hectic preparation and publicity, the Prom found three hundred couples dancing to the music of Woody Herman and his Orchestra. While Dean Strozier found the rhythms a hit too lively for hi3. taste, he confessed that he had great pleasure in crowning Janice Porter Miss U of C. For Jan it was Ha thrilling experience ; for the campus, a pleasure to honor her. Bartlett Gym, for the first time since 194-8, had seen the best remembered part of the UC social program. Thiseplus outings to Colorado, a controversial art exhibit, the Oberlin Choir, and a raft of other ac- tivitieshwas SU 1954-. ThP Student Union Board. Prpsidrmf Hrur'p Knrkin at r'?' :15. In bm'A'g'rnmhL l'ft tn right: Barr - erprr- ' H1. Maum andPN. Jr'mfw Fright Martin 2mm. Def? Lmrr. Bil! Hinnmn. Hi: . Km'h'n. Sv-m'e'tmy Karrvn Jams is in fcjrt-jgnjmmf. An. autumn qzwrtrir ; dance. The theme: Dense Macabre. Chairmen of the Wash Prom Committees. Back row: Bill Rosenthal, decorations; Bet- ty Ferrar, Queen. Contest; Louis Schaefer, publicity; Chuck Curtis, finance Front row: Student Union President Bruce Lar- kin, Prom Chairman Al Cmber, Gil Daki- berg. Bruce Larkin and. Dale Lexy SIYkSCI'eening posters. Two Charles Addams characters at the Danse Macabre. Professional dancm's gr, Dame Macabre. 103 Student Union, Art Exhibit Night of Sin 10-4 Publications 103 I954 Cap 8 Gown-Phoenix Edward Maupin Editor Marie Schroer Michael Rogers Associate Editors Thomas deLeon Business Manager Vance Dillingham Sales Manager Jerome Cross Advertising Manager and Staff Adviser Advertising Staff Lanse Felker Clint Smith William Wellcome Stephen Bernard Appel Publicity Director Thomas Jersild Mary Joan Spiegel Literary Co-Editors Robert Sbarge Photographic Editor Editoriai Staff Margaret Anderson Virginia Bickerstaff Lyn Carter Phyllis Friedman Jay Goldstein Ralph Henkle Richard Herwitl Paul Hoffman Robert Kurland Palmer Pinney Karl Rohrer Bill Rosenthal Sharon Smith Tom Slifter 106 Above, the staff of the exriting, eonn'orersiaf 1954 Cap and Gown: seated: Kart Rohrer, Marie Schroer, Ed. Maupin. Mary form Sniegal. Tom JeLeon. Standing: Steve Appear, Jerome Cross, Robert Sbarge, .t'l-fike Rogers, Tom Jersild. Below: Editors 31'1meer am? Srhroer arfempt KunsnrremfuN-H to discover Liberacek 5915763. YEARBOOK is seldom comidered particularly iWcontroweIsiah,1 but this yearas CAP AND GOWN staff occasionally found themselves in that unusual position. Starting with the initial as- sumption that a student activity should he enjoyed. a peculiar group of people - fortunately not so stereotyped as our more severe critics: insist e gath- ered to begin work on the book. The first staff event was a party at which yeal'hook Staffs from all over the country were present. A rather unorthodox Mar 3 yearhookt publicity campaign, and a special Wash Prom issue of the Phoenix with a mild attempt at humor caused quite a Storm in the. winter quarter. One letter to the Maroon suggested that the Staff. together with several? other ttRah-Rahk' organizations he shipped to North? western as a goodwill gesture. The letter was signed HPublius.H Actually, although our publicity F- par- ticularly poor Hortense Fandangle twho was osten- sibly attracted by the promised sophistication and smutu 0f the boom - was unusual, we saw in it little conflict with universal principles. and though we were flattered by all the attention. we found it disgusting at times. A trio of funior officers r',1'IOHf-ng the r'r'mms of CAP :95 COWN at a recent staff party. Sterne Appm', Tom Iersild, and Tom DwLmn. There was. of course. a phenomenal amount of work left to be done at deadlimn time. As the. hook was being sent to press, the strongest motive for the harried staffers was; the party in prospect fm' publi- cation day. riffable, Ifmugh indefatig- aMe, .fIssot-iate Editor 1:11:17er Rogers swans out a dmd- line. The CAP E COWN staff disclaims all? responsibit'izy for zhe low quality of this picture. We print it hpre because we feel tha; the ex- pressicm of Associate Editor Marie Schroer Molding phoned, i3 Wine for the book? Bob Sbarga photo Prfiior. in one Of his fighter moments. N Staff members and friends at Um minim. Editofs party. This affair, traditiormHy held in October, was first held this October. THE MAROON by Arthur Brown Editor-in-Chief N 1953751. lllt' Chicagn NIARUUN :nnlltt-tled its sixty-fil'sl year 0f publication as ihu' 1H; student nmvspaper under lhl: usual mar 01' t'l ilicism and em unusual whisper of praise. The Milivism was witlcspresazl among the vocifer- ous campus gmups. Of the t'allllpllR political groups, tlw Student Repnrsvnlutiwr Party tSRPJ Charged that the N'TARl'JON was unfair in its presentation of the SHP position to lhe campus. while. the Independent Students League USLJ stated that the. papf-r was dam- inuted by u small group in sympathy with SRP. Stu- dent Union tSUt complained of lurk nf hallyhoo ant! prnmmion of social t'iw-nla hy the MAROON: and so the campus might not he without admfuule coverage of C-danr-L-a. 5U tucgam pllhliratinn of its own irregu- larly uppr-zn'ing SL5 FORECAST. Student Govern- mmt tSCt tlmughl that the MARUtftN dill an inaccu- rate job in reporting SC meetings and did not give enough space to SC pl'njor-ts. A rlhw Brown. Left to right: sinfmr Brown. mIitmuin-rhipf: HErr-wa Shin: Hirr'rm'r! IT'm-rf. managing editor: t-i'Hen farmer, news editor. The criticism extended to the editor. Some. 11:1aimed that he was too weak and had surrendered control of the paper. while others t-mnpiained that he was dic- tatorial and undemocratic. One staff memhet' re- signed by posting a notiee in the MARUtI1N nffice Stating that he nrefused to serve under an editor who made everyone grovei before him. Of the over one hundred student organizations, there must have heen a few who were satisfied with MAROON coverage; however. none of them hothered to say so. The praise cmne from it few individuals, and fromI an opinion and readership survey of the MAROUIN conducted by a 0121.95 in the CnmmLinit'utinns Depart- ment of the Social Svieuevh division. ThiR survey. based on interviews with 113 students selet'tod at ran? dom, stated as follows: ccA very significant imlivatm' t'tf MAROON re- sponsiveness is the unanimity rwith whit-h the studettt body expressed their general Hatisfactien With them campus press. It is true that Charges of huts have heen leveled by a strong minority and these. charges are borne out to a certain degree thitts in the. MAROON results more from 01111851011 rather- than from com- Left to right: Roberta Hopkins; Joy Burbaeh, copy editor; Allen fanger, news editor; Richard Ward, managing editor; Arthur Brown, editor-in-chicf; Mit- chell Slain; Jack Bttrbach. missimtt. But evidenre has heen hmught forth that the student hody is cognizant of the MAROUN. its policies and it: shortt'tmlings. It is this mutual sensi- tivity between the MAROON and its- public that will act to correct abuses: of hints and keep the MAHOON a dynamit' and responsive student newspaper. In 1953-54, the paper itself had four objectivesww Ht t0 in'tprove the acutmey and quality of its writ- ing: t2t to present a wider coverage of campus events: 131 to attempt to resolve its ever-present fi- nancial difficulties; and NJ to maintain its position as: an independent aggressive ncwapaper. A5 for the first pointethe Quality of its: writing- the improvement was LII heat unspeetztruTar. Ahhough the number of ahsohltely incmnprehensihle Stories was redut'ed. too many :trtit'ies renminetl verbose and inaccurate. Whether UC students are unable to ex- press thematelveg t-h-iurly and mnrisely. or whether the MAROON attracts people who refuse to he prejudiced by the facts of the Stm'y 01' hy the rules of sentence 111 structure in an open question. In any ease the quality of writing. white somewhat improved. was still far fmm satisfaetmy. However, the MAROON did Huttceed ill broaden- ing the extent of its campus coverage. While politics. continued to pretlmninate. the range of stories in- creased. More leetures were covered. More small eampue organizations were given space. Religious groups whivh had received very little emeruge in the past years: were puhlieized in MAROOTN' columns. Sparta rec'eived itnnsihtent coverage. Thua while eer- tainiy them- ie' room for improvement. mizeh hav. heen aceompiiyhed in this area. Finanees mntinued to he a headache. Huwevel' the paper did develnp an adequate hnokkeeping sys- term a satisfactory ad dummying arrangement, and scheduled husinew office hours. There were fewer flubbed ads and fewer dissatisfied advertisers. AH that was lacking was an advertising staff. But in the face of a deteriorating neighborhood and smaller student purchasing power tdue t0 the lower enrt'ilimentL advertising paid 80? ; of the MAROON'S very considerahie budget. With the aid of grants from the Dean of Studenta this advertising enabled the paper tfor the first time in yearst to avoid going deeper in deht to its printers. The MAROON was ahte to maintain an independ- ent position on Campus. There was a notable lack of the political struggles which were characteristic of MAROON of former times. However much of the aggressive spirit of the paper was lost also. Only fOtU editorials were past in Autumn and Winter Quarters. Reporters were content to rewrite press releases rather than dig up their own information. Page editors were less inclined to question authorityeto go out after scoops no matter who was hurt. Aggressiveness iri- tated many MAROON readers, 30 perhaps this lack of aggressiveness will improve the paper. But it is dis- appointing to those on the paper who remember the htgood old days. The outstanding event of the year was the three week visit of Richard Ward fMAROON managing editort to the Soviet Union. While. the trip was spon- sored by the paper, Ward did all the work in organ- izing and financing the trip, and credit for its success belongs 5:01er to him. Upon his return, Ward wrote a series of five articles teomplete with pieturest for the MAROON on student life in the USSR. To Allen Janger, MARUON news editor, belongs much of credit for what improvement there has been in new; reportng during the past yealz Naomi Bitten- baum and Nellie Stoneman did an adequate jnh as news and new: feature editors1 respeetively. Patti Hoffman gave the paper a well-mvered and accurate Sports page. Daniel Queenk feature page was prm-mr- ative. Joanna Herlihy as production manager, and JOY Burhaeh db t'upy editor did fine um'k 0n the pm- du'ction 0f the paper. Reva Bl'rm'n tiiti an adequate 112 Joy Btrr'badi rmd Cfmw Crrn' jol: as imsinma manager. Mam haul marking mmnlnrn of lhe reporting Hlaff Lmd L'upf; Hlni'f Ih'strl'w mention, lull lack of space. prvvems this. In summing up. this yI-ur showed definite im- provement in llu- HARUUNL Iml lllvl'ff is still a long way to go. Left to right: Richard Ward, Bring faijP, Diane Ep- stein, Robert Bfoch. 113 Review staff mPPtEng: Borkhmrf. Marv 11-4 Shims. HthrL nmf Editor Karmafz. THE REVIEW HE Chicago Review, in recent years, has: been tramformcd into a quarterly t'epreraentative 0f the creative literary thinking of the Universityk students. faculty, and alumni. Originally the Review provided the campus with poetry and fic'tion hy rer't'agnizvr'l writers and as yet unsung students. To- day it is filled largely hy periodic Campetition among students. faculty, and alumni of the Univer- sity. The. scope of the New Review is rounded out by such things as- critic'Iuc-H, art work and articles of currmt interest. The success of the Chicago Review Hes in the desire of a few students in each part of the Univer- sity to go beyond the pale of term papers and essay exams, write for the fun of writing. and see their names in print. Of these students. about fifteen, with an added penchant towards editing, comprise the staff of the magazine. Frank Karmatz was this year's editor. Editor Karmat: Barr-y Sherman, Catherine Allison, and James Holland in llPlayboy of the Western World? UNIVERSITY THEATRE HIS spring, 1954, University Theatre, a non- profit dramatic organization which operates un- der the auspices of the Student Activities office, presented the fiftieth production of its eight year his- tory. These years mark only the most recent develop- ment in the long tradition of campus dramatics. GUniversity Theatre is the outgrowth of the groups that existed before: the ngl'amatic Association, ltThe Gargoyles? and the llTower Players. In Mandel Hall, the dressing-room and basement wells are cov- ered with the hieroglyphiCS and boldly painted in- scriptions which commemorate all of the bright mo- ments in campus theatrical history. Few of the many names inscribed in Mandel will be found on Broadway Marquees, ancl youh'e not likely to meet them again in the credits at a local movie. But those who proudly inscribed their names will not forget the good times1 the stress of rehearsals, and the last minute rush to get things right before 116 the curtain went up. Those old times e the llBlatck- friarsf the llMirror. the llPlayers Guildl, e all added their thread to the tapestry of U. C. tradition. University Theatre has not been a training ground for future stars, nor was it meant to he. Dramaties has always been extra-curricular. N0 courses H 110 credits. Changes have been constant. Faces are always new. Sometimes, a new policy seems to alter things. University Theatre may be. doing the classics now, instead of Broadway plays. Then policy is altered and it's fresh, original plays instead of those tldead, academic things? Tomorrow it may he plays with a llmeaning 0r plays that prove a point. IFS a safe bet, though, that the casts are still going to gather be- low stairs and dauh their names: in scenery colors or greasevpencil alongside those from The Trail 01' The Country Wife or Chalk Circle. This year's produc- tions were: Antigone hy Sophocles, a drama recital; The Carnival of Thieves by Jean Anouilh, premiere of the American translation; Playboy Of The Western Werla' by John M. Synge: Inheritors by Susan Glas- Andrew Bro in Ufinzigw'mf, rPup: Lois Karbef, Andrew Bro in Antigone? Middle: A complicated bid of action from Carnival 0f 5 rtti'imesf3 peH, a sponsored production Starring The cast from The World of Shoem Alpichem in a drama recital for the benefit of Academic Freedom Week; 111 ree one- act plays, Box and Cox by John Morton, Aria dd Capo by Edna St. Vincent Millav. and Tim Shy and Lonely by Irwin Shaw. In addition to these productions: on campus, Universitv Theatre toured Piaj'bov Of The Western World to Shimer College this spring. 11? Srene from slcr'mles, the spring quarrer produr'rion. ACROTHEATER CROTHEATRE 0f the University Of Chicago is nationally famous for its top-notch grandvscale productions and its small, informal shows given in high schools and colleges around Chicago. Dedicated to fast moving programs, the organization has refused to be just arty i instead, the members of Acrotheatre move forward with entertainment that is experimental, but which usually fits 1116 taste of everyone. As a result of the prhctical approach, Acrotheatre has been in Look and Life, and has been filmed by Fox Movietone. The organization will take any kind of act that meets its qualifications of attrac- tiveness, precise timing, good taste, and entertain- ment. Above all, an act must never be boring. Instruction 0f the group is handled by E. F. LLBud Beyer, Director of Acrotheatre, and a large group of assistants many of whom were trained here at the University. The 1953-4 officers were President Creighton Schacht, Secretary Eiichi Fukushima, Treasurer Cat'- olyn Osterberg, and Stage Manager Bill Texter. Barbara Lfsco Above: 51'? Smith frnusr'r rh'recmrL Larry Gleason Kcurminj, Georgirmna Marni: rwosrmningJ, Creighton Schachf fpresf- rfnnfk Carniirn Osirrberg Hrvasurcrk BEN T6110! nge nmnrrgerJ. Below: Junmr JNOHICMW grits a trampoline Emma. 119 I- The 1954 CIN Club. First Row: Peg J-I'Iawr'limzey, BFrniC? Yawn, Judy Baker, Jeanne Chmdmm, Charity Burns, Marion Ross, Don Butterfiehi, Eugenv Crunbjr. Roger BruPs. 4'1-fafthew Zuckerbraun, Riphard LP???- Second Row: Hffda RocknrfeHer, Rosalie Jenna, J0 Harman, Jean Zener, Kathryn AHW, 1 1'rginir: Clark, Lawrence Lerner, Prentiss Chomp, Ross Firestonv, Tom Diamomlsmne, Dick Firimm. Third How: James Maynard, john Warren, Samuel Kovnat, Jvrry Hogan. Jim PhiHips, Cordon Pinkham, Daniri Brash Tony UOTd- Missing: J0 FuUrPrson, Mary Spipgml', Connie' Krausrn Nan Thurber, Shirfrsy Rubin. fm'r-P .mp5, Eifffjrn SWINE, Judy HGTPS, Doris Frank. William Rosmbfoom. 3115A? j'lfm'frln. Bob Bmfrxmiumn, ergr'r Kat'- len, Robert Winemilivr, Raymond .A'Immm'. Harm Tamaras. Wiifimn Churrhih'. Irma Wm'sw'. Dir-M'mr' wa Swing in foreground. THE GLEE CLUB HIS year, under the direction of Mr. Ruben Dressler, the University Glee Club has shown a marked improvement. With mambership up to forty members from all parts of the university, en- thusiasm and quality have increased noticeahly. The yeafs performance schedule consisted of one major concert each quarter. Featured so far this year during these concerts: were Palestrina Misses Papa? Marcelli and Graham Taylofs The Peacabi'e King- dom. Aside from their regular spring concert. the Glee Club during the spring quarter sponmred a recital in Mandel Hall by the famed Oherlin Col- lege Choir. During the latter part of the school year Mr. Peter Swing 0f the Mush: Department I't'plzu-c-d Mr. Dressler as director, when he was appointcd mush'al director of NBC Studios. 120 COLLEGIUM MUSICUM HE Collegium Musicum, amateur student or- chestra 0f the University 0f Chicago, is this year under the direction of Mr. Robert Vikstrom. The group now consists of about thirty members from all parts: of the sehool. The program of the Collegium this year has featured three quarterly concerts. given free in Mandel Hail. Their repertoire is that of the standard chamber orchestra, especially highlighting rare. and unusual pieces of the seventeenth and eighteenth centuries! and very modern European and American music. RMJEr- 'O'E mew , .-, Coilegium members warm up backstage for a. Sunday concert at Mandel H all. UNIVERSITY CHOIR HE Choir of the University of Chicago, under the ahle direction of Mr. Robert Vikntmm, pro- vides the music each Sunday morning for church services in Rockefeller Chapel. In addition to this.- the group present: in Rockefeller a major concert each quarter, featuring professional soloists from outside the university. So far this year. accompanied by members of the Chicago Symphony Orchestra. the Choir has presented Handel's fli'essiar'i., Stravinskfs Maw, and Boralarigm'. For their spring concert. the Choir has scheduled Bachis Paxton. According to St. John. The Choir Often does professional work outside the University, such as their recent accom- paniment of the SElfHCI' Welles Ballet at the Chicago Opera House. Back Row: Wifiiam Jones, Roger Weiss, Louis Dvorak, Clyde Stechel, Ewell Reagin, Don. Spear, David Wilcox. Third Row: Maurice Turnquist, Kurt De Valencia, Edwin Stic-hney, Arnold Ilfeardon, Louis Meriwether, Thomas Johnsrud, Schubert Ogden, Leon McKmiek, Norman Ham. Second Row: Clair Spang- Ier, Gwendolyn Kean, Charlotte Vikstrom, force 0;:- den, Patricia Peterson, Francis Cuterbaeh, fane 0?- son, Edna. Christopher, Eva Leminsom Ruby Smith. Front Row: Anna Mary Adams! Helen Pearo. Marv Kittie, Mary Lee Deters. Carofine Lee. Penny Nosirer. Barbara Trowhridee. Marion Davis, . f 31 V1133; The band r110 basketball gamp. Airfrorrgh 111111171113 m'v bring planned for 13319 future, playing at baskmbalf gnm r13 11105 the 11111111311 1110,1101 artfzrir-jr 111 1933-4. N THE CONCERT BAND HE Band Olganized in Feh1uary of 1953 as a 1ebirth 0f the 01d Univmsity Band, played this year for the home basketball games. The hand also had plans for concerts sometime in the future h hence the name. Leland Smith of the music depart- ment directed the organization which met in Sunny,i Gymnasium every Tuesday night for rehearsal. The: Band was open to everyone and had 11112111111115 from the College and the divisions. Although quality of performance was generally low, the group holds promise, and the University might mnreivaldy 110th for a hand as good in its way 11.: wah- itx 1.11'1'1h11'vssur. The trombone 30031-011 at rehearsaf. Roiand Finswn, at center, was responsible for organizing the band 1'11. I953. 122 There are. the groups. which 113111101 1 . typ . . hesitates: to throu- tou the 11cm headed LIV Hancous 01' H011'1e1'.u . . . . . , Dzrecror Terry Lunsford gwes Forum members a run-down of posuble arguments on both szdes of this year 3 topic for an. impending debate. 124 STUDENT FORUM TUDENT FORUM has been sieveloping polished S craters through a program of debate and dis- cussion. This year the members of the organization chal- lenged visiting schools and fellow participants in the Big 10 Debation League. They also took part in in- tercollegiate tour naments and congresses. In off campus debates, UC students visited Chi- cago high schools, YMCAE, and civic centers for panel discussions. The more venturesome Forum members went to Hobo College once a month for informal and rather loosely organized meetings. The Forum also sponsored student-faculty seminars for the benefit of the debaters. When Terry Lunsford, director, and Mollie Fel- ker, secretary, were married in March, Terry Sandae low was appointed the new director. Bob Zener, Mollie Felker, Paul Horvitz and Sarah Silverman do a little last minute checking. ORIENTATION BOARD 66 0 THIS is a University of Chicago studmtiii This remark i made frequently by entering students and aimed at Orientation Board members h reveals the responsibility resting upon this committee; for to many, its members are the first students to be seen on campus. It is for this reasscm that they are a select group of individuals. Commonly known as LLO Board, the group acts as a welcoming committee for entering students, at- tempting to acquaint them with the college and its program. This is accomplished geographically by campus tours, intellectually by formal and informal discussions, and socially by events such as: the picnic, dance, and Activities night sponsored with other stu- dent organizations. Chairman Nancy Cushwa headed the group in 1953-4. O-Board members Earl Medfinsky and Nancy Cushwa with new student Phyllis Friedman. MOUNTAINEERING CLUB The Mounraineering Chm. Left 10 right: Eiichi Fukushima, Glenn Swagger, Howard Garland, CriCh-EOR SCthCI, Bob Heam'lin, Jerry Jordan, Arnold Hanson, Don Fisher, Spencer Wright, David Sofzman, Jean Zeener, Allason Logan, Nancy Barth, David Williams, Ron Hedi. A pratiirre climb in. fm'a'iet. 126 CHESS CLUB The Chess Club. Left to right: Bill Thomason, Barry Rappaport, Mike Cottesnmn, Chuck chin, Bob Shapiro, Larry Abrams, Siriney Jacobs, Burs Weinstein, Bob Winder, Harry Pashner. l2? The PrevMerI Club rwith hardly the full membership presend. Tom Hanson. Linda Pizak. Chuck Carfson. Janice Pizak, Presiden! W. R. Wilson, Faculty Adviser Mayfiel'rL Larry MokotoH, Sheldon Rosenfichf. Arr Wm'dnmn, Dianne Bafshmu. Julia Moon. PRE-MED CLUB HE 195354 year was quite a successful one for the University of Chicago Pre-Med Club with nearly forty members. The Pre-Med Club serve: the needs of its. mem- bers in three vital ways: fH it provides a means for students interested in medicine or biological scieuree to meet other students with similar interesle; I2fv it introduces members to the. ler-hnieal problems of their respective fielde; and Ch it helps members solve personal problems, such 219 the draft and entranee into Medical School. 12 In the past year experts from a wide area of the medical profession have spoken on subjects ranging from psychology to viviseelion, from plastic surgery to human genetics. Student panels have been held on perlinent subjects. Tours have been eonrlueted t0 Statesville Prison and several hospital?- and research buildings. Arrangements were. nuide to permit mem- bers to observe surgery in Billings Hospital. Films on medical subjects are. always available to the club. Several parties: and picnics: have been widely par- ticipated in throughout the year. AST RONOMY CLUB The optical section of the Astronomy Club grinding telescope lenses in R L b ' - ' . . yerson a . L ft 1 ht. c . . . Elliot Moore, Peter Clams, Jacques Duiin. e 0 ng P8 er I anrz'ervoorr, 129 SAILING CLUB HE Sailing Club showed some improvement this year as it climbed out of last place both at Wis- consin and again at the elimination for the Timme Angsten Race. At least the club offered spirited opposition under the competitive leadership of Commodore Al Fortier, and skippers Elsworth McClenachan, Bob Baron, and Dorothy Hess. Club travel in pursuit of conquest has extended to St. Louis, Madisont Wisconsin, and Nolre Dame. They came ashore last fall long enough to throw a big party after a meet, at which the Sailing Club played host to sailors from seven other schools. During the long winter season they operated the Shore School. teaching elementary and advanced racing techniques, showing movies, and hearing guest speakers. This spring, for the first time, they and two other Chicago area clubs are practicing and sharing facilities at the Columbia Yacht Club. The club is a charter member of the Mid-West Collegiate Sailing Association? and of the Inter-collegiate Yacht Racing Association of North America. Above, Commodore A! For- tier and Steve Seymour on Lake Mendoza for the Wis- consin regatta. The Club owns one boat to which they refer as the Wheat? Right, members McClena- Chen, Karen Adams, Baron, Farrier, and Salem with guests a; autumn party. 13H nwm aw: ' Keltyim 131 RELIGION AT CHICAGO IVE aim of the religious program on the cam- pm is to stimulate students and faculty mem- bers alike to move to a mature faith involving sound thinking and the courage to act. This aim is exemplified in the Reckefeller Memorial Chapel servires which are conducted each Sunday morning at eleven dc-Itjek with additional services at other times. Sermons are preached by Dean of the Chapel, Thompson, and Associate Dean Robbins as well as by guest speakers. Jame: A. Pike, Dean of the Cathedral of St. John the Divine, was a guest during the Winter Quarter. Under the chairmanship of Mr. Pierre H. Del- attre, the Chapel House Cenmlittee on Religion and the Arts sponsors programs consisting of poetry read- ings, 1eeture:, and religious art exhibitions. The Chapel program of sacred music is one of the Uni- versity's major cultural contributions to the com- munity. The University Choir. directed by Mr. Rich- ard E. Vikstrom, sings at all Chapet worship services and presents formal concerls in the Chapel several times each year. '1 - .':x!..' . - Chicago Theological. Seminary. At left. is Graham Taylor Chapel; behind awning: Thorndike Hilton. Chapel. has of Christ Dormitory. At right: Canon. Bernard I. Bell, At left. helow: Ditrinit-'-' students Hiring: in Disr 4 r? t:i.sar of the? Canterbury Ilub. HE B'nai Btrith Hillel Foundation aims tn fur- ther the knowledge and appreciation of Jewish religion and culture. The Fuundation, with Rabbi Maurice B. Pekarsky as Director amt Oscar Kenig as Acting Director, also cooperates in the in- terfaith program of the University Chapel and the groups affiliated with it. A Sabbath service is con- ducted every Friday evening at 7:45 P.M. The Hillel house is situated at 5715 Woodiawn Avenue. HE Catholic student organization at the Univer- sity of Chicago is the Calvert Club. The goal of this Club is the formation and development of weH-rounded Christian personalities and capable stu- dent leaders whose Christian influence will he felt by the whole campus community. Spiritual activities include Daily Masses and Rosary, Sunday Masses, and a weekend retreat once each quarter. Lecture series and discussions are con- ducted by the Clulfs Chaplain, Rev. Joseph D. Con- nerton, and Assistant Chaplain, Rev. Thomas B. McDonough. An open house is held at the beginning of each quarter and regular Sunday night suppers and other special events are scheduled. A: right: James R. Lawson, Carillonneur of Rocke- feller Chapel. At left, below: The Reverend .-1!artin L. Crannm'. mmhrrting Lutheran Services in Thorndylre Hix'mn Chapel. At right: Sunday breakfast in Swift Hat! Commons after the Episr'opat service in Band Chapel. are. Ivi'l: Hid: Plano Iday'fhg Hie Sunday marm'ng Luh'mran .sw'm'ri-rz a! Thorm'h'A'e-Hihon Chm 2.6!. head of Nu: La'riit.:er.sin-'.s .mermucofugy Uepurhnenr, addresses a Sunday afternoon mmm'ng' 0f hr. Ho: c. HAPEI. HO -. E :14 the Pl'i'JlFFlal'll ttPnter of F-tll- Cc -nt n:-ligiou:. LIL'IiV'ilit'h' on snnpua houses lhe 'Hx of a nnmher uf lhe Prot ant pasli who serve tht l'jalllleF. In an altnmspherv conduct to informal .' ' ion and relaxation. students are en- crrluragml to us:- the fau-ilitie: available for tl an the? Pn'atcrstant groups. The- Chapel Hmw: . WY: 1011 I 3 WM A Belnzmg lufl: Tug: .s'er-mx mm m mil; rm Hm porch. lf- 131';th reading: INN! m1: Starfi'nfx a! Hillel House. Ihapef House, center of Prom. l34 Right: Dr. Ceiling, ahJert Jab in. De Sales UTHERAN student life is organized for the gmwth of Christian faith and practice in the cor- porate life of the Church. Programs on Friday nights and other cial events are designated by two groups. Alpha Iota Chapter of Gamma Delta. and the Luthelan Student Aasnr-iaticm, with the guidance of the paglor to sludents. Rev. Marlin Graelmer. and members of the faculty. Sunday morning Fen 1 held in Thorndike Memorial Chapel. amt activin s on campus. The pipe: of the organ in RackefeHer Chapel 1001': boldly down upon the after from the right waft. Hillel Home. home of Jewish student activities at Chicago. J33 THE Canterbury Club tEpiscopal Church Coun- CiH offers an opportunity for all interested Episcopaliam to enjoy good fellowship and to inquire into the meaning of the faith under the guid- ance of the Clulfs pastor. Canon Bernard Iddings Bell t former professor of Religion at Columbia and Editor of the 1907 CAP AND GOWN. The Club meets every Tuesday evening for discusF-ions and arranges special activities such as: the weekly Com- munion service held every Sunday in Bond Chapel. This year breakfast was: Served in Swift Han every Sunday following the 8:30 service. HE Porter Foundation is comprised of the Con- gregational - Christian, Evangelical and Re- formed, and Presbyterian Student religious: or- ganizations. Because of the diversity of the student body, Porter sponsors several felltimships under the direction of the University Pastor. Rev. William N. Lovell, a college fellowship. a graduate felltm'ship. and a Couple's Club. NTER-VARSITY Christian Fellowship is an in- terdenominational evangelical organization. The purpose of the group is to provide fellowship in Christian living under the guidance of their faculty advisor, Mr. Harold A. Anderson. HE Young Friends Fellowship is a campus re- ligious organization of those interested in the principles of the Society of Friends tQuakersi. Activities include discussions. retreats, work projects, social action, outings, and weekly meetings on Sun- day evenings. Its advisers are Chris and Mary Cad- bury. HE Methodist Student Union is a federation of the following Methodist groups and activities: The Methodist Student Fellowship which meets every Sunday evening for supper and discussion; the International House Supper Club; and the Divinity Fellowship, a seminar of Methodist Theological Stu- dents conducted by Chaplain Virgil A. Kraft. HE Charles W. Cilkey Foundation is a Baptist- Sponsored program of religious ministry to stu- dents. Activities of the Foundation are carried out through the Baptist Student Fellowship and are centered in the Hyde Park Baptist Church. The min- ister to students is Rev. S. A. Salter. HE Purpose of the Christian Science group, in keeping with the tradition of all Christian Science College organizations is Itto enlighten the University community concerning Christian Science and to provide opportunities for fellowship and activity among members of the University who are interested in Christian Science.H Services were conducted weekly throughout the year on Tuesday evenings in Thorndike-Hilton Chapel. HANNING CLUB tUnitariant is a student fei- lowship of religious liberals iidedicated to the creation of a new integrity of spirit in personal life and in societyf$ Activities this year included weekly Sunday evening supper-speak-discussion pro- grams, lectures, and special events. Top left: Students display work at religious art ex- hibit sponsored by Rockefeller Chapel during the Autumn Quarter. Middle left: A breakfast of the Inter-Varsity Christian Fellowship. Bottom 58ft: Chap- lain Granger Westberg 0f the University Clinics in discussion with graduate theology students. v.5...wun-u: 444a... :.....- .. . Athletics I 13 THE COACHES NEARLY ali litdl Iltm' remains oi the Olive great Midway teams are the men who emu'hetl them. Written player skill went down student enthu- siasm went with it. And yet the quaiity 0f the coach- ing remains remarkably constant. providing a gener- aily disinterested student body with a generally inter- esting sports program. T. Nelson Metcalf has held the Director's post Since he succeeded Stagg in ,33. He is also Chief Administrative Officer of the NAAU Olympic Com- mittee and a member of the Olympic Executive Board. Chicago graduate I. Kyle. Anderson is As- sistant Director. Besides assisting Metcalf. coaching baseball, and assisting in basketball and golf, he now is serving as Secretary-Treasurer 0f the National Col- legiate Baseball Coaches Association. Joseph M. Stampf, Director of J. V. Athletics1 is also a Chicago alumnus. He starred for the Mal'oons in Big Ten basketball, and played professional hall after gradua- tion until coming here in 194-4. Keoman Boyehefi Director of Intl'amurals, competed in basketball, foot- ball, and baseball at Oberlin and Michigan. He came to Chicago in 346, and at present coaches badminton. golf, handhaih and squash. and assists in coaching swimming. Nelson H. Norgren, basketball Coach, first came to Chicago in 1910 as a student. He was an All- American halfback and a four letter man, amassing twelve iiCs altogether. He returned to the Midan in 521 and now, besides coaching basketball, assists in baseball and tennis. Alvar B. Hennanson, ml the staff since 1927, is one of the country's host three- weapmi fencing coaches. He was appointed U. S. Olympic coach for the 1940 games which were can- celled by war. He has been chairman of the NCAA Fencing Committee for five years, and has coached soccer here for seven. Erwin F. Beyer, a national Collegiate Champion gymnast, started coaching here immediately after his graduation from here in 1939. His outstanding achievement is the creation of Aero- theatre tsee page 116i. William J. Moyle, swim- ming and tennis coach, has been at the University since '46. He coached at Iowa State, USC, and Brad- ley before coming here. Before receiving his degree from here in 1933, Edward M. Haydon hurdled, ran the relay, and threw the hammer for the track team. Returning in $48, he became track coach in 1950 when coach Merriam retired. He has also coached cross-country and as- sisted with golf since then. Allan C. Bates is the newest addition to the staff. Team captain last year, he became player-coach this year, replacing Anton- acci in that post. This survey of the staff is of course too brief to give a full picture. All that could be shown was some. evidence that the high quality of the coaching staff has remained remarkably Constance since the days of Chicagcfs Big Ten Championships. Seated: Norgrm, Stampf, Hermanson, Anderson. Standing: Bates, Moyfe, Beyer, Haydon, MPIMUF': BOYCIH-Jff- Joe Howard, Jim Fencil, George Athenson, Aaron. Ceffner, Sherry Gray. FOOTBALL CG OOTBALL'l became an important word on campus during the year, and, like any impor- tant word, caused a lot of questions. Would the students support a team? Would the administra- tion permit one? Should the sport be intramural. small-time collegiate, or Big Ten? Can it be com- patible with scholarship? Evidence that students would support a team was supplied by the formation of a Committee to Bring Football Back to the University. Farmed by the five students pictured above and Louis D. Walters, the Committee drew over fifty students to a meeting, started a list of potential players, and sought admin- istration support. The administration was choosing its words with care, however, and gave little more support than a wait-and-see attitude. Dean Stl'oziel' told the Committee that he and Chancellor Kimpton Were iiinterested,9 in the idea. ttThe door is not closed but we need more time to Consider and await evidence that enough students will train for the team? Com- mittee Chairman Geffnei' was, on his side, uconfident I can sign up a hundred students before June, but . . . sceptical about the administration's attitude. And so the questions of student interest and administra- tion attitude remained moot. The question of intramural, small-time inter- collegiate, or Big Ten football was settled early in the year, however. In spite of insistence by a Maroon editorial writer and other opponents of the game that any football must become Big Ten football, Kimpton 130 and T. N. Metcalf, Athietic Director, both stated that small-time intercollegiate football was the most that Chicago could consider. The Maroon writer said, in part, ttThe students of that time t1920lsi are today Our most numerous, most effective, most affluent alumni. These are the people who are demanding a return of football. If the game is resurrected would these alumni he content with a mediocre teamiw The Maroon writer thought not. A statement made by Metcalf gave another answer: LaIf we do have inter- collegiate football it must operate on a small and reasonable scale. Any rumor that Chicago wants re- instatement in the Big Ten is ridiculous. III his editorial nWre Prefer No Footballil the Maroon writer also raised the question of the com- patibility of football and scholarship. in his view ilthe good football player is seldom a good student . . . he is merely a 200-plus pound monster in shoulder pads who will receive a degree in Physical Education for cavorting before 80,000 wildly cheer- ing Spectators. An argument opposed to this view cited the fact that the University has maintained wrestling, hockey, and other hody-contact sports similar to football with no apparent damage to its high scholastic standing. Thus the question was left wide open. All that seems settled is that with sufficient stu- dent interest there is a distinct possibility of intra- mural or small-time inter-collegiate football in the future. Coaching is available. Equipment is needed, but may be gotten. What is certain is that, football 01' no football, the storm of controversy will continue next year. A dose finish in the meet with Loyola, Northwest- em, and BradIcy. Trad Coach Haydon checks .crores in a four-u-ay meet. Star Emclrman. Ken Stapfey. HM A sample of Chicagds fast, but unspecmred. brand of soccer. Fencing practice in Burden. Chuck Warner displays a serve fast enough to blur the racket. BAS KETBALL OR the fast time. in several seasons Chicago won as many as it lost, posting an 8 - 8 record. Cap- tain Bob Mann paced the team throughout the season from his guard position and was high scorer with a 261 point total. Forward Dave Smith had the next highest total, followed by 65 center Wally Lonergan. Lonergan alternated at the center position with Fred Hubbard, a freshman from Du Sable High School. Other players seeing a lot of action were guards Bill Lester and Dick Homer. Smokey Garcia, Bruce Colby, Walter Walker, and Bob Dunkel also saw considerable playing. Lack of height hindered the team. Nelson Nor- gran1 in his 32nd year of coaching here, had only five regular players over six feet. Besides Lonergan, they were Hubbard at 631A ; Dunkel, 62h; and Mann and Walker, both 61 . Most of these players will be returning next year, pointing to another successful season. Awards: Major ttCW-Homer, Hubbard, Les- ter, Lonergan, Mann, Smith; Old EnglisthOIby, Garcia, Walker; Small 01d Englisthunkel. OPPONENT C 0 George Williams 89 4-2 Ill. Professional Schools . 57 46 Navy Pier ................................. 4-8 56 Concordia ........................... . 60 57 Aurora .................... . ................. t 70 65 111. Inst. of Tech. 7 , 4-4 65 Alumni ..... .... . .. .. .. . 79 65 Chicago Teachers . 65 97 Elmhurst .............. .. . .. 71 90 Aurora .. .. . t . . ...... 80 84 111. Professional Schools .. t 77 75 Navy Pier ............................ 51 80 Chicago Teachers . . . ........ 53 87 Elmhurst ................. . .. 68 55 111. Inst. of Tech. . 53 75 Concordia .. t 82 76 The Junior Varsity Team. Seated: Davis, Shakow, Wasserman, Hades, Benhel, Cate, Penn. Standing: Coach Scampi. Weisneck, Small, Hanyan, Jones, Watkins, Mullin, Binyon. I42 Seated: Smokey Garcia, Dick Herwz'tt, Bob Mann, Dick Homer, Witty Hubbard. Standing: Coach Nelson Norgren, Wai- ter Watker, Bob Dunket, Waily Lonergan, Dave Smith, Coach Kyle Anderson. HREE outstanding JVers led U. High to the Priv vate School League Championahip but lost to Harvard in the final game of the PSL Tourney following the regular season. Mitch Watkins, Dewey Jones, and Lynn Small were easily the best on the team. Watkins averaged over 20 points per game in league play. Small followed rwith 11.17, and Jones had a 9.7 average. Scett Hades, Nordic Wasserman, Ed Davis, and Al Shakow were alternated around these three to complete the team. Of these seven only Davis will be eligible for JV hall next year. Awards: Major gtU,7-rDatris. Hodes, Jones! Shakow, Small, Wasser- man; ShieldshCate, Kenyon, Mullin, Penn: Man- ager: Binyon. OPPONENT U. 0. Practice Games Westcott ................................ 42 29 Farragut . Hyde Park St. Gregory . . League Games Harvard . Francis Parker Latin .. Christian . Luther South Luther North North Park Wheaten . . Tourney Games Christian Wheaten Harvard 48 40 42 49 43 45 2 1 46 44 34 45 48 4S H '? ' x , t . f - .1 . ,2 -: ; IJ'-.. ' . x ' ' z I J: P 1 H3- WJ u A ' 3 ' a'x , t : x ,. - i . t E 3?. .. Mm .ntigmw I ' $ l'- . t d 9 l. , ' t i . l ... a .., ' I .' . x t r '. .1, ; L? , w. I :7 s r I . t. .. , ' I M - .I , 5 f, .5 . , t 1.? J j ; J . - , l ' x g L ,..II J i l Cs ?fra The 19:34 Varsity Team. Front row: Higdon, Damerow, McCormick, Loomos, Stapley. Hawkins, Fersythj Shademwfsky, Meardon. Second row: Coach Haydon, Mason, Wilson, Trifone, Sanders, Posen, Sheplmrd, Flynn, Omohundw, Deike, Johnson. Back row: Cordon, Winston, Black, Gray, Thomas, Pinney: Wyatt, Lathrop, Letson, HEstrange. TRACK W0 new varsity records featured the indoor sea- son. Frank Loomns clipde a tenth of a saecond off the OH :08.1 seventy-yard Inw hurdle record which Vern Gras sel in 1951. Captain Walt Dcike set the other record, bringing the previous. best two mile time of 9238.3 held jointly hy Tom Scan and Ken Mulcahy down to 9:19.7'. nearly 20 seconds faster. Meanwhile the mih- rtrlely 19am of Dave Shephan'l. Phil Wyatt, Kan Stzlpley. mid George h- ICCOImiL'k came within :01.0 wmm'ls of the school rt-mrd of 3:23 in that event. N'Tt'Cm'mir-k? unfortunate death in March waq ff-II hv Ilia- I'tlh-Iy mule: amt tho entirv team. Teamwimn the imtom xr-ah'rm was: tlxtromeh' .4th- Cessful. Starling nfli'r thv 1K: Tmrk Chih-slmniuretl Holiday MPH. tlw 1mm was tlefvutml nnlv 1w Mm- 144 queue. Outstanding wins: were ill the North Central Meet and th- Midwest Crmfcrcnre Meet. Coach Haj;- dmfs Track Club wrm the? Cmtral AAU and was well represented in lllt' Daily Now Pwlays. With the vet- eran lmvkmon including Justin Johnmn. Jim Flynn. Jae Howard. Roger Fmsyth and thaw named above. phls a promising squad of frcshmen. Hayden looks forward to as: sucressfuT a aramn next year. Deike. H31 Higdon. 1nd Amie- an'dnn will be among those lost to the team next year. Highlights- nf last year's: mltdnm season were Ken Stapley taking fourth in the. 4-4-0-yal'd Tow hurdles in the Drake Relnyx :1an first in the same event in the CAAU. Ellltl Joe Howard and Gerry Czanmnske getting fourths in the Elmhurst Invitational in the Shot and javelin n'mpm-tiwly. 1953 Award: Maior mC : Czamanskm Dalko. Deikt'. Cray. Howard. John- son. Loomns. Mormnau. Shephard. Staplny: Olrl Eng; lish: Beghe. Bristnw. Forsyth. N-Teardnn. h'lichael. Nuveen: Small Old English: DUCocur. Pozm. Sher- reH. Stayart. SPRING, 1953 OPPONENT C. 0. Loyola . . .. 70 61 Washington U. 13L 1.011i51 611,43 691,51 Wilson .. . 92 d 39W Albion . 851.13 4 51: I Depauw .. . . 65 I - 66 Wisconsin State 60 71 Wright .. 812,4, 3932K . Wabash 593K; 711,13r CAAU 2nd Place 11111111111,- 1954 Loyola 722:; 311.?u Western Michigan 62 42 .. Marquette 48 56 Wilson 691,1 : 3411. Wayne 80 241 Wheaton 672?; 3611f; 311111161! 69 30 Loyola fQuadrangle-1 25 Northwestern 51 Monmouth 82 22 Wilson 1T1'ia11g111a1'1 69M;r 31:11 Elmhurst 27 North Central Meet Ist Place Midwest Conference Meet Isl Place Wright 7115 3211 Wisconsin State 6711 181,15, Captain Jim Bl'0wn set a new JV 1140-3111111 record this winter. lowering Alan Gordon's 01d mark I131 21 full half second to :52.8. High mark for the team was winning their 011'11 second annual Invitational Meet. 1953 Outdom A11.alds Majm NLU: Brown Chernoff Donahue Cl'ay..i01168 C. Kal'cazes. Lalh 1013.. Lubenow, Omohundro, Pape, Pinneya Shaderowf- Sky. Small, Youse; Minor: Ginsburg, Greene, North- rop, Saada. Varady: Shield: Ansell, Cottesman. Nettleshipq Rozin. Thomasson. Wolf. Awards: Major NUN: Brown. Chernoff. Mitchell. Northrup. Rozin, Saada. Scupi, Youae; Minor: Ciarke, Gnttesman, Holt. G. Kal'cazes. Van Abra- hams; Shield: Bosch. D. Chernoff. Geffner. Kilar. Moore! MCKeon, Potachniak. SPRING, 1953 OPPONENT C. 0. Harrison 87 30 Tiiden 1T11ang111311 52V: 7015 Mt. Carmel ... .. . 17 Shurz 1T1'iangular1 . 62V3 58 Du Sable . 8V3 Wendell Phillips . 48 65 Wheaten leial1gula1'1 90V3 4015 North Park .. .. .. . 6 Dishict Meet, Kankakee 6th Place Hyde Pal kn ...... 842K; 1914, Thornton T011nship. . 39 74 Private 5011001 League Meet . lst Place 1954 Indoor WINTER 1954- M1.Ca1'mel .. 45 Du Sable 1Tria11gular1 56 Lake View . . Tiiden 1Triang1lia1'1 30 Wendell Phillips, 31111112 1Quadrangular1 443,4, Thornton Fractional St. George Dunbar 1T1'ianguiar1 31 Lane Austin iTrianguiaH 34 Rivm'side-Bl'onkfieid Crane 1T1'ianguiar1 44 Hyde. Park Invitational Relays lst Place Joe Housanf puts the shot. The Varsity team, .1953: TOp Row, left to right: Coach Kyle Anderson. Booker, Mann, Reh'm:es3 Utley, Broyles, Mazukeili, Baur, Cray, Richards. Bottom Row: Gordon, Colby, Ayme, Garcia, Frankenfzefd, Marwmoto, Krantz, Hamilton. BASEBALL. I953 AD weather did not prevent the Varsity Base- lmHers from completing thirteen contests and winning six. The games with Washington U. and Navy Pier had to he canceHed, hut Coach Anderson's team played we11 over the resl t'nf their schedule. Three of last year's playen, Hamiltun and co- captains Frankenfcld and Garcia, received blanket awards for three seasom of competition. Other play- ers with less experienct' but more eligibility were counted on to carry the- tcam in 1954. .r'l-wam's: Major 1101 7 Cn1hy, Frankenfeld, Garcia, Gordon. Gray, Hamilton. Mann, Mummnto, Utley; 01d Eng- lish - Ayme. Bl'nyhs, Kmntza h-Tazllkelli; Small Old English - Baur. OPPONENT Aurora . St. .1090p1fs tChicagok scores are given firsU 21-3, 17-4- 4-8. 4-18. 2-9 Lake Forest 7 7 t 7 7 , 9-6, 5-14 I.I.T. .. ...... . ... 610,64 Illinois fNavy Pier1 . .. . 5-11, 5-11 Chicago Teachers . 7-2, 5-3 HE same. bad weather that hampered the Varsity forced all six Junim-Varsity games into two weeks. In spite of thi? and the fact that Walter Walker was the only returning first string player, Coach Stampf fashioned a team that won two and lost four in P. S. L. play. 111itchell Watkins and Alex Shakow are expected to return for the 1954 season. Awards: Major U -- Hedlund. Marks, Meyer, Walker; Minor - Richardson, Ruller, Turner, Sha- kow, Wulkins. Winston; Shield - Bass, Domm, Flannel'y, Cnldblatt. Hill. Leventhal. OPPONENT C. 0. Wheaten . . 10 9 Latin .. 4- 10 North Park 6 2 Luther . 1 3 Christian 0 5 SOCCER HE varsity kickers: won 4-, lth 3., and lied 1 in 153, including a 1-3 record in the Midwest Con- ference, earning them a tie for third place. Outstanding playem wm'e Pete limen, Gerry Czamanske. and John Godfrey. Rosen and Czamanskc were named All-Ct'mferemre playws. while Godfrey was awarded a mot 0n the second All-Conforcnce team. Czamanske was also CtLCaplain of lhe team with Alex Shane. The highapuim of the season came in the final game at Indiana. Tied 2-2 at the end of the regular period, the game went mm a ten minute overtime. Indiana scored to lead, 3-2. and held their command until 1655 than five minutes l'enmined in the game. OPPONENT C O. Morton Jr. College 5 0 Wheaten 1 1 0 13F Purdue$ 2 3 Roosevelt 1 0 2 0 Earllmml: 0 5 Indianabk 4 3 $Midwest Conference Game. Then, Godfrey and Mamik. lmlh playing their lml game for Chicago. tarh Humml for a 4-3 win. Awards.- Major H'C Colby, Czanmnske, lefrey, Mashik. Rosen, Shane, Stone, Wyall; Old English Eisen- drath, Hirsch, Mt-lman. Nicaise. Pinney, Stavely. Ulley; Small Olrl English i Schelzter. HE Junior Varsity. hampered lay invxperience and a tough st'lmdule nl sulmrllan high schools, ilmmJed all their mmests. Hnwevel: mmsh of the team will return next year to try again. Ron Crutchfield captained the JVm-s. Awards: Major llU', Bcrnicli. Cllemnff, Crutcllficld. Holt.- Kar- cazes. Kilar, Scupi: Minor H Finslon. UlNeill. Rol- ker, Youse; Shield George. Hal'tigan. Pf'JllFl'l. OPPONENT I . Morton H. S. Tildcn Technical Oak Park Morton H. S. Tilden Teclm ical Oak Park Lake Forest o-dwwoocwa Hompmcxwxop The 1953 Soccer Team: Kneeling, left to right: Masnik, Godfrey, Stone, Shane, Czamanske, Wyatt, Schec- ter, Colby, Pinney. Standing: Nicaise, Stavely, Coach Hermanson, Uzley, McLean, Hirsch, Polgar, Eisen- dmzh, Rosen. 147 The Varsity Golf Team: Left to right: Thurstone, Matthies, Kal, Mertz, Friedman, Hayduke, Taylor, Coach Boycheff. l953 GOLF OACH BUYCHEFFS Varsity Golfers capped a Short and snowy season by capturing the 1953 Chicago Intercollegiate Championship at St. An- drewas Golf Course. For the. remainder of the season however, they weren't so successful. The eight squad members could do 110 hetter than a 2-7 record in one douhle-duaI and seven dual meets. Harry Friedman, team captain, led his mater; in the Chicago Intercollegiate by placing second indi- vidually in that meet. Over the entire season hi9 average score was 80.5. Darwin K31 led with an average of 79.. and George Hayduke and Fred Matthies followed with 80 and 81 respectively. Dave M6112, Herb Taylor, Conrad Thurstune, and Robert Philipson, 31f first year varsity golfers, were less adept hut added needed depth and consistency to the team. This spring? prospects include returning men Mertz, Philipmn, and Taylor with ncwcomews Walt Bison and George McCormick. xht'ards: major Th h Friedman, Haydukm Kal. Mailhies; Old English h Mertz. Thurstnne; Small Old English h Philipson. Philipson, VARSITY SCORES OPPUNENT C. O. Valparaiso 17 10 St. JOSBph-JS 111A 31A: Illinois Tech. 8 10 Beloit ...... . 1V3 131,4, Lake Forest .. 6 9 Dekalb 4 14 Navy Pier 61A: 8V3 Wayne ?ithTHf 1 11 Illinois Tech dual 3V3 81X: HE Junior Varsity won two, lost four, and fin- ished fifth nut of eight in the Private School League Tournament. Vance Dillingham led the team while Jame; Rosenhlum and Sheldon Thorrens improved their play throughout the spring. Dennis Cunningham and Bob Kurland completed the team. Awards: Minor 1J1, h Cunningham. Dillingham, Rosenhlum, Thm'renR: Shield Kurland. JUNIOR VARSITY SCORES OPPONENT C. 0. South Shore . 2111: 12V! Tildon . . .. . 8 7 North Park . 3 15 Morgan Park M, A. 51X: 31X; Hyde Park 5V; 12y; Harvard 5V3 6V2 PSL Tournameht 5th out Of 8 CROSS COUNTRY AST and deep, the harriers whipped eight 0p- ponents for an undefeated season. They showed their speed particularly by posting two new school records, bettering marks for the best aggregate times both of five and of seven men over a three-mile course. H31 Higdon and Jim Flynn paced the team throughout the season. Higdun, a graduate student from Carleton and team captain. finished first in all except the Butler meet. Flynn. returning lettel'man and $52 captainj placed second behind Higdon in all except the Butler and W'ashington meets. Other re- turning lettermen 0n the squad inchlded Ken Stapley, running cross-country for the third year, and John Smothers, competing again for Chicago after a year at another school. Paul Baptist, Ray Sanderm Art Omohundro, Joe Letsom Dan Trifcme, and Justin Johnson were the newcemere to the squad. The 153 Squad: Kneeling, left to right: Stapiey, Flynn, Sanders, Smothers, Trifone, Johnson. Omohundro, Lecson, Coach Haydon, Baptist, Higdon. ' a: The climax of the season came when the Univer- sity of Chicago Track Clulh composed of members of the regular team plus Lawton Lamb, Wralt Deikc, and Arnie Meardon, won the Central AAU 5,000 meter crown. Prospects for the next year are extremely good. Coach Haydon, who has built his team without benefit of a Junior Varsity team will have the whole team except Higdon returning next year. Awards: Major HC 1 Higdon, Flynn, Omohun- dro, Smothers, Stapley; Old English Letson; Small Old English 1 Trifone. SCORESh OPPONENT C. 0. Wright Jr. CoHege . 15 45 Loyola .. . . . 24 35 Navy Pier .. . 22 33 Milwaukee State Teacher? .. .. 21 37 Bradley 15 50 Butler .. . .. .. 27 28 Washington U. . . . . 19 36 Albion . 15 42 Central AAU 5,000 Meter Run 1 First Place $1M Cross Country, low score wins. Standing: FENCING LTHUUCH the NCAA Ft'nring Chillnpimlahips um: hI-hl In Burden Gym lhia year. Chicagol lhrw-num enlry tlid m. IlClU'I' lhan Ihr- regular ll'illll haul Lhmv throughout lhr: svamn. 3ch Shane. sht'ming murh illlpl'tn'PIIIL'nL won over half of his Imulw. hut CwCaptain Ernie Dunstan and newcomer Dave Holn'ou' did 102-234 well. Cn-Cnplain Dave Karthcr and the remainder of tht team fcncml only in the regular season'a meets. Their Wcot'd fur thne season was; 2-10. Sinve all are expeclr-cl to return next year and there. are several pmmihing newcomms, Couch Hermanmn hmks for- ward to an improved team. iiwm-Js: Major th Dunstum Kartrher. Shane: Old Englisthohmu-x Clausm Gl'ah'biitf. Mar-ltha.. Reichler. Small. Zavis: Small Old Englishhlg'on. Wuldman. UPPONENT C. 0. Northwesetem 10-17 11-16 Indiana 15 12 Iowa 1215 13-1-1- Illinois II 23 Detroit 12 15 WHHUUHEIiI'I 1:2 15 Ohio State 10 17 Michigan Stale 13 M- Notrc Dame 6 21 Lawrence Tm-h 15 12 HE JV squad. although having only one meet, T un unuffirial one which they lost to Culver, 19-6.. numngml to place 900an in the Hlinoira State Team Championshipn. This they did hy virtue of Mike, Fain winning the State individual title. .4wm'd5: Major LV'hFuin, PaL-luwr. Robins, Rolkel'; Minor hSnideman. The I934 Varsity fmtrm.. Scaled: Parr! .Um'fmrkrr, Join: Lfmm Emmi. Dunstan, Parer Chums, foe Cmssi. Standing: Doris! hawker. Robert Rriirv'afm'. Cnm-h Hnrmmrsnn, Dmrirf Bobmw. Alex Shaina SWIMMING OUR swimmers formed the nucleus of coach Moyle's ,54 swimming team. Boh Geidt, and Lanse Felker. the only returning letterrnen, swam the hack and breast stroke respectively. Cap- tain Howard Jenkin also swam the. hack stroke and Roy Porterfield, the fourth member of the. nucleus, swam free style. Other free-stylers 0n the team included Don Mc- Vicker, Paul Orsay, Walt Deike, Ed Gotlesman and Stan Schechlel'. Bob Herndon transferred his trampo- line technique. to diving, and Gerald Lovinger and Whitney Pope swam the breast and back stroke re- spectively. Awards: Major ttC hFelker, Giedt, Jen- kin, Portel'field; Old EnglishhMcVicker, Orsay; Small 01d Engiish h Dicke, Gottesman, Herndon. Pope. UPPONENT C. 0. Loyola . . 21 59 Ill. Inst. of Tevh. 38 45 Bradley 52 31 Knox 23 61 St. Louis University . . . 26 57 Washington U. tSt. LouiHJ 22 61 North Central 44 39 Chicago IntercoNpgiatrn Cf:ampionshipshqllth Place HE JV swimmers- had unly one official meet this year. losing to Mt. Carmel, 15-60. No awards were given, and :40 the wason served mainly as a conditioner for those JVers who will he on the varsity next year. Left to right, sitting: Orsay, Fnlkm', Lounger. Standing: Magda, M. Vicker, Ceidt, Deir're. 9' '75 Tire 1953 Varsity Tennis Team: Top Raw: Coach William Moyie, Norman Strominger, Lawrence Burien- wieser, Haber; Fox, Gemge Fuller, Coach Chet Murphy. Bottom Row: Robert Kelso, Robert Hartfield, Mar- tin Orans, George Stone. TENNIS N SEVEN games during the spring of ,53 and in five games last fall the varsity lost only once, winning eleven. Sparked hy Iettennen Larry Bul- tenwieser, Bah Fox, and Marty Ol'ans the Spring team lost only 10 De Pauw. With Fox, Bob K6150, George Stone, and Norman Sll'ominger returning in the fall plus a host of newcomers, the team was undefeated. and promises to be Strong this spring. 1953 Attiardb': Major W? e ButteIm-ieser, Fox, Fuller, Orans, Stone, Strominger; Old English W Kelso; Small Old English m Hal'lfield. OPPONEIVT C. 0. SPRING, 1953 Elmhursl 7 0 W'ahash . 5 2 Chicago Teachers 7 2 De Pauw 1 8 IN. Inst. of Tech. 9 0 Bradley ..... . . 5 4 Chicago Teachers ............. . 8 1 FALL, 1953 North Central ........... 4 3 Navy Pier 7 4 North Central ..... . ...... 4 3 Elmhurst ................................. 5 3 Navy Pier .. .. .............. 10 3 HE JV tennis team produced a 4-3 record during the spring of a53. Toby Owen and Morley Hoff- man, now both on the varsity1 were the top play- ers of the team. Awards: Major 6hUh e Hoffman, Owen, Reichman, Wagner; Shields-Adams, Lewin- son. OPPONENT South Shore Fenger Parker Fengcr Harvard Sullivan Latin wwwyprpwup-g: GYMNASTICS ED by captain Herb Taylor, the varsity gymnas- tics squad endt'd thc season with a 3--'-1 record. Taylor had a meet average of over twenty-tht'ee points. In the Notre Dame meet he took five events and scored a seascnfs high of thirty-mm points: more than Notre Dame scored that day. Boh Hel'ndon, the other returning major tetra winner on the squad. scored the next highest meet average. He went un- defeated 0n the trampoline Except for the Iowa meet. R011 Graham finished cloae behind him in average meet points. Eiichi Fukushima. Ken Klein. and Bernie Del Giorno followed the. three lmders in pointc. and W'ar- ren Ot'lofft Mark Shuh. and Roger Copet completed the team. Att-Iards: Major LEG! - Graham. Horndom Taylor; Old English i Del Cimno. Fllkushima. Klein; Small 01d EngtiFh i Copel. Orloff. Shuh. OPPONENT C 0. Northwestern .......... 441A: The 1954 varsity team: Seated: Km. Klein. Eiichi Fukushima, Captain Herb Iowa mg 581;; Wiscmmin ?H- 52 Ind iana 4-5 if: 501;: Northwestern 46 50 Navy Pier . 50 46 Notre Dame 67 29 HE JV team also had a 3-4- record; good for a predmninately novice team. John Btmmam the lone intermediate was easily the top man on the squad. Jay Adams, 301; Dauphin. Jerry Jordan. and Bill Leicht were the novice:2 that heat Lindhloom. the city Champion. in the JVt-r's outstanding meet of 1954. Awards: Major ttU i Bowman. Dauphin, Jordan, Leicht: Minor h- Adams. OPPONENT U. 0 Arlington Hvights 561.;i3 791.53 Leyden Township 4-71, :- 501,5; Arlington Height: 131 166 New Trier . . 51-5 43 561111 . . 421,153 931,53 Leyden Township . 7'3 56 Lindbtoom 7919 721,43 Taylor, BPJ'H fr? DPICior'no. Standing: Coach. Bud Bm'er, Ron. Graham. Bob Herndon. WRESTLING 1'TU111131111'11-C0131CH Allan Bates, team ended the Season holding a 4-1-6 record. Starling $10w1y, the team gained speed during the $633011 and im- proved its showing against every team it met a sec- ond time. Awards: Major 110? Q Abe1son. Bates. F1annery, F10yd Richards, Frank Richards; Large Old English 1 Dunderi. Hoffman. Mehrcns; Small Old English 1 Carlmn. Lear, Lcibowilz. OPPONENT C. 0. Illinois Normal .. . . 5 27 111in0is Tech 21 13 Navy Pie1 . .. .. .... . 0 30 Wright Junim College 14 18 Malquette .. ........ . . 17 18 Front: Don Donderi, Co-captain Dave Abelson, Coach Al Bates, Ken; Flannery, Chuck Carlson. Floyd Richards, Marry Leibowitz, Jerry Mehrens, Viking Schroeder, Co-capmin Frank Richards. Wisconsin Extension 18 14 Navy Pier . . 3 27 Augustana 21 11 West. Illinois Teachers 3 27 None Dame . 15 25 111inois Tech .. 23 12 Wlight Junie! Collegem14 14 WRESTLERS won 1 and lost 4 in 354. J s Standouts Dan Bitter, at 137 lbs., and cap- tain Tom V0g1er at 175 led a team which inchlded Larry Hornet, A1 Davidson, Owen Rennerl, and Marvin Friedman. Awards: Minor 1U 1 Adel- man, Davidson, Hornet, Rennert, Bitter, Vogler; Shie1d - Friedman, Fenmore, Soref. OPPONENT U. 0. Morgan Park ........ . . 3 28 Chicago Vocational .. . . 5 26 Reavis , . .. . . 10 16 Bowen .. . .. ................. . 13 11 Calumet ........... .. .. 8 14 Back: 13-1 0mm 19 Athletics The Executive Council of the Womanas Athletic As- sociation: First row: Karen Adams, Elenie Kostopo- ions, Audrey Rubovits, Judy Hayes, Julia Moon. Second row: Lynn Manama, Barbara Lisco, Leslie Semis, Ann Smith, Miss Martha K500, adviser, Trudy M arzin, Rae Dezette. HE Woman's Athletic Association Sponsors var- sity hockey, basketball, volleyball, and tennis teams. It also promotes intramural bowling, badminton, basketball, volleyball, and a swim mara- thon. Once each year, the WAA sponsors a play day for mid-western inter-murai basketbail teams, which is played at the University. The Association president is Audrey Rubovits; vice president, Elenie Kostopolous; treasurer, Judy Hayes; secretary, Karen Adams; and Miss Martha K100, adviser. Each June, the Association presents individual trophies t0 the outstanding girl in each major sport at a banquet. The 1953 awards went to An-Shih Chang, basketball; Marge ESpiritu, tennis; Grechen Heinkle, volleyball; Nancy Lee, hockey; and Myrna Mauch, softball. 155 The Hockey Team: Left to right: Dorothy Hess, Tucker Loane, Nancy Jacobson, Janice Porter, Betty Shea, Judy Hayes, Trudy Martin, Mecca Reitman, Audrey Ruboyizs, Lynn Manaszer. Absent from picture: Miss Martha K300, coach; Myrna Maude, manager; Em, Zimmer, Julia Moon, Evelyn Lee, Elenie Kostopolous, FIELD HOCKEY SCORES OPPONENT C. 0. Faulkner Girls School . .. 1 4 Illinois State Normal Teachefs College ......................... 1 13 Northern Illinois State Teacherjs College .. ..... .. ...... 3 1 Morton Junior Colleg . .. .. . 7 1 ,4 bully Dmiwmw Trudy .- l-fa.r!.in- am! xfudrey Rubrwics, beginning at-tian for the Chicago .-'1'fa.mmmu93. Doro- thy Hess waits to receive. 131': VOLLEYBALL SCORES OPPONENT C. O. Calumet High School ................. 21 49 George Williams Coliege .. 42 71 Mundelein College 20 4-2 Morton Junior College ................ 30 16 Northern Illinois State Teachefs College ........... . ....................... Saint Josephk College Rosary College .. Wilson Junior College ................. t-il-ir-io The Volleyball Team: First How: Margaret Ledbvttw, Suzanne Freidman, Sarah Silverman, Catherine De- Costa, Sandy Ford. Second How: Myrna, Manda, Harriet Nerlove, Nancy Jacobson, Irene Stevens, Deanna Cartman. Absent from picture: Ruth Dubin. BASKETBALL SCORES OPPUNENT C. 0. University High School 28 17 Faulkner High School 47 416 Faulkner High School 34 30 Wheaton College . 25 47 Wheaton College 45 32 W'aves 28 40 Wraves . .. 19 36 Mundelein Women's College 39 29 George William's College . 34 23 Forwards Efma Pandak am! Sandy Ford. Varsity Squad: First Row: Julia Moon, Charlotte Wood, 31w Mazthay, Harriett Stephenson, Audrey Rub?- vits, Lynn Manaster, Tiny Larsen, Arm Smith, Margo; Pickerz, Margaret Anderson. Second How: An-Shih Cheng, Sandy Ford, Arm Holcomb, Trudy fifarrin, Dorothy H933, Nancy Jacobson, Barbara Lisco, Kay Good- hall, Cynthia Bowles, Elma Pandak. Third How: Sarah Silverman, Elenie Koszopoulos, Virginia Spaeth, Betty Shea, Judy Hayes, Catherine DeCosta. 131i Coach Shirley Thineman demonstrates ball handling to first string member 72d; Ford. Dottie Hess, Elma. Pandak, mi Eleniw Km; topoulm. Barbara Lisco and Margo Pickett go up for a jump ball during inter-varsttj- scrimmage. N91? Eastburn, bowling rj-rJach, demon rates 5: ike form. to Leslie Semis. ?mtc'mitics and 611W The Inter-Fratemity Council. Front Row: Martin Cendell, Beta Them Pi, John Smothers, Alpha Delta Phi, fay Levine, Phi Sigma Delta, George Stone. Psi- Upsilon, Chris Smith, Kappa Alpha Psi. Second Row: Joe Brenner, Alpha Delta Phi, Larry Sherman, Zeta Beta Tau, Rod Freedman, Delta U psilon, Dan Levine, Phi Kappa, Psi, Leslie Foster, Phi Delta Theta. Back Row: Gilbert Dahlberg, Phi Delta, Theta, Steve Appel, Delta Upsilon, Michael Joyce, Phi Gamma Delta, Donaid Fink,- Psi Upsilon. INTER-FRATERNITY COUNCIL EN fraternities are active on the University cam- pus, and their relations with one another, with the University, and with the general public are governed and regulated by the Interfraternity Coun- cil. New rushingr and pledging; regulations were again an itttportant topic this year, spring quarter seeing a further liberalization of the rules 50 that more men could be included in the Fratemity-System. The new rules allowed any man who would he eighteen hy the end of the following winter quarter 10 he. pledged e initiation not to occur until during or after the quar- 162 ter of his birthday. Another important issue was, of course, the at- tempt of Student Government to withdraw recogni- tion from Phi Delta Theta for its non-C0mp1iance with the iiMichigan Plan.n Although there was anything but a solid fraternity front, many of the fraternities questioned Student Government? jurisdiction. and the Council went on record opposed to the withdrawal of recognition. Not aiming squarely at the issue. the Deanis Office affirmed the COiIIICil,S iurisdiction over such categories as house regulations and mem- hcl'ship policies, hut it would take a much Im'n'P pnw- erful organization than the Council was this ymr to successfully demand a literal adhemnce In this affir- mation from Student Governlnent. The Council again sponsored its timv-nul-rJf-mind traditional events: Inter-Fratel'nily Ball and Intu- Fratcmity Sing. The 1953 Sing Climaxwl June Alumni Week. and Beta Theta Pi was awarded the hQuality Cup. The. Ball on Thanksgiving Evr was Only a qualified success. aince thc Coum-il insiqled upon having it in the Edgewater Beach Hotel am establishment which takes a notoriously dim view. of individual fraternity parties in suitea during thv dance. t The Spring Inter-Pledge Council. Seated: Walter Watker, Kappa Alpha Psi, Pres. Ronald Bottsegen, Zeta Beta Tau? I. F. ridm'sor Robert Philipson, Tony Lloyd, Delta Upsilon, Michaex' Rogers, Phi Gamma Delta. Wifham Kidd, Aipha Delta Phi. Standing: Armand Mawsen, Psi Upsilon. Charles Miuman, Phi Sigma Der'm. 163 Githmt Dahlherg. Michael Java and Roderick Freedman, outgoing President. Secrt'tary. and Treats:- urm'. guided the Council through for a mow .uur.-r.'t-.x.-- ful year than has Imen the C890 in IT-r'vnt times and compal'ahh- leadership is expected of the new offi- cers: George Stunt, President, Steve Appet. Sorro- tary. and John Snmthvrs, Treasurer. A brighter future for the system in general 5601115 to he on the horizon. Th9 new college prngmrm Will keep men in the College longer. 111qu relieving the rapid turnover of men which has plagued fratvmitiw. Furthermore. it attempts to attrat-t mare student: arc succeesfut. I'mhing mmpctition will he lessvnod. Front row Eleft L0 rightl: Robert Baumurm'r, Joseph Brenner. Wendeh' 0691;. Gerohl Couture, William Kidd, John K1005- zer, Wesley Wiidman, Thomas Upimm. Second mw: Pay! Wenger, Fred Weather, Juslin Johnson, William Churchill, Philip Stone, Byron Rainey, George Sinou. Back row: Charles Shapiro, Bruce Humor. Bruce Larkr'n, Jack Beam, Alan Reid, John Smothers, Harold Conrad, James Flynn. Incl: Webster, Fred Smith, David Shepharrf, Pan! Slotweiner, Thomas Papa, Peter Lacey, George Backus, Robert Cameron. ALPHA DELTA PHI Annual open house. Left: .4hmmi get-rogerher. Right; Decorating the tree. First row: Herb Kekeg. Jay Dykesm. Connie Zwolinski, Bob Wilfiams. Secund row: Bob Winemiiler, Don. Wentzei, Noble Lieu, Steve McCrade, Cherries Sexion, Bab Austim Last row: Bob Harem, Sieve Crawford, Jerry Rosenfiefd, Jake Rendle- man, Herb Corr, Did.- jolmsun, Jack Holmes, David Spiegler, Len Cibh'n. Not pictured: Marty Cendeh', Chuck Curtis, Don Nesca, Vic Andrews, Maury Agrer. BETA THETA PI 10f: Top left: Wendell Simpson. and Vic Andrews receive qum'ity cup for Beta at 1953 I. F. sing. Bottom left: The Betas with friend; Below: 5737 University Avenue. 167 The active chapter. First row: Humphrey, Zepczrmr, Freedmam Rosenthai. Second row: Appel, Lichman, Walkoff, Tre- fomzs, Krasnitz. Third row: Sarachman, UConner, Thompson, Armentrout. m1: Top: The D. U. bar. This was a. poor negativt am? there are rm flames shooting out of the botde in Sieve Hire snarh'ng barfrcepJ rippers hand. Below: A Mr 0; Jiar'rlv-fl'fpe .mrfnrr'rxi c?cgamrc- ran N. If. 169 Standing: Dillard, Wilkerson, Henderson, Williams. Seated: McDaniei', Fornmn, Joyner, Price, Waiker. KAPPA ALPHA PSI 170 The Waltzupaf at homktwth and Ellis Avenue. 171 Standing: Tom Connor, iliurra-y Herlihy, Frank Richards, Harris Hartzler, Stone Leake, ; Spike Smaitz, Ken Hendricks, Bob Scofieid. Sealed: George Hammer, A1 Keisker, Gil Dahlberg, Stu 1391110 Zimmerman, Tony Lorenzo. Not present: Bob Ross, Elliot King, Les Foster, FrankSonfeimer. Reclining: Jeepf, Chapter Mas- P-Hl DELTA THETA The winter pledge ciass-seated: Ells- worth McCtenacth, Jim Dunham. Ray Sanders, Tom Jersild. Standing: Dave Frieske, Stew Seymour. Right: The Phi Belt Zawn decor for Wash Prom Weekend. At right be- low: Chancellor Kimpton hands schol- arship trophy to president Al Keisker. This chapter had the highest grade average of any Chapter of any frater- nity .in the country. Front Row Heft t0 righU: Edward Manpfrz, Bernard DelGiomo, Arthur Kohrman, Robert Herndon, Wiiliam Wellcome, foe Ferrari, James McClur-P. Second Row: Richard Cerwin, James Camp, Herbert Taylor, Bruce Milken, Richard Hernia, Ralph Henkle, Denis FranHin. Third Row: D. Walters, William, Jacobs, Donald Trask, Max Smoker, David Karcher, wSmokf, Garcia, Roger Kopel. Fourth Row: Michael! Jche, Phil Yuk, Donald McVicker, Alfred. Cruber, James Fisk, Chm Smith, William Keewn. Not present: Collard, Kai, G. Ferrari, Graham, Felker, Rohrer. PHI GAMMA DELTA The Wash Prom exhibit. which, incidmmNy, won the prize for best display this year. A: top: Fiji's and dates at rfle Apache Brawl in Ian- uary. Next above: the F1'ji,, house at 5615 Univer- sity Anemia Tire pledges - Seated: William Seckinger, Robert Ku-rland, Whitney Pope, Peter Clams, Fred Karst. Standing: Robert Berger, Rob- ert Black, Albert Fortier, Michael Rogers, Ed- gar Wachrer, Vance Dillingham. Not present: Abazie. 6-inl- ' Front Row: Norman Sher, Norman Strominger, Bob Murdoch Jerry Mehrens, Marlin Smith, John Ran. Second Row: Norman Rose, Dave Hutchinson, Romain Taylor, Wally Naimise. Jae DuCanLo, John Dahfe. Back Row: Mike Bernstein, George Schultz, Jim Larey, John Irma, Ron Safes, Marl? Goutarman PHI KAPPA PSI Front row Heft t0 righU: Richard Pollay, Ronald Brown, Jordan Hohzman, Stanley Friedman, Bud Ntcssbaum, Zane Gussin. Second r0w: Henry Kaller, Jay Lezlirw, Norman Abrams, Philip Bloomfield, Roger KaHen, Sterling Cohan. Back row: Gene Terry, Harold Miller, Alien Schecter, Ronald Blum, Frank Altman, Arthur Weitzman, Richard Friedman, Sidney Port, Donald Ephraim, Ernest. Koehler. Not present: Roger Bernhardt. PHI SIGMA DELTA The winter pledge chrss Front row: Phi! 520nm, Paul Crossman, Peter Abrams, Dan Heinbacr'z, Harry Sandheim. Back row: Kenneth Nash, Mannr Levin, Dayid Newman, Carl Trough. Not present: Ronald Grossman, Larry Rubenstein, Charles, Mittman. Left: Format! dinner party for new initiates. Righl: Singing waiters Jordan Holrznmn, Erhnm'r! Weintchbmrm. Ronald Brown. l 79 Front row Ueft t0 rightl: James Huger, Richard May, Donald Fink, Alex Shane, George Stone. Second row: Car! Taussig, Robert Ceidt, Paul Kuhn, Wendell Marumoto, John Godfrey, Harry Olejmick. Third row: David Smith, Gene Anderson, Louis Hamilion, Douglas Mania, Ferdinand VanderVenn, Paul: Aiexander, Robert Dunkel. Back row: John Broyles, Robert Blumer, Ted Creiner, Chuck Lindell, David Utley, Gerald szanske, Richard Lech, Paul Orsay. PSI UPSILON 180 Top: Getting ready for the Hard Timm Party? the annual open house. Middle: The m.x4L'2irmcr! Party?! Bottom: The outside decoration for the 7-1.:Nc3i Times Fanf, expresses a. bit of nostaigia. 181 The active chapter. Front row: Cohen, Homer, Fox. Stifder, Mifier. Second Tow: Frankei. Kunitz. Rulstein, Zisook, Ev- ans. Keno. Third row: Sherman, Kuldch, Grass, Mackoff, Salaman, Marks, Goodman. Back row: Shaft, Philipson, Lerner, Kofiun; Fefdnmn, Lulu, Smith, Rosenbaum, Hanrh'er. Missing: Goldstein. ZETA BETA TAU J11, 1.5 ; I 7n ' . 'la Left: The house a! 5749 Woodlawn. The spring pledge ciass. Seated: Sa- lem, Bergman, Chernoff. Standing: Thorrens, Cottsagen, Resnick A1 left: The first day of spring hits the Zebes. Woman 19 6151175 NOW in ils Fixth-lh year. Internshlh Cuunril fum- tium m the t'tzillldillatittg Inotly fm' lhr- wmnerfs PTIITH. The emmc-il. unnpowd of three memhera from each club. Rupervises rushing, handles charity projects and social events. and serves as go-between for the administration and the individual clubs. Under the leadership of Betty Ferl'ar in the autumn and winter quarters: and Ruth Kopel in the Spring and with advice from sponsor Mm. Mullen. the group did everything from sipping tea at the KimptmN to reading to hlind satudents. The tea-sip- ping was part of a HiniEtl'l anniversary t-elehl'ation at which Mrs. Kimptrm entertained eluh memI'JerH, pnw- peetfve rns'hees, faculty memhem and faculty wivee. and alumnae. one. of whom founded the FUN women's club, Morlan'hoarrls in 1894. The firat lady of the University again helped the. eouncil hy crowning the King of Interc'hlh Ball, Quad eandidate Bruce Col- lard, at the annual January formal ill the Sherry Hotel. For two local charitiea the council backed the Hayakawa jazz concert and donned formals to usher for the Jan Smeterlin program. Intercluh girls solicit throughout the campus for charities such as WUS and the Red Cross. Retiring oHicel'Fs. for the autumn and winter quar- ters included Betty Ferrar, president; Laurel Cohen. 3' . max. nwmww.w. .UW,, , secretary; and Carol Davis, treasurer. The spring quarter officers are, respectively, Ruth Kopel, Helen 1Wollack, and Cabbie Coen. Inicr-ffhn'; fl'ouncr'n'. Left to righl: fine Hause. Marv Langv-erfg. i'fhrrrhlrw Hmmmn. Lauwi Cohen.- Pres;- ricm' Bwrr FEHTHZ Cahrr'el'ia Cow. Carol Dam. Ruth impel. :frhimr .Nrs. :lhth'in. Left.- l-l-frs. M'mpron crowns King Bruce Collard at. the K: 30H. Plight: Chanceh'or arm' Mm, Kimpron Jew! Hm grand marsh u! Hm H. HIM. Top: Dan Feldman. and Jeanine Lowe?! studying together. Bottom: King Bruce Collard dances with Mrs. Kimpton. DELTA SIGMA Top rraw: Cnn'm Chapman. Cahrvar; Com, Fecrsnd rum: Caro! Davis. Clam Pefu'a'n. Third rnw: Biniv Rosenberg. Shirlm' Rubin. Fourth row: Marlene Haw. SI'H'm'I Sr'lrmv'nmn. Hnltnm run: Nnm'nr' Thurber. Rim YGJOH'J'IL'. 186 Thr SUUI'J'KU' Hrmrrh uvffz'm. pledges. and m'umnx -Pn-4.I'wrr-rm'r:f Ur'mwr. 1933', MO RTAR BOARD Top: 1WHJI'GI' Baum. Second row: Virginia Bickersmff, Helen Fish, Betty Freed Gloria Glaser, Carob!Y Ho- steuer. Bottom row: Rina House, Martha. Kinyon, Marion Kuebler, Mary Lange-Lurtig, 10cm Woods. n- 'JI Fail qtmrlm' rushing m'omnf a piano with rim Quads. Top row: .-frfmr-'! Hmmr'k. Eliza- beth Ferny: Brirm faffrl. Middle row: Myra Cninsboro. Kay Good- aU. Sheila Lofmn. form Mohmr, Jami? Redmomf. Bottom row: Melic-Ont Rupp. Marie 3613mm; Elia Map Thomas. H916?! W0?- !ach, Charlotm Wood. Top row: CONN. Faber, Hmmn'f; Kopd. Lir'hhm'rer. Hmwulll l'uu : Murphy, Pn'djr'an, Robb. Spuerll. Schnojp. Bultnm mw: vason. Zegar. The Sigmas at one of their uwekh- meetings in Ida Noyes. 100 This Award is given annually by the Alumni Association in cooperation with. me Dean. of Students. Front Row: Lou; Epstein, Ruthe Rigger. Second Row: JFoe Ellis, Francoise Nanin, Caroline Lee, MUZZLE FeU-Jer, Joan. Bremmrd, Efizabmh Cope. Third Row: Clive Grey, Jus- tin Johnson, Merrill! Freed, Louis Schaefer. Last Row: Fedor Mausolff, Kenyon Stapely, Dean Robert M. Strozier, and Jerome Gross. STUDENT ACTIVITIES AWARD, l953 OWL AND SERPENT Owl and Serpent is the honor society for graduate men. Election is based on participation in activities. Standing, left to right: Gross, Brodky, Maupin, Woodworth, Schneier, Lunsford, Cray. Sitting: Stein, Shane, DePorre, Kaufman, Posen. 193 Left to Right: Jean. Allard, Vera Johns, Mollie Felker Lundsford, Linda. Marineili Lander, Marian R053, An-Shih Cheng, Nancy Hopkins McCowen. Nu Pi Sigma is the honor society for women. Membership is based on participation in extra-cur- ricular activities. NU Pl SIGMA 194 IRON MASK Iron Mask is the honor society for College men. Membership is based on participation in extra-cur- ricular activities. Standing, left to right: John Young, Robert Ceidr, Richard. Kariin, Student Activities Director W'ih'iam Birem baum, Dean Robert Strozier, Toby Owen, 0mm Smith. Kneeling: Roland Finston, Kent Fhmnery, Bruce Lar- kin, Jack Beam: David Bobmw, Justin Johnson. Sitting: Byron Rainey, Robert Heavilin, Donald. Fisher, Raymond Wilkerson, John Lyon, Alberi, Forzier, Torry Sandalow, John, Sm-others. 195 STU DENT AIDES AND MARSHALLS HE Student Aides and Marshalls are traditionally appointed by the Chancellor 0n the basis of high SL'thulastic achievemenL leadership in non-aca- dcmic activitiCS. and personal excellence. Students offering such a funnidablc array of superiority help the Marshall of the University in presenting such functiom as mencations and receptions. Tradition- ally, alm. the Aides and Marshalls receive their de- grees at a special point in the Convocation program. Special nml'tarlumrds with maroon, rather than gold, tassels: denote pmple who have been awarded this honor. STUDENT AIDES Nancy Ann Cushwa Mary Joanna McWilliams Margaret Mortimer Caroline Ann Swenson Mrs. Susan K. Thompson STUDENT MARSHALLS William E. Churchill Thomas Wynne Evans Clive Studley Cray David Anthony Panka Russell Leonard Sandherg Alex Michael Shane, Jr. James Leo Spratt David Garrick Utley John Leonard Westley 196 graduates $ m r m '9 . hi I 12 g:- .31, . . 4 X 12... .- '1 .1. ANDRE AERNE A.B.. June 1054-. Home ad- dress: 210 13011351 Avenue, Oak Park. lliinuis. Italian Ciub. ROY ALBERT A.B.. June 1954. Home ad- dress: 5451 Hyde Park Bou- icvard. Chicago. Illinois. Maroon. Student Union. JV Soccer. Bridge. FRANKLIN LAWRENCE ALTMAN 14.13.. June 195-1. Hume ad- dress: 105-21 66th Avenue, Forest Hills. New York City1 N. Y. Phi Sigma Delta. STEPHEN BERNARD APPEL A.B., December 1954-. Home address: 64 Dart- mouth Street, Rockville Cen- tre. New York. Wrestling, Track, Vincent House Coun- cil. Student Union. Cap and Gown. Pep Club. Wash Prom Committee, Interfraternity Council. Incieprindent C0315.- tion. Glee Club, WUCB, Campus Coordinating Com- mittee. Delta Upsilon. SUSAN MATHIEU AUERBACH AB june 1954.1101118 ad- dress: 6106 University Ave- nue, Chicago, Illinois. Law School Wives Association. 200 MURIEL RAISMAN BARON A.B.. June 19311101113 ad- dress: S483 Hyde Park Bou- levard. Chicago. Illinois. Student Orientation Board. Mortarboard. STUART B. BELANOFF A.B.. June 1954. Home ad- dress: 1820 East 15th Street. Brooklyn. N. Y. ROBERT M. BENJAMINSON A.B.. June 1954. Home ad- dregs: 1938 Coney Island Avenue, Brooklyn, N. Y. RONALD BLUM A.B.. June 1954. Home ad- dress: 2200 North Kedzie Avenue, Chicago, Illinois. Phi Sigma. Deha. JAMES ALLISON BROWN A.B.. June 1954. Home ad- dress: 202 East Washington Street, Lombard, Illinois. 3716 6ollagc' RONALD M. BROWN AIL June 1954. Home. ad- dress: 919 West 69th Street, Chiuaga. Illinois. Phi Sigma Delta. ROGER AUSTIN BRUES $1.13.. June 1054. Home. ad- drt'ss: 1221 East 57111 Street, Chicago, Illinois. Rnrkel Sn- ciPty. Camera Club. F01klore Snciety. Outing Club. 0166 Club. LUCY E. BRUNDRETT AIL 111119 1934-. Home ad- dress: 6249 Nnnh Oak Park Avenue. Chiragn. Illinois. Chicago Review. Reynaldk Club Council. JACK LESTER BURBACH AB June. 1951.1101110. ad- dress: 24-6 Fairbanks Place. Munster. Indiana. Student Union. Maroon. JOY SMITH BURBACH AIL June 1954. Home ad- dress: 2108 44th Street. Des Moines, Iowa. Maroon. graduate 201 JAMES DAVITTE CAMP NB June 1954-. Home 21le dunes: 933 Wnotlhourne Drive South West, Atlanta, Georgia. Methodist Student Fellowship. University The atrc, Community Service Committee. Phi Gamma Dan'- 30'. MAXINE BIRA CASS A.B., December 1954. Home address: 1600 Shei- boume Place. Johnstown. Pennsylvania. CARITA ANN CHAPMAN A.B., June 1954-. Home ad- dress: 51-633 Michigan Ave- nue. Chicago, Winois. Chris- tian Science Organization, Student Union. Cap and Gown. Deha Sigma. AN-SHIH CHENG A.B.. June 1954. Home ad: dress: 130 East 40th Street, New York, N. Y. President of llltelvDorltlituly Councii, Pl'eSidellt of Grtren Hall. Womelfs Athletic Asswria- 1i0l1. Nu Pi Sigma. AUDREY ANN CLIFCARD A.B., June 1954. Home ad- dress: 2450 Rhodes Avenue, River Grove. Illinois. Chica- go Review, Reynoldk Club Council. GORDON lJ, COHEN .'X.B.. 111m 1954. Home ad- dress: 915 Winona Avenue. Chicago. Illinois. HARVEY MORTON COHEN A.B.. June 1954. Home ad- dress: 701 11th Avenue, Patterson. New Jersey. Young Republicans. Zeta Be- ta Tau. PAULA WISE COHN A.B.,Jun61954. Home ad- dress: 54.43 Woodlawn Ave- nue, Chicago, Illinois. RONALD CONRAD COLE AIL December 1954. Home address: 3712 So. Kurmnl Avenue. Chicago, II? liuois. HAROLD THEODORE CONRAD A.B.. June 1954. Home ad- dress: 1585 50. 3151 Street, West Allis. Wist'nnsin. . tha Delta Phi. 202 JUDITH ELAINE CULLEY A.B., December 1954. Home address: 8001 Ellis Avenue. Chicago, Illinois. GILBERT F. DAHLBERG, JR. AB June 1954. Home ad- dress: 7440 Ellis Avenue, Chicago. Illinois. Pres. Inter- Fralernily Council. Wash Prom Committee. Student Alumni Cmnmiuee. PM Be!- m Them. ANN HAVEN DAVIDOW A.B..Junr31954. Home ad- dress: 4-6 Lakerirw Terrace. Highland Park, Illinois. 1953 Cap and Gown. Chicago He- view. Nu Pi Sigma. CAROL A. DAVIS ABM June 1954-. Home ad dress: 3144 80. Kingston Avenue. Chicago. Illinois. Maroon. Student Union, In- ter-Club Counvil, Knights of the Ballet. Delta Sigma. BERNARD JAMES DEL GIORNO A.B.. June- 1954. Home ad- dress: 8506 $0. Justine Street. Chicago. Illinois. Gymnastics, Acrotheatre, Wash Prom Committee. Phi Cmmna Delta. 3716 galleye ROBERT MAIN DEMERY 21.13., June 1954. Homr: adv dress: 4-3 Center Streei. Gu- Wanda, New York. Chair- man, World University Serv- ice Conuniltee. Chairman, World Day of Prayer Com- mittee. Canterbury Club. THOMAS IRA DIAMONDSTONE A.B., June 1954. Home ad- dress: 209-19 33rd Road1 Bayside, New York. Glee Club. JV Basketball. Track. Vincent House Council. HARRIS DAVID DIENSTFREY A.B., June 1954. Home ad: dress: 2 Ellwood Avenue, Mt. Vernon, New York. ARNOLD L. DINNER A.B., June 1954-. Home ad- dress: 2919 Catalpa Street! Chicago. Illinois. Orchestra. Alpha Delta Phi. SUZANNE CATHARINE DOUCHERTY A.B., June 1954. Home ad- dress: 143 Pebble Street, F311 River, Massachusetts. graduate 203 JOSEPH DU COEUR A.B., June 1954. Home adi dress: Cheswick, Pennsyl- vania. Track. CRAIG RALPH EISENDRATH A.B., June 1954. Home ad dress: 5232 Hyde Park Bou- levard. Chicago, Illinois. Soccer. Track. College Law Society. JOSEPH ENGEL 14.13., December 1954. Home address: 4175 Palmet- to Street, Daytona Beach, Florida. University Theater. Folklore Club. Science Fic- tion Club. SANDRA LEE EPSTEIN A.B., June 1954. Home ad- dress: 5535 Quincy Street, Chicago, Illinois. Maroon. SHIRLEY SORENSON ERBACHER 11.3.1 June 1954. Home ad- dress: 5238 Woodiawn Ave. nue, Chicago, I 11in 0 i s. WUCB. BARBARA JEAN FELDMAN A.B.. June 19511101113 ad- dress: 7300 Su. Paxton Ave- nue, Chicago. Illinois. Stu- dent Government. 131.. Stu- dent Union. Hillel Founda- tion. SIDNEY FELDMAN A.B.. June 1954. Home ad- dress: 6237 N0. Mozart Street1 Chicago. Illinois. Pre- Medical Club. Zeta Beta Tau. HELEN D. FISH A.B.. June 1954. Home. ad- dress: 5000 East End Ave- nue, Chicago, lilinois. Stu- dent Union. ISL. Student Advisory Board. Mortar- board. KENT VAUGHN FLANNERY A.B.. June 1954.1-Iome ad- dress: Cockade Farms. Dar- 1ington. Mary1and. WUCB. Wrestling. JV Baseball, Wrestling. LESLIE DONLEY FOSTER A.B.. June 1954.. Home ad- dress: Rt. Na. 1. Downing. Missouri. Maroon. Phi Delta Them. 204 NANCY MARILYN FRANK A.B., June 1954-. Home ad- dress: 2810 So. Moreland Boulevard, Cleveland, Ohio. Chicago Ethical Society. Hil- lel Foundation. CARL FRANKEL A.B., June 1954-. Home ad- dress: 3534 W. Fifth Ave- nue, Chicago, Illinois. Bas- ketball. Student Needs Com- mittee. ISL. Zeta Beta Tau. DENIS HUBERT FRANKLIN A.B., December 1954. Home address: 33 Lincoin Avenue, Rutherford, New Jersey. Student Union. Rifle Club. IV Swimming. Phi Gamma Deiaa. BETTY FREED A.B., June 1954. Home ad- dress: 6735 Ridgeland Ave- nue, Chicago, Illinois. Mor- farboard. RODERICK FREEDMAN A.B., June 1954-. Home ad- dress: 5959 Franklin Ave- nue, Hoilywood, California. Delta Upsilon, Iron Mask. 3716 Kollcya LESLIE GORDON FREEMAN, JR. A.B., June 1954. Home ad- dress: 50. Main Street, New City, New York. Track. Ca1- vert Club. Acrolheater. Slu- dent Union. WALTER FRIED A.B1,June 1954. Home ad- drBSS: 6241 No. Francisco Avenue, Chicago, Illinois. RICHARD A. GERWIN A.B., June 1954. Home ad- dress: 6840 Cregier Avenue, Chicago, Illinois. JV Gym- nastics. Phi Gamma Delta. ROBERT E. GIEDT A.B., June 1954. Home ad- dress: 671 So. Goodman Av- enue, Rochester. New York. Swimming. Order of the 11C? Orientation Board. Psi Upsilon, Iron Mask. JEANETTE CORINNE GOEDEKE A.B., June 1954. Home ad- dress: 9335 50. Central Park Avenue, Evergreen Park, 11- linois. wadmtc 205 ELLIOTT JOSEPH GOLDSTEIN A.B..Jurle1954. Home ad- dress: 2680 Heath Avenue, Bronx. New York. Student Union. Hillel Foundation. Vincent House Council. Pre- Medical Club. Tom Reming- tun Memorial Award. JAY WALTER GOLDSTEIN A.B., June 1954. Home ad- dress: ?02? Maryland Ave- nue, St. Louis. Missouri. Cap and Gown. Soccer. Sail- ing Club. Zeta Beta Tau. A. EDWARD GOTTESMAN AH. June 1954. Home ad- dress: 329 Field Place, Hill- side, New Jersey. Student Forum. WECB. Photography Club. Swimming. Delta Sig- ma Rho. AVRUM VREMMIE CRATCH A.B., June 1954. Home ad- dress: 528 W. Surf Avenue, Chicago, Illinois. Hillel Foundation. JV Track. GEORGE W. CROSS A.B., June 1954-. Home ad- dress: 3300 Noyes Avenue. Charleston1 West Virginia. ALFRED GRUBER 11.8.. Juen 1954. Home address: 5615 University Avenut Chicago, Illinois. Student Union. Acrotheatre. WUCB. Gymnastics. Tab1e Tennis Club. Dance Club. Phi Gamma D3130. JAMES H. HANDLER A.B., June 1954. Home address: 8006 Drexel Ave- nue. Chicago. Illinois. Stu- dent Government, ISL. Hillel Foundation. Zeta Beta Tau. MARSHALL J. HARTMAN A.B., June 1954-. Home address: 7751 So. Phillips Avenue, Chicago. Illinois. Hillel Foundation. StudEnt Forum. JV Basketball. Hum- boldt Club. DAVID STEWART HELBERG A.B.. June 1954. Home address: 3728 Pine Grove Avenue, Chicago, Illinois. Maroon. WUCB. Track. President, Intercollegiate Zionist Federation. Inter- Fraternityr Council. Phi Sig- ma Delta. JACQUELINE HERRMANN A.B.. June 1954-. Home address: 15 E. 9151 Street, New York, New York. Chi- cago Review. 206 WILLIAM C. HILLMAN A.B., June 1954. Home address: 210 W. Forest Ave- nue, Pawtucket, Rhode Is- land. Student Union. WUCB. Camera Club. Hillel Founda- tion. RALPH BERNARD HIRSCH A.B.. JUne 1954-. Home address: 2200 Stuart Ave- nue, Denver. Culorado. Soc- cer. Maroon. ILSA NAN HOCHBERG A.B., June 1954-. Home address: 7517 Cornell Ave- nue, Chicago, Illinois. Ma- roon. Knights of the Ballet. SANDRA JEANNE HOLLANDER A.B., June 1954-. Home address: 10932 Tacoma Ave- nue, Cleveland, Ohio. Green House Council. CAROL JEAN HORNING A.B., June 1954-. Home address: 2005 Pennsylvania Avenue, Coeur CPAlene, Ida- ho. Universily Theater. 3716 6ollagc n 4. DAVID A. HORSMAN A.B., December 1954-. Home address: Broomes 15- land, Maryland. Student For- um. Young Republican Club. Pres., Association of Inde- pendent Voters. PAUL MICHAEL HORVITZ A.B., June 1954-. Home address: 9 Nottingham Way, Pawtucket, Rhode Island. Student Union. Student For- um. Hillel Foundation. Cam- era Club. JV Swimming. Vincent House Council. RICHARD WALTER HOUCK A.B., June 1954-. Home ad- dress: 112 N. Washington Street, Potlstown. Pennsyl- vania, BINA LOULIE HOUSE A.B., June 1954-. Home ad- dress: 5100 Hyde Park Bou- levard, Chicago, Illinois. 01'- ientation Board. Mortar- board. ROBERT V. HOWAT A.B., June 1954-. Home ad- dress: 2217 W. 108th Place, Chicago, Illinois. graduate 20? runway. SHOLOM J. HURWITZ A.B., June 1954. Home ad- dress: 922 E. 55th Street, Chicago, Illinois. Hillel Foundation. JV Gymnastics. MONROE. J. INGBERMAN A.B., June 1954-. Home ad- dress: 785 Ocean Parkway, Brooklyn, New York. SIDNEY JACOBS A.B., June 1954-. Home ad- dress: 3832 Menlo Drive, Baltimore, Maryland. Col- legium Musicum. Chess Club. WILLIAM H. JACOBS A.B., June 1954-. Home ad- dress: 4074- Rose Avenue, Western Springs, Illinois. JV Tennis, Gymnastics. Stu- dent Union. Phi Gamma Delta. JUSTIN MORRIS JOHNSON A.B., June 1954-. Home ad- dress: 1131 R055 Avenue, Wiikinsburg, Pennsylvania. Burton-Judson Councii. Stu- dent Government, ISL. Vin- cent House Council. Student Alumni Committee. Student Promotion Committee. Alpha Delta Phi. Iron Mask. RICHARD CARL JOHNSON PLEA. June 1954. Home address: 5122 N. Leavitt Street, Chicago, Illinois. Basketball. Acrotheatre. Glee Club. Beta Them Pi. ROGER M. JOHNSON A.B.. December 1953. Home address: U. S. Naval Station, Pensacola, Florida. Alpha Delta Phi. ANN JOLLEY A.B., June 1954. Home address: 1516 E. Cheery Lynn, Phoenix, Arizona. MORTON KAPLAN A.B., June 1954. Home address: 1305 Independence Boulevard, Chicago, Illinois. LOIS ANN KARBEL A.B., June 1954-. Home address: 19630 Stratford, Detroit, Michigan. Universi- ty Theatre. 208 RICHARD ALLEN KARLIN A.B., June 1954-. Home address: 3500 N. Lake Shore Drivc. Chicago, Illi- nois. Pres., Student Union. Station Manager, WUCB. ACCLC. Maroon. Burtou- Judson Council. ISL. Iron Mask. CAROL KATHERINE KASPER A.B., June 1954-. Home address: 5 Fairview Place, Millbrae, California. Pre- MediCal Club. Dance Club. Calvert Club. Inter-Dormi- lory Council. Wash Prom Committee. JEROME JOE KASTRUL A.B., June 1954. Home address: 5306 Ellis Avenue, Chicago, Illinois. NOBUKO KATO A.B., June 1954. Home address: 48.30 N. Nlagnoiia Avenue, Chicago, Illinois. MICAELA KACFFMAN A.B.. June 1954. Home address: 5038 Drexel Boule- vard, Chicago, Illinois. Womcfs Athletic Associa- tion. Glee Club. Dance Club. ISL. 3716 6'0!!ch ROGER LEE KELLEY A.B., June 1954. Home address: Oakwood School, Poughkeepsie. New York. Pres., Rifle S4 Pistol Club. LLOYD J. KENO A.B., June 1954, Home address: 158 N. Central Avenue, Chicago, Illinois. Zeta Beta Tau. ROBERT TALBOT KEY A.B., June 1954. Home address: Huntville Road, Katonah, New York. Crea- tive Writing Club. Burton- Judson Council. ILENE KIRMAN AB.1 June 1954. Home address: 5054 N. California Avenue, Chicago, Illinois. Hillel Foundation. ACCLC. Student Union. JOAN RUTH KLAWANS A.B., December 1953. Home address: 7733 King- ston Avenue, Chicago, Illi- nois. Sigma. mdmtc 209 ANN MAXHAM KOCH A.B.. June 1954. Home address: 6351 501 Yale Ave- nue. Chicago, Illinois. Glee Club. Orchestra. Green House Council. German Club. Humboldt Club. Stu- dents for Stevenson. Porter Fellowship. SANFRED KOLTUN 191.13.. June 1954-. Home addresa: 6622 N. Francisco Avenue. Chicago, Illinois. Gymnastics. IC. Student Union. Zeta Bera Tau. MILTON KOTLEH ABT June 1954. Home address: 5706 N. Bernard. Chicag0,111in0is. Hiilel Foundation. Student Forum. SANFORD B. KRANTZ A.B., June 1954. Home address: 4166 Clarendon, Chicago. Illinois. Baseball. JV Track. Hillel Foundation. Pre-Medical Club. JERRY KRONENBERG A.B., June 1954. Home address: 1134 N. Kedzie Avenue, Chicago, Illinois. Hillel Foundation. Vincent House Council. Zeta Beta Tau. MARION K1 EHIER 91.3.1 June 1951. Home address: 401 2nd Slrcet. Lnt-kpurL Illilmis. Women's Athletic Association. Green House Council. Inter-Dorm Council. Mortar Board. ELLIOTT F. KCLICK A.B.. June 1954. Home address: 5658 Melvin StrceL Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania. Student Forum. University Theater. World University Service. Pre-Law Club. WUCB. JV Track. Zeta. Beta Tam. BRUCE DRUMMOND LARKIN A.B.. June 1954-. Home address: Box 124-. New Pres- ton, Connecticut. Pres., Stu- dent Union. Student Govern- ment. ISL Maroon, Cap and Gown. WJCB. All Campus Civil Liberties Committee. Glee Club. Aipha Delta Phi. Iron. Mask. ROBERT S. LERNER 291.13., December 19541 Home address: 3565 Pine Grove Avenut Chicaga Illi- nois. 1mer-F'raternity Coun- cil. Zeta Ben: Tau. JAY A. LEVINE A.B., June 1954. Home. address: 6930 So. Shore Drive, Chicago, Illinois. Phi Sigma Delta. ARUNAS LEONARDAS LIVLEVICIUS AR. June 1954. Home address: 654-0 50. Campbell Street. Chicagm Iilinois. Physics Club. Calvert Club. JOHN COVENTRY LOWE AB. June 1954. Home address: 1?1 Maplewood Road. Riverside. Illinois. JERRY M. LUKS A.B., June 1954. Home address: 27 Catherine Ave- nue, Lynbrook, Long Island, New York. Student Union. Chairman, Student Promo- tion Committee. Baseball, Basketball. JV Tennis. Zeta Beta Tau. BRUCE BIRGE MacLACHLAN A.B., June 1954-. Home address: 216 Highland Street, West Newton, Massa- chusetts. Pres., Dodd House Council. Burlon-Judson Council. Student Govern- ment, ISL. Glee Club. Chair- man, Educational Survey Commission. Snack Bar Committee. LYNN MANASTER A.E., June 1954. Home address: 5811 Dorchester Avenue, Chicago, 1llinois. Wometfs Athletic Associa- tion. 3716 galleye 210 ROSEMARIE R. MANDL A.B., June 1954. Home address: 1633 50. Austin Boulevard. Cicero. Illinois. lntH-Varsitj,r Christian Fel- lowship. WILLIAM WALTER MATENKO A. 13., June 1954. Home address: 20 So. Kedzie Ave.- nue, Chicago. 111inois. JAMES FULLER MCCARTHY 11.3., June 1954. Home address: 241 Olmstead Ave- nue, Riverside, 111in0is. ELLSWORTH CHARLES MCCLENACHEN A.B., lune 19511. Home address: 1531 Ardmore Ave- nue. Chicago, Illinois. Red Cross. Commodore, Sailing Club. Phi Delta Theta. ROBERT STUART MCGINNIS A.B., June 1954. Home address: 7501 So. Honore Street, Chicago, Illinois. 211 SUZANNE MEHLER A.B., June 1954. Home address: 6421 So.Egg1eston Avenue. ChiCago. Illinois. University Theater. IRWIN MAURICE MILLER A.B., June 1954. Home address: 2011 W. Birch- wood Avenue, Chicago, 111i- nois. DALE ARCHIBALD MORRISON A.B.. June 1954. Home address: 6914 Hamilton Street, Chicago. Illinois. CORINNE A. MURPHY A.B., June 1954. Home address: 8128 So. Wolcott Avenue. Chicago. Illinois. Sigma. MARK NUGENT A.B., June 1954-. Home address: 8024 Honors Ave- nue, Chicago, Illinois. ROBERT J. NYE 91.13.. December 1953. Home alldl'PS-Hii 4418 N. Cen- tral Park Avenue. Chicago. Illinois. Zeta Hem Tau. JAMES O1BRYANT, 1R. A.B.. December 1953. Home address: 4-76 Monk Street. Spartanburg. South Carolina. DAVID ELLIOT ORLINSKY A.B.. December 1954. Home address: 63-135 Rego Park. New York. Hillel Foundation. Chicago He- view. CAROLYN JEAN OSTERBERG A.B., June 1954-. Home address: 821 W. South Street. Kalamazoo. Michi- gan. Womenk Athletic Asso- ciation. Acrotbeatre. Judo Club. Mountaineering Club. MARTIN PASKMAN A.B., December1954. Home address: 7923 Spruce Street. Philadelphia, Penn- sylvania. PALMER WATSON PINNEY 913.. June 1954. Home address: 99 Normal Avenue. Montclair, New Jersey. Ma- roon. Soccer. Track. Cap and Gown. LOUIS FRANK PLZAK A.B., June 1954. Home address: 560 N. Washington Street1 Hinsdalc. Illinois. Camera Club. PrelMedical Ciub. Sailing Club. HOWARD POMPER A.B.. June 1954-. Home address: 7648 So. Kingston Avenue, Chicago, Illinois. Hiilei Foundation. Biologi- cal Sciences Committee. MARY ELLEN POPKIN A.B., December 1954. Home address: 18019 Santa Barbara. Detroit, Michigan. HELEN KATHERINE PROBST A.B., December 1954. Home address: 1234 E. 3rd Street, Chicago, Illinois. Country Dancers. Acrothea- tre. Politics C1ub. 3716 Kolleyc ROY L. PROSTERMAN A.B.. June 1954. Home address: 1607 E. 501h Place, Chicago. Illinois. Hillel Foundation. STANFORD PULRANG A.B., June 1954-. Home address: 6 Delavan Terrace, Yonkers? New York. BYRON PINDELL RAINEY A.B., June 1954. Home address: 401 N. High Street, Georgetown, Ohio. Porter Fellowship. Concert Band. Alpha Deka Phi. Iron Mask. HARRY C. RANDALL A.B.. JUne 1954'. Home address: 88 Penhurst Park, BuHalo, New York. CAROLE HEEVMAN A.B.. June 1954. Home address: 115 Madison Ave' nue. EnglewoocL New Jer- sey. graduate 213 ALAN CHARLES REID A.B.. June 1954. Home address: 13315 Dearborn Street Chicagm Illinoia. COI- lege Law Society. Young Ref publicans. Alpha Delta Phi. MARION W. ROSS A.B., Jurm 1954. Home address: Mill Lane. Norwell, Massachusetts. Glee Club. Chancellofs Student Coun- cil. Nu Pi Sigma. ROBERT JORDAN ROSS A.B., June 1954. Home address: 221 Middleneck Road, Great Neck. Long Is- Tand, New York. Maroon. Student Union WUCB. 1953 Inter-Pledge Council. Inde- pendent Coalition. Young Friends. Methodist Student Union. Vincent House Coun- cil. Campus Coordinating Committee. Phi Delta Them. JOSEPH J. ROTMAN A.B.. June 1954. Home address: 6307 N. Central Park Avenue, Chicago. Illi- r1015. SHIRLEY RUBIN A.B.. June 1954. Home address: 5491 Greenwood Avenue, Chicago. Illinois. Glee Club. LeCercle Fran- cais. Delta Sigma. OLIVER SALEM SAFFIR 91.3.1 June 1954-. Home address: 24-2 Sn. Orange Drive. L05 Angeles. Califor- nia. Orchestra. Band. Base- ball. WUCB. CARL E. SACAN A.B., June 1954. Home address: 576 Bryant Street. Rahway. New Jersey. Dodd, Mead House Councils. Bur- ton-Judson Council. Pres, Astronomical Society, Sci- ence Fiction Club. ROY B. SANDERS A.B., June 1954. Home address: 709 Bement Ave- nue. Staten Island, New York. Hillel Foundation. JAYSON SCHLOSSBERG A1B.. December 1954-. Home address: 2915 Chelsea Terrace. Baltimore. Mary- land. Acrotheatre. Chamber- lin. Hitchcock House Coun- cils. Inter Divisional Coun- cil. Young Democrats. Pre- Medical Club. NAACP. Folklore Society. Hillel Foundation, JAMES SCHOENWETTER A.B., June 1954. Home address: 5428 Ellis Avenue, Chicago. Illinois. PHILIP EDWARD SEIDEN 53.13.. June 1954. Home adc1ress: 1:144 Farwell Ave- nue, Chicagu. Illinois. CHARLES W. SEXTON A,B., December 1954. Home address: 301 N0. Cor- nell Ch. Ft. Wayna Indiana. Beta Theta Pi. F. FURBER SIMONS 251.13., June 1954. Home add regs: 154 Emerson Street, Carteret, New Jersey. Stu- dent Union. WUCB. Glee Club. Mead House Council. Delia Upsilon. DANIEL WILLIAM CLINT SMITH A.B.. June 1954-. Home address: 314 54th Street, Newport News. Virginia. Cap and Gown. Phi Gamma Delta. DAVID JAMES SMITH A.B., June 1954-. Home address: 2817 Orchard Street. Chicago, Illinois. Basketball. Order of the 11C? Student Forum. Psi Upsilon, Iron Mask. 3716 6allcy6 214 a $2 f? FREDRICK CHARLES S1V11TH A.B.. June 1934. Home address: Henry Clay Hotel, Ash1and. Kentucky. Docu- mentary Film Group. Alpha Defm Phi. ROBERT E. SMITH A.B.. June 1954. Home address: 7039 Clyde Ave- nue. Chicago. Illinois. Zeta Beta 'Tau. FREDR1C SOLOMON A.B.. December 1954-. Home address: 54-611 So. Cornell Avenue. Chicago. Il- linois. Orientation Board. Student Promotion Commit- tee. Young Democrats. Com- mittee for the College P1311. Pre-Medica1 Club. Students for Stevenson. JV Wrestling, Track. HARRY BERT SONDHEJM A.B., December 1954-. Home address: 1435 Bal- mora1 Avenue. Chicago, 111i- nois. Student Forum. Hillel Foundation. THOMAS PAUL STEINER A.B.. June 1954-. Home address: 7503 Seven Mile Lane, Ba1timore, Maryland. mdzmtc 215 RICHARD ALAN STHDHL 91.13.. June 1054. Home address: Rt. 1. Crwanlmiis. Pennsylvania. Porter F61- Iuwship. World University Service. JV Basketball. HENRY ALEXANDER SWARTZ 31.13.. December 1954. Home address: 4327 Cor- nelia Avenue. Chicago, 1111- T1015. L. GLENN SWOGCER 21.3.. June 1954-. Home address: 3155 W. 15th Street. Topeka. Kansas. Bur- ton-Judson Council. HERBERT METCALF TAYLOR 91.13.. June 1954. Home address: 54-12 East View Park. Chicago. Illinois. Soc- cer. C011. Gymnastics. Phi Gamma 08150. DAVID M. TERMAN 31.13.. June 1954-. Home address: 1630 Lunt Avenue, Chicago, 111111015. 1952 E0110. Midway. Pre-Medical Club. GEORGE THEVT TIEDEMAN .43.. June 195-1. Home address: HI. 1. Lakeside Cal- ifornia. PM Doha Theta. HENRY LOUIS 1.1LLMAN A.B., June 1954. Home address: T33 N Lincoln AVE'nuf'. Minnnk. Illinois. Student Forum. WUCB. Chapel Choir. Canterbury Club. prha Delia Phi. MARY ALICE UREY A.B.. June 1954-. Home address: 4-000 Greenwood Avenum Chicago. Illinois. University Seitlement. Nu Pi Sigma. BARBARA JUNE VOGELFANGER A.B.. December 1954. Home address: 40 R001:- wood Avenue. Baldwin. New York. Maroon. Student Govd ernment1 SHP. Chairman, Committee for the College Plan. KE-113,r House Council. PETER OLIVER VANDERVOORT A.B., June 1954-. Home address: 603 W. Vine Street, Kaiamazoo, Michigan. Asv tronomical Society. 216 LOUIS DAVID WALTERS. JR. A.B., June 1954-. Home address: Good Hope. Louisii ana. Calvert Club. Acmlhea- tre. WUCB. Pep Club. Com- mittee for Reinstitution of Football. Phi Gamma Delta. LEON RALPH WANERMAN A.B., June 1954-. Home address: 312 E. let Street. Brooklyn. New York. Uni- versity Theater. President, Dodd House Council. Table Tennis Club. KATHLEEN E. WARD A.B., June 1954. Home address: 1311 Palmer Ave- nue, Winter Park F10rida. ARTHUR JOSHUA WEITZMAN A.B.. June 1954-. Home. address: 271 Meeker Ave- nue, Newark, New Jersey. WUCB. JV Tennisa Swim- ming. Phi Sigma Delta. DONAT G. WENTZEL A.B., June 1954. Home address: 5532 30. Shore Drive. Chicago. Illinois. Stu- dent Union. Outing Club. Humboldt Club. Beta Them Pi. 2716 6'01ch RAYMOND C. WILKERSUN A.B., June 1954-. Home address: Rt. 1, Sheridan. Wyoming. NAACP. Track. Burton-Judson Council. Slu- dent Union. Inler'Fralernity Council. Kappa Alpha Psi. CHARLOTTE ANN WOOD A.B., June 1954. Home address: 5830 Stony Island Avenue. Chicago. Illinois. Quadranglers. GLADYS GAY YEZEK A.B., June 1954. Home address: 95411 Sn. Lowe Ave- nue. Chicaga, Illinois. MARTIN LESTER ZANE A.B., June 1954. Home address: 7516 Bay Parkway. Brooklyn. New York. Vice Pres Student Union. WUCR. WILLIAM M. ZAVIS 23.13., June 1954. Home address: 5490 So. Shore Drive, Chicago. 111in0i5. University Theater. Fencing. mdmzta 21 WW NIJNM ZEGAR A.B.. December 1954. Home address: 7750 Cornell Awnum Chicago. Illinois. Sigma. JOSEPH ZELAN A.B.. June 1934. Home address: 1418 Post Avenue. Torrance. California. 1111161 Foundation. College House News. Glee Club. MAHGERY TRESCOTT ZELLWECER A.B., June 1934-. Home address: Rt. 2. Media. Penn- sylvania. ROBERT V. ZENER 11.3., June 1954. Home address: 8983 Eastwood Road, Pittsburgh. PennsyL vania. Studenl Forum. C01- Iege Law Society. MYRNA ESTELLE ZIMBERG A.B.. June 1954-. Home address: 314- W. 65111 Street. Chicago, Illinois. Dance Club. Student Christian As- sociation. STUART ODELL ZIMMERMAN A.B., June 1954. Home address: 304. 4th Avenue, Callipolis. Ohio. Wrestling. Calvert Club. Phi Delta DONALD A. ZOLLICOFFER A.B., June 1954. Home address: 955 W. Grand Avenue, Chicago, Illinois. a q? Theta. NOT PICTURED erlianJJ H. AVDEHHWN N.Il Ii u- addrn-i J'a Ilun-m-ll Mcrluv. Lon: limh. Caljtun CHARM:Q ll IMI'MIHHI -K B. Hnnu- mldl-Hf :MIH. Slh thuu. Milwaukn. Wis Hm Ian. Rum- In N nm: A Ii Jiumv nddnu: II2I Pmum-r, Sun Angdo. Trial. CATHERIK'I' W nrr t 4 u. Hum. .uidu-M . x. Eurk ih-ael. IJGxangr. Ill'umix. nn'wwnA Hrs. tum A13. Elumr uldum. 1mi- SW 15m. Avenue. Mimm' Hul- idu. Mom 11. HIRNIHI' Ali. Humr :cldn- m u: 1.1. H....,L-I,-... Nev.- anl: ROBERT S BLUCFI .Hi. Ilnnlr nchn-m: EIJBU Tunglu Avenue. Chicago. IFIInuis. ALFRED M. BONE .x a. lawn mums: 1w. ' Iunr. F'rrndalc. Hichiparl. RAYMOND BTHIDVO A. Hurm- urIrIx---.-: ZEWT .h-umhlv. l Iu-w'l.:nd nglnn, Ohm. JOHN BR'IAVT A H. Hum mldnns; F3118 S. Ritlgtlan-I. flhxragrh Hlinniy. HUHRHT a. CARIIART -K I! Hurm' nrtdnus. '122 F-Imm. 7.. m . Nchrrka. ROILHTI' l-.. CIIARHI: A. . om addrc 035 Elm. Winm-lkn. lllmuis. DOIEALII W. CLARK l 55 Ha: addrrw' I321 E. aquJIhirngo 3?. lllim-xx. SHEthH H COHN ' .Lli. Huml' .uidmss TH . irgmia. llan. anlianu. JOHN C. Cl'MMlNS . Hume addrcis: HS N Hurirln Eluml Sm-L-r. New Y .NVEKE Jr RUYN' A13. Hum: lddress' 1021 F Shnl ervn-L llhimgn Illinuk. ERIC 1.. ELFTMaV . A. . Hllmr addrm. -IHT- Park hmm. Lennie. .cw Jersey. RICHARD L. ENIZH am. Hm... mmmu 1.1m g; aim Mn-n-I, Chwagn 11mm; MAT'IFIILW ENEH . A Ii Ilmmv addrru' RBI Wv-l- -L.- I'mll ROBERT El. FTiEEI 'T MB. Hnmr nddrva: mrp Amnur I.. In. 1...I.. BARB-HH GAHOR Hi up ... mlglnun' lint F NJII-QliPrLljllirapo. Illinmx. HFA HT f.flR mm N R llnnn- delrkh: THE Sheridnn Road. Chimgm H- Imm-L SAMVEI. Ii. fil'ARh I -H1 Hunu- nerI-is. Slmkmnls. LnuiEvin. Munch. H-xrm'F. HrHr 4723 N Talman. Lhimgu. Illinuia. BA RTl'l: KH- I ART! 3! J HIRFCII JR . . . B Nnrm- .ern-sn: I J3 Mmdunn I'ML thu-apu, lHn-urs JfIT-J. ' Huu'rm $.15 Mm- mlrluss T.I!I'J Mhland rlwmnv. Chimp. H- Iinoia. 213 JUHV C. Ell'DFI'ihI AB. Tlnmr urHrrss I314 ?th. Rapid CIU. South anulu. WILLIAM T 4 u HI'RST nMrrsl I62 E. Walton Plurr. Chimgo. II: Iino-s. ROBFRT WEIR. M: Hmnu- Ildli'wn: Jaw Brosdwnv. unlinglrm Park. Califnrnin. ' LOUISE. L JOEL 3.3. Hume addma. 111-: E. 52nd Sum. Cl:i1;lgn.THmnin. CAROL HI'CIIFIS J'OFW aLE H w nddn-ss: 7222 Smuida anl. Lu: Anw-Irm Cnriinmin. HLNHY A. ?HLLET AB. mm: addluss: :51er K. Crnlul Park Avenue. Clu- tugU. Nlmhiu. 'v KENT ..m.- mirlxrss: 15:37 rlgulilc Awnuc. Chicago. llL'mms. IN A. . A. ELLIOT KINII 4J1. Iinmr :drllou: '13 ii'. Ct-prvss. I'hnnnix. Arimlu. Pin- 13ch Tim: AHLETE ll. KIHHLH .-!.B. Hulm: aduIr-css. 11m Mnmgnmrrg. Rmoklm. MN York. Jon. I. M'Pr'mnn- AJi. m :lrcsx: mm m. Ridgewa'y. Chirngo. mamas. HEHHEH'I' 1. Nl'Tl'. . I.Ei. Harm: addyuss Imuls '. Paerr 8... ...Chiugn. II- mm MARINEHJ I..-m.-m:n ma. Hum adtlrtss: 90:? 5... 1mm. cums... IHimlw. Quadrangh'r GEORGE M LEVY Ms. Homl' um... rm: H. Unirrrsity mm... a... cage. Ellinuia. ANTHUN'I' L. LEWIS A B Horn! aninlmq- 1n erllmn. Bmoklmc. Massachumw. LAWRFNFL .11. HCHTFNSTEIN AB. Ilnmv- adding: L701 Clwclmul Rum! Miami Beach. Florida. Pin amnma MIN. RICHARD! IL LOBENT'JML IL?! Home. address. 2I6 Prinn- vhcllur. Frnporl, Nun Yuk. JEA N S. LI'NIJSTEDT JLB. lT-mm address: IISEJIK; E. 5151. IIIhicngo. IHinois. MARVIN A LYFJTS 5.5. I'Tumr address: $5M l'ndnl. Chicagu, Illinois, JAN MAJDE AB. Hunn- urldrmn: 1111 Unuria. Oak Park. iliinnim ANITA E. MARK .-'I.E. HnITIL addmss. l23rxl m aduland r'hl'nue. Chiragn. Illinuia. NCHARI! M. MCCON AB Fl-um- mhiu-M: ' 57m. Chiragu. Illannie. LERTEII r MEYER a3. Hulm- nddmaa- m 0m. shaman Falls. W15- I-nns'm. SrLVDY L. MOGIL AR Homr :Irldrcss: 323 Crnlral Park W051. Nu.- TMI: Ciw. Nev. Yuri. SALLY a. MURHIS I'LB Hmm- mMn-aa. -N12I Summgn. Dnnnrrk Gruw, ll. linuis. WHIJAM T MORRIS AIS Hmm mldn-ss: 2II6 W. analinl Drive. Tulsm Oklahoma. DONMD G. MOTEL AIB. Hnrnr JIIMIFSH 5201 PI. MuJIII-waod AVHIIIKB. Chicngm lllinui-I. TUKI'M IS-I NAKAMITI'I'J AB. Home midn-Is 1300 E. I'IIIIII. Chimgo. Illinois. DAVID C. NASH JLB. Hnlm- a-ltlro-II: OILS Mnmck Delmit, M'Ichhgan. ELMO II, NAI'MIIN' AB. Homr illliln'xir ram ?IIIIIIIa V'Isln. EI Cclrilu. Cul- iEaIIIIn. MDBLI. NEISON AB. Humt minim: 212 Culumh'm Ammo. Berklmw. Cul- 'Iiumia. SEYMOUR NEISUN - ILB. Honic IIIIIIms-s: I436 Clay Awnun, New Yurk, 32x Yolk. DONALD l1. NEESA . AB. Home address: 6058 DI-mhmlrr AI-rIIIIz. Chlcngu. I1I'Inois. UJCE R. O'CIIADY LB. Hume addlessI 6515 W. Raven. Chicago, Il1irmia. ioIINNE DliLlKOFF . . NIB. Hum! aIlIlu-ss: Nob Filth Plum. chicuso. IHIHOHI CER-HD D. P.I'I'I'UIJ .-l.B. HoI-II- ..Ildrm: 5m I'IaLIIIIIIIl Ih-I-IIIII-I Lake Fuml. InimHh. WAYVF II PUMHEHN AB. Hmnc :IIIIInvM: Ibl! UIIIvIInI ans Am-mur. Chung HrJghlu. lilinIIisI. HELEN K. PRGEHT AIB. Hum: Ilrhll : I231 E. 3rd. Lung BL-m-II. CIIHI'IIrIIIa. MAHCL l RAS KIN I H. II-IIIII- IIIIdrI- w :dN-R N. 5.5mm HuIIIru. Milunukrr. WIM-msin. J-KMES M. IIILIJFIELD -k B lImm :IIIIJnasI-I- Rm 2131 II. Do. lenu. lllmuizn REX W. REETE LB. Hume IHMIMEI 3945 W. I25 51.. Palos Park. Illinnis. AI FRED El. REMSON A B. Horn: addms; 2773 acmmir INI'I'llUiJ. Nrw YoIL Nrw Yuk. FRANK E. RICHARDS ILB. Home address.- DI-xlI-r. Mmmsnlm Pm Delta Than. TED ll. Rll'iIII-lliT 1ND. ?Inmc aIIIIMss: EUII h. Cicero :lItnuI: Chiclgu. III'I- nols. MARVIN C. NIN'I'ALA ILB. Helm: a:ldrcss: 4h 17m. Cloqud. Minnesola. WILLIAM R. FII'ICL' .B. I... :IIlIJrI-sm. mo PleI-lc IIIIIIIIIII. Pltlsbulgh. Pennsylvlma. H WOLF RODER ILL! HIIIIII'1KIrIfE5-t: Illinois. 255 Kenwoad Avenue. Chicago. IOEL 'r. HoschHIu, AB. om. :Iclduss: 38m Cmsvcnar. 50th Euclid. om JOANNE REBEL A.B. Hume addn-u: 2600 LIku'mw Avenue. Chicago. Illinois. RHIJDA S-IDJI'IIIR 3.3. Hnme :Iddlesn: -IZI Lnlayelm Ianlzvard. Long Rmrh. New York TERIRY SI'INDIILOW B. Hum: addrcsa.F-S.1IIGI.-Idys Avenue. Chicago. Illi- nois- EDISON B. SCI'IROEDER JLB. Home address; Lnnmis Village. Liberty. New York SHELDON H. SCHUSTER A11. HI lrlrpss- 5642 N, Spauld'inp. Arnnuc. ClIiraguI Illinois JILL M. SCHWAB I3. Home Mdrrsu: OOIFI Kimhark Avenue. Chicago. Illi- nois. Onm'mngfcr. ADILLIIVE c. smrm-r JLB. Home nddncas: 1034 Cnrretl Rm. Upper DarbI. Pennsylvaniil. WILMA J. ' JLB. 4-62? :I. 'NSEH Wabash Awn. Chicago. Ill CHARLES W. SEKTON JLB, Hume addrcu: 301 N Emnrll Circle, Fort Wnrn! IIIdIana Sm: Them Pi. RICHARD K ?EYFDRT'H , All. Home nddrua; 5515 Woodlawn Arman. ChIc-go. Illinois, ROBERT E. SHEDLOCK AB. Hump mldrras: 2051 W. Iowa. Chiragn. Illinms. MERTUN E. SHERMAN AB. Home address: 994 25th Strut. Du Mainga. Iowa. 219 MARCIA SIEIAF'F . I E. IIqu- :IrlIJmsH 'I-IJMI Cm'nwmnl Ih-L-nunu Chmagn. IJImnii jEJHV H. SIMS .x.B Hum.- mmm. v5 MIIIIIIMI- .-II-IIIIIII-. Chicago. llliv no'II. I'a'l'L SIDTWIVEII AB. Hmm- address: I033 32ml. Br-Inklw. Nrw YuIII. JUDY SMITH A. HIIInI- aIIIII-M. lfIIII IInJII-uilr Awrwr. anx. New York. HAN'KF. II 'IUN'QL'IH'T A B, HunII- adnlrw: .II'IH WuIIIIIawI Aunur: Chimpm Hlinllil. WINNIE?! Ii. SPACH EH AIB. Hullll' 51 flakmum FIIL Highland Park lilinuis. JOHN I'. S R. ILB. HIII :2-I HL-ndricks Isle Fl. LuudI-rrlnlc. Flurida. BEHN-Hill C. SPHJTHEH AB IluIIm .1an l-I'Zrl Ehu- AI-unm, Tun Turk, Non- Turk. ISEHHT l SPRINT Blemu :IIIIheIIs: HUS Enduv. SunlIIrd. North Carulina MARILYN n. STMILF. .LB. Hmm: nddrcsa: 53m WWIIIIIwn .Mcnur. Chirasu. IIIiIIIm. MAME K. STIINFIELIJ A73. H add :SI ml. IIeI-uI- 5.. 5L Pcu-Isburg. Florida KEN STAPLET ah. Hum: addrnu: 51H Univusilr .IhcnuI'I Chicago. 'IH'muis. Aipha Delta Phi. ELIZABETH L STARR . Hnrm' addrws: Wcsl Vin: Avrnun Nashville. Ten- nessec. JEROME A. STONE ,-I E. Hume- mIJyI-II; ITI-IIII-I, wIIII-un. Walerlmn. Eon- unlicut, SUSAN A STONE Ia. HIIIIIE addrru 22m x. XIIIIIIII. llIuIIIIIII. IIIcII'IgIII-. ELI NOR n'l'lJK'EI J'I N AH. H..mr add 366 MunlI. Btlrnnnl. Massarhuselu. NORMAVL. STROMH ER m. Hum. .IIIIW .I ma Flushing. New IUII. EILEEN 'T, 2LFLI.IV-IN 31.5. Hum: addrrw' .15 RMkI'iIII- Drivn Baldwin NEW Turk. HARRY Ii. TFIII'IPLFII'O'MI A.B. Homr nddn-ss. 633 Wmm-n Rnnd. Lakmwonni. Ohio. FRED L. THOMAS AB. Hump acldrrsn 5:qu I'niwrsilr Al'enum CIIirago. Illinoi-s. WILTIMII IL THIJMRNSIJN AE Humm address- ?fll W 23ml AI-mmp Pine Bluff. Adcansus. HOLLY THfmlS A13. HumI- addmss: 331 olllwm I'arlc Fond. Illinuia mcmnb a. TRACY A14. Hum .aam- 252.; .IppII-EIIC. KIath Fan... Oregon THOMAS II. IJPHAM AB. Humr addn-ss: III Joy 5mm. Buston Mnsnal'lluselk. CHARLES W. 'I'DSSLFR AIS. Iimm- addlaxa: .105 N. Mam erlsvillg Nu.- ank, MANFRED WAGNER A.B. Hum: address; 25106 N. l'JrI-IIani. Chicngm Illinois. GERALDINE WERNER AB. HImIr addlcas: 91-6 E. 33rd. Chicagn. IIILIIvis. ROBERT OI WIVDIIR I. . I address: I'JQT Drewl Ihcnum Ann Arbor. MIcIII'gI . ALFRED II Wl'sSLnW AME Holm- mjdress- 4.56 Drum! BouIe-rard. Lhwnso Illinois ROBERT 'I'I WILSON AB. IIIIIIII- :IIIrIrr-m: OI I1 Ellis Artnuc. Chicagm Illinois. HAL WITT JLB. Hump addmu: I60 W. ??lh. Vcw Yolk. New Yprk. RICHARD J 'IAIN'UI AB. Hume addnm: 5338 Blanksu-n: 3-.u-nuz Chicago Illinois LENUEIE I'IIRML'LVI K AB. Humm :ddmu: 1:10 X. Drake Avenue. Chicagv. Illinois CHARLES LI YLVDT JLB, Homo addrmI Elm 46. LIlI-rd. Tens. Timur. J. ZIMMIER 3 .-..IB Hm . addrrss' cIrI rthpIm Poughkeepsie. New ka CHICAGO? J The College Poll by PAUL HOFFMAN E who inhabit the smohe-lilled rooms of the Reynolds Club sometimes wonder what stu- dents on this campus are really like e the students we never see, the ones who wake before noon, attend classes and retire behind the shelter of some dormitory 01' private domicile. We found it easier to mimeograph a college-poll and submit to every college student, rather than suhjecting mlrselves t0 the trouble and waking at 501116 early hour and at- tending classes to find out. Besideea we reasoned, our method was lhecientifie. After some stuffing of en- velopes, recording of answers and tahulating data, Education wt Business 26 9 Per Cent Per Cent Civil Service Law 5-5 6.5 Per Cent Per Cent Medicine Skilled Labor 10.5 13 Per Cent Fe, Cenl Engineering Other 6.5 23 K Per Cent Per Cent our poll is finally complete. We think that even those who wake before noon and attend class may he inter- ested in our findings. The accompanying graphs are. largely self-explanv atm'y. Our task in this commentary will he mainly to explain the L6others.u tThe white columns represent men, the black, women. All figures are pereenlageal The University of Chicago, despite its world-wide fame. attracts tat least as far as the College is con- cernedl almost 50 percent of both boys and girls from the City of Chicago or the surrounding area. The remainder are scattered throughout the nation with large concentrations in the greater New York area and the Midwest. Chicago students are largely the products of pub- lic schools with a fair share who have attended the University? mm high school. The two percent lhotherl, were either tutored privately or attended special schools. 10 7.0 :m an 50 From Chicago MI :MN 118 h 47 9 M From New York 1'2 7 h pm me sm 9 A 8 E from the Mldwesl 14 H From the Mid -Atlanri: Slates g 9 H From New England 3 'IO 6 0.5 Other 0.5 l WHERE DO YOU COME FROM? f m cm H Lab School 1; S F Ptivate 1; CH E Pub'lit 33 00 11 Military ? l L S A Other - 4 Palathlal 1 I I J HOW WERE YOU PREPARED? The apathy about which the Maroon quite often complains certainly exists on the question of religion. Almost a third of the students classify themselves as having no religious preference and a similar number never attend church. We found in tahulating our answers that the younger students were less ardent church goers than their senim-s of three or f0 u r years. An interesting aspect of the tabulation of school residence is the. fact that tas the temperance novels decryt as children grow otder they tend to leave home wand University dormitories. Because of University regulations none of the students under 18 years of age live in rented rooms or fraternity houses. Because of University regulations, no girls live in the latter either. uOthers here. include some students who live at the home of friends and one man who inhabits a trailer. WHAT WILL YOU DO AFTER COLLEGE? r 1 CONTINUE Wm u or c t? 36 F CONTINUE M ANOTHER umvansm 13 h WORK 1 Fl ARMY , 3 D I MARRY o B h omen 7 DON'T a mow '3 e a '15 L- 0 IO 20 30 P. c.:? 50 an 70 J WHAT DO YOU THINK YOUR FUTURE OCCUPATION WILL BE? The tabulations of Graph 3 are obvious. Uf spee- ial interest here. are some: of the statements made by students in the. Hotht-r category: at large numher of these FtUdETIIS came because they were offered erholar- shipx, but we received answers ranging from caeon- venienceerlme to homeu to Believe it 01' notea good liberal education! PER WEEK PEP UNIX Less than 6 5 hrs. 3 5-10 hrs More than 30 hrs. HOW MANY HOURS PER WEEK DO YOU STUDY? The high standards which have attracted students to the University also appear to keep them here for graduate work, the most popular fields being medi- cine and the social sciences. Those who intend to do graduate work elsewhere are either in some special- ized field, such as nursing or art, 01' intend to study at some school of especial prominence, e.g. law at Harvard or foreign relations at Georgetown. Other fields include a girl who desires to he an officer in the Waves and a couple of boys who want to he farmers. Science seems to take the major portion of the male graduates while many girls are entering educa- tion. The business world gains only a small share of Chicago students. However, businessesmall or Ial'geeis the occu- pation of the. parents of a great many University stu- dents. In this graph the Hothersn include such occu- pations as commercial artists, the military1 journalists and even a trapeze performer. WHERE DO YOU LIVE WHEN IN CHICAGO? r PER CENT AT HOME 21 23 IN UNIVERSlT-T' HOUSING 2; t: IN FRATERNIIIES 17 IN RENTED APARTMENTS : 1 OTHER 221 WHAT ARE YOUR EXTRA-CURRICLTLAR ACTIVITIES? ID 20 3a 4D So an t FRATERNITIES mm; and CLUBS to 19 n SPORTS 21 m 10 POLITICAL I I I H 13 CULTURAL g - lo SOCIAL . I 20 6 PUBLICATIONS - I 7 RELIGIOUS : OTHER - : NONE - '4 . . l2 ' m cm 'N m...- 43 helnw $5 4-: F $5 to $10 :3 7 F. $10 lo 515 W H $15 lo 525 ; 1 $25 L xh P r' J BEYOND ROOM, BOARD. AND TUITION, HOW MUCH DO YOU SPEND EACH WEEK? DATES PER MONTH ' 331W Less than 1 15 More than 4 40 HOW MANY DATES DO YOU HAVE PER NitZtNTI-l? DRINKING EXCESSIVELY m tcmx MODERATELY RARELY DO YOU DRINK? 222 PRO IPREDOMJNATELY QUALIFIED ANSWERSl COLLEGE CHANGES HOW DO YOU FEEL ABOUT THE COLLEGE CHANGES? FOOTBALL HOW DO YOU FEEL ABOUT FOOTBALL FOR CHICAGO? Tuition probably forces a great many students to he tight-wads. Perhaps this is the reason Wt: found it difficult to sell the Cap SI Gown this year. Our figures on the. number of hours students de- vota to study might be somewhat higher if there were not 50 many of us sitting in the basement of the Rey- nolds Club all day thinking about such things as Cap and Gown and college polls. In the. next graph we have included only activity sponsored by the University 01' recognized student or- ganizations. Hence such matters as lJLlll-Fessiuns, lis- tening to hi-h and midnight schnapps at Jimmyes art- excluded from this: tabulation of the extra curriculum. College students, we. find, for the mOFI part agme with the revised program of undergraduate eclumtitm. Many of those who wcre opposed made hnhl marks on the paper and at'companierl their answers with words. the post-office worft let us print. A A- L... Gk. ua u-u- win: ENSCOPALIAN ROMAN CATHOUE METHODIST UNXTARIAN PRESBYTERIAN CONGEEGATIONALIST 3 3 iUTHERnN BAP'IISI' OIHER PROTESIANT WHAT IS YOUR RELIGION? However, football ewhich many students think will accompany the new College program i is. con- demned by the great majority of Chicago students. An interesting contrast is found here: while 15 per- cent of the girls polled were undecided about the Col- lege program, 16 percent of the boys are undecided about football. Perhaps personal g1ory conflicts with educational theory in their minds. Drinking appeals to no one age group more than others. The graduations on the Chartedespite State laWeare similar for those under 16 and those over 20. One girl who answered was in somewhat of a quandary; she said she rarely drank, and when she did she sipped only moderately, but the Iemllts were excessive. Enrollment hgures have most to do with the dif- ferences between the sexes 0n the matter of dating. The bulk of those without dates are males under 18 years old, but the amount of those who date to a great extentesometimes as many as 20 01' 30 a monthhseem to coincide in all age groups. Perhaps the reason so many boys g0 dateless is that with a closely buttoned pocketbook they canit attract girls. We fmd that most of the boys spend less than two dollars on each excursion. Chicagds i'eputation for affinity for left-wing causes seems largely exaggerated. Perhaps those few at the red-fringe have bigger mouths and louder voices than the large majority of Democrats and Republi- cans who attend this University. Note also here the wide range of views in the men and the narrower range in the women. And now our presentation is over. We think we'll just isit back and join the 29 percent male moderate 2'23 K DO you GO TO CHURCHL HOW OFTEN DO YOU ATTEND REIAICIOL'S SERVICES? f PER cam X :3 2 CONFIRMED REACTIONARY D CONSERVATIVE REPUBLICAN g MODERATE REPUBLICAN : LIBERAL 17 REPUBLICAN 3 CONSERVATIVE DEMOCRAT 2 MODERATE DEMOCRAT 10 :9 lJBERAl D MD RAT NON - COMMUNIST RADICAL 5 COMMUNIST Less than 'I : NONE 1D 21 WHAT ARE YOUR POLITICAL BELIEFS? drinkers in a Scotch and soda and let McCarthy Worry about the three announced Communists in the College. BORIS .M'EHBACH J.D.. june 1954. Home address: MUG University Avenue, Chicago. Illinois. Associate Editor. Law Re- view. Basketball. OLIVER V. AXSTER LDH March 1954. Home address; 69 Kaserenste, Dus- seldorf, Germany. Associate Editor. Law Review. DONALD BAKER J.D., Juae 1954. Home address: 145 Ravine Fares! Drive, Lake Bluff. Illinois. GREGORY B. BEGGS J.D.. June 1954. Home address: 304 S. Euclid Ave- nue, Oak Park. Illinois. Phi Gamma Delta. RENATO BECHE 1.13., June 1954-. Home address: 4- E. Ohio Streei, Chicago, Illinois. Managing Editor. Law Review. Phi Gamma Delta. 224 HARLAN NI. BLAKE J.D.. June 1954. Home address: Huron. South Da- kota. Editor in Chief, Law Review. DAVID M. BRENNER J.D., June 1954-. Home address: 2752 Gregory Ave- nue, Chicago, Illinois. Asso- ciate Editor, Law Review. ALAN H. BRODIE J.D.. June 1954. Home address: 5206 N. E. Rodney Street, Portland, Oregon. HUGH A. BRDDKEY J.D., June 1954. Home address: 54119 Harper Ave- nue, Chicago, Illinois. Asso- ciate Editor, Law Review. Alpha Delta Phi. Owl and Serpent. WILLIAM H. BROWN J.D., J1me 1954. Home address: 322 W. 11th Ave- nue, Huntington, West Vir- ginia. Associate Editor, Law Review. 3716 am! 56!th BRENT FOSTER, JR. 1.13., June 1954. Home address: 18 Belair Road, W'rzrllesley1 Massachusetts. RAYMOND W. GEE J.D., June 1954. Home address: 2806 S. 20th Street 13., Salt Lake City, Utah. ISAAC S. GOLDMAN J.D., June 1954. Home address: 1209 N. Astor Street, Chicago, Illinois. Phi Gamma Delta. WILLIS D. HANNAWALT J.D., June 1954. Home address: 15402 Parkgrove Avenue, Cleveland, Ohio. Managing Editor, Law Re- view. HAROLD 1. HEFTER J.D., March 1954. Home address: 6031 Harper Ave- nue, Chicago, Illinois. 225 LOIS J. COHN J.D.. June 1954. Home arHrcss: 3520 Lake Shore Drive. Zeta Beta Tau. ARTHUR L. CONTENT J.D., June 1954. Home address: 6131 University Avenue, Chicago, Illinois. EVA 5. CONTENT 1.13., June 1954. Home address: 6131 University Avenue, Chicago, Illinois. GILBERT A. CORNFIELD J.D., June 1954. Home address: 8110 Cottage Grove Avenue, Chicago, Illi- nois. Associate Editor. Law Review. LEO FELDMAN J.D., June 1954. Home address: 1300 N. Damen Avenue, Chicago, Illinois. VERNON H. HOUCHEN J.D.. March 1954. Home address: 5312 Drexel Ave- nue, Chicago, Illinois. JAMES VINCENT HUNT, JR. I.D., March 1954. Home address: 24-4-0 Lakeview Avenue. Chicago, Illinois. Phi Kappa Psi. WILLIAM W. JOCHEM J.D., June 1954. Home address: 219 N. Sheridan Road, Peoria, Illinois. Man- aging Editor, Law Review. GEORGE D. KAHLERT J.D., March 1954. Home address: 840 Kane Street, Carlyle, Illinois. GEORGE KAUFMANN J.D., June 1954. Home address: 1290 Grand Con- course, New York, New York. Managing Editor, Law Review. Owl and Ser- pens. 226 ROBERT A. KELSO J.D., June 1954. Home address: Silver Hills, New Albany, Indiana. Phi Kappa Psi. JOHN W. KLOOSTER J.D., June 1954. Home address: 7759 Constance Avenue, Chicago, Illinois. .1 ULES J. KOHENN J.D., June 1954. Home address: 6006 Kenwood Avenue, Chicago, Illinois. DANIEL S. KUWALCZYK J.D., June 1954. Home address: 70 Cedar Street, New Britain, Connecticut. WATHA H. LAMBERT J.D., June 1954. Home address: 802 E. 59th Street, Chicago, Illinois. 2716 121147 LEWIS V. MORGAN, JR. J.D., June 1954. Home address: 130 W. Prairie Avenue, Wheaton. Illinois. ERROLL E. MURPHY 1.0., June 1954. Home address: 1108 E. 615! Street, Chicago, Illinois. ROBERT E. NACLE J.D., June 1954-. Home address: 5434 Ellis Avenue, Chicago, Illinois. MICHAEL PARA J.D., June 1951. Home address: 5601 Blackstone Avenue, Chicago, Illinois. HOWARD M. PELTZ J.D., June 1954-. Home address: 4606 N. Central Park Avenue, Chicago, Illi- nois. 227 GEORGE S. LUNDIN J.D., June 1954. Home address: 190 Prospect Ave- nue, Elmhurst, Illinois. EDWARD 1. MCCOWEN J.D., June 1954-. Home address: 1157 E. 54th Street, Chicago, Illinois. SAUL H. MENDLOVITZ J.D., March 1954. Home address: 5654- Kenwood Avenue, Chicago, Illinois. GERALD M. MINKUS J.D., June 1954. Home address: 174-3 Humboldt Boulevard, Chicago, Illinois. ELAINE G. MOHR 1.0., June 1954. Home address: Rt. 1, Sturgeon Bay, Wisconsin. D. HARVEY PUCHOWITZ J.D., March 1954-. Home address: 5556 Gladys Ave- nue, Chicago, Illinois. GORDON P. RALPH J.D., June 1954.. Home address: 3920 Stickney Ave- nue, Wauwatosa, Wisconsin. Associate Editor, Law Re- view. DANIEL G. REESE J.D.. June 1954. Home address: 513 W. Main Street, Taylorville, Illinois. GEORGE STANLEY RIEG. JR. J.D., December 1953. Home address: 1713 W. 99111 Street, Chicago, Illinois. Basketball. Inter-Fraternity Council. Sigma. Chi. THEODORE W. ROSENAK J.D., March 1954-. Home address: 6026 Blackstone Avenue, Chicago, Illinois. Editor in ChieL Law Review. 228 ALAN ROSENBLAT J.D.. March 1954. Home address: 133-27 Sanford Avenue. Flushing New York. Managing Editor, Law Review. JACK F. SCAVENIUS J.D., June 1954-. Home address: Anchorage, Alaska. ELLIS I. SHAFFER J.D.. June 1954. Home address: 6101 N. Sheridan Road, Chicago, Illinois. Zeta Beta Tam. qua EDWIN H. SHANBERG x J.D., June 1954. Horner address: 7000 C1yde Ave- nue, Chicago, Illinois. Zeta Beta. Tau. a HAL M. SMITH J.D., June 1954. Home address: 1713 Bates Avenue, Springfield, Ohio. Associate Editor, Law Review. ch00! WILLIAM A. SOULES J.D., June 1954. Home address: 5421 Kenwood Avenue, Chicago, Illinois. HUEY THURSCHWELL J.D., June 1954. Home address: 230 W. 79th Ave- nue, New York, New York. MARVIN K. TILLIN J.D., June 1954. Home address: 1108 S. Central Park Avenue. Chicago, Illi- nois. LEE VICKMAN J.D., June 1954. Home address: 7347 Yates Avenue1 Chicago, Illinois. 229 JUDITH E. WEINSHALL LD., june 1954. Home adclress: 38 Pevsner! Haifa, Israel. PAUL N. WENGER, JR. J.D., June 1954-. Home address: 11 Waterside Lane, W. Hartford, Connecticut. Associate Editor, Law Re- view. Alpha Delta Phi. WESLEY A. WILDMAN J.D., June 1954-. Home address: 9031 Elizabeth Avenue. Chicago, Illinois. Aipha Delta Phi. CAROL ROBERT YELLIN I.D., June 1954. Home address: 47341.6 S. Wood- lawn Avenue. Zeta Beta Tau. JOYCE W. ANDERSON MJI. Jun:- 1954. Home address: lI-iE-i May .M-enuo. Elmhurst. Illinois. JASON A. APPEL M.D.. June 1954-. Home address: 5332 5. Shore Drive. Chicago. Illinois. Nu Sigma Nu. CLARENCE M. RAUGH M.D.. June 1954. Home address: 11219 Ii. 615t Street. Chicago, Illinois. MICHAEL E. BLAW M.D., June 1954. Home address: 812 Tyler Avenue. Gary. Indiana. GEORGE H. BURNETT M.D., June 1954. Home address: 24-5 N. Pershing Avenue, Wichita. Kansas. 230 RICHARD D. CHESHCK MIL June 1954-. Home address: 1050 E. 70th Street. Chicago. Illinois. Nu Sigma Nu. JAY L. COLLINS M.D.. June 1954-. Home address: 3 11th Avenue. Rn- chcster. Minnesota. Associa- tion 01 Interns and Medical Students. ROBERT L. COZINE M.D.1 March 1954. Home address: Bushnell, Illinois. JAMES W. CRAWFORD M.D., June. 1954. Home address: 1106 Oakland Ave- nue. Napoleon. Illinois. A1- pha Kappa Kappa. ALFORD C. DILLER M.D.. June 105-1. Home address: 218 S. Jackson Avenue. Bluffton. Ohio. Nu Sigma Na. 3716 Scfw THOMAS F. BUTCHER MD. March 1954. Home address: 57 Walnut Street. Wellsboro. Pennsy1vania. Nu Sigma Nu, DONALD J. FAULKNER M.D.. June 1954-. Home address: 51? Liherty Street, Spokane. Washington. LEONARD V. FISHER M.D.. June 1954. Home address: 211 B1ackburn Ave; 11119. Yonkers. New York. Association Of 1nterns and Medical Students. ARNOLD L. FLICK 1111.13,, June 1954. Home address: 8137 Blackburn Avenue, Los Angeles. Cal- ifornia. FREDERICK A. FOX M.D.. June 1954. Home address: 1161 E. 615: Street. Chicago, Illinois. editing 231 PETER G. CALL M.D.. June 1954-. Home address: 847 E. 51111 Street, Chicago. Illinois. DALLAS D. CLICK 111.13., June 1954. Home address: Jenera, Ohio. JOHNT I. CROSS M.D.. June 1954-. Home address: 6113 Greenwood Avenue. Chicago. Illinois. ARNOLD R. HAUCEN M.D.. June 195-1. Home address: Rt. 4.. Box 231. Paullup. Washington CHARLES F. JOHNSON MDH June 1954. Home address: 710 N. Stone Ave- nue. La Grange, I11in0is. JOHNT E. KASIK M.D.. June 1954' Home. address: 5320 Maryland Avenue. Chicago, Illinois. Afpl'm Kappa Kappa. MARY H. KNELLER M.D.. June 1954-. Home address: Methodist Boys1 5111001. Kusla Lumpar. Ma- laya. MASURA KOIKE M.D.. June 1954. Home address: Box 256. Waialua1 Oahu, T. H. AKIRA KUTSUNAI M.D., June 1954.. Home address: 3354 Winam Ave- nue, Honolulu, T. H. ANTHONY L. LALLI M.D., June 1954-. Home address: 825 Ranny Avenue, Akron, Ohio. Alpha Kappa Kappa. DANIEL O. LEVINSON M.D.. June 1954. Home address: 7238 Cole's Avenue, Chicago. Illinois. Associa- tion of Interns and Medical Students. Nu Sigma Nu. HERBERT LINDEN M.D., June 1954. Home address: 5400 Greenwooti Avenue, Chicago, Illinois. Nu Sigma Nu. HENRY C. MAGUIRE M.D., June 1954. Home address: 6136 Greenwood Avenue, Chicago, Illinois. Association of Inierns and Medical Students. Nu Sigma Nu. ALVIN M. MESNIKOFF M.D., June 1954. Home address: 1147 E. 60th Street, Chicago, Illinois. UZOECHINA NWAGBO M.D., June 1954-. Home address: 9 Oranye, Onitsha? Nigeria, W. Africa. Nu Sig- ma Nu. 3716 School ARTHUR J. OKINAKA M.D.. June 1954. Home addreSS: 1020 11th Avenue. Honolulu, T. H. ROBERT L. PETERS MAD June 1954. Home address: Yuciapa, Califor- nia. .rh'pha Kappa Kappa. ROBERT E. PRIEST M.D.. June 1954-. Home address: 1151 E. Slst Street, Chicago. Illinois. ALAN D. RAPP M.D.. June 1954. Home address: 1409 S. Moreland Avenue, Shenandoah, Iowa. Delta Upsiion, Aipha Kappa Kappa. MILTON RASKIN M.D.. June 1954-. Home address: 338 Spruce Street, Chelsa, Massachusetts. Asso- ciation of Interns and Medi- cal Students. of Medicine 233 JIILES HISHIN M.D.. June 1954-. Home address: 663 Prospect Ave- nue. Oakland, California. THOMAS ROLAND M.D.. June 1054. Home acldresy 1150 E. Gist Street, Chicago. Illinois. Nu Sigma Nu. DAVID L. ROSENBERG MVDH June 1954. Home address: 257 Lexington Ave- nue. Passaic, New Jersey. Phi Gamma Delta. Nu Sig m :1 Nu MAKNIOOD SAJJADI MD June 1954. Home address: Seraye Javahery. Teharan, Iran. LOIS GRIEDER SCHEIMANN M.D., June 1954. Home address: 364 Graydon Terv race! Rirlgewood. New Jer- 56y. JERRY G. SEIDEL M.D.. June 1954. Home address: Rt. 4a Princeton. II- linois. Aipha Kappa Kappa. CHARLES M. SHAPIRO M.D.. June 1954. Home address: 2535 N. Sawyer Avenue, Chicago, Illinois. GORDON S. SIEGEL MD... June 1954. Home address: 1225 E. 58111 Street. Chicago. Illinois. Nu. Sigma Nu. DONNA MEDDAUGH SUMMER M.D.. June 1954. Home address: 346 E. 59th Street, Chicago. Illinois. FRED B. STERN MIL? June 1954-. Home address: 4029 Ridge Ave- nue. Altoona, Pennsylvania. 234 EDWIN L. STICKNEY M.D., June 1954. Home address: Billings. Montana z'l'l'pha. Kappa Kappa. DAVID D. STONECYPHER M.D., June 1954. Home address: Nebraska City, Ne- braska. PM Gamma Delta, Nu. Sigma Nu. PATRICK E. TAYLOR M.D., June 1954. Home address: 7275 Mulholland Drive, HoIlywood, Califor- ma. RICHARD C. THOMPSON M.D., June 1954. Home address: 2234 Cordova, Youngstown, Ohio. Alpha Kappa Kappa. LEO VAN DER REIS M.D.. June 1954. Home address: 1339 46th Avenue, San Francisco, California. Nu- Sigma Nu. 3716 School RICHARD A. WEAVER M.D., June 1954-. Home address: 812 E. 59m Street. Chicago, Illinois. ERWIN N. WHITMAN M.D.. June 1954. Home address: 1150 E. 618': Street. Chicago. Illinois. Nu Sigma Nu. DOROTHY B. WINDHURST M.D.. June 1954-. Home address: 910 E. 37th Street. Chicago. Illinois. FRED WIVSBERC M.D., June 1954. Home address: 6721 Cornell Ava nue, Chicago. Illinois. Asso- ciation of Interns and Medi- cal Students. of Medicine 235 BERNARD M. VEENSTRA 31.13.. June 1954. Home arlvfress: 1138 E. 6151 Street. Chicago. Illinois. GERALD W. VOGEL M.D., June 1954. Home address: 822 E. 59th Street. Chicago. Illinois. Associa- tirm of Interns and Medical Students. VERNER .1. WAITE M.D.. June 1954. Home address: 3124 Poplar Drive, Lynwood. California. Nu Sigma Nu. MANFRED A. WALLNER M.D.. June 1954-. Home address: Box A. Carmari1lo, California. SHU - YUNC WANG M.D.. June 1954. Home address: 4710 Drexel Boulei vard. Chicago. Illinois. VARTANUOSH AYRANDJIAN A.M. Social Sciences, June 195-1. Home address: Cairo, Egypt. w MOHAMMAD MOBIN AHMAD A.M. Humanities, June 1954. Home address: 2315 Jelmgior, Karachi East. MAJOR JUANITO P. BARRIENTOS A.M. International Relations, June 1954. Hmne address: Phil- ippine Military Academy, Ba- guio City; Philippine Islands. International Relations Club, Calvert Club. CHOUSE MUNIR AHMED A.M. Student At Large, June 1954-. Home address: 3832 Eid- gah. Mysore City India. GORDON M. BARTACE MBA. Business, December 1953. Home address: 4351 N61- son, Chicago, Illinois. PAUL A. ALBRECHT PhD. Committee On Human Development, December 1953. Home address: 5214 Kimbark. Chicago, Illinois. CHARLYNE RUTH BOOZE AM. International Relations, June 1954-. Home address: 6121 Champlain. Chicago, Illinois. International Relations Club, Communications Club. NAIM N. ATIYEH A.M. Education, June 1954. Home address: Amiocm-Coura. Lebanon. REVEREND ANTHONY BUCHIK S. V. D. Ph.D. Social Sciences, June 1954. Home address: 4940 Greenwood, Chicago, Illinois. EMMERINE AVANT AM. Education, June 1954. Home address: 47 Garfield, Chicago, Illinois. k6 Divisims and Schools 237 PETER FREDERICK BURI PhD. Zoology. June 1954. Home address: 101 Lexing- ton. Eau Claire, Wisconsin. S. CATHERINE CARROLL SM. Home Economics. June 1954. Home address: 3367 W. 16111 Street, Van- couver. British Columbia, Canada. NIKHOM CHANDARA- VIDURA A.M. Social Service Ad- ministration. June 1954. Home address: Free. Bang- kok. Thailand. Thai Alli- ance. Social Service Admin- istration Club. YFNC TEH CHOW Ph.D. Social Sciences. August 1954. Home ad- dress: Tsing Hua University. Peking. China. ELBA CIMA-D-VILLA A.M. Social Service Ad- ministration, June 1954. Home address: 256 Colonel Carr Street, Mayaguez, Puer- to Rica. Social Service Ad- ministration Club. HELEN M. DANLEY AM. Nursing Administra- tirm. June 1954-. Home ad- dress: 210 State Street. New Orleans. Louisiana. IRENE ELIZABETH DE MARA AM. Nursing Education. June 1954. Home address: 2802 Peavey. Port Huron. Michigan. Nursing Educa- tion Club. International House Council. GILBERT DEMENTIS AM. Economics. Decem- ber 1953. Home address: 6422 Kimhark. Chicago, 11- linois. Political Economics Club, Sigma Chi. CLAUDIA M. DURHAM AM. Social Sciences, June 1954. Home address: 4-19 E. 43th Place. Chicago. Illinois. Nurses C1ub. MARION ESTELLE EISNOR AM. Social Sciences, Aug- ust 1954. Home address: Box 42. Gorham. New Hamp- shire. Nursing Education Club. Divisiom TOBIAS Y4 ENVERGA PhD. Education June 1954. Hume address: Mau- banf Quezon. Philippine Is- lands. MARVIN H. EWERT A.M. Divinity, June 1955. Home address: Bolton. South Dakota. ESTELLA SALUORO FABILANE A.M. Political Science. June 1954. Home address: 3155 S. Green, Chicago, 1!- linois. JAMES THOMAS FITZPATRICK A.M. Graduate Library School, June 1954. Home address: 520 N. Fair. Onley, Illinois. Graduate Library Club. PETER FONG PhD. Physical Sciences, December 1953 Home ad- dress: International House. and Schools 239 MARCEL MATHEW GASCHKE PhD. Chemistry. June 1954-. Home address: 5474 S. Everett. JOHN D. GODFREY PhD. CenIogy. June 1954. Home address: Burlnn-nn- Trent. England. Soccen Squash, Tennis. Golf, KEP. CHARLES JAMES COEBEL PhD. Physicai Science; June 1954. Home address: 6101 Drexel. Chicago, Illin- ois. Rocket Society, Orches- tra. Sigma Xi. THOMAS COLDMAN ELM. Social Sciences. June 1954. Home address: 852 E. 60th Street. Chicago, Illinois. LEONARD GOODWIN AM. Education, June 1954-. Home address: 78-20 Cloverdale. Flushing, New York. PERETZ GORDON A.M. Social Sciences, March 1954-. Home address: 31 M. B. Melacha Street, Tel- Aviv. Israel. I. Z. F. A. STANTON W. GOULD PhD. Social Sciences, De- cember 1953. Home address: 1522 N. Dearborn. Chicago, Illinois. EUNICE M. GRAM SB. Mathematics. June 1954-. Home address: 5228 Drexel, Chicago, Illinois. FREDERICK LOUIS GRATIOT. JR. A.M. Humanities, June 1954. Home address: 1710 N. La Salle, Chicage, Illi- nois. JEROME A. GROSS AM. Political Science, June 1954-. Home address: 555 Tyler1 Gary, Indiana. Owl and Serpent. Editor 1953 Cap and Gown. Alumni Deans Award 1953. 2410 WAYNE PRESCOTT HANSEN MBA. Business, June 1954. Home address: 5254 Grove, Skokie, Illinois. THORMOND H. HANSON A.M. Social Service Ad- ministration. June 1954. Home address: 84-0 E. 60th Street. Chicago. Illinois. JEANNE LORRAINE HARPER A.M. Humanities. June 1954. Home address: 5704 South Park Way. Chicago, Illinois. Le Cercle Francais, El Ateneo Hispanico. JAMES HAYWOOD HARRISON A.M. Social Sciences, June 1954. Home address: 1317 N. Caroline Street. Balli- more. Maryland. JAMES WILBER HARRISON PhD. Education, Decem- ber 1934-. Home address: 5512 Kimbark, Chicago, Il- linois. kc Divistms PHILIP WYMAN HARRWON SM. Physical Sciences. December 1953. Home ad- dress: 2538 W. 115111 Street. Chicago. 1111:1015. DOROTHY MAE HASKINS NM. Nursing Education. June 1934. Hmm- address: 3824 Awnue K. Galveston. Texas. ROBERT HENRY HORWITZ PhD. Political Science. August 1054-. Home address: Box 5163. Hunnlulu. T. 11. Political Snimu'c Associav 11011. Amerit'an Society for Pub1ic Administration. 2nd. LL ROY L. JENNE Air Force Meteorology Program. Home address: 6106 S. University Ave., Chi- cago, Illinois. SENTEZA KAJUBI A.M. Geography, August 1954. Home address: Ugan- da, East Africa. President Internationa1 House Coun- ci1. Md Schools 211.1 A MARVIN RElfBEN KOPULSKY MBA. Business, March 1954-. Home address: 4-523 N. Troy Ave... Chicago, 11- linuis. Hi11e' Foundation. MARY JANE LACEY MA. Library Science, June 1954. Home address: 726 N. Main Street. Wheat- on. Illinois. JEAN LAMOTHE MBA. Business, March 1954-. Home address: 535 Viger Avenue. Montreal, Canada. SHELDON BLAINE LOEWY MA. Economics. Decem- ber 1953. Home address: 5218 Harper Avenue, Chi- cago. Illinois. Political Econ- omy C1ub. HiHeI Founda- tion. GILBERT H. LINCOLN RD. Divinity, June 1954. Home address: 920 E. Over- brook, Ponca City, 0k1ah0- ma. Student Government. Neighhorhood Commission, Phi Gamma Doha, South East Chicago Commission. COLDIE LIPSHL'TZ AM. EducatiMI. June 1954. Home address: 7943 5'3. Elwrhart. Chimgn. Illi- nois. Hillel Fuundalinn. Gain; Hall Counvil. Dwim Higm a. GEORGE PANOS LOURIS PhD. Social Sciences. June 1954. Home address: Athms. Greece. WILLIAM HHINES LUTTON A.M. Humanities. Decem- ber 1953. Home address: 7339 5. Egglesmn Avenue, Chicago. Illinois. Le Cercle Francais. II Circulo Italiano, Phi Doha Them. VIRGIL EDISON MATTHEWS PhD. Chemistry. August 1954. Home address: 5348 S. Michigan Avenue. Chica- go. Illinois. Student Govern- ment, Chemistry Department Student AHairs Board. CHILTEN H. MCDONALD PhD. Chemistry. Decem- ber 1953.H01116 address: 329 Culpeper Street. Warenten, Virginia. American Chemi- cal Society. 2 4-2 MARY JOANNA Mc-W ILLI A MS 11.1.11. History. Jurw 1954. Hume address: 122:9. Hinman Avenue. Evanston. Illinois. Porter Foundalion. History Club. Student Aide. CHRISTOPH METELMANN SM. Physical Sciences, January 1955. Home ad- dress: Walhalla. Germany. JOHN C. MEYER MBA. Business. March 1954. Home address: 3387 Erie Avenue. Cincinnati, Ohio. Chamberlain House Council. Salisbury House Council. Phi Gamma Delta. JOEL HENRY MILLER AM. English. June. 1954. Home address: 231 Sullivan Piace, Brooklyn. New York Wrestling. LEE H. MILLER MBA. Business. August 1954-. Home address: 352 Sandusky Street. AsHand. Ohio. Z716 Divisions NONA MARY MILLER A.M. Graduate Library School, June 1954. Home ad- dress: 22 Normanstone Road. South Launcaslon. Tasmania, Australia. Uni- versity Thealcr. Internation- al Hnuse Council. Compass. Graduate Library Club. SOPHIA PHILLIPS NELSON AM. Social Sciences. June 1954. Home address: 1044 Blat-kadnre Avenurx Pitts- burgh. Pennsylvania. Com- munications Club. ELIZABETH MSXI'REEN NISSEN A.M. International Rela- tions. Decemher 1053. Home address: 5727 Kenwood Ave- nue. Chicago. Illinois. JOSEPH K. OFORI A.M. Humanities. Decem- ber 1953. Home address: Box 20. Kumasi. GoH Coast. British West Africa. Interna- tional House Council. SEBASTIAN KWAKU OPON AM. Political Science. June 1954. Home address: Box 3, Wiawso. Cold CoasL British West Africa. Calvert Club. Student Government. Political Science Club. am! Schools 243 SETH AHOAKO OWI'SU AM. Pulitival Snivmre. June 195-1. Hulnl: address: Box 3. Ohuasi. Gold Coast. British West Al'w'wa. HLANCHARD K. PARSONS NM. International Rela- liuns, June 19.34. Home adr drea-ss: .334 S. Maryland Avcnuv. Chicago. Illinois. Communications Club, Inter- national Relations Club. BELDEN H. PALTLSON A.M. Social Sciences. June 1954. Home address: 115015 E. 615: Street. Chicago. Il- linois. Political Science Club. Neighborhood Commission. MARY PAULSON B.D. Divinity, June 1954. Home address: 836 N. Har- vey Avenue. Oak Park: H- linois. JO-ELLEN N. PETTIT A.M. Humanities, June 1955. Home acidress: 203 Heath Street. Chestnut Hill, Massachusetts. GERALD JOSEPH PHILLIPS KM. Muair. June 1954. Home address: 34-0 Clough Road. Waterbury. Connecti- cut Calvert Club. Collegium Musicum. MARCOT CASSEL PINS A.M. Education, June 1954. Home address: 7200 5. C0185, Chicago, Illinois. Hillel. ANTON JOSEPH PREGALDIN ANT. History. June 1954. Home address: STSB Mr.- Pherson Avenue. St. Louis, Missouri. Calvert Club, His- tory Club. DARRELL DONALD RANDALL PhD. Social Sciences, August 1954. Home address: 1661 E. 82nd Street, Cleve- land, Ohio. GINEVERA NERO REAVES A.M. Social Sciences, June 1954. Home address: Route 2. Holly Springs. Mississippi. 2-1-4- JOHN DANIEL REID PhD. Sociology, August 1954. Home address: 622 2nd Avenue. Columbus, Georgia. Sociology Club. RODNEY E. RING PhD. Humanititw August 1954. Home address: 34-7 N. Columbia. Seward, Nebras- ka. PEDRO RIVERA AM. Social Sciences, June 1954-. Home address: 217 W. Font Martello, Humacao, Puerto Rico. ROBERT IRWIN ROSENTHAL Ph.D. Psychology, August 1954. Home address: 130915 E. 60th Street, Chicago, Il- linois. Psychology Club, Phi Beta Kappa, Sigma. Xi. F. HERMAN RUDENBERG PhD. Physiology, June 1954-. Home address: 32 Ross Roada Belmont. Massa- chusetts. Glee Club. RICHARD E. SALISBURY MBA. Business, Decem- ber 1953. Home address: 244- E. First Street. HinsdaIE. Il- 1111015. MARLENE ADELLE SAXE A.M. Education, June 1054-. Home address: 4327 Sullivan Avenue, St. Ber- nard. Uhiu. LORETTA RHEA SHARP A.M. Social Sciences. June 1954. Home address: 701 Ivy. Denver. Colorado. Nurs- ing Education Club, Pi Lambda Them. WILLIAM H. SICKELS A.M. Human Develop- ment, June 1934. Home ad- dress: 421,! Lexington Ave- nue. Elkharl. Indiana. Canr era Club. Racket Suciety. JANIS SMILGA A.M. Divinity. June 1954. Home address: Latvia. and Schools 243 PAKPONGSXID SNIDVONGS 3M. Physic-al Sciences. August 195-1. Home address: 8.36 Kaw Banpoon. Thon- buri. Thailand. VIRGINIA H. SWAN ELM. Education, June 1954. Home address: 5829 Durchester Avenue, Chicago. Illinois. Pf Lambda Theta. AUBREY SYKES iLM. Humanities, June 1954. Home address: 4823 S. Kenwood Avenue. Chica- go. Illinois. PAUL JACOBI TAXEY A.M. Biological Sciences, June 1954. Home addresa: 4.00 W. Surf Street. Chicago1 IIIinois. Phi Sigma Defra. STANLEY TAYLOR PhD. Social Sciences, June 1954-. Home address: 1145 E. 615t Street. Chicago. Illinois. Social Science Club, Sociology Club. IilTHYMIOS TH ED DOROS THEUDORUPOULOS 31.311 Eduvulicm. Decem- lu'L 19:33. Home address: Naupaktor. Greece. XAVINIC THEHESE TIIl RBER A.M. Humanities. JunE, 195-1. Home address: 1400 E. 56111. Street. Chicago. Il- lixmii Delra Sigma! Glee Club. GEORGE V. TOMASHEVICH A.M. Social Sciences, June 1954-. Home address: 5112 Dorchester. Chicago, Illinois. JOSE A. TORRES PhD. Humanities, Aug- ust, 1954. Home address: 1119 E. 60th Street, Chica- go, Illinois. NICHOLAS ARTHUR TROSSMAN AM. Humanities, August 1954. Home address: 183'? Humboldt. Chicago, Hlinois. CARLOS G. TULASZEWSKI P1117. Humanities, Decem- her. 1955. Home address: 3308 Madison. Chicago, 11- linuis. JAMES W. VICE JR. A.M. Social Sciemes, June 1954. Home address: 1176 Falls Avenue, Wabash, Indi- ana. President Young Dem- ocrats, Graduate History Club. VERNA A. VOTH M.SW. Social Service Ad- ministration, June 1954. Home address: 314 E. 8th Street, Chicago, IlIinois. WILLIAM WHITE 3.13. Federated Theo1ogi- cal School, June 195-41. Home address: Box 215. Brooklyn. Mississippi. Methodist Stu- dent Fellowship. RAYMOND LESLIE WILKINS MS. Chemistry. June 1954. Home address: 1151 E. 615.1 Street, Chicago. Il- linois. Camera Club. 3716 Diaisims DOROTHY M. WILLIAMS A.M. Pulilical Science, June 195-1. Home address: 1114- 11th Avenue. Rock IH- 1am1. Illinois. JEAN .1. WILLIAMS B.D. Chicago Theological SF-minar-L Junw 195-1. Home address: 411 Carpenter Lane: Philadelphia. Pennsyl- vania. LEANAHD WISE MBA. Business, June 1954. Home address: 907 E. 60111 Street, Chicago. Illinois. FRED BUYER WRIGHT P1111. Physical Sciences, Becamber 1954. Home ad- dress: 1211 E. Hyde Park. Chicago, Illinois. Alpha Def- ia Phi. FRANK STEPHEN ZEPEZAUER AM. English. 1une 1954. Home address: 800 N. Main Street. Salinas. California. Delta Upsilon, Calvert Club. Student Government. Md Schools 2-1 T Ackowlcdymmts V-IE two requirements: demanded of a yearhook arc t'tllnpletent'HR and pmmptness. Ohviously. these are generally mntradietory. The editors of the 1951- Cap and Gown have in many Cases: heen foreed tn sacrifit-e one or the other. and for this we. offer apologies and a reminder that Cap and Gown must still he considered a new hook with problems which will be eliminated as the E:taffs become more experienced. The Cap and Gown clearly owes a terrific debt of gratitude to many people outside the staff. Mr. Jerome Gross. editor of the 1953 hook, stepped in at the lasat minute tn ealvage, at least partially, a lost advertising campaign. Mr. Al mamquist. 0f the Denisou Yearhook Cmnpanyt and Mr. Robert Tht'ig of S. K. Smith and Company tour msemakert, and Mrs. Lillian Kapen 0f Daguerre Stutlioe. all hetped the Staff through it? trying perimls. The stuff also rereived much outside help with the gale; campaign. Dave Ahelhon, Beth Kenyon, Su- 24?- san Uaskais. Nate Kuhel, Rohert Kurland, Mary Innge-Ttuttig, Don Fishen Shelly Thorens, Cathy Allen. Carita Chapman. Justin Johnson! Bob Berger, and Jim Camp gave the sales program a vital honst. As the final deadline drew near many people not on the regular staff. Joe Ferrari, Bin Seekinger, Bruce. Larkin, Lyn Cartelu and Hetlen Wotlack in particular. donated their time to heTp with the routine work which by that time was crowding in. The editors 'dlhn wish to thank William Biren- haunt, Mrs. ATma MLIHiIL Dean Robert M. Stroziel'. Miss Dorothy Demon, Leonard Ericksnm Howard Mort and other members of the University adminis- tration who were mnre than cooperative. The entire staff was thankful for the succor and sustenance given hy our sister organization, Gamin- Dregs. Phntographir I'I'El'lilS for pictures not taken by Robert Sharge go to Walter Parker who took mnet 0f the athletic groups. Steve Llewellyn, and the Chicago Sun-Times. RuppETY-TEAE uEvery Man a Tigg .d but not in 1953 249 Daquerre Studio 209 So. State Street In Business for over 40 years Offgciaf plzofograpgek gr 3A6 7954 Cap anal Gown N YEARBOOK COMPANY FOOTBALL N our younger days we occasion- ally had moments: of rather wist- ful yearning for the return of foothall to the campus. We had perused the faded and torn stomp- lmoks in the files of some of the fra- ternitieshsaw photos of Stagg Field packed to overflowing with them;- ands of cheering spectatorshuml felt a surge of pride. at the head- lines ciN'l-aroons Win Again? Then. sanity returned. Vic sighed and closed the scraphtmks with all their mementom of past glories for we were fully cognizant of the fart that when a sport becomes Big Bllhlltehh it can prosper only at tllt' expense of the more iliiportaiit 'dHDPt'lh' of our University experience. Still, it would he rather plemanl tn chem our own team. THE gnozs EYE VIEW Until this year Hthh thinking could he t'lismissed as mere wishful thinking, and we haul l0 mnttrnt nur- SElVES with plotting synntanmm pep rallies for the haskethall team. Now. it seems that Hfoutlmll is again an innmrtant WIJI'Ll rm Irani- pus. and, like any important word. it has caused many questions. Wnuld the students support a team? Should the sport In! intrumtlrzlh small-time collegiate, 01' what? Can it ever he cunlpatihlc with Httlmlar- ship? As usual. these qncstimm elicitatl a variety of I'ialOl'lHPt-t from llillerent Houn-es. We had our own opinions, but withhold crnmment un- til at student committee. haul heun formed and met with the Athletic Department an Ll Administration spokesmen. We were sitting around the otcliit'c playing whist and vursing the Business h'lanagt-r for not lating- ing more icu when. u'ht-n wu fll'hl heard of the meeting. m whipping a Chicago six-ftmt muffler m'mind our neck, we slashed over to Burl- lett. Wu didnlt expert much from past experience. anul were surprised at lllE numhcr of healthy types whu were clamoring for the return of loothall in some term to UN! campus. A list of potential players was start- ed, uml the auppm't 0f the adminis- ti'attiun was suught. The Admin- lSll'ilIlUtl was vhonsing its word; with rare. lum'wer. and gave little morn Hupport than a wait-amcl-stbe attitude. At a later meeting with the Cmnmittc-e we lt'ttl'ttl'tl that Dean Slmzic-r hutl informal tlw mmmit- tee that he tit'ltl Kimptnn were '6in- tet'estecl in the idea: The door is not closed hut we need more time to runuider and await cvidmu: that enough students: will train for the hum. Committee Chairman Geff- ner was, on his sidtn confident I van sign up a hundred students: he- lm? Junv. hut . . . skeptical almnt the tulministraticmis attitude.u But in April. Mett-alf unnmlnrvd that there was no possibility of hav- ing at team. even an an intru-mural levcl, next year. 'iThm-e are oh- vinusly not enough interested Hlll- dents. The list of a 100 prospev- tive parlitnpunts waR never snhmib ted tilttl the Athletic hutlget for next year u'au ftll'lltlllttlttl without pm- visiuns lm- intra-nim'al games. Mett'alf rhtilnt'tl that there 1111' not enough hnyx' eumthle at play: ittg.H htll wrttt athmg u'ith Hmvut'tl Mutt. eer-retut'y of the Alumni Ar:- Hit'i'dtitlli. and pittt't'tl hope in the new degrees thawing an enlarged undergrzuhlate hotly. Mort saw the football agitators uh martyrs t0 the value painting out that HBy the time the program started they wmthl no longer he students. He said, though. that the program wnutd have to start fmm administration 01' students. since the alumni wouldn't step in and hawk the plan until there. With? a ttefinite possihitity of restor- ing the game. Dean Strozier, however. placed the crux of the difficulty on the hudget. ttFoothatt. even intramural. i9 an expensive proposition. It t'em't he done overnight. And 90. tackled by the t-mnhined force of qttestimlahle student inter- eite administrative attitude? alumni support. and lack of money, 21 Chi- ttagn foothatl team will not return to the campus: next fall. WOMEN Along with the. proposed Chicago eleven. other of this yearas ideas ttlltl projects vanished like eotd beer on a warm day. It seems that one of the hrightet- math majors around t'ampus. after playing little games- with hie slide rule. announced to the worh'l in gen: eral that the fifty year ham on 501'- nrities was over. Immediately, rumor had it that the womenis Clubs would accept na- tinnat Charters, tear down Soc Seit Harper. and Classice. and in their places erect a row of 375.000 hittin- stone sorority houses, each equipped with a private pier extending to the lake. Because we thought that Mtt'tit a move might be newsworthy. we broke into the nearest bridge game and asked a club girl if there would he any sororities on Campus. She 1391 E. 55th St. Mi 3-4020 Your Exclusive Florist for University Occasions -:- Two Stores To Serve You -:- Wide ; 3$ridl 1225 E. 63rd St. Hy 3-5353 STUDENT DISCOUNT - FREE DELIVERY carefully trumped her partneris ace. hitched ttp her knee-tength am; and said. uNot while lint in eehooh at any rate. She was then planning a career in netn'wpeychiatry. 53Not only is it a practical impossibilityf she squealed tthut the clubs have their own traditions. What would happen to our relics. such as the toe- nail clippings of our past presidents. our cherished ceremonies such as Iaringitis hour at the C shop? N0 sorority is going to replace our silly traditions with its silly traditions!u She turned her eashmere-elad hack toward us and we intuited that the. interview. as well as one pipe dream. was over. Upon finding that the dormitory food left her gourmetis needs tm- filled, at least one Kelly resident closed her account at the hursaris and used her newly acquired mad money to purchase a hot plate. tEd. note: We do not make moral judg- ments. Hawever, according to the strict interpretation of Sections d and e of Item 3 of Terms and Con- ditions of Occupancy 0f the COM- tract for Accommodations in the Residence Halts 0f the University of Chicago, a hot plate might feasi- hiy he prohibited from use in Kelly. The administration and the univer- sity? insurance company are noted for adhering to the strict interpre- tation of these seetionsj The clandestine appliance 11n- douhtedly would have remained un- discovered had its erring owner kept the hot little coils from close. proximity with an inflammable trunk. When hot coil meets inflam- mahte ohject, the result is smokee smoke enough to tickle. the olfac- tory organs: of a vigilant neighbor. The smnke-sniffing neighbor, true to the Rules for Occupants posted on the inside of Kelly Chisels, dove for the. phone, stuck in a slug, and reported the blazing inferno to the fire department. Here, however, is where the intrigue comes in. Unhe- knownst to the calling co-ed 01' to the Chicago Fire. DepartmenL an- other firefighting Kellyite who prohahly had Completed the natural science sequences, threw a glass of water on trunk, hot plate. et al., thereby.r ruining any chance. of a wienie roast. When the twenty-eight firemen. lured to the scene. of the crime hy the husky-voiced Kellyite. poured into the dorm, the only thing; that they found smoldering was the Kelly girls' glances. So the axe- hearing Prince Charminge uncoop- eratively climbed on the hack of their snorting red charger and Si rened their way into the distance leaving pin curled heads wistfully protruding from Kelly, Green, and Foster windows. nThose were more men than have ever been in the girls' dormitories. commented one green Hall girl as she crumplect paper on her white- hot hot plate. HOUSING Probably to counteract the ap- pearance of the titrendf, the univer- sity administration, following the precedent set years before by some of the nati01fs more free-thinking schools such as Bryn Mawr and Vassar, agreed to allow men to visit the rooms in the girls' dormitories. uGentlemen callers are permitted in the cloistered upper reaches of the WC group during a few innocu- ous hours on Sunday afternoona. Rules of the game: sign in at the desk on the first floor. and leave the doors of visited rooms open. Because of the manyr closed and locked doors in the dormitories on Sunday afternoons, it may he as- sumed that the plan is unpopular and that many couples are not tak- ing advantage of the liheral. new arrangement. tEd. note - The following article is a partisan. account which does not necessarily reflect. the opinion 0! the editorsj By Joe ENCELS Linn and Coulter were the top teams in the college touchhall league. Linn won the championship. Linn demanded the trophy from Coulter because. it had won it. Coul- ter said it could only he delivered upon official presentation. A Linn man with a genius for practical compromises said that at any rate Coulter wasnlt entitled to it and forthwith it was aeropriated for the Linn Lounge. This is the theme. forthwith the variations. One evening overcaat with a haze, the touchhall trophy disappeared. and was traced to Coulter. The re- action of about twenty rough, tough Linn freehooters to this was the forceful expletive of llMy good- ness. This verbal directive was translated into explicit action ahout 11 olclock when the House of Coul- ter unsuccessfully tried to oppose the removal of their lounge furni- ture by a fraction of Linn House. However due to meddling hy high- er-ups, the hric-a-hrae was returned to Conlter in condition better, or at least more interesting. than hefore. For these esthetic improvements, Linn was billed. Finally the trophy was regained by a thoroughly tm-Linnian expev dient - negotiation. Peaee should have descended upon the courts hut this is not to he. tNow for an on- the-epot report from our Correspon- dent with the Linn forcesJ Dateline: dark, dark. night. Se- cret agent Prosternian enters Coul- ter territory, hidden hy a thick screen of metaphysics. He goes up to the first floor. He thinks: this is the first floor? It is. By gum the next is the second floor. He hits that one right on the nose also. By Socrates, Plato and the Phaedrus in the' Jowett translation. iTm clair- voyant. This occupies him until the top is reached. He. enters the sani- tary establishment, props open door to stair. He repeats: pl'oeeea on all flnors. Then. mission accomplished. disappears in a fog of detaelnnent. Twenty minutes later. a squad of picked Linn Men have taken over all the Conlter johns. The c-ruoial micro-seeond approached. The doors to the corridors are opened. Smoke homhs go off all over the ever lovinl place. Bloorletirdling screams fill the halls as smite Coul- ter men attempt the frustrating taRl-i 0f Slipping into their wastepaper baskets before joining the. fray. A cry of defiance pierces the mark on the second floor: tcl wants my mom- myla, Dark rlark night. feame meta. phor. different housel The typical Linnian sleeps dreaming unhani- perecl by the hampering demands of reality. Simultaneously people all over the house feel as though they'd been chlorophylled. Zoumls. is the cry. who meeseth with my molars. fYou try to cry this in the middle of the night and acknowl- edge hereafter the verhal virtuosity of LinnJ A Linn man opens the door to see a puddle spreading in front of him. After eliminating all obvious alternatives he intuits that it is ammonia. t0f all the ways: of intuiting, smelling,r is way aheadJ The truth sinks in. Coulter has. struck back. With the exception of a few mi- nor incidents the high spots have been covered. Lately peace and quiet have descended upon the courts. Yet therelll come a day when the innate salubrioueness of both houses will rise like huhhles from the bottom of a deep-flowing tranquil river. to punctuate our in- tegrated existence with. our social environment. And then there was. the entering student who tried to get a new Bio Sci instructor at Faculty Exchange. tCads! Are we this short of materialN STUDENT UNION Cmnphlining this uintl'i' that the . Um'oon gave almost no wn'rmgc- tn Irampus suriui L'follth. Student Union mvmhers lurked up their point with sumo tvlling HlilithliliQ lsa-unpie: nut nli 4-339 nun-arh'ertising inches in the Autumn quarter. the Maroon dcwletl 2.92'. 10 Uff-I'ampus p0- iitit-al subjects. only 1.1762 to cum- pus sot'ial eventst and set 0111 to publish a wt'eklv 0f thL-il' own. CallPd the For'vmst, and stating its policy as having num'. the or- gan's purpose Was. tn advm'tise Union events hoth hefnre and nftvr their presmltatimlf Appearing first with a Fchrtlary 22 clatt- Iiltc. tht- hjx published issuer: of lhv Fowrnxt were chock full of message: from pimple who both did and didn't have messages to give. a mmir Hll'ip Called1 appropriately enough. the Oddity, and incidental infm'malimi. Also, news of Union events. How- ewel', this fulfillment of UCS read- ing needs was short-iived. Aftt'r succumbing UH April 10 10 the ivlilargv that i: LICE- own spring fevert tht- Fm'orm! limited tlw Campus; to turn tn tit? .-l.-'m'oon inl' social news. Pogo for mmil' entertainment. and In the ahnanac' for information as to the peso value of MexiL-oia exports. PUBLICATIONS IPPETY - TEARING into dor- mitory mailhoxes. turrom pl'ominenl bulletin hoarda and under the. Skill of the cteoterir- faction on campus. Cup and Gown and Phoenix publicity was: some- thing new this. year. The suave. smooth collection of witticisms, pictures and cartoons were culled from campus :.-0In-'c,-rsaK tions or formulated with Jimmies' Broadview Hotel -. 9'3 F6 .- FIREPROOF 225 ROOMS 2 225 BATHS -..,;H3...- 5540 HYDE PARK BOULEVARD CHICAGO 37 tli'tlf' anisltlntrt-n As ttdwrtising mu- terial they caused us muvh rum- ment as would Hutt-hins in lill' Hw- 0nd row center at Minskfs. AH this- hook goes t0 prama mu- hm; m- know is carefully wrapping H mm- piete set of Cap and Gown return postcards, featuring tilt; it'ft' Imggl'tl sot symbolizing 'tSerething to re- member your University days by . . . He's envlosing a Httppv Mother's Day card. Another of our eurquaintaimtm a lady prominent in intellectual cir- cies and fraternity pledge classes, is a proud owner of lwu t-opie-s uf the picture that graccti tlw poster i'What happens when Cap and Gown hits Chicago. Hortmse Fanrfangs' On the other hand many U of Cier's were offended by tht- houkqs purported smutty approach to cam- 14105le The Yearlyr Newsmaguzine Co-Editors; Helen C. Wollcxck, Karl V. Rohrer. Contributors: Ann Joliey, Robert Kurlond, Joseph Engel, Ste- phen Appeal, Marie Schroer, Edward Maupin. Business Staff: Clint Smith, Lanse Felker, Jerome Gross. pus lifefH Hortense Fandangle. the toothraome and toothy Green girl who claimed she was 'tsnrmed hy- the Cap and Gown. was turvused of conspiring with the Cap emit Gown staff in trying to mold everyolte else in their own image. The bouncing haliy who thanked kithe niees' math for the Cap and van, the white nmuse who queried poster-reuders aa- 10 their gradua- tion status, and the ape who went people 1hr the Phoenix. u-cre all rhatged with ahul'ing in the mastei plot to destroy the sanctity of the ivory tower. One puhlir-spirited citizen even suggested that the entire Cap and Gown stuff tats well as varimm and sundry rah-rah suhversivest he shipped off to Northwestern to raise the school spirit in Evanston. And you know, for one awfui. soui-seal'chittg moment. we half- heartedly considered it. They pat the editors of the Northwestern Syllabtta. SNICKERTY-SNACKT Along with competition fmm the Forecast, this spring the Maroon got wind of another purported plot to end its reign as U. of Cir; only newspaper. In view of the failure of the dozen or 50 attempts wince 1938, the i'Uaroon. got intc a helluva surprising uproar. They sent out spies to observe and report on any moves at overthrow. One of their biggest suspects was apparently the Cap and Gown. htdff. All day one day Maroon people kept dropping into the office on one pretext m an- other, alert for any sign that the yearbook was ahout t0 hecmne a weekly. We were kind of sorry to disap- point them. It wuuld have'heen fun to hand each of them a copy of Ult r 32-page daily complete with a roto- gravure section. But anyone would be foolish to buck a papert which, according to Kenneth Adler's Mai roon-puhlished survey, is thought by a large section of a sample Cam- pus group to be ggenerally satiw factory? MAYFLOWER HOTEL 6125 KENWOOD AVENUE CHICAGO 37, ILLINOIS Phone PLaza 2-6700 if h , ., .l. u- -. COFFEE SHOFI VALET amt. RATES From $2.50 Single From $3.50 Doubte Special Student Rates REMEMBER THE HUT! While at the U. of C. you may have spent some pleasant moments at the hut end enioyed our fine food. Whenever you return to the campus, COME IN AGAIN! TROPICAL HUT 57th at Kenwood STUDENT GOVERNMENT Une ol the plTJlJUH-Hl Student Government projet'ts that we were whole heartetlly hehintl. hut whieh never Came ahouL was the investi- gation of the C shop's extortion of tea drinkers. In the January 15th issue. of the University's Greatest Newspaper. six enraged students ln'ought thin: serious matter to the attention of the campus. They pointed out that the lteallous management of the Coffee. Shop has raised the mice of tea e not ten per cent. not fifty per centt but a etaiggering, wallet wrenching one hundred per eent. They further elaimetl that hvnrefuL meticulous research has uncovered no increase. in the cost of tea haga lemon, sugar; watety soap, lalmr. heat, eleett'it'itv, or any COIH'E'inlltle Component or accessory to the pro- duction of a cup of this etmln'osia. They then proeeedetl to suggest a boycott to force the avarit'ioue management to ltahantlon this loatheomet discriminatory price in- crease. DEANS For a while during the winter quarter it looked as though the Unit versity was going to average at new Dean per week. The first indication of the new 'lfatl war: the Maroon headline: COLLEGE LOSES WARD In a matter of hourn the campus was liuzzing with speculation as to the real reason for his departure. Wartills own words were: live been dean seven years. . . . No adminis- trative office in the College should have one ineumhant for too long. The i'ollt'awing week Jli'aroon heatl- lines lilazetl: DEAN LOOMER QUITE This aetion brought rumors of conflict within the administration out into the open. Loomer ewe plained Hl resigned hemuse it he- eame clear that I could no longer act constructively. lt hemme elear also that recommendations from me . . would not he aeeeptahle. And the next week brought an- nouncements of the resignations of Associate College Dean Northrop who left campus for the National Science Foundation. and Ralph Ty- lei'. Dean of Social Sciences. Four resignations in three weeks ln'ought the average to one and a quarter a week. Clearly, the switch in the administration three years ago hatl not been velvet-smooth, and the results were beginning to show now when the deans could find a tactful moment. The whole eampuh waited to see who would he next. but stthseqttent weeks hrought no new resignations. and the University settled flown to more normal topics. 5733 University Avenue Now that you are an alumnus you can become a member of fhe University of Chicago Alumni Associafion. The students who made todayls Cap 8t Gown will make tomorrow's Universify of Chicago Magazine--- included in your Dues---S4.00 per year THE UNIVERSITY OF CHICAGO ALUMNI ASSOCIATION Chicago 37, Illinois Serving the University Community Since 1 885 WITH Reniols - Sales - Insurance PARKER HOLSMAN COMPANY 1500 East 57th Street HYDE PARK 3-2525 TAI-SAM-YON CHINESE-AMERICAN RESTAURANT Specializing in Cantonese D1shes Family Dinners Orders 10 Take Out Delicious Foods by CHARLIE YOUNG Famed Oriental Chef 1318 East 63rd Sfreei Chicago Tel. Bunerfield 8-9018 FREE DELIVERY ICE CUBES M13-0524 Visit the New UNIVERSITY LIQUORS 8: TAP EVERYTHING FOR YOUR DRINKING PLEASURE 1131 East 55:11 St-Chicogo 15 Liberal Discount on Case Goods CIGARS - CIGARETTES HEBERT MOTOR SALES, INC. The Home of fhe ROCKET OLDSMOBILE SERIES 88 AND 98 PARTS 8 SERVICE 6044 Cottage Grove Ave. Burierfield 841500-4502 Hotel Windermere 56th Street at Jackson Park FA4-6000 Comprn'rmu u .mZdy u I'Eltilc'e'f m dt'wfop JIM may! zwsfrmiilt' xrrt'tc'c- jar Mic bt'rrt'jir nj rlmxr sw't'c'd. SHERMAN l. RFKT! LY A service keyed to the particular needs at those who feed many people each day-resulting from seventy years of continuous and spectolized effort in the interest of this great market. CHICAGO w LONG ISLAND CITY BOSTON -- DETROtT 7 DALLAS PHILADELPHIA . INDIANAPOLIS PITTSBURGH - SAN FRANCISCO ATLANTA FOREIGN We inst got word fmm uur for- eign mt't'espmtdenl Karl ttCung Hrf' Rnhrer. who is r-ttt'rt-tntty c'm-v cring thc' hattlcfmnt at moth; in- tI'igue-rithh-n Fort Chaffev. Ark. He informs us that. whih' Fh'altlillg nltt nnr of the TORI moms in the offi- tetra7 rhrh. hr mm across thP inf srt'iption tdCl'Pr-EPEII St'it'lltiaq Vital Exmhttut m-rawled on one of the walls. mtrott'H ntEt-T'l' know how h appv that reminder of my care free cnnt'ge day? mad? mt:H hr: writes. hI inst Sat there and Fried. Roht'Pr also added that he is now 9112:21ng in Irving to 9911 hi; drill sergeant on the idea of hut'ing an issuv of CAP and Ct'tW-'VN. S?EHH the good SPI'gCEtIH has a rllthtDraR ht snriell srimtrvs from the U. of C. The Voices ofSphng AS we wiped the dirt, grass seed, and old tlanrlclicms from our white hacks with a copy of 1110 June. 1939 Echo, it suddenly mrt-urt'ed to us that fifteen years had dmw little to alter anything hut Chicagohs Htmll- ment. To prove our point. we here reprint a letter addressed to the editors of the 1939 Er-ho. Dear Echo, We work and work rh-e-muting the Campus with rhdins. W'H put them up in the ht'sl plat't's zmrl alr-mrding t0 the rumms of Tamharsatpt' architec- ture. They have the utilitarian ptnv pose of presorving the fair green lawns of this American Oxford. Mam what in tho result! A path heaten up to the chain and a well- trodden pit where- the non-varsity high iumpcrs work out. Wre crawl up and down planting hulhs that in tho Filling there may he daffodils and jonquils to glad- den the eye of thv passing student and take the mind of the failing one off the looming mmprelwnsives. But what huppma? Instead of buying nnsegays our swains strip the camptm watfks for their offer- ingS. Or some- girl thly phtr'ks a blossom to put hehiml hf-r ear. Nor are we all tt-rmler-hnarted men who would not hegrudgc a young lady one hlossnm if it will help hrrr get a lifetime meal IiPkt'l. But Usually such young lathe; are wearing red. And it pains rw-ry mm of the staff to lhc deptha' of his L'tl'tihltt' $0111 to have to hE't' this. Truly yours. B and C man We- Itthan to print out predeces- sor's answer: Having hrcin one of the rulpt'its in quPSIiUII. Et'llO kracpq ita mouth shut. ignores this 1dtetuhEd. James J. ghortall a C0. Realtors A COMPLETE REAL ESTATE SERVICE SALES MANAGEMENT - REAL ESTATE INVESTMENTS Harper Avenue 01 57th Street Fairfax 4-2525 Chicago 37, tllinois SAMUEL A. BELL Buy Shell From Belll! Lake Park Ave. at 47TH St. Kenwood 3-3150 Chicago 15, Illinois Firesfone Tires MORTONIS STEAK HOUSE 0 A favorite rendezvous for University of Chicago faculty and studenis-and other intelleduols, and with a unique charm that is entirely its own. American, of course, and so papular if is advisable to make reservations. lls reputation for food has been enhanced by the quality of iTs Steaks, its Ribs, and wide assorfmem of Salads, Music and 0 bar. 0 5487 Lake Park Avenue BUHerfield 8-4960 GOOD BOOKS GOOD MUSIC FINE ART PRINTS Add So Much To Good Living Browsing Hours 8:00 AHM 1'0 5:00 P. M. Monday Thru Saturday The University of Chicago Book Store 5802 Ellis Ave. TELEPHONE GREEN: Imunge: P-IL 3-0120-3- Qnri Hour: Bu. 51-0165 'Ilh Hmrl': Bil. :LUSt'H-l KIEILLY: 2nd :ml': R111 11-01111 FOSTER: Imlmgv'. D0. 3-0pr6 12nd Hour: Bu. H3436 51-111 flnnr: Bu. 8-W1vf'5 DODD: 2m! HmIr: 11L 2-9312G -1-lh flour: P1. 2-9063 DI RECTORY CHAMBERLIN: 2nd Flrmr: Pl. 2-0612 5th Flnur: PI. 2-95i'J1 VINCENT: 2m! fluor: PI. 2-0040 4th 00! : Pi 2-9623 CUIiL'IqEH: Isl HUM: PI. 2-0637 3rd Hcmr: PI. 2-91-92 M A TH ICWVH 15:! Haul : Pl. 2-0716 2nd Huur: PI. 2-0772 4th HUNT: P1. 2-0693 MEAD: LINN: Isl flour: Pl. 20363 Ist flour: H. 2-9732 3rd floor: Pl. 2.9547 3rd flour: P1. 2-9546. P H 0 T O P R E 5 S Inc. OFFSET LITHOGRAPHY 73'! Plymouth Court Chicago Phone WAbosh 2-8182 Edward J. Cholifoux '22 DEGREE OR NOT A DEGREE THERE1S STILL N0 QUESTION . . . Jimmy 1172 E. 55m SALISBURY: 181 flour: PI. 2-9773 3rd flrmr: PI. 2-0763 MRS. KIMPTON S PUNCH W'e were on the phone gelling this recipe for anotlwr purpose when by chance AI Jamger Hf the Maroon quLecI into the offit-rn His article lhr' foflmritlg Friday mentioned that we would feature the infmlnulicm in the Phovnir. We am: Hm 01105 In IJllt'k 1hr: linivm'silfs Greatest Nrwspupm': m llltf rwipt' IDHOH:R: 3 fifths Rum 1 fiflh canned Lime Juivc 1 qllen'l spurkfing wutrr TU 02. Crenadinv Syrup Pour m'cr ire amd wrvc Ilm' lJlel. Artuallv, nt'1w' iriHI IlliH mar- selves Hhv ulhvl' lJlIITJIJHL' referred to aluwvl. and our enthusiasm is only tempered 11y llu- thought that we han'u 10 tll'iw- lmmc. THE ALBUM PHOTOGRAPHERS 1 171 EAST 55TH STREET Midway 3-4433 Beautifully Furnished, Spacious Rooms and Apartmenfs ACCOMMODATIONS for BANQUETS, DANCES, LUNCHEONS and MEETINGS of All Kinds Shoe Repair SUBSTANTIAI. DISCOUNTS TO STUDENTS H Mus? Be Done Right HOLLIDAYi'S 1407 East 6151 ST. 01 DORCHESTER AVE. Phone NOrmc11 7-8717 Two blocks from lml. House WHILE-U-WAIT Or ONE-DAY SERVICE G E 0 R G E 5 Men's Shop . HSmarf Attire for Men 0 Featuring NATIONALLY ADVERTISED BRANDS . 1035 East 55th Street Cor. Greenwood COLOR LITHOGRAPHY LETTERPRESS PRINTING GRAVURE 81 PHOTO-GELATINE Milton H. Kreines 101 EAST ONTARIO, CHICAGO WHitehall 4-5921 - 2 - 3 - 4
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