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e CaliforniaTech Vohnfte LVII Pasadena, California, Friday, January 6, 1956 Number 11 Ford Foundation gives Tech $1,229,990 to raise salaries Dr. Silveri firsl of AUFS of ~~~2i9:~~~un~hi~og~f~\~t~Wb;du;c:rt~C~a~~f~~~~;:cl~r1~~~ It will raise them by about 4 per cent. represenlal-Ives 10 V-IS-It Tech This gift is part o.f a huge gift. fund of $260,000,000 given by the Ford FoundatIon to 615 private colleges and universities of the country. Caltech's gift ------.:=------.:...... Expert on Central American affairs, :i~~ t~t:~:~~dla~~;~~dnt~:li~~;~ Justice Douglas to visit Tech,a with $2,334,400 and the Univer- Silvert will address faculty, students Four field representatives of the American University Field secondsity of withSouthern$1,710,900.California was, open'· house feature of' stay Staff will visit the Caltech campus between January 9 and The amount of the grant to The campus program of Justice William O. Douglas will February 29 of the new year, 1956, to talk to the students, both each institution is approximately feature an open house in a faculty member's home the last informally and through lectures. K. H. Silvert, the first repre­ the amount of one year's pay- night of his four-day visit here January 31 to February 3. This sentative to visit the campus, will begin his tour with a talk roll for the full-time teaching addition to the schedule for the "Leaders of America" was to the undergraduate lunch club on Tuesday, January 10. In members of the faculty of that announced recently by the YMCA program committee as a suLsEquent days, he will lecture institution. The gift is to be in- .---, further attempt to provide in- to hi,story and economics classes vested as endowment. Since it D J h ell formal contacts between stu- and vv"ill make himself available is anticipated that this money re 0 ns WI dents and the guests, according Scholarships for informal "chats" to all who can now be invested at about 4 to John Young, program chair- desire to speak with him. He percent, an average increase of delsCUSS orelgelns man. will lecture on various aspects about 4 percent in faculty sal- aries is expected. The gift is to Justice Douglas will deliver available for of Central America including be given in two installments. of landscapes his keynote' address Tuesday United States relations with re­ Only one-half will be available evening, January 31, on a topic volutions and business. before July 1, 1956, and the re- "Origins of the Southern Cali. yet to be chosen. He is expe~· French study Dr. Silvert received his de­ mainder by July 1, 1957. Hence, fomia Landscape" is the title ed to arrive here Tuesday noon. The French Government is grees from the University of the 4 percent increase will occur of this week's Friday Evening During his visit, he will reside offering approximately thirty Pennsylvania. He realized a in two instalments in the next Demonstration Lecture. This, in the student house guest suite. university fellowships through long standing interest in politi· two fiscal years. the first demonstration lecture Wednesday evening he will the Ministry of Foreign Affairs cal science and Latin America B'd h $2 000 000' of the second term, will be deliv- participate with students in a and forty teaching assistant· when he began his field studies to :~ ~ri;a~e u~iver~itiesgl:~~ ered!by Dr. Richard Jahns of panel discussion following the ships through the Ministry of there in 1940, observing the coleges of the country, the the Caltechfaculty. The lecture lines of the program for Paul Education. The fellow s hip presidential elections lnMexico. Hoffman last November. After awards are for students with de­ Foundation is giVing at this time will be given in 201 Bridge at He joined the Political Science $200,000,000 to about 3500 pri- 7:30 p.m. this evening. these evening meetings, infor· finite academic projects or study Department of Tulane Univer­ vately supported hospitals to mal bull sessions with Douglas plans. The assistantships afford sity in 1948 and was serving as help them improve and extend During World War II Dr. will continue in the student language teaching experience an associate professor when he services to the public; $90,000,000 Jahns was with the United houses into the night. and an opportunity to become accepted his appointment to the was reserved for privately sup. States Geological Survey, ap· During the day Mr. Douglas better acquainted with France. American University Field staff. ported medical schools to help praising deposits of tungsten, will meet with·classes and other Nominations of candidates for His war service from 1942 to them strengthen their instruc. tantatum, columbian, beryllium stUdent groups. These sessions fellowships and assistantships 1945 included two years in Afri­ tion methods. and other strategic materials; will be Oriented around the par­ will be made by a joint commit­ ca-with the Air Transport ticular interest of each class as tee of French and American ed­ He is a professor of geology Command of the Army Air More funds needed it refers to Douglas' career. Ar­ ucators working in cooperation at Caltech and has been a mem­ rangements may be made with Force. He is the author of a Says President DuBridge of with the French C.ultural Servo ber of the faculty since 1946. the YMCA secretary Wes Her· two-volume work, A Stud)' in the gift to Caltech, "Needless to ices and the Institute of Inter· Dr. Jahns did his undergraduate shey or with John Young. Government: Guatemala. say, this increase in funds for national Education. work at the Institute, received Thursday night, Justice Doug­ The Arne ric a n University faculty salaries, though most will speak in the Athenaeum Closing date for application is Field Staff, founded in 1951 by welcome, does not solve all our his M.S. at Northwestern Uni­ las to Institute Associates and the February 1, 1956. ten major univesrities, has, as financial problems and the Board versity and returned to Caltech faculty as part of the Athenaeum Eligibility requirements of Trustees and the AdmInistra­ to take his Ph.D. (Continued on page 3) Lecture Series. In addition, he tion will continue to seek addi· The F r e n c h Government In coming weeks Dr. Went will address the senior current awards are open to men and tional funds to continue our pol­ will discuss "Air·Pollution and icy of keeping oar salaries com· affairs class and the Graduate­ women preferably under 30 Eat Viceroys;' Smog, A World Wide Problem." Faculty Forum. parable to those of the best in­ years.of age. Applicants must Dr. Langmuir will talk on "Ac- The Friday evening open stitutions in the country." be U.S. citizens. Other eligibility celerators for Nuclear Physics," house will be open to undergrad­ requirements are: a bachelor's win $50,000 Certain liberal arts colleges Dr. Engel will discuss "The uates and possibly their dates. degree from an American col· By Argo were given extra grants because The faculty host will be an­ lege or university by the time If you smoke Viceroys, and of their leadership in improving Search for Hidden Ore," and Dr. nounced soon. of departure; good academic rec­ if you don't, it may prove worth· faculty salaries. Engineering Ingersoll will relate his exper­ Previous to the visit, The Call· ord; good knowledge of French; while to take up the habit tem­ iences as "An American Profes­ and professional schools were fornla Tech will print a bio· correct usage of English; good poparily. You may be overlQok· not eligible for these awards. sor in India." (Continued ou page 3) moral character, personality and ing the.chance to win yourself adaptability; and good health. a Ii'ord Thundevbird, or if you're Recipients of French teaching fairly skillful, a Columbia Hi­ (altech's unique Industrial Relations Section assistantships will teach conver­ 'Fi 'phonograph. As the adver­ sational .English in secondary tisement in lJext week's Tech ~andindustry schools and teacher training in­ will tell you, ";1]]" you have to does double service to school stitutions in France. These posts do to become n winner is to find a name for Viceroy's as·yet by Stu Richert ices. The services of the Section such poll it has yet attempted­ are intended for future teachers include: A reference library of that of the Standard Oil Co. of of French. A few applicants with anonymou,.<; cellulose filter. How­ One of the leaders in the field ~ntry of industrial relations tod~y is books, pamphlets, and magazines California. This poll covered special training in American lit· ever each must be accom­ the Caltech Industrial Relations related to industrial relations, 16,000 employees and involved erature and some experience in panied 'by something or other Section. This section, under the specialized courses or series of thousands of man hours of work college teaching may be selected from two (2) packs of Viceroys, direction of Prof. R. D. Gray, is meetings without academic cred­ by the section. The results of for postes de lecteurs, teaching so as we said, it's nice if you located in the basement of CUI· it for representatives of compa­ each questionnaire were punched assignments in French universi­ happen to smoke Viceroys. bertson and has a staff consist· nies and unions, periodic con­ on an IBM card, and each of ties. Stipends cover mainte­ All-in-aU, $50,000 will be dis­ ing of librarians, typists, and re­ ferences of business executives thousands of employee com­ nance. pensed in the form of ten Thun­ search fellows. and union and government offi­ ments was designated a code All fields of study derbirds, and forty phono­ The Industrial Relations Sec­ cials for the discussion of cur­ number by a comment coding Graduate fellowships are open graphs, plus ten RCA color TV system and typed on an IBM tioI,lwas established in 1939 rent labor problems, surveys and to students in all fields of study. sets to go to a school organiza­ card. through gifts from a number of researca studies on problems of In the field of medicine, candi­ tion designated by, as if they individuals, companies, and la­ industrial relations, and a series In addition to its services to dates must have the M.D. de­ didn't h a v e enough already, of bulletins and cirCUlars pre­ bor unions, with the purpose of industry, the section offers gree. Fellows study in French each of the Thunderbird win­ pared by the section. The library studying the problems that arise courses to Caltech students. The universities and other state in­ ners. in employee-employer relations of the section is one of the most undergraduate courses offered stitutions. These awards pro­ The contest can only be en­ and of deVising ways to solve complete industri;:l1 relations li­ are: Ec 48, Introduction to In­ vide tuition and a modest main­ tered by college stUdents, you these problems. The Section braries in the rlation, and is dustrial Relations, and Ec 18, tenance. lucky dogs you, and each con­ was one of the pioneers in the widely used by representatives Industrial Organization. It is Since the ,number of supple­ testant can send as many entries industrial relations field; pre· of industry and also by students the feeling of the section that as he likes provided he has an vious to 1939 only four Ameri­ of industrial relations, including industrial relations training is mentary travel grants is limited, unlimited amount of Viceroys, can universities had formed in­ those from Caltech and other important to Caltech students. applicants should be prepared Le., an unlimited amount of dustrial relations departments. universities in the area. "The majority of Caltech grad­ to pay their own travel. The Industrial Relations Sec­ Much of the work of the sec­ uates eventually get into super­ A:pplicants for the French money in which case he doesn't tion is entirely self-suppo:r:ting. tion is devoted to conducting visory positions," emphasized Government awards should ap­ need to win the contest, which It receives its financial supp&rt employee opinion polls of the Prof. Gray, "and thus should ply to the United States Student closes, by the way, on January from approximately 80 compa­ employees of its subscribers. 'It k\low something of industrial re­ Department of the Institute of 31, anyhow. Good luck and keep nies which subscripe to its Berv· has just completed the ··largest lations:' International Education. smoking. Page Two C AL I FOR N1A T .~. C ... Friday, January 6, 1956 CfJliffJrnifJ Teta Editors··in-Chief-Dlck Hundley and Marty Tangora Campus Btlwlns N&ws Edltor - Dick Kirk Assistant News Editor - AI Farley "I'd rather take care of eight Who liked my daddy's playing Double EFooffenpif Song News Staff Barry Bass, Jim Co~, Bill Hecht, goats than one woman!" -and I was the result. By "The group from Throop" John Lango, Ed Park, Mike Peters, John Price, Mike Talcott. Jim Wilkinson Feature Editor - Frank Kofsky Alfie H. Zornberg So my mammy and my daddy are To the tune of: The Yale Feature Staff...... Tom Dodge, Craig Elliott, the ones I have to thank Now dOIf't get excited. NQ one \yhiffenpoo[ Song Karl Klutz, Stu Richert. Audience: John Lansingh That I'm chairman of the board Sports editor - Dick Van Kirk is trying to lower their, purity From the tables at the Grea.sy Sports Staff _ Brent Banta, score. In fact Alffe H. Zornberg of the Chase First To the halls of' dear old Throop Don Lewis, Bill Davis National Bank. Through the portals of the bars Photo StafL Stu Bowen, Don Nierlich, Dennis Paull, Dave Groce didn't 'even intimate that he Business Manager Dan Chilton preferred his goats to the much There's More we love so well, Circulation Manager - Dave Leeson talked of opposite gender. Actu­ Now I'm an ordinary figure in See the "Double E's'" g"setnbled Entered as second-class matter November 22, 1947, at the Post Office in Pasadena, With their voices turned on California, under the Act of March 3, 1879. ally, this quote was given by these democratic states, a hermit from the state of Maine high, Apathetic demonstration of Relating dirty jokes we love who recently appeare,d .• on' the hereditary traits; television show "Two for the to tell. The unwritten honor code Money." The truth is that we As the children of policemen Yes, the range noise from our have the flattest kinds table By now every Tech student has received his grade report slip had to run something to fill up the blank spot in the paper. of feet, Rates a thousand decibel for first term, with his grades listed and his calculated grade-point And the daughter of a floozie As we drink and sing to Ode to a Caltech Student average at the bottom. has a wiggle in her seat, Alexander Bell. {'m an autocratic figure in these My position at the bottom of We will honor him in memory In the preparation of 600 such slips it is inevitable that some democratic states, society lowe as long as we can last, mistakes are made in the calculation of GPA. Sometime quite a A dandy demonstration of here­ To the qualities my parents Then pass out and be forgotten few such errors turn up, sometimes almost none. But the experience ditary traits; bequeathed me long ago. with the rest. We are little lost currents gone of the registrar's office has been that usually about half of the errors As the children of the bakers Now my father was a married astray are reported to them by the students involved: roughly, the half make the most delicious man, and what is even Ha H:a Ha which were errors whose corrections were in the student's favor. breads, more, And the sons of Casanova fill We are poor electrons who The common attitude seems to have been that if the office gave He was married to my mother, have lost our way the most exclusive beds, a fact that I deplore. you a GPA that was too low, the error was just barely important And the Barrymores and Roose­ Ha Ria Ha I was born in Holy Wedlock, enough to be worth a walk to Throop Hall and a complaint; while velts and others I can Frustrated peons without a consequently by and by, degree, if the error gave you too high a GPA,well, in that case it wasn't name Inherit the qualities that per­ I was rooked by every bastard Doomed from here to electricity quite so important. petuate their fame, that had plunder in his McCann have mercy on such This is ,one of many kinds of situations where a point of per­ Wy position at the pinnacle of eye; as we. Ha Ha Ha. sonal honor comes up that is not strictly within the limits of Cal­ society lowe, I invested, I deposited, I voted eyery fall, tech's honor system. Using resistors to cheat telephones, filching To the qualities my parents EGAD! bequeathed me long ago. I saved up every penny, but books from the campus libraries-or, for that matter, just keeping "What's your girls' name?" My father was a gentleman and the bastards took it all. "I've forgotten, but it's some. them overdue-and stealing equipment and tools for dance decora­ musical to boot, But at last I've learned my thing like Chiffonier." tions (particularly for the Interhouse Dance) are other similar Who used to play the piano in a lesson, and I'm on the "But chiffonier is something situations. They are not necessarily the worst or most frequent house of ill repute; proper track. with drawers." violations of the unwritten honor code. My mother was a madame and I'm a self-appointed, and I'm "Guess her name must have a credit to her cult, going to get it back. been Kelly." Just because the "Honor System" is an academic system and refers principally to cheating in classes-and just because these other violations are rarely punished-there is still no excuse to continue such behavior. I We suggest as a New Year's Resolution for every Techman, tllat A frank message to he begin to police himself a little more carefully under the harder graduating eJectronic and mechanical rules of the unwritten honor system. Every step that is made in this direction is a step toward a finer college community. ENGINEERS Interview Schedule January phia, Pennsylvania. You know it ... we know it ••• so let's be frank Mon. 9-BSup/Ch, ChE, ME, Wed. ll-BS, MS/Ge, Geoph about it. ! EE The Chebstrand Corporation, Socony-Mobil, Exploration. Over­ The demand for engineerr-experienced or graduate Decatur, Alabama. seas positions. -far exceeds the supply.!And, from now on in, you Mon. 9-BS, MS, PhD/EE, ME, Wed. ll-BS/CE, EE U. S. are going to be sought after more than a triple threat Ph Raytheon Manufacturing Co. Coast & Geodetic Survey. halfba~k for next y~f' varsity. . Interviews for positions in re­ Wed. ll-Jet Propulsion Lab­ You Will be promised many things (including the search, development, and appli­ oratory, Group Meeting 4:15. 108 moon with a fenco/"?round it), and for a young man cation engineering. Dabney. just getting started these things are pretty hard Mon. 9-BS, MS, PhD/ME, Ae, Thurs. 12 - BSup/Ch, ChE to resist. I ChE Wright Aeronautical Divi· Monsanto Chemical Company, So, again, lers be frank. We at Farnsworth won't sion Curtis-Wright Corp. Santa Clara, California. promise you/the moon. (Although we are working Mon. 9, Tues. lO-BS/ME, ACh Thurs. 12-BS/ACh, CE, Ch, on some i~eas that may eventually get you there Food Machinery & Chemical Ge, ME California State Person· ?nd back) We are an old, young organization. Old, nel Board. Interviews for posi­ Corporation, San Jose, Calif. In the s~mse of being pioneers in the field of elec­ Tues. 10-BS, MS, PhD/Ph, tions in various offices through­ tronics-!(Our technical director, Dr. Philo Farnsworth EE; PhD/Ma National Cash Reg­ out California. inven1ed electronic television.) Young, by being the ister-Electronics Division, Haw'­ Thurs. 12-BS/EE, ME, Ph newest division of the world·wide International Tele­ thorne, Calif. Wright Engineering Company, phohe and Telegraph Corporation, devoting our ef­ Pasadena. Tues. 10-BS/CE; Jr.lCE for forts exclusively to research, development and pro- Summer Bureau of Public Roads. Fri. 13--BS, MS/ME, EE; MS/ duction of military and industrial electronics, and Tues. 10-BS, MS/EE, ME Ae, ChE .Joy Manufacturing Co. atomic energy. Western Union Telegraph Com­ Manufacturers of underground mining equipment, heavy duty All of which makes Farnsworth big enough for sta­ pany. Interviews for positions in bility and technical perspective, yet small enough development and research de­ construction equipment, air com­ pressors, oxygen generators, for mobility, flexibility and recognition of the in­ partments, plant and engineer­ dividual. Here you will be associated with and ing depts. drilling equipment, tools and pro­ duction equipment, electrical encouraged by a team of eminent scientists and Tues. lO-BS, MS, PhD/Ge, engineers with many "firsts" to their credit in the Geoph California Company, New connectors and switchgears. Fri. 13-BS, MS/ME, EE, Ph field of electronics. Here you will be heard ... not Orleans. just one of the herd. Wed. ll-BS/ME; BS, ME/Ch, Detroit Conrtols Corporation, ChE Colgate - Palmolive Com­ Redwood City, Calif. We earnestly invite you to hear the whole fascinating pany, Berkeley, California. Fri. 13-BS/Ch, ACh; MS/ChE Farnsworth story. We're pretty certain it will make Wed. ll-MS, PhD/Ch, ChE, General Chemical Division, Al­ the decision for your future easier. ME Rohm & Haas Company, Re· lied Chemical & Dye Corpora­ search Laboratories, Philadel- tion. ON CAMPUS INfERVIEWS: Your Nearest Laundry FEBRUARY 3 Caltech SUDS-KISSED Authorized Westinghouse Pharmacy Laundromat PRESCRI PTIONS Near corner of Lake and California Dependable Registered Pharmacists Dry Cleaning-Finished Laundry FOUNTAIN BREAKFAST, LUNCH, DINNER Free Parking-S&H Green Stamps 882 East California Street 24-Hour Laundry Drop SYcamore 2-2101 922 E. California St. SY. 2-2300 Pasadena 1, California FARNSWORTH "ELECTRONICS CO., FORT WAYNE, INDIANA Friday, January 6, 1956 CALIFORNIA TECH Page Three Cool Corner LITTLE MAN ON CAMPUS by Dick Bible, By Frank Kofsk.)- The Jack Montrose Sextet, a Pacific among the most aesthetically be applied to any existing style 12" high fidelity LP IPJ-12081, featurng: jack Montrose, tenor sax; , satisfying albums yet released. (or type) of music, or it can be baritone sax; , trumpet; Paul Moer, piano; Ralph Pena, bass; Shelly Conclusion: If you like Mozart, the basis for complete origin­ Manne, drums. you'll like Montrose. ality. It is merely a question of A solo in a jazz group, just musical architecture. For this 12-Tone Compositions and Arrangements as one in a symphonic ensemble, by Lyle Murphy, a Contemporary 12" high album, its structure consists of be understood, should be re­ fidelity LP IC-35061, featuring: Buddy Collette, flute, clarinet, tenor and alto horizontal patterns :written in la;ed to what has come before sax; Abe Most, flute, clarinet and alto sax; jack Dumont, clarinet and alto sax; Chuck equal intervals and using the anj \vhat will follow. This ef­ Gentry, bass clarinet, contrabass clarinet twelve different tones as a basis. and "baritone sax; Andre Previn, piano; fecl is achieved in classical mu­ Curtis Counce, bass; , drums. This changes the normal inter· sic by writing out the solo, but Directed by Lyle Murphy. val relation and can be readily in the main, may be achieved by By a strange coincidence, De­ detected if one is musically in­ other methods in jazz cember also saw the release of clined." .J ack :\'lontrose, a twenty-six­ the exciting works of another year-old compoer-arranger-tenor­ composer who too has his own In some of his compositions, ist, has devoted his written ef­ unique conception of jazz. The the piano, bass and drums, the forts to developing this princi­ composer in mind is Lyle Mur­ three of which usually comprise the rhythm section in jazz en­ ple to the greatest degree pos­ phy, a pioneer in developing an sembles, all play separate melo­ sible. Montrose typifies the per­ original twelve-tone system for dilines, while in others, the sona grata of jazz, 1956 - he jazz usage. plays like although three playas one voice. How­ his compositions s how the Murphy is one of the few men ever, during solos, which are marked influene of Mozart-and who has been able to meet the tonal in contrast to the atonal conceptions such as his may constantly changing demands of unison portions, piano, bass and form the foundation for all mod­ jazz in the twenty-one year per­ drums revert to their more fam­ ern music in future years, iod between 1935 and 1956. His iliar 'function of supplying the In his writing, Montrose uses arrangements started to receive beat. musical form as a framework widespread acclaim while he Because of the atonality, the "THIS IS APOOR CLASS TO TAKE FIRST PERIOD-SO NOISY YA CAN'T SlffP, II for improvisation, and he en­ was a member of the initial Ben­ instrumentation and the linear hances the effect of cohesion be­ ny Goodman group of 1935, al­ phrasing, much of Murphy's JUSTICE DOUGLAS DR. SILVERT tween the improvised and the though he soon graduated to the work has been the basic sound (Continued from page 1) (Coutiuued from l>age 1) more demanding job of arrang­ written by writing passages that of modern classical music, hut graphical sk.:tch, supplemented its purpose, the providing of ing for large dance bands when played, sound improvised. since Murphy is fundamentally with pictures and political car- further insight into life, customs Also, when composing, Mont­ In 1942, soon after Pearl Har­ a jazzman, all of his music, hap­ toons depicting Douglas' lengthy and economics and political con. rose takes into account the tal­ pily enough, swings. career in public affairs, ents and idiosyncracies of the bor, Murphy enlisted in the In the past six years, Justice ditions. To accomplish this, they Merchant Marines, With the end men who will play his composi­ 12-Tone Compositions and Ar· Douglas has written five books. send representatives to various tions. By the use of such de­ of the war, he came to Holly­ rangements by Lyle Murphy Men and Mouutains was his for e i g n countries, especially vices, he is able to present wood and began work as a film contains too many broad impli­ first, followed by three travel- those from which little informa­ studio arranger, at which he w 0 I' k s that have continuity cations to be completely di­ ogues and his Almanac of Lib- tion is obtainable. The repres­ throughout, was em i n e n t I y successful., gested after one, or even sev­ erty. These are available in entatives spend about eighteen Around 1948, qe went into semi­ Both Montrose and his late eral, "hearings. As in all good Dabney lihrary and in the YMCA months in their area, familiar­ retirement to devel 0 phis long-time associate, Bob Gordon, lounge. izing themselves with it, and Twelve-Tone harmony system, music, the more one hears the perform at their rhythmic, Although lecture topics have sending back periodic reports. more one discovers. Both Mr. swinging best on this record. a representation of the fruits of not been selected yet, they are All these reports are available Conte Candoli, who has his ups his labor being found in this al­ Murphy and Contemporary Rec­ expected to center around the at the Public Affairs Room. bum. and downs, is definitely up here, ords are to be congratulated on American legal tradition and the The representatives then return as are Paul MoeI' and Ralph Of his system, Murphy says: an excellent album, one which current status of civil liberties, to the United States, spending Pena, Shelly Manne, recently does much to erase the arbitrary and foreign problems, with Mr. about six months touring and chosen as Musician of the Year, "My Twelve-Tone system is Douglas' observations from re- and artificial schisms s 0 m e cent travels through Russia, the lecturing at the various univer- is in his usual fine form, de­ not a style, and is not related monstrating that a melody can to the Schoenberg system. It can would insert in modern music. Near East, and Southeast Asia. sities in the Field Staff. be played on four drums and three cymbals. It is worth while to elaborate On Bob Gordon's performance, since it was almost his last rec­ ord date before his untimely death during the summer of BS MS PhD 1955 . - After the recordin~w.as com· pleted, both Montros and Gor­ don expressed the op nion that ELECTRONIC ENGINEERS PHYSICISTS MECHANICAL ENGINEERS Bob's solos were his most mov­ ihg to date. I am inclined to agree; Gordon's individual work is remark

Totals 11 24 12 46 Redlands Player FG FT PF TP Endeman, F 6 1 2 13 WHAT'S Peterson, F 4 0 4 8 Stevenson, C 6 0 1 12 THIS? Cook, G 1 234 Holt, G 1 042 For solution, see Sampson, F 3 0 0 6 paragraph below. Perkins, F 1 446 Womack, G o 0 0 0 Edson, G 3 4 1 10 Fitz, G o 000

Totals 25 11 19 61 CAUTION-SLIPPERY DROODLE ABOVE. But if Workouts start you like your fun on the run, it should be easy. for thinclads The title: Bobsled team enjoying better-tasting Head track coach Bert La­ Luckies. Luckies taste petter, you know. because Brucherie's thinclads beg in workouts in earnest next week they're made of fine toHacco that's TOASTED to in preparation for the 1956 sea­ taste better. So light up a Lucky. You can bank son with high hopes of bettering their third place finish of last on this: You'll say Luckies are the best-tasting season. Headed by javelin ace Phil cigarette you ever smoked! Conley, the Beavers boast a nu­ DROODLES, Copyright 1953 by Roger Price cleus of eight returning letter­ men and are pointing toward their conference opener Febru­ ary 25 at Occidental. Other let­ termen are Roger Wileman, John Luke-sh, Don Lewis, Fred Witte­ born, Jim Lloyd, Marty Tangora, and Ted Lang. HOUSEBOAT WITH Sophomore prospects include SUNKEN LIVING ROOM Blue Beathard Forrest Cleveland and Chuck Sam Houston State Bonwell, both dash men; distance runners Tom Moore, Dan Wulff, and Reed Saunders; and hurd­ lers Jerry Lawrence and Dick ~ Van Kirk. COllEGE SMOKERS PREFER LUCKIES! We Highly Recommend • • Luckies lead all other brands, CARL'S regular or king size, among 36,075 college students tIues­ tioned coast to coast. The CALTECH number-one reason: Luckies taste better. BARBELL FOR KNOCK-KNEED FLY BARBERS CIGARETTES 97-LB. WEAKLING Sanford Zinn Nelson Barden Indiana U. ~~~s=~~~ _ Friendly Personalized U. of New Hampshire Service LUCKIIS TASTE BEITER .. Cleaner, Freshet; Smoothe,! Cctlifornia Near Lake OA.T.Co. PRODUCT OF ~~f~AMERICA'S LEADING MANUFACTURER OF CIGARETTII.