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11-2-1978 Washington University Record, November 2, 1978

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Recommended Citation "Washington University Record, November 2, 1978" (1978). Washington University Record. Book 117. http://digitalcommons.wustl.edu/record/117

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New Directions versity, and Stanley Tiger- WU's Tuition Stabilization Plan man, a practicing architect In Architecture Is from Chicago. Enjoys Successful First Year Eisenman will also deliver Symposium Topic the Harris Armstrong WU's innovative tuition plan announced last spring has "Directions," a two-day Memorial Lecture on "Post- been well received by WU parents, with 165 students par- symposium that will attempt Modernism, Post-Function- ticipating in the plan, according to John H. Biggs, vice chancel- to point the way in which alism—Some Comments on lor for financial affairs. architecture is headed today the Current Condition of The Tuition Stabilization Plan (TSP) was designed to assist and why, will be held at WU Architecture" on Mon., Nov. families in coping with inflation, while providing adequate Monday and Tuesday, Nov. 6, at 8:30 p.m. in the Stein- income to meet the University's rising costs. The plan has two 6-7. The conference is free and berg Hall Auditorium. parts: (1) a prepayment privilege under which parents can open to the public. The editor is Nory Miller of prepay four years of tuition for an entering freshman at the cur- Four eminent architects, The American Institute of rent year's tuition rate, and (2) a loan plan under which parents who are well-qualified to Architects' Journal (AIA), and can borrow the prepayment amount with loan repayment over the WU faculty members are four, six, or eight years at nine per cent interest. Comparable William Gass, noted author of plans with adjusted terms are available to sophomores and Omensetter's Luck, Udo juniors. The plan also provides income tax benefits to most Kultermann, author of a new parents in that instead of paying tuition increases which are not book on Ernest Trova, and deductible, the parent who takes the loan option pays interest, Norris K. Smith, well-known which usually is deductible. for his scholarship and publi- Biggs said the plan was used by the families of 107 cations on Frank Lloyd freshmen, who represent about one-fifth of the students for Wright. whom the plan would be appropriate. Forty-one sophomores Eisenman, Graves, Stern and 17 juniors are participating in the plan. and Tigerman are among the He said he was pleasantly surprised at the large number of exclusive eight whom world- families (47) electing to prepay the tuition without a loan, famous architect Philip John- because this reduces considerably the need for borrowed funds son recently identified as over the plan's duration. "architects who represent a In view of the recently announced tuition hike, many multiplicity of directions on parents have benefited substantially by participating in the the cutting edge of archi- plan. The TSP will again be available for freshmen, Peter Kisenman tecture." Part of the current sophomores and juniors entering for the academic year 1979- speak on modern archi- furor in architecture is 80. Contact the Admissions Office for more details. tecture in transition, will trade attributed to Johnson and ideas with an editor, and three John Burgee, designers of the WU faculty members—one a controversial, slated to be famous philosopher-novelist; built, AT&T Building in the others, respected art his- Manhattan, referred to by torians. They will consider and some as the "Chippendale comment on what is called skyscraper." "post modernism," which Johnson himself observed some define and describe as a in a recent ceremony at which "return of architecture to his- he received the AIA's Gold torical illusion, contextual Medal: "We stand at a place sensitivity and inclusion of that maybe we haven't stood cultural and historical mean- for 50 years, and that is a shift ing through ornamentation." in sensibility so revolutionary The forum will include: that it is hard to grasp be- Peter Eisenman, director of cause we are right in the mid- The Institute for Architecture dle." and Urban Studies, New This flux within the disci- York City; Michael Graves, pline and art of architecture professor of architecture at prompted three WU students Princeton University; Robert in the School of Architecture, A. M. Stern, professor of Jerry Brown, Dan Enwright Max Ernst's "Eye of Silence" is one of WU's art works currently on display at architecture at Columbia Uni- (continued on page 2) Steinberg. The painting was purchased in 1946 by the University. Seven Eminent Scientists Speak well-known in pharmacological circles because of his ability to form a compatible "marriage between medical chemistry and At WU's Biomedical Symposium pharmacology." Needleman said Black has developed a number of compounds that mimic the effects of histamine on On October 16 and 17, an uncharacteristic, yet dramatic the stomach. Histamine is a compound found in animal and production was staged at Edison Theatre. Each afternoon of vegetable tissue that stimulates gastric secretion and dilates the two days, several hundred scientifically inclined people blood vessels. enjoyed biomedical lectures by seven of the most notable scien- Black talked about his research and the research of other tists in the world during WU's "125th Anniversary Biomedical laboratories on histamine and concluded by saying that, in his Symposium." opinion, histamine "is of vital importance in protecting the Chancellor William H. Danforth opened the symposium, stomach in the act of eating." which he called the highlight not just of WU's 125th year, but The next speaker was George E. Palade, director of the of any year. Divison of Cell , Yale University, and winner of the Dr. W. Maxwell Cowan, director of WU's Division of for or Medicine in 1974 for his pioneer- Biology and Biomedical Sciences, introduced the first speaker, ing studies in cell biology. Dr. Cowan, in his introduction of Sir Peter B. Medawar, head of the Division of Surgical Palade, said that, in addition to his other accomplishments, Sciences, Medical Research Council, England, and winner of Palade was known to anyone who had ever looked at an the Nobel Prize for Physiology or Medicine in 1960 for his dis- electromicrograph because of his development of techniques covery of immune-competence. for its use. Sir Peter described his contribution to the symposium as a Palade's lecture concerned membrane biogenesis, the history, not in the conventional sense, but essentially a history generation of membranes from other membranes. Membranes, of ideas having to do with the modern conception of transplan- he explained, are used in abundance in the construction of all tation immunity, a story that began with the discovery of the cells and are essentially diffusion barriers for small water solu- transplantability of tumors. ble molecules. In concluding his lecture, Palade said that the The next speaker, Walter F. Bodmer, professor of genetics way membranes grow leads to the thought that the same at the University of Oxford, England, commented that Sir membrane that was born in archaeozoic times is, by expansion Peter's history of immunological reactions gave a better and division, what now occupies the biosphere. background on his topic than he could have. Carlton C. Hunt, head of the WU School of Medicine's Bodmer, introduced by Donald C. Shreffler, head of the Physiology and Biophysics Department, introduced the last WU School of Medicine's Genetics Department, as a speaker of the symposium, Andrew F. Huxley, professor and "geneticist's geneticist," said his talk would describe the HLA head of the Department of Physiology, University College, System. This is the genetic system in man whose code can help London, England, and winner of the Nobel Prize for match individuals for "genetic differences that matter when Physiology or Medicine in 1963 with Sir for grafting tissues from one individual to another." their elucidation of the nature of nerve impulses. The third speaker was Har Gobind Khorana, research Hunt said that Huxley's work on nerve impulses set a new professor in the Departments of Biology and Chemistry, Mas- standard for quantitative analytical study in neurobiology sachusetts Institute of Technology, and winner of the Nobel coupled with profound theoretical insight. He added that Hux- Prize for Physiology or Medicine in 1968 for his work on the ley's "second career" has been muscle research, a field, structure and synthesis of DNA. Luis Glaser, head of the WU according to Hunt, to which he has brought amazing clarity of School of Medicine's Biological Chemistry Department said, in thought and a combination of ability at instrumentation and his introduction of Khorana, that the Nobel Prize winner's experimental design. invaluable lesson to others was in his combining chemical and Huxley's lecture dealt with the mechanism of muscle biological techniques when studying important problems. contraction. He reflected that the year WU was founded, 1853, Khorana said he had learned biochemistry, methods of was right in the middle of the first wave of useful discoveries on enzymology and, especially, how to work hard while studying muscle. He said that recent research was at an exciting state at WU with , who won the Nobel Prize for where speculation could be made, but with trepidation, Physiology or Medicine in 1959 and was head of the WU because, based on the way discoveries in muscle research have School of Medicine's Department of Microbiology from 1952 been made in the past, new proposals were as likely to be dis- to 1959. proved as proved. "I'd be very surprised," he concluded, "if Khorana talked about ideas and discoveries that collectively we'd come to the end of these revolutions." led to the development of . He lectured on On that note the symposium ended. The audience had been breaking the in the 1960s and synthesizing the gene treated to histories of some of the exciting recent biomedical in the laboratory during the past 10 years. research by the scientists who performed that research. And In introducing the next speaker—Andrew A. Benson, lastly, they had been cautioned by Huxley that no end to such professor of biology at the Scripps Institution of scientific discoveries was anywhere in sight. (Nickingaia) Oceanography—William H. Outlaw, Jr., WU assistant profes- sor of biology, said Benson's work in plant biochemistry con- SympOSiUm ( continued from page I) tributed most to the area of photosynthesis by the elucidation and Steve Sobel, to organize this conclave. Through their of the Calvin-Benson cycle, the path by which plants reduce efforts, an impressive list of contributors, including the Mis- carbon dioxide to carbohydrate. souri Committee for the Humanities, have helped to fund the Benson said, during his talk, that the marine biologist is symposium. concerned with learning about basic biological and medical The meeting on Mon., Nov. 6, will convene in the School of phenomena from the ocean in order "to get the meaning for Architecture's Givens Hall (9:30 a.m.), but all lectures (10 a.m. man of the lessons of remarkable adaptations marine to noon and 2 to 5 p.m.) will be delivered in neighboring organisms have developed." Steinberg Hall Auditorium. The second day, Tues., Nov. 7, will The fifth speaker, the first to speak on the second day of the include a workshop (9 a.m.-noon) in Givens Hall and a panel symposium, was James W. Black, director of the Therapeutic discussion (1:30 to 4 p.m. in Steinberg) featuring Eisenman, Research Division, Wellcome Research Laboratories, England. Graves, Stern, and Tigerman. Miller will serve as moderator at Philip Needleman, head of the WU School of Medicine's Phar- this afternoon session in Steinberg. (For exact times of macology Department, introduced him, saying that Black is individual lectures, see Calendar, page 4.) Lindsay Helmholz In February of that year, Arthur Holly Compton To Be Honored at became Chancellor of the University, and, with the help Symposium of Joyce C. Stearns, a long- The retirement and ap- time friend and colleague, and pointment as professor Joseph W. Kennedy, a dis- emeritus of Lindsay coverer of plutonium, rebuilt Helmholz, who has been WU's war-time depleted associated with WU's Chemistry Department. Six Chemistry Department for 32 new chemistry faculty years, will be marked by an members were appointed in afternoon-long symposium 1946, all from the Manhattan from 1:30 to 5:30 p.m. on Project at Los Alamos, the Wed., Nov. 8, in Louderman project to build the atomic bomb. Compton was the Chancellor William H. Danforth (2nd from right) recently participated in a brief Hall, Room 458. The lectures at the symposium, director of the Metallurgical ceremony involving a SI0.00(1 grant from the National Football League Charities Atomic Project at the Uni- to the orthopedic surgery and sports medicine program of WU. William V. Bid- "Spectroscopic Studies of the will (left), managing general partner, the St. Louis Football Cardinals, matched Electronic Properties of versity of Chicago, a part of the award which was accepted by Dr. Fred C. Reynolds (2nd from left), team Inorganic Materials," will be the Manhattan Project. physician, and orthopedic surgeon-in-chief, Barnes Hospital, part of the Univer- based on Helmholz's research Stearns, who had taken his sity's Medical Center. At right is Texas E. Schramm, president and general mana- in X-ray crystallography, PhD in physics under Comp- ger of the N.F.L. Cowboys. crystal structure and the ton at the University of J. H. HEXTER, Distin- CONTRIBUTIONS to the electronic structure of Chicago, was personnel direc- guished Historian in Frank O'Brien Memorial molecules and ions. tor of the Metallurgical Residence at WU and direc- Fund, named in honor of the The symposium will be free tor of the Yale Center for late O'Brien, editor of the and open to the public. The Parliamentary History, has Washington University speakers will be: Max Wolfs- received grants totaling Magazine, have enabled the berg, a WU alumnus and $230,000 to collect, edit for WU Rare Book Department former student of Helmholz publication and publish the to acquire one of the most who is now professor and surviving sources on the Eng- bibliographically significant chairman of the Department lish Parliaments of 1625 and James Joyce titles: a copy of of Chemistry, University of 1626. The funds, a direct grant the pamphlet Two Essays . . . California-Irvine; Donald of $56,000 and a matching The Day of Rabblement McClure, professor in the grant of $87,000, both from (Slocom & Cahoon, Bl). Department of Chemistry, the National Endowment for This rare, early work was Princeton University; and the Humanities, coupled with published in an edition of only Harry B. Gray, professor and Professor Lindsay Helmholz an equal sum of $87,000 from 85 copies in 1901, six years be- chairman of the Department Atomic Project at that univer- the John Ben Snow Memorial fore the appearance of Joyce's of Chemistry and Chemical sity. Kennedy was leader of Trust, will support this first book, Chamber Music. Engineering, California the chemistry and metallurgy scholarly research. The work The pamphlet was Institute of Technology (Cal division at the Manhattan is part of a 12-year-old project purchased because of Tech). Project's Los Alamos facility. at Yale intended "to make O'Brien's enthusiasm and Helmholz received his PhD When Compton became available to scholars all the appreciation of the writings of in chemistry from Johns Hop- WU's Chancellor, Stearns was discoverable sources on the Joyce. Housed in a special kins University in 1933. From installed as dean of Faculties. history of the English Parlia- protective case made then until 1946, he worked as Kennedy was brought to the ment from the accession of specifically for this item, the a National Research Council University as chairman of the Elizabeth I (1558) to the exe- work is currently featured in Fellow and instructor in Chemistry Department. Four cution of Charles I (1649)." the exhibit, "Sixteen Years of chemistry at Cal Tech, as as- other men from Los Alamos, Collection Building: Notable sistant professor of chemistry along with Helmholz, fol- Gifts and Purchases, 1962- at Dartmouth College, as a re- lowed: Arthur C. Wahl, now CHARLES CHURCH- 1978," now on view on level search chemist in the Office of Henry V. Farr Professor of WELL, WU dean of Library five, Olin Library, Viewing Scientific Research and De- Radiochemistry and a dis- Services, will be a featured hours are 8:30-5 weekdays. velopment at Cal Tech, as a coverer of plutonium: Samuel speaker at the meeting of the THE DEADLINE for research chemist for the Man- I. Weissman, now a professor Council of Colleges of Arts graduate study and faculty re- hattan Project in Los Alamos, of chemistry; Herbert Potratz, and Sciences 1978 annual search awards in the People's N.M., and as a Guggenheim a professor of chemistry until meeting in Orlando, Fla., Republic of China is Novem- Memorial Fellow at the his death in March 1975; and Nov. 2-Nov. 4. He will talk on ber 13. Graduate study fel- University of California- David Lipkin, now William "The Library Crisis" at the lowships are for one year, be- Berkeley and Cal Tech He Greenleaf Eliot Professor of morning session, Sat., Nov. 4. ginning January, 1979; faculty became an assistant professor Chemistry. awards are for three to 12 of chemistry at WU in 1946. Kennedy died in 1957. With The WU Record is pub- months, beginning March 1- Helmholz was at Los Helmholz's retirement, only lished weekly during the June 1, 1979. Eligible fields Alamos from 1943 to 1945. Lipkin, Wahl and Weissman academic year by the Infor- are the social sciences, When he came to the Univer- are left out of the six men mation Office. Editor, Janet humanities, natural sciences sity in 1946, WU's Chemistry from Los Alamos to teach the Kelley; calendar editor, and professional studies. Ap- Department and the Manhat- next generation of chemistry Charlotte Boman. Address plications are available at Slix tan Project had much in com- students at WU. communications to Box 1142. International House. mon. INick lngala) Calendar 3:30 p.m. Center for the Study of 1:30 p.m. Department of "Prints by Sidney Chafetz." American Business Labor Chemistry Lindsay Helmholz Chafetz is a professor of art at November 3-9 Workshop, "Fringe Benefits," Honorary Symposium, Ohio State U. Bixby Gallery, FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 3 William Alpert, WU asst. prof, of "Spectroscopic Studies of the School of Fine Arts. 9 a.m.-5 12:15 p.m. Harford Lecture, economics. 300 Eliot. Electronic Properties of p.m., Mon.-Fri. Nov. 3-10. "Interferons 1978," Dr. Thomas Inorganic Materials." 458 "A Selection of Washington 4 p.m. Department of Biology Lec- C. Merigan, Jr., Stanford. Lounderman. (See page 3.) University Student Publications, ture, with Alan Templeton, WU Cloplon Amph., 4950 Audubon. 1869 to the Present." Olin assoc. prof, of biology. 322 Reb- 3 p.m. GWB School of Social 2 p.m. Department of Technology Library, level three. 8 a.m.-12 stock. Work Colloquium, "A Field and Human Affairs Seminar, Experience in Mexico," Sylvia midnight, daily. Ends Nov. II. "Resource and Energy 4 p.m. Department of Anthropology Rossi, GWB graduate student, Department of Earth and Conserving Agriculture," George Colloquium, "Considering and David Gibson, doctoral stu- Planetary Sciences Tours and Kuepper, WU research assistant, Human Evolution: The Teeth of dent in anthropology, U. of Mo. Presentations. Mondays, CBNS. 307 Urbauer. the Matter," C. L. Brace, prof, of Brown Lounge. Wednesdays and Fridays, 3 p.m. Department of Germanic anthropology, U. of Mich., Ann 4 p.m. Department of Physics Col- through Nov. 7. Tours begin at Languages and Literatures, Arbor. 303 Mudd Hall. "Goethe's View of America in a loquium, "Do Neutron Stars 108 Wilson at 3 p.m. European Context," Peter 4 p.m. Committee on Literature Obey the Laws of Physics'?" K.. "Washington University: Its Boerner, prof, of German, and History Lecture, "Literature Brecher, prof, of physics, MIT. Design and Architecture."WU Indiana U. 320 Ridgley. and Politics in Translation," 201 Crow. Gallery of Art, lower level, SATURDAY, NOVEMBER 4 Annabelle Paterson, prof, of THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 9 Steinberg Hall. 9 a.m.-5 p.m., 9 a.m. WU School of Dental English, York U., Toronto, 12 noon. Very Interesting Women Mon.-Fri.; 1-5 p.m. Sat., Sun. Medicine Course, "Options in Canada. Hurst Lounge, Duncker. Series, with Gay Goldman, WU Through Nov. 12. Treating Periodontal Pockets," asst. prof, of architecture. 4 p.m. Department of Chemistry "Major Acquisitions: A Century Dr. Sigurd P. Ramfjord, U. of Women's Bldg. Lounge. Seminar, "Photoacoustic Raman of Collecting." WU Gallery of Mich. School of Dentistry. WU Art, Steinberg Hall, upper Spectroscopy of Gases," Joseph 4 p.m. Divison of Biology and School of Dental Medicine. To gallery. 9 a.m.-5 p.m. Mon.-Fri.; register, call 454-0387. Barret, researcher, Allied Biomedical Sciences Seminar, "Pattern Formation and Sym- 1-5 p.m., Sat., Sun. Through SUNDAY, NOVEMBER 5 Chemical Co. 311 McMillen Lab. metry in Drosophila," Dr. Peter Nov. 12. 8 p.m. Hillel Foundation Lecture, 8:30 p.m. Harris Armstrong Bryant, U. of Calif., Irvine. 215 "Sixteen Years of Collection "Jewish Resistance and Its Mean- Memorial Lecture, "Post- Rebstock. Building: Notable Gifts and ing during the Holocaust," Modernism, Post-Functionalism: Purchases, 1962-1978." Rare Vladka Meed, a Jewish resistor in Some Comments on the Current 4 p.m. Department of Chemistry Books and Special Collections, the Warsaw uprising. Hillel, 6300 Condition of Architecture," Peter Seminar, with Donald Kurtz, Olin Library level five. 8:30 a.m.- Forsyth. Eisenman, architect. Steinberg. prof, of chemistry, Stanford U. 5 p.m., weekdays. Ends Nov. 23. MONDAY NOVEMBER 6 311 McMillen Lab. 10 a.m. School of Architecture TUESDAY, NOVEMBER 7 "American's Architectural Symposium "Directions." 9 a.m. School of Architecture Music Heritage." Givens Hall, main Speakers will include: Stanley Symposium "Directions" level. 8 a.m.-8 p.m., weekdays. Workshop. Givens Hall. The Through Nov. 18. Tigerman (10:30 a.m.); Norris K. SATURDAY, NOVEMBER 4 workshop will last until noon. Smith (11:30 a.m.) William Gass 1:30 p.m. WU Wind Ensemble 1:30 p.m. School of Architecture (2 p.m.): Robert A. M. Stern (3 Pops Concert, directed by Dan Symposium "Directions" Discus- Films p.m.); and Michael Graves (4 Presgrave. West County Shop- sion. Steinberg Auditorium. (See p.m.). Steinberg Hall. (See story ping Center. FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 3 on page 1.) story on page 1.) 7:30 and 9:45 p.m. WU Filmboard 11 a.m. Department of Civil 2 p.m. Black Studies Faculty THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 9 Series, "The Goodbye Girl." 8 p.m. Student Union Jazz Engineering Seminar, "Numerical Seminar, "What Happened to the Brown Hall Theatre. Admission Stability of Time Integration Civil Rights Movement?" Concert, with the Bill Evans Trio. $1.50 (Also Sat., Nov. 4, same Graham Chapel. Advance tickets Methods," I. Norman Katz, WU Marcela Howell, WU instructor times, Brown.) prof, of applied mathematics and $5.50; $4.50 for WU students in black studies. 349 McMillan. 12 midnight. WU Filmboard computer science. 100 Cupples II. with SU cards; $6.50 for all at the Series, "Slaughterhouse 5." 12 noon. Biomedical Engineering 8 p.m. Meet the Writers Series, door. Tickets available at the Brown. Admission $1. (Also Sat., Seminar, "The Medical Device with Stanley Elkin, WU prof, of Edison Theatre Box Office. Nov. 4, midnight, Brown; and Amendment of 1976," Robert L. English, who will read selections Sun., Nov. 5, 8 p.m., Wohl Valentine, Sherwood Medi. Ind. of his recently completed work. Center.) 215 Cupples II. Women's Bldg. Lounge. Performing Arts 2 p.m. Women's Programming 8 p.m. University City Library 8 p.m. Women's Programming SATURDAY, NOVEMBER 4 Board Lecture, "How Women Architecture and Religion Series, Board Presentation, "Many Faces 8 p.m. Office of Student Activities Have Written about Women," "Greece and Rome," William of Women," with Ivy Bottini, American Cinema Series, "They Carolyn G. Heilbrun, prof, of Sale, WU prof, of classics. U. feminist comedienne. Graham Drive by Night" and "The English, Columbia U., author of City Library, 6701 Delmar. Chapel. Admission $3.50; $3 for Letter." Rebstock Auditorium. Toward a Recognition of Admission $1.50. WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER 8 WU students. Tickets available at Androgyny and the Amanda 11 a.m. School of Law "Quest for the door. MONDAY, NOVEMBER 6 Cross Detective Series, and head Equality" Lecture Series, 7:30 and 9:30 p.m. WU Filmboard of the Virginia Woolf Society. "Equality in American History," Series, "Bringing Up Baby." Hurst Lounge, Duncker Hall. Exhibitions Brown. Admission $1.50. (Also 2 p.m. Department of Chemical Oscar Handlin, prof, of history, Nov. 7, same times, Brown.) Engineering Seminar, "Catalytic Harvard U. Graham Chapel. "Evarts A. Graham, 1883-1957," Gasification," Charanjit Rai, 1:15 Center for the Study of an exhibit describing and WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER 8 U.S. Department of Energy. 100 American Business Accounting illustrating the scientific 5:30 p.m. WU Film Arts Series, Cupples II. Seminar, "The Proposed achievements of Dr. Evarts A. three short films about 3 p.m. Department of Music Elimination of Full Cost Graham, Bixby Professor of filmmaking. Wohl Center Lecture, "Composing with Accounting in the Extractive Surgery, WU School of Lounge. Computer," Dexter Morrill, Petroleum Industry: Market Medicine, 1919-1951. Library 7:30 and 9:30 p.m. WU Filmboard composer and assoc. prof, of Consequences," Dan Collins, Annex, 615 South Taylor. 8:30 Series, "Cries and Whispers." music, Colgate U.Tietjens prof, of business, Michigan State a.m.-5 p.m., Mon.-Fri. Through Brown. Admission $1.50. (Also Rehearsal Hall. U. 300 Eliot. Nov. 30. Nov. 9, same times, Brown.)