Notre Dame Scholastic, Vol. 99, No. 12

Notre Dame Scholastic, Vol. 99, No. 12

The Notre Dame Scholastic February 7,1958 A new idea in smoking! refreshes your taste 4lr menthol • rich tobacco fresh taste Salem brings a wholly new Smoking was never like this Through Salem's pure-white, quality to smoking. ..Spring­ before.' You taste that rich modern filter flows the fresh­ time-softness in every puff. tobacco...then, surprise!... est taste in cigarettes. You Salem refreshes your taste there's an unexpected soft­ smoke refreshed, pack after the way a Spring morning ness that gives smoking new pack, when you buy Salems refreshes you. comfort and ease. by the carton. Created by B. J. Reynolds Tobacco Company We want engineers who like to We have plenty of it to be done. We have problems to be licked, and questions to be answered. Want to roll up your sleeves and tackle the fascinating world of petrochemicals? Union Carbide makes almost 500 of them—it's a world leader. Want to grab the atom by the tail and put it to useful work? Union Carbide's been in nuclear energy since the earliest days of the Manhattan Project. It operates three AEC plants plus Oak Ridge National Laboratory, and is building a private nuclear research center near New York. Want to dig in and really get down to the basics? Union Carbide is as basic as an industry can get. It's been called "chemist to the chemicals industry and metallurgist to the metals industry." Representatives of Divisions of Union Carbide Corporation, listed below, will be interviewing on many campuses. Check your placement director, or write to the Division representative. For general information, wTite to V. 0. Davis, 30 East 42nd Street, New York 17, New York. BAKELITE COMPANY Plasties, including SILICONES DIVISION Silicones for elec­ GENERAL OFFICES —NEW YORK polyethylene, epoxy, fluorothene, vinyl, phenolic, trical insulation, release agents, v/ater repellents, Accounting, Electronic Data Processing, Operations and polystyrene. J. C. Older, River Road, Bound etc.; silicone rubber. P. I. Emch, 30 East 42nd Research, Industrial Engineering, Purchasing L R. Brook, N. J. Street, New York 17. N. Y. Brown, 30 East 42nd Street, New York 17, N. Y. ELECTRO METALLURGICAL COMPANY UNION CARBIDE CHEMICALS COMPANY Over 100 ferro-alloys and alloying metals; titanium, Synthetic organic chemicals, resins, and fibers calcium carbide, acetylene. C. R. Keeney, 137— from natural gas, petroleum, and coal. W. C. 47th St. Niagara Falls, N. Y. Heidenreich, 30 East 42nd St., New York 17, N. Y. Bl HAYNES STELLITE COMPANY Special UNION CARBIDE INTERNATIONAL COM­ alloys to resist heat, abrasion, and corrosion; cast PANY Markets UNION CARBIDE products and and wrought. L E. Denny, 725 South Lindsay Street, operates plants overseas. C. G. Scharf, 30 East 42nd Kokomo, Ind. Street, New York 17, N. Y. LINDE COMPANY Industrial gases, metal- UNION CARBIDE NUCLEAR COMPANY working and treating equipment, synthetic gems, Operates Atomic Energy Commission facilities at molecular sieve adsorbents. P. I. Emch, 30 East Oak Ridge, Tenn., and Paducah, Ky. W. V. Hamilton, 42nd Street, New York 17, N. Y. P. 0. Box "P", Oak Ridge, Tenn. NATIONAL CARBON COMPANY Indus­ VISKING COMPANY A pioneer in packaging trial carbon and graphite products. PRESTONE —producer of synthetic food casings and poly­ anti-freeze, EVEREADY flashlights and batteries. ethylene film. Dr. A. L Strand, 6733 West 65th S. W. Orne, P. 0. Box 6087, Cleveland, Ohio. Street, Chicago, III. February 7, 1958 WHERE YOU BUY IS SOMETIMES AS IMPORTANT AS WHAT YOU BUY.. and we like to feel that the Campus Shop is such a store. Our aim is to have the Campus Shop one of the best uni­ versity stores in the country. We are go­ ing toward that goal with the finest selec­ tion of nationally famous suits, coats and furnishings obtainable in today's world markets. We want you to feel that if it comes from the Campus Shop it is right ... in style, in price and in complete sat­ isfaction to YOU. ^ILBERrS On the Campus—Notre Dame The Scholastic CHARGE rr THE CAMPUS SHOP WAY. PAY PAY FEB MAR Get whatever you need in the way of clothing and furnishings—and pay for them the Campus Shop way. Pay one-third in February, one-third in March and the balance in April. Buy whatever you need now and use this convenient charge account, designed for the man who lives on a budget. Naturally, there is no carrying charge at the Campus Shop. Use your charge account tomorrow! DRESS RIGHT — Vou can't afford not to! On the campus — Notre Dame February 7, 1958 m The Notre Dame with QaCan^Qs AfoMnan Scholastic (JBT/ the Author of "Rally Round the Flag, Boys!" and "Barefoot Boy with Cheek") Vol. 99 February 7, 1958 No. 12 Disce Quasi Semper Victuius A SCHOOL AWAY FROM SCHOOL Vive Quasi Cras Moritunis Students majoring in science, like all "This is an enlightened corpora­ Founded 1867 other Ameiican students, have a %\ild tion," said Mr. Femur, yodelling •^aciousty. "First j^ou must get 3'^our Entered as second class matter at Notre Dame, yearning for culture, but, alas, when Indiana. Accepted for mailing at special late of a student is after a degree in engi­ cultural base broadened." postage. Section 1101, October 3, 1917. Authorized neering or math or hke that, he simply Mr. Femur took Lambswool to the June 23, 1918. does not have time to take all the training campus, which looked Uke liberal arts courses his heart pines for. anj'^ other campus. It had i\^^-co vered JIM STEINTRAGER And Avhat is being done about this buildings, dormitories, fraternity and Editor unhappy situation? I'll tell you what: sororitj'^ houses, a stadium, a deer Enlightened corporations everj^vhere park, and a moat. Lambswool was DAVID L. KUBAL ' ai-e setting up on-the-job liberal arts given a roommate, a beanie, and Associate Editor programs for the newly emploj'^ed copies of the company hjonn and science graduate—courses designed to rouser, and the enlightened corpora­ JOHN GLAVIN broaden his cultural base—for the en­ tion proceeded to fill the gap in his Associate Editor lightened corporation realizes that the culture. trulj"^ cultured emploj'^ee is the truly First he was taught to read, then GEORGE CLEMENTS News Editor valuable emploj^ee. to print capital letters, then capital HARRY McKEE ... Copy Editor ' Take, for example, LambsAvool and small letters. Then there Avas an BOB EARLY ;. Features Editor Sigafoos. attempt to teach him script, but it MIKE FITZPATRICK Sports Editor was ultimately abandoned. BOB WILLIAMS Photography A week after his graduation, Lambs- LORAN SHEFFER Business Manager wool reported to Mr. Femur, the per­ From these fundamentals, Lambs­ MIKE KURAS Assistant Business sonnel director of an enlightened wool progressed slowly but steadily JOE DEZELAN Circulation Manager corporation engaged in the manufac- through the more complex disciplines. WALT RUDGE Assistant News facture of cotter pins and wang nuts. He was diligent, and the corporation RON BLUBAUGH Assistant Copy ' "How do you do?" said Lambswobl. was patient, and in the end they were BILL CONWAY Assistant Copy "I'm Lambswool Sigafoos and I've rewarded, for when Lambswool fin- TOM EDWARDS Assistant Features come to work." TOM LAMONT Assistant Features "Sit do%ra," said Mr. —'—'— BOB SEDLACK Assistant Features ED ROHRBACH Assistant Sports Femur, chuckling kindly. TED THOMPSON ... Assistant Sports "Have a Marlboro." "Thank you," said News Staff: Ken Baumgartner, Alan Bosch, Art Dechene, Luino Dellosso, Bob Maniyama, Gil Pap- LambsAvool. "I like rocki, Lyn Relnh, Charles Rieck, Roy Rubeli, Tom , IMarlboros. I like their Romans, Milt Streifel, Tom Swanstrom, Dick Zang. filter and their flavor." "Me too," said Mr. Sports Staff: Bob Briggs. Jim Brogan. Dave Cole, Jack Dolan, John Koch, Bob Miller. Mike Murphy, Femur, blinking humane­ Tim O'Reilly, Bob Schacfer. ly. "And I like their flip- top box. When my flip-top & fi^M{i^(iitt/^/^^B0ar^ Sports Features: Joe Bride, John McMahon, Greg box of Marlboros is emptj^, Rogers. I use it to keep fish hooks Business Staff: Bernie Dobranski, Pete Hasbrook, in." Bob Horn, Conrad Suski. "Know what I do when my flip-top ished, he could play a clavier, compose box of Marlboros is emptj'^?" asked a triolet, parse a sentence, and identify Member of Catholic School Press Association uul Lambswool. the birthstone for every month of the Associated Collegiate Press.. Represented for iw tional advertising by National Advertising Service, "What?" said Mr. Femur, snigger­ year. Inc., 420 Madison Avenue, New York City. ing graciously. His lengthy schooling finally over, Lambswool was assigned to an impor­ THE SCHOLASTIC is published weekly during the "I buy some more Marlboros," said tant executive position where he school year, except during vacation and examina­ Lambswool. served A\dth immense distinction ... tion periods, at the University of Notre Dame. Subscription rate, $4.00 a year. Address all manu­ "A sound idea," said Mr. Femur, Not, however, for long, because one scripts to the Editor, Box 185, Notre Dame, Indiana. %dbrating fetchinglJ^ "But enough week later he reached retirement age. chit-chat. Come along to the campus." Today, still spiy, he lives in St. Publication Schedule for the 1957-38 school year. "Campus?" said Lambswool, puz­ Petei'sburg, Florida, where he sup­ Volume 99: No. 1, Sept. 27; No. 2, Oct. 4; No. S. Oct. 11; No. 4, Oct. 18; No. 5, Oct. 25; No. 6, zled. "But I've come to work. Take plements his pension by parsing sen­ Nov. 8; No. 7, Nov. 15; No. 8, Nov. 22; No. 9, me to my drawing board." tences for tourists. Dec. 6; No. 10, Dec. 13 (Football Review); No. 11, © 1958, Max Shulnutn Jan.

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