University of Chicago - Cap and Gown Yearbook (Chicago, IL)

 - Class of 1962

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University of Chicago - Cap and Gown Yearbook (Chicago, IL) online collection, 1962 Edition, Cover
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Text from Pages 1 - 192 of the 1962 volume:

Die unteriucfyung bet wahten IDirfIicIIfeit iit iclzwietig $WQE1AM?J; HA$WEPI$THE$X$AAHOEIAE eEQPIA$$$XAAEUH THE INVESTIGATION OF THE TRUTH IS . . . HARD nmtn ntw-n .1an A1 i5iotfe, Book II, Metaphysics. THE UNIVERSIT? 0F Cites. Vita catici- exco' 911m tAIm' LW CHICAGO 3 2. 1.5.2,! JOSEPH SCHWAB Dedication TO JOSEPH SCHWAB, Professor of Biology, Wiliiam Ramey Harper Profexsor of Natural Sciences, and Professor of Education whose versatility and brilliance have helped to make him a man highly respected by the entire community. His membership on the faculty since 1937, and his three professorships in diverse fields attest to his belief that dedication and duty are the reasons for doing. The President 8 'zaga : CID 33:00 . x thxwrmsoabt, TH: aruoeurumau aulmmawas 0-! 5mm: FrEuJ. I'LL PUT FRRTEENITY Rom augn Heme on 6'thme Adminis tration 16 m Zm ZOO Student Activities 34 Publications 47 Service Organizations 53 Music 61 RRLCWTRIICT. 3... Iwaur 10pm? ? 73 vnRsnYanLL. . ' Drama 69 Sports 158 UnclassiHable ' 83 Graduating Students 98 Housing 1 10 fro THE Tum; of want We rm. renouncmcmd 7 ..g, me F.:.htsanq . Li? a 1.1qu THE r-Lnu Fol won ow Kesenkm, Tamar :5 am: cRV. . I wrrn TMT trooo OLD GREEN roman us. UE HINsTHRT WE... ouoHT To Be MLE To HT 001' OF nus hate 1H TEN as meat TIE 42: 2;; 8 Echo: Midway 124 PRESIDENT GEORGE WELLS BEADLE ON MAY 4, 1961, GEORGE WELLS BEADLE WAS OFFI- cially installed as the seventh chief executive oth- cer of the University of Chicago. He had been se- lected by the Board of Trustees of the University after almost a year-long search which was under- taken upon the resignation of Lawrence A. Kimp- ton on March 29, 1961. President Beadle was for- merly the Acting Dean of the Faculty and Chair- man of the Division of Biology at the California Institute of Technology at Pasadena, California. He has also been 011 the faculties of Cornell Uni- versity, Stanford University, and Harvard. He is a distinguished geneticist, and in 1958 he received the Nobel Prize in Medicine for his work in fun- damental genetics. During his first year in office, President Beadle has changed outmoded policies and instituted new ones. He has proved to be a man who is able to step into a new situation and view it with a clear in- sight. The following is the Context of an inter- view with president Beadle, made one year after he took office. Interviewer: Mr. Beadle, you have held the chief administrative ofEce of the University for almost one year; what are some of the major administra- tive problems that you have encountered during that time? Mr. Beadle: The two most important aspects of any university are its faculty and its students. The excellence of a university is directly dependent on these two factors, and our major problem at the University of Chicago is to maintain both a facw ulty and a student body of high quality. As to the faculty, we are trying to keep strength where we have it and to add strength to areas where we most need it. The University has always had more strength in some areas than in others. In recent years the Divisions of Physical Sciences and of the Biological Sciences have had the advanA rage of availability of funds from government agencies. The Humanities and Social Sciences have been in a less favorable position in this re- gard. One problem is to achieve a. more equitable balance in hnancial support of the several areas of the University. One way of attracting the faculty members we need, especially in Humanities and Social Sci- ences, is to strengthen our library facilities. Our present library is excellent in quality but is fall- ing behind in size. The physical facilities are both inefficient in arrangement and inadequate in size. The solution lies in finding funds for a new li- brary building. We also can attract new faculty members in other areas with better physical facilities. The Coi- lege physical facilities are inadequate. The Col- lege science teaching labs are woefully limited. The music and art teaching and research facilities too, are notoriously poor. Many departments in the rest of the University also need physical im- provement: Meteorology and Psychology both are badly housed. This list is by no means exhaustive. The answer again is funds to improve the facili- ties. The second primary factor to be considered is the University's student body. The situation in the College is a unique one. Teaching is done by faculty members who want to teach. Many faculty members hold joint appointments in the Divisions and the College, adding stimulation of research activities to teaching. The result is a hliberal arts college, set down in the midst of a great univer- sity. It has the advantages of both, through its ac- tive collaboration between the College and the graduate facilities. The advantages and quality of the College are such that it should attract the best student body in the country. A major problem of the graduate student in the University is the lack of adequate scholarship and fellowship assistance. Most universities use teach- ing assistantships as a device to support graduate students. Chicago believes teaching should be done by full-time faculty, and 50 we have very few assistantships. Therefore we need increased funds for fellowships, again especially in the Social Sci- ences and Humanities. The University dOes provide unique Opportu- nities for its graduate students in some Fields, such as the Argonne Laboratory. The University oper- ates this laboratory under contract with the Atom- ic Energy Commission of the United States Gov- ernment, and its facilities are available to faculty and graduate students of the University. Through the Associated Midwest Universities, some 31 oth- er universities of the llidwest likewise depend on the Laboratory's facilities for research, espe- cially reactor research and high-energy physics. Our graduate students in appmpriate areas have the opportunity to work at this unique facility with the most advanced equipment available. 10 Interviewer: The College has been in a state of continuous change since its establishment. DO you see any drastic changes in the College in the near future? MT. Beadle: One of the special characteristics of the College at the University of Chicago is that it has always been able to change with the times. This characteristic is a vaiuabie one, and we are striving to maintain it. The College is at once an individual unit and a part of the entire Univer- sity It can and does take primary responsibility for the general education of undergraduates and at the same time maintains effective contact with graduate departments. Interviewer: How do you like Chicago as opposed to California? 11 Mr. Beadie: I grew up in the Midwest, and my wife lived here in Chicago for many years, and so we are not strangers to this part of the country. We are somewhat dismayed, though, when we see the snow tum black soon after it falls. We feel that there is still a great deal to be done in collabora- tion with city authorities and neighborhood or- ganizations in achieving a eieaner city. On the other hand, we do enjoy the changing 56350113 We find Hyde Park-Kenwood a most stimulat- ing community; it is easy to be enthusiastic ab0ut it. It has a cohesiveness that is unique for any Uni- versity community. Some 70 percent of the faculty live near the University, which is unusual for an urban university. The result is that Hyde Park- Kenwood is a community in which there is a great deal of extraeclassroom interaction between Eac- ulty and students, as well as between University peeple and members of the community. Interviewer: What do you feel about the future of Hyde Park-Kenwood? Mr. Beadle: We would like to see continued prog- ress in the area. This Unixtersity is unusual in its interest in its surrounding community There are many problems; for example, those concerned with urban renewal. The University has much to offer in the solution of these problems. Interviewer: What do you visualize as the future of the University? M'r'. Beadle: The University of Chicago, as a ma- jor private university of the Midwest, must re- main strong and must become stronger in order to 12 retain a leading position. It is an important asset to the community, the city, and the nation. The trustees recognize this fact. They have supported the University in all its activities, as have the alumni, individuals, foundations, and government agencies. In addition to such support, the Univer- sity-as are many other universities in the United Statese-is being supported to an increasing extent by private industry. Members of industry recog- nize that the University is an asset to them as well as to the rest of the community. Today, many of the Universityts units, especially the Medical School, the Business School, and the Physical Sci- ences are supported to a considerable extent by industry, and we are conhdcnt that the support will increase. Interviewer: You dex-oted a great deal of your time to basic research in genetics before your ap- pointment here. Do you now have any time to spend in the lab? Mi: Beadle: Naturally this post keeps me pretty busy and I dml't have any time to do research. But the scientific progress which is taking place today in basic genetics is rapid. About all I can do is to keep up with the day-by-day discoveries as re- ported in scientific journals. 13 F ACULTY REVELS, 1962 15 Administration gwwr, anRaf', THE STUDENT UNION x BUILDING boas cm 5mm: FIELD. I'LL - PuT FRRTERNITY Row OVER H626 ON LREGNuJOoD. :J L L x X 2 V m M... nyrf; 14?:9; I m 'a . Affiiigighzl' L's . I 1, I . :5 ' 'ltrh'yflu'l; :.tgh g, r' 1 ! B'NK'KLEKT XI Illll: I 1 FIELD H0056 UNIVERSITY ADMINISTRATION William J. Van Cleve Regisfrar George W. Beadle President of the Universify Lowefl T. Coggeshull Vice-Presidenf for Adminisiraflon of fhe University John Phillip Netherion Former Dean of Students Charles D. O'Connell, Jr. Assisfant Dean of Students and Director of Admissions AFTER HOLDING THE POST 0F DEAN OF STUDENTS since 1957, john P. Netherton announced his fes- ignation on December 5, 1961. Mr. Netherton, who holds the position of associate professor of Spanish in the College, announced plans to return to Spain where he and his wife had lived for three years, to do work on the sociology of small Span. ish towns. One of Nethertonls most controversial decisions in his five years as dean was the establishment of a University residence requirement. Under the re- quirement, introduced in the summer of 1960, all women undergraduates are required to live in University residence halls for four years. Under- graduate men must live in residence halls during their first year, and have the option of living dor- mitories or fraternity houses their second year. The rule touched off a storm of student protest which lasted all of last year. The office of clean of students is one of the most diflicult in the University administration. When a man must represent the interests of the students to the administration and the views of administra- tion to students, he must indeed be the dedicated diplomat Mr. Netherton continued to be for the past five years. On February 6, 1962, Warner A. Wick was ap- pointed Dean of Students, succeeding Mr. Nether- ton. The new dean, a professor of philosophy, has served as dean of students in the humanities divi- sion and associate dean of the College. Upon ap- pointment, Mr. Wick asserted his subscription to the theory of his predecessor, Mr. Netherton, who once said, llThe deanls job is to produce the stu- dent in the classroom in optimum condition for James E. Newman Assisrunt Dean of Students learning. But moreover, the process which pro- duces the student in the classroom should serve an educational filnCtion of its own. One of the problems which Vv'ick will face as dean is the supervision and continued improve- ment of UC dormitories. By way of specific im- provements Wick would like to see, Hincreased student activity, much of which comes from the Students themselves? Also, he noted that 116 is not satisfied with the physical arrangements in the dorms as yet, although the program of im- provement is still in progress. 5. .wou-uw , v Henrietta Herbolsheimer Diredor of ihe Siudenf Health Service quu-mv- I--vav- I v vbiJ-J- . uvraaaun v ' Nirvana ' 1 Warner A. Wick Dean of Sludenls J-nnnyusu... . - . q, . 4:731 . 5.; 1:7; u... - 3; . I - . . 11.3.13? 't?: 3 u m COLLEGE ADMINISTRATION Alan Simpson Dean of fhe College George L. Playe Dean of Undergroduafe Sl'udenfs 22 A Short History Of the College Of the University Of Chicago THE COLLEGE HAS EXPERIENCED A UNIQUE EDUCA- tional metamorphasis. Throughout its 69-year his- tory, it has experimented with many programs in an attempt to develop a superior undergraduate education. Foremost in its quest for academic ex- cellence has been its attempt to define the nature and function of a liberal education. At its inception, the College contained the germs of some sort of liberal education. The Uni- versity's first president, William Raney Harper, favored a study of the great heritage we have re- ceived from the past. He required students to take a specified number of courses in the study of history, the institutions and the literature of the past. The College originated as a junior col- lege which awarded the Associate of the Arts de' gree after two years, and a senior college which awarded the BA, BS, or PhB tbachelor of phiIOSa ophyt degrees. The junior college curriculum was somewhat Exed. All students studied languages, science, and mathematics; and most were required to study English and history. Minumum and maximum numbers of courses that could be taken from each department were specified. Students took only four courses at a time, because Harper didn't be- lieve they could concentrate on anyr one of them if they had more. Harper thought that heath in- dividual student should he treated separately and when his course of studies completed, he should be given his diploma. . . . The student will receive his diploma not because a certain number of years has passed and a certain day in June has arrived, but because his work is hnished. For this reason, he inaugurated four annual graduations. 23 As administrators were loathe to allow junior college students into senior college courses, the junior college gradually became regarded merely as a span between high school and senior college, when the student could seriously specialize. Harp- er felt a student should know what he wanted to study when he came here. In the early years, students created their own institutions. As the University did not yet have its own athletic Held, they played football for Amos Alonzo Stagg in Washington park. In 1892, U niversity N ems, later to become the Maroon, be- gan publishing. Three years later, the junior class put out the first Cap and Gown. In 1902, Black- friars was formed. The Hrst dean of the College, Harry Pratt jud- son, became Harperis successor. He had envi- sioned a one-year general education college fol- lowed by a three year senior college for specializa- tion; however, his plan was never enacted. Judson placed more emphasis on training for a vocation than had Harper. Agreeing that there must be hno inhexible bar against advancement? he believed it quite possible to attain general culture in a College course course and yet . . . plan a good part of the work that it will lead directly toward a pro- fession already chosen. During his administration there was almost 110 faculty concern for the College. Attendance at College faculty meetings in the two year period following World War I averaged less than 10. The lack of an autonomous College hurt teaching standards. Judson, like Harper, thought research of prime importance, and so graduate students taught undergraduate courses, and the annual turnover was high. Department heads complained about heavy teaching loads. In the College of the 19203, said Aaron Brum- baugh who became dean of the College under Robert Maynard Hutchins, the many departmen- tal courses offered in the hrst two years were taken in many combinations and produced no common foundation of basic general education. Generally students didnht discuss intellectual matters be- cause they didntt have anything in common to talk about; . . . Class attendance was required and grade points were reduced for unexcused absences. Unexcused absence from chapel automatically resulted in the reduction of academic credit. One student was de- 24 nied graduation priveleges because, out of fear, he refused to dive into the swimming pool, a physical education requirement. It was suggested that the College be dropped altogether. Chauncy S. Boucher, dean of the Col- lege in the late 1920?. explained why the College continued: it provided the departments with an opportunity to select promising research students; it brought in revenue which helped pay for re- search and graduate instruction; and it attracted contributions from its alumni, who were wealthier than graduate school alumni. Ernest DeWitt Burton, Judsonts 1923 successor, wanted to put the College on the South Side of the Midway with its own faculty, budget, dean, buildings, and equipment, and begin with early entrants from their junior year of high school. His plan was stalemated in debate and it was not agreed that the College would be at, as well as in, the University until Max Mason took over the Presidency. Burton, however, had a greater in- tereSt in undergraduate education than Judson. Ernest Hatch Wilkins, whom he appointed dean of the College, showed great concern for the stu- dent body, introducing, among other reforms, the first Orientation week for entering undergraduate students. Also under Wilkins, UC's first survey course, which was to become the basis of the undergrad- uate curriculum, was introduced. tlThe Nature of the World and of Man was a two quarter course featuring lectures by leading University scientists. Moved by its success, several departments began investigating such courses for themselves. The credit system, under which students graduated after completing a certain number of class hours, also came under examination. In 1928, a committee of 9, chaired by Boucher, was appointed by President Max Mason to study reorganization of the undergraduate curriculum. The committees report required two comprehen- sive examinations for a bachelorls degree, one in a major held and one in a minor field. Graduation from the junior college would be based on the completion of Eve comprehensive examinations: English, a foreign language, natural science and mathematics, social science, and an elective Held. The day before the faculty was to discuss the re- port, hoWever, Mason resigned. Three years later, under Chancellor Hutchins, a l'New Plan. somewhat similar to the Boucher committee's, was adopted for the College. The plan applied Hutchins, theory of a universal scheme of education: llEducation implies teach; ing. Teaching implies knowledge. Knowledge is truth. Truth is everywhere the same. Hence ed- ucation should everywhere he the same. Graduation from the junior college was to be based on the completion of seven comprehensive examinations: English composition, biology, phys- ical sciences, humanities, social sciences, and two elective sequences. Mathematics and a foreign lan4 guage were also required, but they were sub- mitted by most students as having been completed in high school. Instruction in mathematics was not even oHered in the College; students could 25 fulflll the requirement only through the home study division. The New Plan was proceeded by an adminis- trative reform in which the College was given control over only the first two years of under graduate education and would award the AA de- gree. The graduate schools were organized into four divisions: biological sciences, physical sci- ences, humanities, and social sciences. A college faculty, largely autonomous from the divisions, was created. A staff came into existence for each College course and planned it. Syllabi were in- troduced to encourage independent study. Class attendance was made voluntary. The substitution of uniform comprehensive ex- aminations for grading by individual teachers was a major feature of the new plan. Students could proceed at their own rate, taking an examination whenever they felt ready for it. Although there was an English composition placement test for stu- dents under the New Plan, few succeeded in plac- ing out. All other courses were compulsory for everyone. In the Erst three years of the program, 34 students completed their work in less than the usual time, but 108 took longer than two years. In 1933, jurdisdiction over the last two years of the University high school was transferred to the College faculty; however the new Eour-year united was not called The College until 1987. Under the New Plan, student activities suffered a great decline. Faced with the two year College, the many campus fraternities could offer only one year of membership before the student would en- ter the graduate divisions, as the University-high entrants were too young to join. The fraternities, which had to adjust to survive, did neither. Ac- tivities also suffered because of the depression. Fraternities found the student without any money, and activities, without any time, because he was working his way through school. Hutchinsl attitude was not one of great sympa- thy. He felt that a great deal of time spent on acrivities showed that the student was substituting activities for the more intellectual pastimes the College offered him. Hutchins sought a course of study consisting of the greatest books of the West em world, and the arts of reading, thinking, and speaking, together with mathematics, the best ex- emplar of human reason Such a curriculum would heduce the elements of our common human nature, he said. He felt that his course of study 26 could help prepare the young for intelligent ac- tion. . . . They will have learned what has been done in the past and what the greatest men have tought. They will have learned to think them- selves. If we wish to lay a basis for advanced study, that basis is provided. In addition, the College could serve as a terminus for those students who would end their formal education in it. In 1936, working under the principal that the end of general education can be achieved best by helping students to master the leading ideas and signihcant facts in the principal fields of knowl- edge, with a view to the develoPment of intelli- gent action, a College curriculum review com- mittee recommended further changes in the un- dergraduate program. In the 1936 four-year Cola lege, hEteen comprehensives were required for graduation, representing three years each of hue manitis, social science, and reading, writing, and criticism; three years selected from two years of biological science and two years of physical sci- ence; one year of philosophy; and two years of electives. In addition, students were to present evidence of work equivalent to two years of high school study of foreign language and mathematics. Then came Worid War II and a great decline in enrollment. The paucity of students gave many divisional faculty members an opportunity to tum to the development of undergraduate education. Thus, in 1942, the College changed again. The two and four year programs were combined, and the Hutchins BA was awarded upon the com- pletion of the general education requirement. fit . RFEalq'R't 410er 1 I INPV n01 l'l't..: tulll'b unnum- nu During the war, student activities again suf- fered. Blackfriars disbanded in 1942, and did not reorganize until 1956. Cap air Gown stopped publication from 1941 to 1951. The Daily Ma- roon became a small weekly. Many fraternity chapters folded, never to return to campus. As the war neared its end, the major problem of the C01- Iege was educating returning veterans. 16-year old early entrants and 23year old war veterans would be in the same entering class. To compensate for the studentsh differing backgrounds, the place- ment test program was established. Previous train- ing no longer mattered, as all course requirements were based on the students' demonstrated abilities and deftciencies. Several course changes were made. A mathe- matics course and a course particularly devoted to considering general language problems were in- troduced. The history of western civilization was also added to the required core of courses, and it became possible to combine Humanities III with work in a foreign language. The veterans who came right after World War II felt that time had passed them by and wanted an education and de- gree as quickly as possible. Often married, work- 27 ing, and raising children, theyr had little time to participate in student activities. Many new organizations, however, arose on campus. In 1946, a student edited literary maga- zine, the Chicago Review, was born. In 1948, a group of veterans founded WUCB in the base- ment of Burton-Judson courts. The National Stu- dent Association was organized at the University Of Chicago in 1946. In the same year the Student RBCKEFELLER CHAPEL CHOIR ymatas E; IRA . cameo smrunm cats .9 h 339 t . ,-,- - I .SUIMZF-Edgda'w Al .:T...Z.J'.. :7. Union began, and within three years, was c011- ducting the 3rd largest collegiate recreation pro- gram in the United States, including outings, folk music programs, campus dances, and running the Reynolds club. Student government assemblies, too, began after the war. In 1945, Clarence Faust, dean of the College, led the faculty in abolishing the PhB degree. This degree had been given to students who substituted two elective helds for the terminal courses in two of the three major general education sequences thumanities, social sciences, and natural sci- encesj Faust argued that it was impossible to build coherent three year sequences if the second year would be terminal for some students. By 1950. the two-year BA degree was running into trouble. Although high school graduates were supposed to take a two-year BA followed by a three-year masters degree, the average high school graduate was taking 11.6 of the 14 comps, almost three yearsh work. Other schools did not accept the BA as representing more than two years of Col- lege. Thus, students who had spent three and four years here were recognized elsewhere as having done only two years of College work. Enrollment dropped as a result. Lawrence Kimpton, who succeeded Hutchins, commented, We had a College that with all its genius was frozen into a pattern alienating it from the rest of the University and indeed from the rest of the educational world. The problem, he said, was relating the College to the total American educational process. After dealing with commu- nity and hnaneial problems, Kimpton turned to the problems of the College. Although he felt that the Hutchins BA was the fmest system of general 28 education devised that the US had ever seen, he also found problems in continuing to award it. He had a committee under vice president Henry Filbey investigate one undergraduate curriculum. While the Filbey committee met, a student Com- mittee for the College organized ttto arouse senti- ment and present both pressure and arguments for the maintenance of a system of integrated and interdependent courses in undergraduate study. The Filbey report, which went into effect in 1954, added one year of specialization to the 14- eomp BA requirement. The BA was now to be jointly awarded by the College and the divisions, thus reducing the College's autonomy. To main- tain some of its autonomy, the College instituted the tutorihl studies and professional option pro- grams. Many protests greeted the report. Persons 011 every level and area of the University peti- tioned. presented statements, and publicized their support of a general and liberal education as the basis for a BA degree. Groups demonstrated in front of the administration building, Kimptonts house, and outside faculty senate meetings. The Committee for the College joined with the stu- dent-Eaculty relations committee of student gov- ernment in a campaign to oppose specialization and the htrend towards a more conventional un- dergraduate curriculum. Nevertheless, the report was enacted, and the College was still further modified four years later. Filbey explained that action was taken 'tnot be- cause . . . the College program is undesirable, but because the University simply cannot finance the program on the number of students it attracts. . . . The University needs students . . . He added that by adding a year to the present College pro- gram, we can improve that program too. The students whom the University did attract participated in a myriad of new activities. A fac- ulty fellow program was established in 1952. In 1953, the Folklore society was born. 1955 saw the birth of intramural campus debates, cheerleaders and a band at basketball games, Court theatre, the formation of a social activities council to replace the Student union; the Young People's Socialist League; the National Association for the Advance- ment of Colored Peeple, then referred to as a core of hardworking students ; Robin Hoodhs Merrie Men, an anti-McCarthyist group; and the Festival of the Arts. There were many problems in the 'hnew Col- lege. For example, although the average student placed out of only 1.5 of the comprehensives, he was taking only 8.5, thereby missing the impor- tant third year terminal courses. Thus, in 1957, the Executive Committee on Undergraduate Ed- ucation, under Kimpton's chairmanship, was formed to re-evaluate the College program and End a more effective plan of general education. The recommendations contained in its 1958 re- port are the basis of the present hNew New Col- lege. The report established the College as a four- year institution, devoting two years of work to general education, one year to a single area of con centration, and one to nfree and guided eleCtives. Concentration requirements tincluding prerequi- sitesh were given up to two years, except that in fields in which recognized standards require addi- tional work, they may include up to a maximum of 21A: years. In addition, a College faculty was 9J-e' --J.. 13h J'tl - 1t established and empowered to determine the re- quirements for the BA degree and the general dug cation component of the BS degree. The Collegehs autonomy. which the joint degree program def stroyed, was thus returned; once again the College could award degrees. Alan Simpson became dean of the Coliege. Speaking of the new program's advantages, he said, We have balanced the claims of specialized training against those of general education. We have weighed the claims of individual Choice against an earlier faith in uniformity . . T The 1958 College reduced the 14 course general education program to 10 courses. The old termi- nal courses and philosophy were eliminated from the required program, leaving 2 years each to hu- manities and social sciences; one year of English composition, foreign language. mathematiCS, phys- ical sciences, biological sciences; and two of the three quarters of the history of Western civiliza- tion. SimCe the maximum time alloted to these 10 comses was two years, it was expected that stu- dents would place out of at least Eve of the 29 quarters' work represented by the 10 courses. About half of each entering class, however, has failed to place out of enough courses, resulting in the waiving of certain courses on the basis of the studentik; placement performance, 01' arbitrary mitigation. In the present College, the comprehensive sys- tem which was one of the bases of Hutchins' New Plan has been dying a slow death. Several courses, such as mathematics and biology, count each quar- terhs work separately; others, like English compo- sition and physical sciences, count each quarter's work in addition to the comp to determine the final grade. During the past year, under new Chancellor George Beadle; the College faculty has discussed the problem of mitigation as well as the entire general education component and the concentra- tions in the context of the foureyear program. The New New College, then, like its predecessors, is still changing and striving for what its faculty con- siders the best undergraduate education, whether it be a terminus for students or a stepping stone to graduate work. 16S 1t Student ActiV ff! Perry A. Consras Director of Sfu'ta'eml Activities THE STUDENT ACTIVITIES OFFICE, UNDER THE DIREC- tion of James E. Newman, is part of the OHice of the Dean of Students. The director of Student AC4 tivities is Perry Constas. The office is intended to serve student interests, and to allow students to attain maturity and individuality thIOugh partici- pation in varied activities. Mr. Constas describes the Student Activitiesl program as: Not one I 'eontroll nor direct, and not one dominated by the Administration. It gets its impetus and stimulation from the rigorous experimentation of students. I see it as a microcosm of a free society. It is self- govemed and is exists for those students who con- tribute to it. Mr. Constas counsels and advises student groups which also have faculty advisers who serve to strengthen the bond between students and faculty members. Some of the problems which 36 the ofIiCe helps students solve are legal matters, mainly involving contracts, and financial problems of bookkeeping and auditing. Many of the prob- lems which students encounter in planning and organizing events serve to further their practical education. Again, the emphasis is on helping the student to do things, not doing them for him. All the organizations on campus are registered with the student activities office. The many clubs and activities offer numerous types of groups for students to participate in. There are language clubs, religious clubs, journalistic organizations, intellectual groups, and specialized clubs such as anthropology or history. All political views are represented, from the Intercollegiate Society of In- dividualists, The Young P6011165 Socialist League to the Young Americans for Freedom. Each activ- ity appeals to different people, so that all interests may be served through innumerable voluntary stu- dent associations. The oHice serves as a clearing house for all the activities, to insure that two organizations wonlt be scheduled to meet in the same place at the same time; as an information center, when problems arise; and as a coordinator of functions and meet- ings. Many special projects are under the super- vision of the student activities office, for example, the Shapiro Collection. This group of 350 paint- ings is on loan to the students through Student Activities. In all its varied duties, the main thought of the 031cc, is to serve the students in every possible way. This makes it unique to our campus, for at many other schools. such an office would be planning the activity rather than just serving in an advisory ca- pacity. But at the University of Chicago, the pur- pose is to allow the student to follow his interests wherever they may lead him. 5105 of he Student Aciivilies Dmce Review of the Activities of Student Government 1961-62 by Leonard Friedman, President of Student Government, 1961-62 PROTESTS AGAINST SEGREGATION IN U OF c OWNED housing, and cooperative services that saved stu- dents over $6000 were the highlights of SGls ac- tivities this year. Other SG actions ranged from support of the Washington Action Project and continued activity for the extension of civil liber- ties and civil rights to helping to clarify the pro- cedures of, and providing an opportunity for stu- dent representation on, the disciplinary commit- tee and bringing the student code up to date. For several years, SG had worked for the elimi- nation of discriminatory listings from the housing file the University administration keeps for the use of students in fmding off-campus housing. During the past few years, however, it had become obvious, from refusals by University City, Realty 00., which manages only University owned prop- erty, to rent apartments twhich were known to be availablea to Negro students who had applied for them, that the more serious problem of direct dis- crimination by the University was at issue. Dur- ing the Winter Quarter of 1961, SG, in coopera- tion with the campus chapter of the NAACP. ap- pointed a student committee to look into the sit- uation. Armed with a partial list of the Univer- sity's real estate holdings twhich the University, perhaps understandably, had refused to give SG any specihc information aboutl the committee be- gan investigations which provided more evidence that discrimination did exist in Universityr owned housing and led the committee to conclude that specihc instances of discrimination should be doc- umented. In the Autumn Quarter, six test cases were conducted, involving Eve Negro students and eight apartments owned by the University, and in each case it was shown that Negroes were unable to get, or in most cases even apply for, apartments which were available without ques- tion to whites. The results of the test cases in the form of signed and notarized statements by the 38 participants were presented to President Beadle and Vice-president for Administration Ray Brown, who both conceded that the test cases might be accurate since the University did prac- tice strategic discrimination in many of the properties it owned in order to prevent their tum- ing all Negro. They added that this practice was not intended to be applied to Negro students, that our test cases were just the result of some admin- istrative feul-up, and that the Universityls overall policy was one of achieving a Vstable integrated community of high physical standards The',r stated, however, that the University felt it would be unfair, indeed immoral for it to buy prop- erty in the neighborhood that was segregated and then impose its own standards on the community' by ending discrimination in such property. When asked if the University would give students on a conhdential basis the relevant information con- cerning the University's renting policies in par- ticular buildings, or would at least describe the overall plan that would lead to an end to discrim- inatory practices in University owned housing, the Administration refused, holding that business interests prevented them from doing so. 86 replied to these rationales of the University administration by passing a resolution which stated in part: i'The 15th Assembly of SC declares its opposition to the stated policy of the University administration which eondones and supports racial segregation in housing. The University in pursuing its policy of discrimination is giving moral and practical support to other realtors. such as McKey and Poague, who conspire to maintain segregation in housing as a standing policy. The argument that the University is just maintaining the unfortunate policies of past own- ers appears to us to fall of its own weight. The argu- ment that the adoption by the University of open occupancy in housing it owns would unfairly impose the University's standards on the community does not seem reasonable. Residents of the community do not have the right to legislate informally or otherwise a policy of racial segregation in housing. The Univer- 5ity has no responsibility to put itself in the pcsition of giving practical backing to what it assumes to be the prejudices of the community. . . . The argument that the University must preserve the neighborhood may be overcome by the obvious assertion that the Leonard Friedman, President University may adopt any reasonable criteria which is applied equally to all for accepting or rejecting prospective tenants. The irrational criterion of race does not insure that the proper tenants are selected. Instead, it perpetuates the unmitigated evil of dis- crimination, an evil wholly inconsistent with the aims and ideals of an academic community. unwausui- COHIINSUNITY : SIGREGATED - UC P0137 g jf i w-t ! Students sit-in on the fifth floor of the Administration Building. President Beadle replied by reiterating the Uni- versityhs commitment to a stable integrated com- munity and citing the town houses and University apartments as examples of stable integration. but he declined once again to elaborate any further upon the specific programs for integration that the University was pursuing. Dissatisfied with the University's apparent practices and its unwilling- ness to release the information that would make possible a real discussion of the issue, U of C CORE, in an action supported by SG, began around the clock sit-ins in front of President Bea- dle's office on the fifth floor of the Administration building that were to be continued until the Uni- versity changed its policies or entered into serious negotiations with student representatives. After 35 students had sat-in for over a day, representatives of UC CORE and SG met inforw mally with President Beadle. A statement written by Julian Levi at President Beadlehs request was issued for the consideration of both' the students and the University administration, although nei- ther group was prepared to accept it at that time as the basis for the start of new discussions. The statement read as follows: Discussion over the past days suggests the desirabil- ity of an exact reiteration of housing policies of the University of Chicago: 0h All University-owned property is available to faculty and students of the University Of Chicago without any discrimination as to race, creed, or color. Cg The University is committed to a policy of non- discrimination in the operation of all its properties. subject to staging where appropriate and necessary to achieve a stable interracial community of high standards. 42 N D 35305! NE: Ionst ;-w.. mutt??? 43 L90 In light of the material presented by CORE, and to implement these policies the University will form a faculty-student review board with appropriate access to all relevant information and data. Your cooperation and advice in the formation of such a board will be welcome. UC CORE, in a meeting attended by over three hundred students the next night, refused to ac- cept the statement as a solution to the problem of the Universityls discriminatory practices, but did accept it as the basis for reopening formal discus- sions with the administration. Pursuant to this de- cision, UC CORE reduced the number of sit- inners to live, pending President Beadlels accept- ance on behalf of the University of the nstate- ment and the beginning of formal discussions. President Beadle had meanwhile left for Califor- nia on a fund raising trip and the results of the CORE meeting were mailed to him there. There was no reply until over a week later when Presi- dent Beadle returned to campus and invited rep- resentatives of UC CORE and SG to meet with him in his olhce. At that time, President Beadle said that he could not accept the statement on be- half of the University, that he would not negotiate with students, and that he could not commit the University to releasing, on any basis, any of the particular items of information that UC CORE and SG had requested. This was particularly true, since he had appointed a faculty committee to study the problem and he would not act until the report was in. In addition, he requested tthis was on a Fridayl that the sit-ins be stopped and that UC CORE answer the request by noon on the fol- lowing Monday. UC CORE on Monday morning asked for a twentyvfour hour delay so as to give the question more consideration, but at 1 pm Mon- day afternoon the University administration or- dered all the students who were sitting in to leave on threat of automatic suspension. The students left at the request of the UC CORE steering com- mittee, and an emergency meeting of UC CORE was called for that evening. President Beadle came to the meeting and spoke to over three hundred students concerning the Universityls present poli- cies and its plans for the future. No solution was reached, however, until President Beadle agreed in a discussion period afterward to a proposal put to him by UC CORE and SG which read as fol- lows: 44 Although the University has not asked for further discussion, CORE now proposes to the University ad- ministration the suggestion of broader discussion, hoping that community involvement will make a just and reasonable outcome more probable. CORE sug- gests that a new discussion of how to end discrimina- tion in University-owned real estate now be initiated. i'Participating in this discussion should be the Uni- versity administration CORE, Student Government, the faculty, the Hyde Park Council of Churches and Synagogues, the Urban League. Alderman Leon DesPres, State Representative Abner Mikva, and the Hyde Park-Kenwood Community Conference. This would be a joint discussion, not a committee or com- mission. There would be no votes taken, and the only way a policy would be adopted is by the agreement Of the University administration. While the sessions of the discussion would mt be public, each group is free at any time to make whatever public statements it sees fit. A11 participating groups should be per- mitted knowledge of all relevant information regard- ing the Universityis real estate policy, upon the un- derstanding that all information remain confidential. Following President Beadleis personal accept- ance of that proposal, UC CORE suspended the sit-ins. SG at its next meeting passed another reso- lution on Discrimination in University Owned Housing which follows in part: Declaration: The 15th Assembly of SC welcomes President Beadle's committment to discuss this com- plicated issue with students, faculty, and members of the community, all of whom are directly involved in it, and to provide these discussions with the informa- tional background concerning the University's poli- cies that would make them meaningful. We deeply regret that this committment could not be made on behalf of the University. This committment to sin- cere and meaningful discussion, however laudable, and the report of the faculty committee will provide the basis for such a plan. We accept with pleasure the offer to participate in the community discussions that are about to be initiated. At the time this is being written the faculty committee has not yet made its report and the community group has only met once to discuss the issue in broad terms. The outcome is clearly up in the air, but in general all parties agree that there is now an appropriate structure for arriving at a solution satisfactory to all concerned. does not COnstitute a final solution to this problem any more than the appointment of a distinguished faculty committee to study this matter did previously. The University has shown a willingness to move faster toward ending discrimination, but unfortunately this has all too often been directed at the problems of Negro students and faculty members rather than to the whole community. The University administration has not developed any overall plan for an eventual end to discriminatory practices on the basis of race in properties that it owns. We feel that to provide any justification for discriminatory practices at this time such a plan must be formulated and expressed pub- licly. We hope that the broad communityr discussions 45 THE OTHER. MAJOR sc ACTIVITY THIS YEAR. WAS LESS complicated, but nonetheless, very significant. Af- ter the diHiculties with regard to publisher can- cellations and University Bookstore interference had decimated last years SG discount book order- ing service, Jim Thomason, President of last yearls SG, and several other students formed the Inter- national Student Cooperative Union to act as a purchasing agent for books and other supplies for student run cooperatives which would be set up as campus agents of ISCU. Although other campus agents have begun operations, the SG discount Bookstore here has provided over 9096 of ISCUE volume to date. In its Erst hve months of opera- tions, the SG bookstore sales were over $13,000 and savings to students exceeded 32500. In addi- tion, a permanent stock of over $800 in books has been created, providing greater service to the cam- pus. Recently the bookstore has added cameras, tape recorders, magnetic tape, and color tand black and whiteh Film to the list of items it can provide at a 2596 discount. Cooperative travel was also expanded this last year. In addition to the usual flights to Europe over the summer, SG ran a charter flight to NYC over Christmas interim which saved students over $1500. Over spring interim SG provided charter bus service to NYC on a round trip basis which saved students over $2000 and plans are being made to provide discount bus transportation to several cities in addition to NYC at the end of the academic year. 46 Publications 93M e Quwe news 1'1 HTSMF; N E :: :MHRQEJ CAP AN D GOWN 48 CHICAGO W m V E R 49 Maroon sing members in typical print shop posture. DURING THE AUTUMN QUARTER OF 1961, EDITOR Jay Greenberg announced the plans for daily pub- lication of the Chicago Maroon. The Mm'oonj dis- tributed free of charge, had previously been pub- lished only on Friday of each week, and now ap- pears on Tuesday, Wednesday, Thursday, and Fri- day mornings. The Maroon was the campusr daily newspaper from 1902 until shortly before V-Vorld War II, but the paper then began appearing weekly because of the shortage of newsprint at that time. Daily pub- lication has never been resumed until this year. Commenting on the more frequent'publication schedule, Greenberg stated, We feel that we can bring the campus more comprehensive coverage of all aspects of news. The University is a commu- nity of some 8,000 persons, all engaged in some form of activity and there is a great deal happen- ing everywhere. We feel that this can best be r6- ported through the medium of a daily newspa- per. Assistant Dean of Students Charles D- 00C01mell commented, 01 cant: think of anything more splendid-unless the proofreading is going to be iivc times as bad. Ercrl-um Application deadline for the graduate school of business is Feb. 15, not Jan. 15 as re- ported in yesterday's Maroon. CHICAGO MARCO 0 qu.'lo.l?62 Efrain D The lecture by Herrlee G. Creel. In search of Shen Pu-Hai, listed in the calendar for Wednesday, January 10, will take pIace Wednesday, January 1?. 23 There are two r's in erra- tum, not one. as reported in yesterday's Maroon. CHICAGO HAROOH ' Jamn.l962 NEW UNIVERSITY THOUGHT Inside 1ha NUT house. New University Thought is a magazine published by and for students. Its coverage includes all of the major national and international problems of moment. This year it has expanded its activities, and has begun publication of New University N 61051 a monthly newspaper. The organization is represented on campus by the Friends of New University Thought. u Service Organizations Members of Maroon Key meet Ambassudct Pond Koht oi Norway at a reception in the Law School. MAROON KEY SOCIETY ORIENTATION BOARD Representing: Alpha Delta Phi Beta Theta Pi Delta Upsilon Phi Delta Theta Phi Gamma Delta Phi Kappa Psi Phi Sigma Delta Psi Upsilon Zeta Beta Tau WOMEN S CLUBS Esoteric 58 Mmmrboard 59 Ralph Ellison. Ariisf-in-Residence, Fall, T961 Leo Szilurd, eminent biophysicisi, spoke t0 overflowing audience in Manda! H0 : Are We on the Road fr.- War? Saul BeHow, Artist-in-Residence, Winter, 196! Musical Organizations FOLKLORE SOCIETY THE UNIVERSITY OF CHICAGO FOLKLORE SOCIETY presented their second annuai Folk Festival on the weekend of February 2, 1962. The festival in- cluded American folk songs of various types- southern mountain blues, songs of protest and labor, as well as ballads and other types. Appearing at the evening concerts in Mandel Hall were many singing groups who had not ap- peared at the University before. According to Mike Michaels, president of the Folklore Society. . . most of the singers to be featured were people raised in the culture whose folklore they exhibit. Emceeing for this week end of folk music were Studs Terkel, Archie Green, and B05 CosbeyA Clarence Ashley and Company sing primarily southern mountain songs, blue grass, and medi- cine show tunes Ashley himself, over seventy years old, long ago sang in medicine shows. 0 62 F estival 1962 jack Eliot, whose repertoire includes many of Woody Guthrie's songs, comes originally from Brooklyn, New York, and has hitch-hiked all over England and Europe. Bill Chipman is a native of the Ozark Moun- tains of Missouri, and sings southern mountain songs '11: a personal manner. He was discov- ered by Dawn Greening of the Old Town School of Folk Music in Chicago, while working in a mission. Specializing in Gospel singing are the Staple singers of Chicago. They are a family headed by Father Roebuck Staples, who plays the guitar, and his singer daughter Mavis. 64 Jean Ritchie, a native of Viper, Kentucky, has a repertoire of mountain ballads and folk music from the British Isles. The Blue Grass Gentlemen tRed Cravens and the Bray Brothersh specialize in the south em mountain orchestral style, characterized by hScruggs style banjo and a bluesy mandolin. The New Lost City Ramblers play hold timey music from the southern mountains. 01d timey refers to the hragged music of the mountain string bands of the twenties and thirties. Their repertoire includes ballads, dance tunes, and songs from the depression. w um Emma KT f l-: BELL afr'w an- '. 91.. ,5 Reverend Gary Davis has lived for the past twenty years in New York as a preacher and street singer. He sings primarily Negro spirtuals and gospel songs. A country blues singer from Mississippi, Big Joe Williams, began singing in minstrel shows that toured the South. He is unique in playing a nine String guitar, instead of the customary six string instrument, and uses an unorthodox style of tuning. New features of the fBStival this year were the exhibition of folk dances of various nations, guitar and banjo workshops, and lectures and discussions led by folk singers, ethnomusicologists, and folk- lore scholars. . - . 1 - .... I . - ..r. - ' 174' I'd II ' . -- ' . -. s . 'x 2-. I . . - I n'- ..I .1 5' , a l. a..- I . I 1r. 4...! .1. :14? 7-: . UNIVERSITY ORCHESTRA g ,1..- Colin Slim, Conducior Drama -GszM and Sullivan THE YEOMEN OF THE GUARD RICHARD II -szakespeare ACTORS COMPANY THE BEDB U G -Mayak0vsky IPHIGENIA IN AULIS -Euripides BLACKFRIARS Blackfriars Board at Play. Ken Davidson, A550! CANDIDE -V01taire UNIVERSITY THEATER LAND OF CARDS -Tag0re TIMON 0F ATHENS -Shakespeare numb, MI Ilium ? El duimun Fromm MON OF ATHENS I'IIIIIIIRY 9. 10. II 3:30! II tic Innhu nuhl bull 53$ :1 uhmlh datum Hm I! alder: $.50 .- Itlllrln: $2.00 I I W mu an m? mil mm M alum ! 5106 ulmsirl mun h Dick Gregory visi'rs rehearsal, shows by example The elemems of comedy. 77G: Mzniffor'aejv uwgnbroggmlcgqg iusngi'ewnin, c d .3 :3. ' P l .9 .-,; F. i I lmlmmvg: -- umuw mmmm w, unname- oummum l'r nimu Iw Jan nun mrmmt Hausl man: - III! E. sm 5-. I90 IM. WES: 52D. I220. Illi motm DIWIS IEIRVA'I'IOHS: HM! J-Om. kl. :mo EIEHT PERFORMANCES ONLY HE Rodgers and Hart PAL jOET Pal Joey chorines tench professional strippers to bump and grind. Igeons in Ungrass, a 05. em: is the grass, a as, GERTRUDE 575m 0M PICEOA! A, B; TOKLA S Unclassifiable $ 0E;: L; ,t:: Yx OUTING CLUB Skiing in Colorado. A Boating in Michigan. Climbing in Wisconsin. W cw. wag, Repast repulsive. In a: .. I 85 STUDENT PEACE UNION -- .- . p... - nm-r bu Informal! D .3 m....n. . . . I m. n .-.-- -- The UC Washington Proiect was coordinated by SPU to demon- strate to U.S. Congressmen that university sfudents care acfive in a new quest for peace. mu ARE RESPONSIBLE run THE 11mm mum - M-.. .1 I un...r..... mm .L:, .. I' mqmm -:w- M . 87 UC students march on She Capitol during the Washington Proiect, February 76, T7, TB. WE CONDEMN w BOTH SOVIEIM U.S.TESTING 9i 1- r. .T un mu LUI .uucueo MY ahso BEW HANDOPEMFID WM-.. mmmmmnwmrnnmionon WM 2 F00! EXIENSION-UNI1mFOIl' SHEUER EVENT OF U801? O BGNATED LIVE AMERICAN will DlE . A MFDV Al I A I wm I l l u .. . $ . ... 9 . . J x Iv! Y. .1. ..,, ..... u... ... J... .4. u ., . .. .. ..MFV-.u..lr.. .. . .w Taf iPmUamrdrvtww 1.. .2 mm .... .. .. ..L.rtu.nnqpil . d Uh... .. .m. :- h. 4?... .. . 4 . . . . r W. T...- +-a. . . .J. . i. .. a l .. .. .m 92 Sherwin Kaplan, Simian Manager WUCB 94 THIS YEANS ANNUAL WUCB MARATHON WAS HIGH! lighted by dramatic presentations, Robert May- nard Hutchins' farewell address and a perform- ance by the Chicago PIo-Nausea. All funds raised at the marathon were donated to the Student Non-Violent Coordinating Commit- tee, to help finance Negro voter registration in the South. Friday evening's live programming included a performance by the Actofs Company of George Bernard Shawk one-act play, Passion, Poison, and RetrijEcation. Members of. the Folklore Society also performed. On Saturday, University Theatre presented scenes from Shakespearfs Timon of Athens and fTOm Pal Joey. Music on the marathon included folksongs, jazz, and classical music. Kurt Weill and Berthok Brechfs opera, The Rise and Fan of the City of Mahogany was heard at 3 AM. Saturday mommg. 96 The Marathon culminated Saturday evening with the traditional performance of the Pro Nau- sea. The program consisted of a portion of the Nausea's large repertoire of hlittle known versions of well known works. Past favorites have includu ed Antonio Vivaldfs Concerto Grosso for Orches- tm and Washboard in Gsh the last of Reaphighihs series of tone poems on the eternal city, the Sewers of Rome, and Haydnhs Surprise Symphony, with an original surprise. 97 Graduating Students I GRADUAT ION 1362 + h. I I, IE 5;! '9'? $1.1 , I . P'IA. c 4:13 l. 6' . -. I X :2:va fl ' 3 Z I -' -' . :Ira K a . -' ' - x . X :6 . . . - 1 U I , -I III I I . . P . . ' '; ,. ..; 1 ii I II . nut . . . . er: a m RONALD M. ABE PHILIP G. Honoiulu, Hawaii ALTBACH ChicagoJllinoz's HOWARD S. JON BERALL BENENSOHN New York, New York Chicago, Illinois 5' ROBIN B. MICHAEL L. BOGEAUS BROWNSTEIN Highland Park, III. Skokie, Iilinois BROOK STEVENS MORTON F. BULLOCK BURDICK Wrenrham, Mass. Chicago, Illinois DAVID E. WILLIAM K. AXELROD BEAN Skokie, Illinois Hammond, Indiana BARBARA J. BERG CHARLES B. Chicago, Ilfinois BERNSTEIN Chicago, Illinois ix; x I: . -: ' . ELLEN K. SUSAN M. BRYANT BUCCINNA Chicago,Illinoi5 Bronx, New York GERALD J. JUDITH L. CHODIL CHRISTIAN Chicago, Ifiinois Raytown, Missouri gww ROBERTA HARRY E. DEITCH DEMBKOWSKI Chicago, Illinois Chicago; Illinois w 'E- k MANUELA J. DITZ ROGER J Chicago, Illinois DORNBERGER Mayville, New York EDWARD BURCH JOAN CALDWELL Ch irago, IHi-nois Chicago, Iliinois $5377: IR GARRY M. CRANE WILLIAM H. Ottumwa, Iowa CRANE Hampshire, Illinois r MARIE E. RUSSELL DEWEY DETARVILLE Evergreen Park, Ill. Chicago, Ufinois MURRAY P. DRY MARY A. ChicagOJHi-nois EININGER Chisholm, RIin-n. MYRON S. MAXINE L. EINISMAN EPSTEIN Chicago, Illinois Chicago, Illinois Jha- JULIAN IL ' NATALIE FERHOLT FINKELSTEIN New York,New York New York, New York SALLY L. FRISBIE JOHN MERWIN Chicago, Illinois FRITZ Giendale, California ROBERT M. GARY R. GLICK GOLDSTEIN Morristown, NJ. Chicago, filinois 1 a . l- J ' 3L MARG-ARE THEA B. HODGKISS FALKE FELDMAN Pittsburgh, Penn. Chicago, Illinois BI IRA FISTEL DONALD A. FOX ChicagoJHinois Cedar Falls,Iowa JOAN K. FROMM ALGIMANTAS 1 Chicago, Illinois GALINIS Lemons, Illinois DAVID F. GREENBERG Chicago, Illinois . .' v? HOLLIS B. HARRELL Cambridge, Mass. jACK A. HIRSCH Chicago,lllinois A. GARY j. GREENBERG New York, New York ANTtnNEfTEB. HARTMAN H custom, Texas STANLEY G. IRVINE Long Beach, Cal. BRAYTON I. jERROLD GRANOK GRAY Chicago, Illinois Chicago, Illinois CAROL H. ELIZABETH GROSSMAN TUC KER GUICE White Plains, N. Y. Grossepointe, Mich. 3,32; . ANN HILLYER Muscatine, Iowa WILLIAM HENSEY Munster, Indiana MARTIN H. PETERJACOBSON ISRAEL waich, Vermont Chicago, Illinois WALTER A. JANKOWSKI JOHANNING Blue Island,Illinois Indianapolis, Indiana RICHARD KATES JUDITH A. KATZ Shaker Heights, Ohio ChicagoJHinois MICHAEL C. jAMES M. KRIVO KOTZIN Highland Park, Ill. Chicago, Illinois SUSAN F. LANDER SHIRLEY V. Scarsdale, New York LAWRISUK Berwyn, Illinois 'L .4 CHARLES P. STEPHEN L. JOSLYN KARPF Worthington, Mass. Chicago, Illinois 5'2. . OWEN A. ARTHUR J. KENNEDY KLOWDEN Chicago, Illinois Chicago, Illinois .l'xj. PATRICK D. JOHN W. KRUK KROLAK Woodstock, Illinois Lasalle, Illinois GERALD F. CHARLES J. LERMAN LERNER South Bend, Indiana Chicago, Illinois RICHARD S. LEVY JAMES T. LOFTUS Berwyn, Iiiinois Chicago, Illinois SHEILA A. HERBERT L. MAHONEY MEISELMAN Berwyn, I Ilinois M attapan, Mass. EDWARD W. RONALD A. LEAN, JR. LEFKON South Bend, Indiana New York, New York MARVIN W. LEONARD D. LEVENSON LEVIN ChicagoJ I llinois Milwaukee, Wis. NICHOLAS C. RICHARD P. MARAVOLO MARTIN Chicago, Illinois Memphis, Tennessee ' DOUGLAS D. ' ROBERT MCBROOM MCDONNELL Spokane, Washington Park Ridge, IHinois r .5 'id Ii RICHARD L. DAVID C. MOSES MILLER Philadeiph Ea, Penn. Brookiine,Ma55. DAVID B. PHILIP C. NOREM NICHOLSON Omaha, Nebraska Miami, Florida MICHAEL PAUL E. PASCHKE OPPENHEIMER Chicago, Illinois Chicago, Illinois DORIS J. RICHARD A. RANDALL RATNER ChicagoJZEinoz's New York, New York MICHAEL J. CHARLES LEWIS MURPHY NELSON Chicago, Illinois Chicago, Illinois PATRICIA V. DENNIS P. NORTHUP OIEARY Morgantown, W.Va. Spencer, Iowa JOAN C. PAUST BARRY F. Milwaukee, Wis. PRESTON Chicago, Illinois 'x 1 RONA G. MICHAEL ROSENBLATT ROSKIN Chicago, Illinois BronxJ New York JOYCE A. RUKAS MARY E. Calumet Citlelinois SAMONSKY 02'! City, Penn. ARTHUR B. SCHNEIDER New York, New York RUDOLPH E. SCHILD ChicagoJIElinois ELLEN S. REIFF Miami Beach, Florida PETER J. ROSLER Chicago, Illinois $65.19 M nmrm MICHAEL H. SAN DALOW Chicago, Illinois HERBERT A. SC HWARTZ Chicago, Illinois . 137' LEON ROCHESTER Chicago, Illinois RONALD J. ROTH Shaker Heights; Ohio EDWARD F. SCHEINER Swanton, Ohio MAUREEN R. SEGEL Chicago, Illinois .-...-..L k IUCHAKDJ. GARYIi ELZAJ.H. DONALDSTEVEN SHAKER SHANDELSON SHERMAN SHIRE A rlington, Virginia Chicago, Illinois Chicago, IHinois Chicago, Illmoa's CAROL J. DAVID J. SIMKIN ROGER W. GEORGE A. SIEMENS Fair Lawn, NJ. SNYDER SOUKUP Chicago, Illinois Mankato, Minnesota Berwyn, filinois WILLIAM G. PETER G. SPELTZ L. TOMLIN SHELDON M. SPADY, JR. Gardena, Caiifornia STEVENS STOLOWICH Mifwaukie, Oregon Youngstown, Ohio Chicago, Illinois jAMESD. BARBARAJ. SULLIVAN SWITALSKI Chicago, Illinois Chicago, Itlinois ' ; JAMES E. NICHOLAS G. THESELIUS TSOULOS Chicago, Illinois Chicago, Illinois XV .. '. L z ' t BARBARA E. JUDITH P. FRANK J. ANN TWALINSKI UNGER VERTREES VETROVEC Chicago, Illinois Cleveland, Ohio Chicago, Illinois Berwyn, Ilfinois . .. a ,f WALTER ALLEN R. J. LEVELLE RICHARD j WARSHAWSKY WILCOX WILLIAMS WILLIAMS Chicago, Illinois Michigan City, Ind. Chicago; Illinois Casper, Wyoming The students pictured on these pages wen: scheduled to gmcL uate from the College sometime during the academic year, I961- 62, as of Winter Quarter, 1961. They do not represent the en- tire group of students sched- uled to graduate at that time, and the presence or absence of a gbictu're has no bearing on aca- ONA KAREN AMES BLOCK JACK ZEVIN demmtaiw- YOUMANS ZAGEL Chicago; Illinois Gustavus, Alaska Chicago, Illinois 'o-g Mwmmv J .- :x- ,- w. :. Housin I CQN TELL- SlCr, ME MNT You TmoRfZE 0H.SloMum;-, LOVE, You RT B'J. Paar. 0:624:6- STnI'm New DO RMS 955m .5116, THOSE TINY So I can 555 $1911 lSaL RTE mm a ROOMS 5 RT BEERKFAST. HEDITH TE CEAMPQO Vw' wI-I'H 05- Mrpdz-rq MRI k I ! t-J PIERCE TOWER NEW DORM . $52!...Sgs... . . ..sz..oggizxv;. 35; $4. . w ..s.. a .., x as 4.1 ETC. 113 114 TI. cl..l.....l..sz:11. Wednesday night coffee hours at the New Womenk Residence Halls are transformed 119 into Twist Sessions. 122 Apartment life centers on the good things in life. Studying is a good thing. Therefore apartments are the center of study. 123 124 destined to become a mere remembrance. 125 Echo: Midway 9 Ho THE rum: OF NAME THE Fun. FOR OLD cmcnoo Lej Mme. 9th Sontf .f' wave THE FLHCr FOR GOOD 01.0 RESERRCH, THEORY IS ouR aw. , Jq- wlTu TunT 6-000 OLD GREEN Toucan us, we mlNkmr-rr NE... 445 J1 OUGHT To Be HBLE To eeTouT OF Tm; PLRCE m 16:90:: TmeYESf' ; . 42$. A g1; 163' I Hear You Rockefeller Chapel I28 Drahcir Lednam unwansm . . or CHICAGO - HOSPITALS First year students rained out t0 at annual trip 133 135 Camp at Williams Bay Wisconsin is the Erst big experience after a week of intensive placement exams for Erstryear students. This year was no ex- ception; it rained for the entire week. Students are here allowed to let off steam in a controlled manner. The effect is usually a high, loud piercing sound, indescribable under most conditions. 1m t .1 Du. S O H S g n H 1 .1 B medical research headquarters for the Midwest. The Joseph Shapiro collection of paintings, drawmgs, and lithographs at the beginning of each quarter. U of C Women: A description This article was written by Robert M. Scrozier, Jr, an undergraduate student in the Coilege, in re- sponse to the First Annual? Cap 8c Gown Essay Contest. UNIVERSITY OF CHICAGO WOMEN NEED NO INTRO- duction. They are special genus within a special class within a special phylum: square pegs with round bottoms struggling to Et into triangular holes. They are white and black, yellow and brown, and often black and blue. U of C women wear clothes as if they were homework assignments, assignments they have Hunked. They wear the pants in the University family, mostly to identify their sex: surrealistic Shetland draperies, colonial levis-seeking inde- pendence, sweat pants, green-bag jerseys, accor- dion slacks, jodhpurs, knee-bump tights, and, on Feast-Days-dresses. Style, to a UC woman, carries only its literary sense. She wears her hair like a ceiling wears fly tape: strapless sandals, hard-gym-like shoes, West- ern boots, Eastern socks, and Midwestern feet. 140 But the feminine facade is only a part of the total show. The pungent, swampy exuberance is there, but must be exhumed to be believed. She is half-woman, halE-freedom rider, half Edgar Burroughs, half-jane, half-pleasure, hali-pain. She must be accepted as she is, no questions asked, the way one accepts a dusty yo-yo connected to eight pendulum bobs. If she's speechless, she's sleepy; if she's moody, 51165 healthy; if shris healthy, shEs overfed; if she's underfed, she shows it; if she,s pale, she wears makeup; if she wears makeup, she doesn't go to the U0, and if she doesn't go to the: UC, shefs been frightened away. 141 Chicago women are fiendiSth alert, relentlessly stubborn, consistently convincing, usually wrong, but usually right. Only they in the world know as much about men as they do about women. They don't flirt; they champion causes. They dont lose at tennis to win in love; they play chess. and win to win. They play bridge because it's stimulating, London bridge because it's sophisticated. They like the worst movies because they're bad, and the crecpiest men because they're imported. They'd all rather read sonnets than wear bon- nets, 0: study Plato or NATO than pull taEEy. They are mirthfuliy direct, and terrifying. They provoke deduction, rather than seduction, and 142 I'Ji'II'IW-r .rmmwf y- talking to one of them is like trying to do the twist on skates with a porpoise through a Braille screen. But their background is wide, their outi 100k liberal, and their language the same. Vehe- mently, they favor the right wing or the left wing, and say to hell with the cockpit. The lady wears her sex like a Freudian slip, pre- ferring hard-hearted appraisals t0 un-analytic whistles. Sheid rather dance cheek-tOthin-hair than smooch with a peach, rather sing risque lyrics than burp babies, rather march on the ad- ministration than march down the aisle. Saint or sinner, ceramicist or boycotter, she moves demure- ly like a jet flight past the waking gargoyles, through rain or shine, into the hearts of her countrymen. It's difficult to know whether ifs possible to live with University of Chicago women, but iHs clear that we can't live withom them. They're fascinating, 50 colorful that the colors sometimes merge into gray. Thefll all become poets and paramours and guitarists and senators, though itic. doubtful a single one of them could pass President Kennedy's physical Emess test. They shouldn't be changed. Leave them alone. 144 How mm Vanna, wn. saman. On Two chilly days and nights, November 13 and 14, reams of camera men, technicians, directors and performers. invaded Mandel Hall, the Reynolds Club Lounges, and Hutchinson Court to film an hour-Iong folk concert. The ecllled and spliced finished prod- uct was aired in Decemv bar.- the only indication of the November chaos seen in the Final program was He unusual sequence of eve n15 where nTghl fol1owed day foitowed nigh? . . . and all in the space of one houn Biil Friedkin, the director. Video-geni: girls were imported to beuuriiy our siudem audiences. 14B The Weavers were weaving . . . Josh White was singing . . . . 1 y . gm . ' .- 1 9A1 . d The Second City Players were playing . . . Chaos was reigning . . . . g: wr 1 say LIE recur mm. WFN nu LnL'iuhh w numb: KrNLgp' L'flddlflwl'p'l l lrll' IIUMIMI:.ikHI'-'N ' ll Jr ae;.Arf-E,u:.rv ! . v . Mom: u: n nwmwe BUT IVE a a . mun. outrauild I hug m; 9. um, I; ncmy- ' ul IF THE mm 1311157035 W!!! W 801091. 11 I 1 eta ' . You Buswes; Hangs Trunk Vou'M so snare: neon HUNEV. nu: ma TELL You 836- ? f smocTH E.M'Ewek. msr wart? Yes; run I r: Mgr KuwaniE You anouLD Nt'lc'K nmc Tummy Fain. FLREE mw nahm' Mind: ion Fin carr men rm IL, ,xov Moaaur 599.; w- Tum: 1'qu RMHJRE A1900 LORD! THEE! RumS Ant- ENHRE- IDlEFInT 1HEHM! p. sumiw Lawns m MY MHIDEKNM 31A GOLD! GZE. HURIEL... umr A Rt'ng THL- -. - . l ERS'ker .mm. . . ?VHEDlu-EELL Pr3;4n'lgl ' m1, a 4-.- , : !- : .'- 4-;wq ' I LJE mssan mu RT THE N c-HM SHOFER Lasr qur. atone LeT's PLHT Sun: mask: anLL umxu; rou'LL NEWER GIT ANYquRk unwmo h FLowiRS ' KIM. LE'T'S SEE 1F ICHN REHEMBEIL TnRY POKER LESSON... IanL mum's Rals: wr'ru 95.5mm! UP, luck. Hm oNcE cm TN! FOURTH cam: IQNO SMING Mr Tm IPPMF. mm nnkk uE'u. SHa-LJ THEM 14'; FLOUE-IL ROUND 9n HN' ulupa wt ,9. - nun .um C'MJNEOJNOH m 1'34; EIPFILT 10 us! um .. Law . mm. J 'C' K?WWIH ro-zcuqu'conrung 'n FOK HER EYe'BMLSHwH 'l' Fanuefi IRJSH wmggg'r T'f-ouutzczanmn i 0:':an1'4!!1. 'H' wUMT Ame unnor Trg-ogucehaanausaw I 'o'srauns Foeotv Crinw' Tvlt-GFJTLl-Jux1..l-l FNow,: vJF.-JHQI a :mML . ILL S'FIYIIRnIm STuDewr-snsnunEn-F HM ,usyex 10065 ms-m, Mo oJJLLHEUEILnO mvt- rmuu wounwwnc L13. P955 T102357 Books:- :9 .. gmm'j x mm uEin-HJ NHD Mugs: THJunf ME TMDHM: nmrsmwoe I Mia numuE plnulf see 100 nnurui Tusnm' ammo mu we? we. misc LR gtutlgmuma C 1.9 WHRRWR c'mon 81L... nsnumour okaur Tins Is TIIE For. me. m Lnsr TmE. I'M1rkep SHYL-m'rn OF Down Yank Rsczunr. ?EUPLE- Imr Poi Van LLHM 'I'N'LL vi um Au. THE IgME TTES AND W HE OmlERF THIS Suns mu'r Lme Bmqu Swen; 15W Coq7 HOLD ; STWLLJSQLHKKEL. 3K HIE, DON'T wonky RBDUT You: Sammy rm 51'Rono HND STURD'r Seam: Wong I A amen: Na-r 'feuk. 2.2; 1 mm noun i LN l'sr'wm' Pm mtJ 'ka 'Aunrrcwf Libra! Bu7'L0,15'T:LLNfED c:cmg', mm; HY RTTITUDE TownKD noH'S mm: 5:11:ch ullsan Fame IFHiwnnTs Ta Kurd AHPJUMP Lel mm NOT FOO ECONOMICAL 0F Hm,:51r HILTDNJ mmuuuz? . menu 1: ' mm II ' ' I I m Vo'r BOTS' Gaanw; PILEI'ISE mm m fsmFFJ SanEu. Hume mo Mooum 'MhJs mau-r par Bu'r rm-NG Ma: 590.2295 2443.5; . ZMI'S EEHTS 6GiNf; k TD LHf'n r HB- q M. D Z? 1 ICOGGESHRLL 100 ufs 555 -n Commemow Smt. km rue HF'meg Sc'vcnr ISTDOD J'N TJMJ' 0L! QLIKSRII': OFFI'GL' Four. noun 52mg: luramo REuwSTEk' THRTJS hT'RNMoE 115 CRTHLOLIJE namely 9 t-vaD .saunLuF-E RT cnncnuo ; I THINK. ILL TRHHSFQR TO $RFNRKD. 0H Limo! Fm LEFT MHH TERrI Pan IN JIHHTS. so DLFFERENI' nrcmcnw THE GOOD I: mu nmwrw' OFTME SOUL .. ON MARCH 28, 1955, THE CITY COUNCIL OF CHICAGO adopted an ordinance authorizing the Filing of an application for an urban renewal planning ad- vance from the Urban Renewal Administration of the Housing and Home Finance Agency for the Hyde Park-Kenwood Urban Renewal Area, bounded by Lake Michigan and Jackson Park on the East, Cottage Grove Avenue on the West, 47th Street on the North, and 59th Street on the South. Three years later, on November 7, 1958, the City Code, is the following: Slums do not happen, they are made. Working for our neighborhood to be a good place to live in, a place we will be proud of, is everyone's job. If landlords and tenants are will- ing to meet each other at least half way, we will have good buildings and a good neighborhood. In its constant emphasis on the need for prop- erty rehabilitation in the community, the Com- munity Conference is attempting to make clear the following point: that demolition and new struc- Council of Chicago approved this major under- taking of conserVation and removal of blight. As of December, 1961, 76 per cent of the total number of land parcels had been acquired at a cost of $18,000,000-the total clearance area is 101 acres in 74 scattered sites with an estimated total acquisition cost of $30,000,000. As the acquisition program has accelerated, at- tention is being turned to the code enforcement aspects of the Urban Renewal Program. In 3 pam- phlet published by the Hyde Park-Kenwood Corn- munity Conference, giving suggestions for land- lords, tenants, and janitors regarding respective responsibilities and ways of getting along with each other, plus a summary of the Chicago Housing t'ures will not, in themselves, be enough to bring about the New Hyde Park that all envision. After the Urban Renewal Project has been completed, the COmmuniLy will still look much the same as it does today: an area largely composed of middle- aged homes and apartments, many very badly run down, others in need of less major repair, all need- ing constant maintenance and renewal. It must be remembered that the Urban Renewal Project, which has been so prominent in the communityls thinking for the past six years, in reality only covers about 20 per cent of the structures of Hyde Park- Kenwood. The other 80 per cent of the neighbor- hood's buildings will be untouched by the renewal activity. This is the property which must be re- habilitated by individual initiative and coopera- tion. Many of the structures which will remain in this 80 per cent category are large apartment dwell- ings, hotels, and rooming houses. The rehabilita- tion of these properties are distinctive. The re- mainder of the structures, excluding businesses and offices, are homes and small apartment build- ings. The problem of rehabilitation for these own- ers is different than for owners of large, multi-unit buildings. It is this latter type of property owner that the Hyde ParkiKenwood Community Conference is most interested in reaching. This is not to detract from the importance of encouraging the multi-unit apartment owner or hotel swuer to renew his prop- erty. It only emphasizes that the Conference, as a citizen-participation community organization, can and should approach the home owners who are the core of the iipeople-oriented community. The re- habilitation of their property, in the aggregate, is crucial to the renewal of the entire area. Rehabili- tation generally is defined by the public as mod- ernization and remodeling. But the Housing Act of 1954, under which the Federal Government granted the funds for the Hyde ParkeKenwood program, uses the phrase iirehabilitation of exist- :Iiilu ing dwelling units to cover all types of physical reconstruction. This can mean a whole range of activities from mere iisptucing up to a complete renovation of the entire interior and exterior of a structure. Never has the awareness of this need for reha- bilitation in the community been made so plain as through the overwhelming voluntary participa- tion of members of the community in setting up a rehabilitation demonstration house, to encourage and assist home and small apartment house owners to rejuvenate and modernize their properties. The method used in this type of rehabilitation educa- tion is to show rather than talk about the why, how and iiwherefore of rehabilitation. Through generous contributions in time, money, labor and materials from many different sources in and outside the community, the Conference ac- quired and rehabilitated an older home, similar to many in the community, at 1215 East 54th Street. The finished renovated home- Rehab House'i-is now open for inspection to the public, and work- ing through its block group structure, the Confer- ence has attempted to encourage making of surveys to determine which homes and small apartment buildings can and should be thus modernized. In the ofhces of the rehab staif at the Rehab House, there is a map with pins designating each building for which rehabilitation is planned, in process or completed within the last year. Every month, more and more of these pins appear all over the area. The Community Conservation Board and the Conference, working in cooperation, have been compiling pictures of homes in the area which have been attractively remodeled. As these pictures and stories are published periodically in the Hyde Park Herald, the community is becoming more aware of the rehabilitation program and the CCB services available at the Rehab House. If you walk through the community, you can see these homes and many more in an ever-widening swath across the neighborhood. There is rubble, half-wrecked buildings and the many doors that show demolition in process; but walk down East 50th Street on the south side of Farmersi Field and you will see a charming row of 1890 townhouses which show a pride of ownership. Seven of these homes have been rehabilitated within the last year or will be remodeled in the immediate future. On you walk, you might not be able to see more than the freshly painted exteriors or new front porches, but inside these homes interior decorating, new wiring and major remodeling of rooms have made South side of Furmersr Field. 156 The Rehab House. them consistently more attractive and desimble. Crossing the street diagonally, and passing St. Paulis Church and parish house, which was com- pletely rebuilt after a disastrous Fire, there are more outsmnding examples of rehabilitation. Many are painting, refurbishing and rehabilitating as part of their feeling of confidence in the neighborhood. While specific institutions and various persons are entitled to take bows in this effort . . . . to maintain and improve a stable interracial com- munity of high standards? the main credit must go to the community as a whole which is behind this rising tide of optimism and encouragement that is needed for successful urban renewal. Sports L. 1' FROM MY INTRA- .94. MURRLCONTRAG: ' IwnNT TO pmr K? i- ' g ' t; I VHRSITYBHLL. CHETISIR, BIG DADDY, MAY r ! PROTEST THE HENDERSoN- Donn 6M6? Ken Davidson Steve Fortgang Helmut Laumer Peter Leary Loran Spyers m m t a L SOCCER a'siltiayauw Y fly , X....q,.. K. mm Eng? WITH NO RETURNING LETTERMEN FROM THE 1960 squad back, Coach Ron Wangerin's soccer team struggled gamely but unsuccessfully through an eight game season, emerging with only a single forfeit victory. While the overall team balance was Spotty, three individuals were singled out for special awards at the end of the season. Loran Spyers, Chicagols leading scorer, made the All-Conference second team as outside left. Freshman goalie Bill Boggs received All-Confer- ence honarable mention, and junior Steve Fort- gang placed on the All-Midwest honorable men- tion roster. Besides these three, most of the play- ing load was shared by Jim Bradley, John Culp, Ken Davidson, Helmut Laumer, Peter Leary, Ralph Meyberg, Rod Phillips, Alan Sheam, and Maitland Griihth. With only Spyers on the spring graduation list, the Maroons can look forward to a much stronger and experienced returning contingent next sea- son. The Season: Chicago 1 Illinois 0 tforfeiq Chicago 0 Lake Forest 2 Chicago 0 Purdue 6 Chicago 0 Wheaten 5 Chicago 0 Washington 12 Chicago 1 U.I.C. 5 Chicago 2 Lake Forest 3 Chicago 1 St. Louis 10 161 CROSS COUNTRY Letterman : Marty Baker John Bolton Tom Clarke Fred Kurz Hal Lieberman Pat Palmer Dennis Rusche Steve Sackett 162 TED HAYDON,S PREDOMINANTLY UNDERCLASSMAN cross country squad finished a stiff duaivrneel: sea- son with a 4 wins-9 losses-l tie record and an opti- mistic look toward next year. Only two men from this season's top eight runners, Marty Baker and Tom Clarke, will graduate this spring. After a slow start the Maroons toppled Grinnell and Marquette in succession, gained a tie with Wisconsin of Milwaukee, and won a frosh-soph encounter with Wright Jr. College before a one- point loss to Albion triggered a seven-meet losing streak. Besides the eight lettermen, Richard Goldstone, Paul Rabinow, Don Williams, and Joe Olive added depth to the squadis forces. The Season: Chicago 43 Eastern Michigan 15 Chicago 47 Wabash 15 Chicago 21 Grinell 38 Chicago 29 Marquette 30 Chicago 28 Wisconsin-Mil. 28 Chicago 16 Wright Junior 44 Chicago 28 Albion 27 Chicago 41 Valparaiso 16 Chicago 49 Western Illinois 15 Chicago 47 Northern Illinois 15 Chicago 40 DePaul 15 Chicago 38 Wheaten 19 Chicago 31 North Centra125 Chicago 19 U.I.C. 43 F ENCIN G COACH ALVAR HERMANSON'S VARSITY FENCERS DU- eled their way to a 4-win 8-1055 season against the fmest collegiate competition in the country. The Season: Among their six Big Ten Foes, the Maroons man- Chicago 3 Air Force 24 aged to knock off Indiana 15-12 and Iowa 14-13. Chicago 11 Fenn 16 Their losses came to powers like the Air Force Chicago 19 Indiana Tech 8 Academy, Penn, Ohio State, Wisconsin, and Notre Chicago 19 Iowa State 8 Dame. Chicago 8 U I C 19 Gary Crane, Ron Kaye, Pat O'Donovan, Dan. Chicago 10 Michigan State 17 Rosenblum and Marshall Wais were Chicagcfs Chicago 11 Detroit 16 most consistent winners, although a group of Chicago 15 Indiana 12 promissing underclassmen including Jeff Benson, Chicago 9 Wisconsin 18 Jim Beyer, Helmut Laumer, and Nick Liepins Chicago 11 Ohio State 16 will be back to bolster the Chicago ranks again Chicago 14 Iowa 13 next season. Lettermen: ' ' - Garry Crane Ron Kaye Pat O'Donovan Dan Rosenblum Marshall Wais Lettermen: Ken Driessel Joe Kuypers Larry Rockwood Ed Stevenson Cary Webb Pete Wilson GYMNASTICS THIS YEAR'S VARSITY GYMNASTS, DESPITE STIFF COM- petition from three Big Ten and two Rocky Mountain Conference foes, finished the 1962 sea- 5011 with a laudable 5vwin 6-10ss record, which almost turned Out 8-3. Coach Bob Kreidler's Maroons stopped Northern Illinois twice, Eastern Illinois, Indiana, and Colorado, while losing very close matches to Minnesota, Ball State, and Illir nois State Normal. This was the Erst time in over a decade that Chicago gymnasts have won Eve meets in a single season. Heading the list of point makers were senior c0-captains Joe Kuypers and Ken Driessel, while strong backing came from freshmen Larry Rock- wood,Cary Webb, Pete Wilson, and Ed Stevenson. Although Kuypers and Driessci will be hard to replace, this year's strong freshman contingent will give Kreidler an experienced nucleus from Which to build next fall. The Season: Chicago 31 U I C 81 Chicago 47 Wisconsin 65 Chicago 73 No. Illinois 39 Chicago 60 Eastern IH. 52 Chicago 63 Indiana 49 Chicago 53 Minnesota 59 Chicago 54 Ball State 58 Chicago 57;!2 Colorado 54y2 Chicago 29 Denver 82 Chicago 73 N0. Illinois 36 Chicago 55 111. State Normai 57 WRESTLIN G WITH ONLY THREE RETURNING LETTERMAN BACK from 1961, Coach Ron Wangerinjs power-shy wrestling team fought through a 3-win 711053 sea- son behind the outstanding efforts of SOPhOYHOTES CHE Cox and Jim Baillie. Wrestling at 137 pounds through most of the campaign, Cox won 15 matches against a lone setback, while 130 pound Baillie won 8, lost 4, and gained 2 draws. Both men went to the NCAA regional tournament. The Maroons, three victories came over Elm- hurst 25-10, Valparaiso 15-14, and Illinois Tech 18-14. At the Great Lakes Tourney the Chica- goans gained a fourth place Fmish and captured the same spot in the ten-team Millikin Tourney at Decatur. The Chicago regulars were Fred Hoyt 123, Baillie 130, Cox 137, Bob Gustafson 147, Dan Guthrie 157, Dick Cook 167, Gary Deter 177, and Marty Karash 187. Since the entire squad remains eligible for next season, Wangerin can look for- Letterman: ward to greeting a much more experienced con- jim Baillie tingent in 163. Cliff Cox Fred Hoyt The Season: Chicago 25 Elmhurst 10 Chicago 11 North Central 19 Chicago 15 Lake Forest 18 Chicago 8 Notre Dame 20 Chicago 3 Marquette 23 Chicago 15 Valparaiso 14 Chicago 10 Augustana 22 Chicago 18 Illinois Tech 14 Chicago 3 Western Michigan 21 Chicago 9 U I C 20 SPARKED BY THE RECORD BREAKING PERFORMANCES of George Calef and John McConnell and out- standing pointgetters Joel Krisoff and Ken Neal- son, Coach Bill Moylee varisity swimmers stroked to their Erst undefeated dual meet season in over a decade. Only the second place finish to a potent Loyola contingent in the Chicago Intercollegiate Championships spoiled the Maroonst perfect 8-0 regular season mark. Caief broke the University 100 and 200 yard breast stroke marks, and represented Chicago in his specialty at the national collegiate champion- ships, while McConnell battered the 200 yard backstroke standard. Gymnastic ace Joe Kuypers bettered the all time C.I.C. diving record with 373.75 points in another outstanding performance. Indicative 0f the potential for future seasons was the freshman victory over last yeafs returning letter winners in the annual inter squad meet. With Eve sophomores and fourteen freshmen re- turning to action in T33, Moyle can look forward to another veryr successful season. The Season: Chicago 65 Chicago 55 Chicago 56 Chicago 53 Chicago 56 Chicago 59 Chicago 66 Chicago 65 Elmhurst 30 Bradley 40 Wisconsin State 39 George Williams 42 U I C 39 Indiana State 34 Wisconsin State 28 Valparaiso 28 Lettermen: George Calef John Culp Ken Driessel Errol Elshtain Mike Gay Gerald Holmquist Joel Krissoff john McConnell Ken Nealson Larry Taylor BASKETBALL 168 COACH JOE STAMPF'S VARSITY HOOP SQUAD RACED to mid season boasting nine Wins against only two defeats, but the Maroons faltered, dropping Eve of their last nine outings to finish the season at 13-7. In their best efforts of the year, the Chica- goans dumped a solid Carleton five 68-55 and frightened giant Bradley the following week with a 20-16 halftime lead before ultimately suc- cumbing to the Missouri Valley Conference c0- champions. High scorer for the Maroons was junior guard Larry Liss with 257 points, followed by classmate Gene Ericson's 220 and playmaker Joel Zemans with 188. Outstanding defensive play was turned in by seniors Jerry Tomasovic and Steve Ullman, while MerIe Lahti, Larry Costin, and Mike Winter were the mainstays of the Maroon bench. Chicagois opponents were held to 53.3 points per game, but their own scoring mark barely ex- ceeded 52. Although hitting a respectable .369 from the floor, the Maroons managed only 59 per cent of their free throws and 41 rebounds per game. With several capable freshmen and the squad's nucleus returning next season, Stampf and the Chicago cage fans can anticipate another campaign of winning basketball in 1963. Letterman: Larry Costin Gene Ericson Merle Lahti Larry Liss Jerry Tomasovic Steve Ullman Mike Winter Joel Zemans The Season: Chicago 40 Chicago 50 Chicago 53 Chicago 54 Chicago 59 Chicago 45 Chicago 55 Chicago 56 Chicago 58 Chicago 66 Chicago 61 Chicago 33 Chicago 68 Chicago 68 Chicago 43 Chicago 39 Chicago 51 Chicago 47 Chicago 41 Chicago 54 Wisconsin Tech 37 St. Thomas 36 Lake Forest 50 U I C 42 Colorado College 57 Grinnell 72 Valparaiso 75 MacMurray 55 Dcnison 49 Dubuque 47 Wayne State 59 Illinois Tech 56 Carleton 55 Knox 55 Beloit 44 Bradley 69 St. Procopius 45 Illinois Tech 59 M I T 55 Tufts 46 COACH TED HAYDONts WELL BALANCED TRACK team raced to a Eve-win threeiloss indoor season and fmished second in the Chicago-Midwest Con- ference meet in preparation for the spring season. Close losses to Wisconsin tMilwaukeet and Wayne State during exam week and a decisive defeat at the hands of Northwesternts forces marred an Otherwise successful campaign of indoor competi- non. At the Milwaukee Journal Games, the quartet of Ed Wooley, Charley Swan, Jim McKenzie, and Don Williams placed second in the eight lap relay 620 yards per mam in one of the outstanding team performances of the season. Frank Smith in the sprints, Captain Tom Clarke in the 880, Pat Palmer and Hal Lieberman in the mile, John Bolton, Rich Goldstone, and Steve Sackett in the two mile, Greg Zehner in the hurdles, Mike Mei Kean in the broad jump, Dave Kroll and Wayne Groves in the pole vault, and John Musgrave, Mike Rivard, and Paul Blumberg also contrib- uted to the team's scoring punch. With the addition of several more men in the spring quarter, Haydonts outdoor squad beneht- ted from the added depth, particularly in the run- ning events. Chicago-Midwest Conference Meet Grinnell 72V2 CHICAGO 46y2 Cornell 42y2 Carleton 361A; Monmouth 28 Beloit 26 St. Olaf 10 C06 6 Lawrence 1 Ripon l TRACK The Indoor Season: Chicago 57 Wheaton 46 Chicago 531A; De Paul 50y2 Chicago 30 Northwestern 74 Chicago 80 Wilson Jr. 23 frosh-soph Chicago 934: Wright Jr. 84y2 frosh-soph Wilson Jr. 52 Crane Jr. 9 Chicago 40 Wayne State 64 Chicago 51 Wisconsin tMilj 53 TENNIS PROSPECTS FOT THE i62 OUTDOOR SEASON WERE raised when live lettermen and three other experie enced players turned out during winter quarter Workouts. Coach Bill Moyle's net men finished their 31 season with five wins, three losses, one tie, and a third place finish in the Chicago Inter- collegiate Outdoor Championships. Among the starters, jim Zagel, Mike Wailin, Will Provine, Paul Abbats, and Larry Weiss are returning, while Bob Schuwerk, John Bissett, and Lorand Spyers are also vying for starting assignments. Among this yearis opponents were Lake Forest, De Paul, Illinois Tech, Bradley, Marquette, St. Louis, Wheaten, Iowa, and Northwestern. GOLF COACH BOB KREIDLER'S HOPES FOR AN IMPROVED golf season in '62 should have been raised with the return of five of his key men from the 61 squad. Last season the Maroons won three and lost eight in regular match competition, placing fifth in the Great Lakes Tournament and fourth in the Chicago Collegiate Tourney. Fred Paulsell, last yeafs No. 1 man, Larry Bow- man, Bob Weiss, Dave Silver, and Larry Costin all returned for the 12 match spring campaign, in which the Maroons played host to the Chicago Colligiate Tournament. COACH KYLE ANDERSONS VARSITY BASEBALL TEAM compiled a 5-win 12-1055 record in 1961, including the hrst double shutout in U. of C. history, 3-0 and 8-0 over Beloit, with right handers Neemon Taylor and Bill Peterman allowing only three hits in the two games. Other Chicago victories came over Lake Forest, Illinois Tech, and Wabash. Kent Wooldridge hnished the campaign with the best won-lost record on the mound staff, and third baseman Mike Canes led the Maroon hitters with a. .307 average, Anderson's usual starters included outhelders Wooldridge, Dick Thompson, and Earl Olson; Canes at third, Mike Gessel at short, Captain Ira Levy at second, A1 Devin at hrst, and Dennis Seykeral catching. With the majority of the squad back again this year, the Maroons1 preseason prospects looked brighter than in the last few years. BASEBALL IN FALL QUARTER INTRAMURAL SPORTS PSI UPSILON in the fraternity division and East IV in the house leagues emerged with the touch football crowns, while Laughlin House captured the divisional league title with ease. Delta Upsilon won frater- nity honors in both swimming and wrestling, while Chamberlin's swimmers and Dodd's grap- plers proved most superior among the dormitory entries. Phi Sigma Delta and East IV won their respective golf titles. In Winter quarter's major sports, the Psi Uts caught hre, and raced to championships in has- ketball, tennis, track, handball, free throw shoot- ing, and badminton. Phi Kapp Psi won frater- nity rifiery honors, and Zeta Beta Tau emerged with the table tennis crown. In the house league, Mead took the honors in free throw shooting and table tennis, Chamberlin nabbed the riHery laurd eIs, East IV raced to the track title, Henderson South captured the basketball championship, and Dodd came out on top in badminton. In all-University competition, the Psi U,s won their umteenth straight football championship with a close win over Laughlin. The Unknowns Gaw schooD dominated play in basketball by de- cisively stopping every opponent. Independent Allan Jung beat Psi U's Rob Kirby for the hand- ball title, and Lorand Spyers turned the same trick on Kirby in tennis. In badminton, Will Pro- vine 0E Dodd nipped Kirby in the fmals to gain the All-University crown. Spring Sports included softball, volleyball, golf, horse shoes, and tennis. INTRAMURALS UNUSUAL FOOD DELIGHTFUL ATMOSPHERE POPULAR PRICES WWW r'AlT Fifty-Sevenll'l u! Kenwood lElCA - ROLEX - I-IASSELBIAD - TAPE RECORDEIIS Discount :0 Studenls and Faculty MODEL camera MOST COMPLETE PHOTO AND HOBBY SHOFI ON SOUTH SIDE 1342 EAST 55TH STREET HY 3-9259 4: POSTAL STATION THE UNIVERSITY OF MAIN . A ........ EDUCATION BRANCH V . . UNIVERSITY COLLEGE BRANCH. MM: main store only. DOWNTOWN PROGRAM BRANCH TEXT BOOKS - GENERAL BOOKS - STATIONERY .' ' --; SCHOOL SUPPLIES - $TYPEWRITERS - $GIFTS I $PHOTOGRAPHIC SUPPLIES - Bi FAPE RECORDERS . 582: KIMBARK AVENUE MI 34800 EXT. 3304 CHICAGO BOOKSTORES 5302 ELLIS AVENUE Ml 3-0800 EXT. 3306 :34 E, LAKE STREET FI 6-8300 190 E. DELAWARE PLACE WH 372478 FIRST THINGS FIRST! To lay a strong foundation for your family's financial fu- ture, you should make life insurance a first investment. Life insurance provides immediate protection for your fam- ily and, if you survive, an added income for your retire- ment years. It aiso provides you with a dejinite program for systematic saving. Let me show you how the Sun Life of Canada can benefit you and yourfamiiy. Yon will be under no obligation and you will see what we mean when we say-Tirst Tkings First? Ralph J. Wood, Jr., 5'448 UNIVERSITY INSURANCE COUNSELING SINCE 1950 SUN LIFE ASSURANCE COMPANY OF CANADA 1 N. LA SALLE ST. . CHICAGO 2, ILLINOIS FR 2-2390 RE 1-0355 P H- THE GEORGE SOLLITT CONSTRUCTION Co. BUILDERS for THE UNIVERSITY OF CHICAGO I ncluding ARGONNE CANCER RESEARCH HOSPITAL 58TH STREET AND ELLIS AVENUE WOMEN'S RESIDENCE HALL 59TH STREET AND WOODLAWN AVENUE WOMEN'S RESIDENCE DINING HALL SOUTH OF womaws RESIDENCE HALL PIERCE HALL 55111 STREET AND UNIVERSITY AVENUE. HIGH SCHOOL 5830 KENWOOD AVEN U E NATIONAL OPINION RESEARCH CENTER 5720 SOUTH WOODLAWN AVENUE Telephone RAndolph 6-5330 SUITE 1301 - 109 NORTH DEARBORN STREET - CHICAGO 2,1LLINOIS THE MAX BROOK co. For Your Better Garments C leaners and Launderers On Campus Since :93? We OHe-r c: Complele Tailoring Service I0l3-I7 E. blst St. For Prompl Pickup, Telephone Mi 3-7447 Trucks on Campus Daily UNIVERSITY NATIIJNAL BANK jimmy? A Strong Bank, AND THE UNIVERSITY ROOM 1355 EAST 55TH STREET RESERVED FOR UNIVERSITY CLIENTELE MUseum 4-1290 1172 EAST FIFTY-FIFTH STREET Member Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation g PHONE: Hsz Park 3-9T00 LEIGH9S GROCERY AN D MARKET HARPER LIQUOR STORE 1114 EAST FIFTY-FIFTH STREET Full line of imported and domestic wines, liquors, and beer at lowest prices Quality Foods 1327 E. 5713151 ammo 7m 23W? PHONE FA 435$ WRIGHT HOBBY HOUSE RESTAURANT Jam :5 WW COMPLETE LAUN DRY lAUNDERETTE and DRY CLEANING SERVICE 1313-15 EAST 57TH STREET - MIDWAY 3-2073 M TREAT FOR STUDENTSJ We Cater 1:0 Your Wallet I342 East 53rd Street for- FUH Time College Students only! Free iii-tiChecking : t : Acco u nf -::. 1 ,H . .g g; Service W W NO No minimum balance service charge No charge for checks or deposits All you need to do To open an accounf- full time attendance at any college unywhere in the United States. NATIONAL BANK OJ HYDE PARK IN CHICAGO 53rd and LAKE PARK 7 MEMBER FiDERAl DiPOSIT INSURANCE CORPOMHON Plaza 2-4600 NO IVORY TOWER Research on Todaygs Vital Issues from this Campus The hazard and the hope: a sane look at mums new servant LIVING WIT H THE ATOM By Ritchie Calder. A calm summing up of the views of various scientific experts who met at The University at Chicago to discuse progress and problems in the taming 0f the atom. Withcmt belittling the dangers, Professor Calder takea a strongly positive view. The result is a unuclear philosophy to combat nnuclear superstition -and a thorough edu- cation in what has been achieved and what is contemplated in the peaceful use of nuclear power. Illus. $5.95 An gsinsideh, look at the Black Muslim movement BLACK NATIONALISM: The Search For an Identity in America By E. U. Essien-Udom. An African who studied at The University of Chicago assesses the Muslim movement in America and the nature of its appeal to the Iower-class urban Negro. Writing from firsthand acquaintance with the Chicago leader, Elijah Muhammad, and with many of his followers, the author discusses the religious and edu- cational activities of the movement and its soeial, psychological and political implications. 111115. $6.95 The successes and failures of THE AMATEUR DEMOCRAT By James O. Wiison. Local amateur political clubs in the Democratic party, many the DHspring of the presidential campaigns 6f Adlai E. Stevenson, are critically analyzed in terms of their goals. tactica, class base, internal constraints, and their effort to adapt liberal and reform Creeds to the problems of modern metropolis. Written while Mr. Wiison was in the Political Science Department at the University of Chicago, the hook concentrates on the conHict between amateur and professional politicians in Chicago, New York, and Los Angeles. $6.95 Through yam- haokaeiler umvensmor ' 0 PRESS 6750 Ellis Avenue. Chiuko 37. Illinois IN CANADA: The University of Toronto Press. Tamra 5. Oncmia Integration and Cooperation. . . The future belongs to you who believe in these concepts 0r it beiongs to no one. But xio the ideas which inspire us really prove practical? The Hyde Park Co-op says ye?! 0111' in- tegrated stag, interracial Board, multi- faith membership work harmoniously, ef- fectively. The Co-op is a miniature United Nations. CO-OP SUPER MART OWNED BY OVER 6000 FAMILIES Located in the New Hyde Park Shopping Center 55TH AND LAKE PARK AVENUE CONCRETE SIDEWALKS CONCRETE BREAKING FLOORS-DRIVEWAYS T. A. REfiNQUIST t0. EST. 1V2! 6639 SOUTH VERNON AVENUE NORMAL 7.0m: ; 4- t I d'zu: 5 FLOWER SHOPS Flowers for All Occasionf, Candy Mldway 3-4020 1340 E. 55TH ST. 1225 E. 63KB ST. CHICAGO, ILLINOIS I O 0 Fl ne Book Printing THIS IS ONE of the important and prominent parts of our production. For mamr years we have served publishers and assisted private prc35es in the printing of: Scientific 3; Historical Works - Manuals 8: Technical Books Educational 3L Juvenile Books - Bibles 8; Religious Works Books on Literature ISL Language - Dictionaries Encyclopedias - Maps . Charts - Art Reproductions The skills and techniques required for this specialty are also used here in widely diversified types of printing for advertising and sales promotion. I'ESS INCORDO RATED LITHOGRAPHV Congress Expressway a1GardnerRoad BHOADVIEW. ILLJNOIS COIumbus1-1420 Proud to be of Service 10 the Universify of Chicago RAND McNALLY BOOK MANUFACTURING DIVISION Large capachy, modern equipment and com- Monotype Composition - Linotype Compogih'on peient supervision ossu re constant high quality. Letterpress Priming - SheeT-Fed and Web Off- Plants in set Printing : Offset Piu'remoking . Edition SKOKIE, ILL. - HAMMOND, IND. - DECATUR, ILL. Binding - Paper Covered Books - Design RAND McNALLY 8L COMPANY 800K MANUFACTURING DIVISION SALES OFFICES.- 124 WEST MONROE STREET, CHICAGO 3 - 405 PARK AVENUE, NEW YORK 22 SPECIAL CREDITS: Stanley chirrz, Muhsin Mahdi, and Keith G. Scale for translations; Peter Domhik for enlarging and printing; Danie! Lyon. for photographs, Ppg. 8-13, 62, 86-93, 1281 131; Lemmrd Lyon for photographs, Ppg. 136-437; David Silver for artwork, Ppg. 16-17, 34-35, 47, 53, 61, 69, 83, 98-99. 1247125, 1527153, 1587159; James Bradley for cover. CAP 8L GOWN STAFF, 1961-62 Gene Kadish Editor in Chief Ted Lindauer Business Manager William Spady Sports Editor Contributing Artist David Silver Contributing Photographer Dahiel Lyon A dvertising Manager Myron Einisman Production Assistant Christine Osterhus COPY STAFF Eve Bell Associate Editor James Bradley Art Editor Harvey Golomb Managing Editor Richard Mandel Poetry Coordinator g' is 13-93.; HIEEF Laura Godofsky, Lori Hall, Joyce Huske, Pamela Smith PHOTOGRAPHY STAFF Barry Rumack, Chief Photographer; Barry Dwor- kin, Peter Jacobson, Alan Krauss, Len Lyon, Carol Masters, Hugh Newberger, Bob Okin, john Smis- kol, Joel Snyder, Nancy Thomas BUSINESS STAFF Carmen Cooperidcr, Catherine Janus, Andrew Stein, Linda Steinig 184 ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS Our special thanks go to Jay Greenberg and the staff members of the Maroon for their kind as- sistances; to Perry Constas and Norman R. Wolfe for their masterly guidances; and t0 Rory McCor- mack, who will forever stand as a symbol of Youth and Truth, for his tremendous insights into the problems which confront us today.


Suggestions in the University of Chicago - Cap and Gown Yearbook (Chicago, IL) collection:

University of Chicago - Cap and Gown Yearbook (Chicago, IL) online collection, 1958 Edition, Page 1

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University of Chicago - Cap and Gown Yearbook (Chicago, IL) online collection, 1960 Edition, Page 1

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University of Chicago - Cap and Gown Yearbook (Chicago, IL) online collection, 1961 Edition, Page 1

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University of Chicago - Cap and Gown Yearbook (Chicago, IL) online collection, 1963 Edition, Page 1

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University of Chicago - Cap and Gown Yearbook (Chicago, IL) online collection, 1964 Edition, Page 1

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University of Chicago - Cap and Gown Yearbook (Chicago, IL) online collection, 1965 Edition, Page 1

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