THE ACRO·POLIT~N .
.
A SEMI-MONTHLY
PUBLICATION
BY THE MO-NTANA
STATE
SCHOOL OF,MINES
Yo-IVII.
How much is meant by that muchabused. tellm, school spirit? Perhaps once upon ate, in the distant past, it had a real fine ignif1cance. I Wonder. It has fallen now into such dispute as to cause ~ny to scoff in derision at the mere mention of it. School spiritsynonymous of roaring bleachers, huge bonf~es, winning footba.ll teams, snake dances, school letters, a lot of noise and blare and &0 forth--and what else? 'Under the present day connotation of th~ term, Is there anything else? Many have serious doubts. Of course, we are told in high lIChool that to possess real school lIpirit Is the most worth while aim that aUyone could hope to have; that school Ipirit ta love for school above self, that U 1& the only thing that makes any school W'OI'th atten~, and more words-many more--to the same general effect. But anyone knows, if he has thought upon the matter at all, what It all really boils down to: "Up-patriotism," the shouting IUld the tumult. The modern may be frank, bunk-less, and independent of old tradl.t!oo. but in th.la instance they don't abow it. The illUSion of school spirit hangs on- thru the ages, a veritable bogey, to scan us Into doing and saying many thinp we don't, want to say and do, and WOUldn't if we weren't subservient to pUblic opinion. 81r W1lliam OIlier, the ereat physician, ill bis _y, "The. Student Life," has this to say upon the matter (that is, it may be llUerJ)ret«l to bear very dJrectly upon &,be matter): "When a simple, earnest, spirU animates a collece, there Is no appreciable Interval between the teacher and the taua-bt-both a.re in the same claa, the one a little more advanced than the other. 80 animated, the student feelt th&t he has Joined a tamlly whose honor Is his honor, whose welfare is his GWD, an4 wbose lDerests should be his ftnt CODI1deration." That tI, as we say, an angle, isnt it? THE
MINING
ENGINEER
'!be Bociety for the Promotion of Enrtneertng Education claims that there are ',GOO sen10r students in ltne for enineerIng degrees in the 'Various schools in \lle United states. Of these, 7,900 ha-ve bIeoe!Il cLusW.ed as follows: semo~ In electrical engineering, 2,483; !IJmion 1n mechanical engineering, 2,148; Seniors In civil engineering, 2,044; SenIors tn chemlcal ~eering, 801; Sentors in mining and metall~ eni1n..0•• ~.
A few years baclt, a.nd at present, too, for that ma.tter, the fielc! for mining enrmeers was rather crowded compared to that of &ome of the other engineering professions. Most students enrolled for courses other than M. E. We look at the above fl.gures and wont'ler what the result would be on the average mining engineer's pay with a boom In the rninlng'industry on top of the regular expansion. Perhaps then the M. E. will come into his own (only to start the pendulum Swinging the other way again.)
Excerpts-a foretaste of the February Issue of Professional Engineer
These rather serious faults Which engtneersun knowingly possess, these deficiencies in training, kinks of temperament, and errors in attitude are to the profession what halitosis is to society. They are impediments in the way of the engineer's progress toward adequate compensation and official recognition and status, One man summed up, such defects of engineering temperament dispassionately but conclusively by saying "The worfd is his oyster and there is nothing to prevent his opening It, but that he cannot hope to do with a slide rule alone." • • "The engineer should do his" work in the way that makes it of . the greatest value, never forgetting that practicab11!ty and financial results in earning power are of more value than technique; do not forget that some operations were a great success but the patient died."
• • • • Engineering schools may find in the selected statements pertaining to engineering education the same invigorating cold shower of criticfsm that has already been admlnlstered to their product, the graduate engineer. Cover~ the whole field of training without partlcuJa.rization the following statements are tYll1cal: "In lnY o'oaenal:.ton and tSperlence a young engineer is not as well educ.ated as a doctor and lawyer; his education has been along very narrow lines and he has been fitted at college to occupy a rut in life."
• • • •
IIghtful informal luncheon yesterday which he receives in college is in the With the Co-ed club as hostess. right direction, but it should not be too The co-ed room wore an air of ex- specialized. "What Is needed is training pectant -awe, with every book, chair and 0f........ eUf>u.eers a Iong econo mi c Iines an d curtain in place. ThIs situation Is not in salesmanship in order that they may unusual, but every article of furniture properly sell their services." yesterday was placed just so, and the • • • • effect was very pieasinl. "1 do not think the colleges have The luncheon is a weekly affair and properly tratned their engineers to be. decidedly informal The girls believed come executives. Many of them are well that the ladles would enjoy meeting them trained techni.cally but have almost no in such a friendly manner and from knowledge of finances, salesmanship, -pubthe pleased comment of the guests the lic policy, accounting or business in gen,. girls guessed rightly. eral. Many of these lacks can be, and are overcome by the engm'eel'S after they get out of college, but better training THE_ CO-EDS SLEIGHING .PARTY alorig these lines won'''' cerlainly be .,.._ As definite proof of the pep and get-to helpful."
MINES!! .BEAT B. Y. U.
_...l_
Returning the Mines seemed to have the - cockiness taken out of them and started, to get ready for the two games wi~ the University of Missoula on January 7 and 8. The team expected to win, but could not seem to get along against Bobby Morris. Bobby, an expert football referee, is not so hot in a basketball game. 'Ilhe Mines were forced to change their entire system of play in this game in order that the game coulq be played. otherwise the Mines would have had ail . ten men thrown out of the game for personal fouls. ,We are not attempting to say that Morris was favoring the University but it seemed that in a mix-up such as was _taking place, there must have been·at least one foul on the University. Bufin 'the fouls in question every one was call'ed on the Mines. The Mines teain, I the visiting team by the way, did not have a thing to say about tQ_epicking of the referee as Missoula has Morris under contract for the entire season. The final score in the first game was 33-22 and in the second was 30-22.
Speaking from the eminence of the highest executive post in a corporation manufacturing a popular but costly automobile, a man who began as an engineer said, "The engineer figuratively acquires a pair of eye-glasses from which he can see broad propositions only from the engineers point of view and not from the angle of the financial man, the buyer, and the manufacturer." The severest stricture ot this kind is the comment of the chief engineer of a great central railway: "They do not seem to grasp always the fundamental principle tha_t a railroad is constructed, maintained and operated for the purpo-se of economically and expediously handling passengers and. freight and is not a field for application of abstract engineering principles or a place for exploitation of knowledge of the science of engineering or for the construction of monUInimtal englneering works."
THE FACULTY'LUNCH
================='
1
• • • •
"The excess1ve emphssis which has been put upon technical education in the scientific schools and the neglect of, if not actual contempt for, training along more liberal lines has left the .engineer without the capacity to express, advocate and defend impressively the results of his technical work." • • • • "The engineer needs to be broadened The wives of the members of the school in order to attain the more important c1f Mines faculty were guests at a de- positions. The fundamental training
getherness of the fair co-eds of the Mines, a sleighi.ng patty was held during the OOlidays which was the last word in good times! It was held Saturday, December 29th, at the Columbia Gardens, with Mrs. Roach, the physical director proving to be... very able chaperone. ~ afternoon -of .twt was enjoyed by the hilarious co-edS, with sleighing the main attraction. However, an -added surprise -was the Treasure Hunt, planned and executed by :Mrs. Roach. It led the girls into many humorous situations" but the prizeS -at -the end of the hunt 'W8I '-Well worth all the effort extracted. A del!c1ous 'lunhceon was partaken of about 6:30 P. M. and after devouring it the girls left for home, declaring the party was keen.
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• • • •
In childhood we used to jnsist that a bitter but wholesome dose be :followed by something to "take the taste out." We did not seek to neutralize the specific but we did want a little relief from the immediate dis~omfort. We have saved for the last group of statements culled from these letters indicating that many employers believe engineering training to be the greatest sort of individual asset. "I can easily forsee the time tn the not distant future when the old fashioned executive trained exclusively along commercial lines will find it impossible to hold his own against the oncoming generation of capably trained engineering executives:~ This litqe
paper, the Acropolitan, ,has
probably a more wiaespread circulation than any other similar school paper in the United States. It has been the policy since it's founding to send a- copy of each issue to every alumnus,. South America: China, Australia" Africa, Poland, etc., these copies find their way carrying to M. S. S. M. engineers in responsible posltions all over the globe a contact with the old school. ·And with you, Mr. 'Advertiser, may be a feeling that you -are advertising only .to a group of students, but .-your advertisement 'is carried out all over the world to those who ha.ve -memories of Mix?es II-nd who'holda.good feeling for those who 'help -make our little publication possible.
When the Montana Mines defeated the fast moving Montana Hardware basketball team by the score of thirty to seventeen supporters of the Mines figured that the Ore-diggers were -going to make things interesting for the .Bobcats when they tangled with the Mines in Bozeman on December 27. But this win proved to a misleading one. With better looking material than last year, more accurate shots and mote experience on the team t~an we have had in the past three or four years the team went down to a defeat greater than .icany that has ever been administered to the Mi~es in recent years. The final score was fiftyeight to twelve. The Ward brothers of Bozeman seemed to have more than, an eye for the basket that evening and the Mines suffered by it.
EXCHANGE
HOW TO BUM A'SMOKE BIG PRIZES FOR COLLEGE ORATIONS By A FROSH
"The Top 0' The World," published weekly by the associated studentS of
The idea of hiring an_ official for the 'entire season seems to Missoula to be a good ·one. For them it appears that it is. Our only hope is that we can encourage the University team to come to Butte and that we get a referee that is ,not hired for the season. We know that .we have the best team this year as we did ,last year.
The next game of the season was Knowing how to bum a smoke is one against Intermountain Union in Butte on Western State College, at Gunnison ColWashington, January W, 1-92.9;;.vThething that every college man learns. He January 12. The Mines gang going agorado, \II .. mOIl\:. \n\:.Qrea~ t>ll.oeI. It ~atlonal !ntercolleg!nte O~tO!1~ l1).!ty flunk l' Tril/:. a.nd All/:eb.... , or ao -a -oeen "rnaeaway" In English, but he always of a great team started in to play bfloSIs very like the Acropolitan in make-up, test on the Constitution, Whlc1l als of that very ketbaU in a manner in which they are being a four page, seven column, regu- conducted for the past four years by the learns at leas UID-O. necessary art, bumming a smoKe. ,._.", capable of playing. Intermountain Union larnewspaper size sheet. Its staff, how- Better America Federation of CaJlfornia, volves, of course, many delicate and in- haa-.....~gh School aU-state men and -... ever, has a gOQd many more members will be continued this year, according to tricate processes. A person who wants two men wh 0 u'"-r.ced the benching of -_ . than ours. We gather from perusing it an announcement today at contest head- to bum a smoke has to be familiar with Intermountain's star's fro~~r. But · toO--_· his intended victim's present status: in the work 0 f th e Mines f Ive was '6"'-"_ earefully that Western state Is a nor- quarters, 1217 National Press BuIlding, regard to supply. He .must also know for the boys from Helena. The final mal college, but we get no idea how Washington. score was 50-27. lartle a re.glstratlon it has. From the his character. This involves three classes The prizes will be the same as In pre- of persons: easy ones, those not so easy, Jack Matlock was. the high scorer f~r title one would infer that the school Is vious years, namely $5,000 in cash, divid- and tight ones. If the victim falls in the the Mines with twenty-four points. Kiely rather high, and immediately, in viewed among the seven National finalists first category the process is quite simple. was so closely guarded that .he was only of our own position in the world, we in the following amounts: First place, Walk over near him and begin to feel able to get eight points. Sigler showedl wonder, "how high?" As for the paper in your pocketsi for an imaginary pack- that the old eye is coming ~ack by col$1500; second, $1,000; third, $750;hurth, age of cigarettes. He will immediately lecting thirteen, besides playmg the best. itself, it contains "a whole 'Page of ath- $550; fifth, $450; sixth, $400 and seventh, offer you one, if your guess as to his sup- floor game of any of the Miners. Matletics-not only those ot its own school $350. The National finals will be held ply was correct and he has plenty. The lock, tlile old reliable Fat, along with his. but of neighboring colleges also. The in Los Angeles on June 20. next class is more difficult to appr.oach. new mate, Viv Quinn, showed that the last page Is devoted a1most entirely to Any bona fide under _graduate student You should get very friendly with them, Mines when they desire to hold the . ··t listen to all thel'r troubles ask them what score down, have a capable combination. society as the college boasts several fra- many unlversl y or co IIege in tile U· Dl-'
I
ternities
and
sororities.
Its
editorial
ted States is eligible. The orations which must not require more than ten minutes for del!very, must be on one of the following subjects: The Constitution, Washington and the Constitution, Hamilton and the Constitution, Jefferson and the Constiutlon, Marshall and ,the Constitution, Franklin and the Constitution, Madison and the Constitution, Webster_and the Constitution, and Lincoln and the Constitution.
,'w'
nne to .scholal\tic difficilltl~, ~th~ staff has lost its' business ft!.ana,ger, }4r. L. C. Torrey. Mr. John Blixt has been appointed in his place, and the work Is now progressing rapi41y. Mr. Blixt reports t~at ~an.em!)nw have been made with the Middleton S~\J---. dios to take the pictures .of· the ~entors: juniors and all the -rest, that YIlll_bQJ),eC,r essary for the 'annual after school and on' Saturdays. All pictures are to be taken before Jal}uarY~25, }i!2.,9.;; _ , Further II-nnounc~ll!~ntswill appear on the bulletin boards. . Plelse watch for these announcements and save the business manager the inconveniences which ,arise from late .pictur(!s. _ Wllile the orga.nization ~ Vl~ll,alPll'~ there is plenty of space left ~~ ... mbI~ tious contrtbutors: so if you have -any talent, the staff will be pleased,to_reeelt_e your contrlbutlons on apy lI\lb-ject r4'~ lating to the school, ~y ~a:y" eve_DI. consent to print them. 'AIty 'such article must be in by the first of -Match;' as we intend then to go to press. - !; The Junior flfoss say.,tpa~ th,y ,w.uprint a bigger and better 311n1).al~ heretofore been attempted: 'The .'clrcu-: lation manager states that year''; annual -will have at least tWice the, etr.i culation th.at any annu!l-l,S9 far hM;haci: Already, the whole student bOdy 'if ,.e~ listed and signed up to take a copy, for value received. The staff wi~l appreciate. 'j1py_sllii~i tions or contributions made in 10Qd fatth. (others may be printed In the 'hWnor section). Up to date, the .foI-lowine iJ' the -~. ual Staff lineup:, . -. Humor, J. P. Ost; Art, N. GerSheVl!Sk7; Circulation, M.• Foster; Bus. Mar.,~ ~ Blixt; AdvertiSing, ;r. H-intalla; ~unlor class forensics, ;1. Newrot); F!l~~!U'es.t.;. Nuckols; Athletics, J. Jones; Snapshots, H. Hall; Co-eds, Bess Wallace; !.Sophs; A. Englehart; ,Seniors, J. Brurmer; Fr~ C. Stevens; Features, E. P. T!t~; P~tr"j Naomi Sternheim; Editor, H. W. H~d.
na.
thiS
A. M. Gaudin ~ Lectures stMiuN, Professor A.
M.
-Gaudin, dJrector of -the
of Mines and many interested ;eD8lneers . from the various 1l¥ning p~n1i!l ~n and ~roUDdButte. Mr. Gaudin mentioned ,the difftcultie$ ~ncoUDteredin prying into YMother His ~lkw8.$ really .on pf the laws ot ~b.eo.reto" (!al or p~YSiCalc~.try to the aohitlo(1 ')f flotatIOn problems. b .! eIt on the-flotability of various .ore&- _an~ ~ ence pf variol,l,s or~nic __ r~ellt:s. talk was of very vital interes.t to ,many of the stude~ts who are taking physic,.l chemis.try. He -shed a -great deal of l1,M on the pOSSipleapplications pf· Ul, laws of physics and chemistry ..to t,he re~~ .of ore dressing.' . All in all, We are :well,pleased 'to h~ve made the acqualn'-~ce of the scie' 10... _•.
N.a.•
_n
grades they received and then tell them The feeling .in the school now: is that engineer,.a man of rare q~1Je!t. yours. And then feel for the imag'l.nary the Miners have hit their stride and page. Is most interesting, however, tor it package of cigarettes.' If he doesn't of- that the teams tbat the Mi,nes pla.y in contains two columns, one, u!'ve Been fer you one say, "By golly, I must have the 'future will have to keep moving to Reading," and the other, "No Point whatlost mine. Got a smoke?" If a smoke get over Mac's 1929 team. ever," both well-written and well worth is not then forthcoming, different tactics The' Mines have a bunch of ·tough reading, more especially the former. must be tried. In th~ case of tight ones games ahead of them and the ~inersupyou should'select your victim well .ahead porters will see ~ome of the fastest ,teams The return of Sigle~ ~tter ,..t' year~ If the Top staff happens to see this: f t·lIJle. So me d ay wh en you have a in -this . par t a f th e COUD t ry in th e Mirt· es 0 a,b/ience from the paske~ball tee.n1 baa we should appreciate an answer to -our surplus II\ake it a point to get him off in gym in the nea-r future. helped tbe te;\m a gl;'eat deal. sij: ,....may , :.~ questions about Western State, also a a corner on some pretense or other and 'Cook Painters vs. B9bca~ not get 'the holes -bUt he frets ·it :there' 'so criticism of the. Acropolitan. give him a cigarette. When the time Butte sports w~e tltea.ted p> what some tbe other ,guy ,gets _~~et_ lUP sl(ot. '~. The nation is divided ip-to seven ,re- for the slaughter arrives, -walk over to gions for the purposgs of the ntest. call a r.are exhib~t~on of baske_thall 41 the him and insinuate ge.ntIy, '~Say, -partnllr, .Mine.s gym on January _twelfth. I~, was . I - -,..! The colleges in each regipn compete am.. "THE ANDERSON CARLISLE ong themselves, generally by states, to got a cig? I gave all of mine away. Oh, .rare. 'The best team dJd not come out Matlock is still',as depimdable as ;"v~i. by the way, I_ think you got on~, didn't the winner. There is not a ,doubt but H~' see~ to 'be in~the 'JN~y ,o;'ev;r-;- ~ne determine the finalists _for each region. the 'last edition of the Acropolltan The regional finalists compete ate- in you?" This trick with a few variations that the boys frQm Kansas City _ar_!l,·the who tries ·to get ID' and get:a :close flhoot someone seemed to be worrying abOut the May to determine the one speaker from may be worked on the f!ame person three greatest team ,tha,t the- peoille ,of Butte a..t tbe b~sket.. ' existence of the' Anderson Carlisle 80- each region who is to have _a phce in or four times. In case you wish to 'bum' have ever had t_he privil~ge of seeing in . to' . t y. A pparen tJy th""" Cle ey ..ave no_t tak en the 'National finals. A place in ~e Na- the first fellow mentioned more than Butte. But thoe team was train tired and_ Kiely is as gOOd,a; <shot »ze :ha.lUI very much interest in it heretofore or they once or twice try the second method, then could not seem to get going in the high tiona! finals automatically c!trri~ with the thl·rd. Thl's .makes the "easy" fiil'~e is ,0;0C,l uld nave 'known that It is still one of altitude. The team .fairly sparkles with ever ,seen on ·a Mines fl~. wo . it an ~ward ran,ging ~roIl! ~350 to $1500, low good fur about six -01' seven cigarfrom all angles ,and ~ll di&tIloIlP.e5; th~ most active organization son the cam- according to the ratmgs given the dif" " . stars. And they are good. This team. pus. When -other things seemed to crowd ... arettes. Th.e not so easy one IS only p~y~g af,ter ,a few we"E\ksr£st In at) al-r ferent natIOnal fmalists., -" d f " b t f hil th "ti ht • J ont the former usefulness of the SOCiety, I • goo or a au our, wee g titude that was suit.ed to them would Ja.ck Matlock seems to cbe as',??<,: ~ those who were still i~terested revived and Oolleges may be enrolled m the con.. one" is only "good for" about two. double any score that the Bobcats could center as Fat is a gUard.. :Jack :Is 11~'.. reorganized it to serve another useful pur- test by action of either a college Official In case you become too per.sistent you make. ing them. pretty regular.~. ' c; pose, that of promoting interest in the or a student. Entries close Matth 15. 'will proba.!>lybe notifie by the victim. !EIarrig-aq, Holt and DeBernardi, seven engineerin garts.The officers of the 01'- The spokesman for .each college IllUStbe He will probably tear the !l'ont off of his times all-,Americans, ~ere stars of :tl}e :Mrs. Roach ·is - trying, to '~la~e-~e~p:!. ganization are Monroe Foster, President; deeignated by April 15. Regional semi- package and give it to you with these first order. For the Bobcats, the .Ward. out of the girls at the school. ~y win Harold Johns, Vice PreSident; Earl Lind- finals will be held .April 27. words, "If you go down to tp,e store on brothers and Breeden were the main- never equ~l the eo-eds~of la~t 'yeai lief, Secretary. ..Meetings are _held reguThe national finalists of 1928 were: the corner and ,give them thjs a~d ten, stay~. Butte ,fans who have watche(l. the 1 beat every tee:m ·that theY \plil.31ed, : - f:: larly 'and those -who aTe interested ma,y Carl Albert, Univ.ersity of oklahonl, win- fifteen or twenty cents, ;which ever the doings .of "Cat Thospson" ';we~e bitterly , . ;:~ get in communication with the officers. ner of first place; Herbert Wenig, Stan- case may be, they will ,_give-you a whole disappointed. ':Cat," the peer of all men The poor sho_wtng-of p!lot Tl?-0PlP5.?D 1ll ford -University, winner of second place; package free!'~ in' the 'west for the past two years has the game satur~ay .wasa,~is~?poin~~~ Allan -Frew, Da.vidson ColI-ege,North CarFour years in_ college will make you a tinally started down the hill. T,he.old eye to all of his adn'!1rers in Butte. • ." . £O~EDS USHER AT THE BIG GAME olina, 'winner of third place; Lee F. Ly- master of this art; so I -will dedicate this seems to 'have gone-and tliere is accrude-: ~ --barger, .Jr., ,Bucknell Univ.ersity, Winner article to the Seniors of the .8<;hool of ness about 'handling Ithe ,bgll that does Breeden js ttle,greaj;est_;&__w.p.fUPI{ lUJ..rS For the first time since the Christmas of fow:th place; William H. Conle1,Loy- Mines. not seem to ,.go,natural with the Plllt. It in tne w~st tQd~Yif ,not J~ the .c,ounWy_. holidays the Co-eds have blossomed into ala >UniversiW, ChicagO', winner d fifth may be that he h~s 'yet not hit his ,stride, . - ---. ., . prominence. . For the first time in the place; Philip H. JJ-Iatfelter, P.rinceton bl! there 'is surely something wrong That Frank -Ward makes a n,ice leader tor ~story 'of the institution of learning and University, winner of sixth plaCI' and the 'form,er -king ·has lost his eye is also the Bobcats. sundry other thiIlgli, the fair co-eds ush- paul V. Keyser, Jr., Massachuser Inf_J.Uttherproven b_yIthe fact tnat after', I _ ered at a Big Game. They performed th~ stitute,of Technology,,:winner of venth WITH THIS ISSUE THE ACROPOLIT-AN abOu.tiourteen games .he ha,s not s,tarted The loss of '!Greenie" Wor!ien ha,s.hurt duty at the Cook-Painters-Bobcats game Place. ~ sink them again as yet. the Bobc.ats. more than ·al_1:yope·,thi~. _ ':. STAFF PRESENTS FOUR itBSOLU- . as well.as the :Mines-Intermountain. The - "Hartigan, former Michigan captain and I girls 'made a .fine __ showing -in their (?) The championship of 1927 :as 'on by Our season ~w!ll be -tL ,gOQ!i<one --with team mate of 'Bennie Oosterbatn -gave the "M" sweaters and -owhiteskirts, 'and so .we -H. _J.. OberboIzer, North ,Carolina, State Bobcats a lesson -in dribblirig. _He is the ,gam~ "Vlith~B.Y.,U.:a.ll.dtl'l~,Utall~~ Jlear they were quite the knockout! Agricultural College; that of 19: was WONDER, .sPORT~O-GRAPHS AND fastest, clev,-erest.dribbler· -that has ever on the sqhedule. The co-eds ushered at the State Bas- won by G.harles T. Murphy of Fe dham METERS, WHICH WILL BE -RUN ,IN hi~ these .parts. Hol~ with his .six toot ketball ',tournament last year, -but their University, and that Cif 1925 by E.JWight The schedule _is so arranied ,that tile seven put the ball ,l.n the basltet ,when B_akke, Northwestern Yniversity. . students catn see games wit-hout 'ml8Sinr EVERY NUMlJER HEREAFXER. appearance on the 'floor -in '1929,far _sur,,..--,0,..,..' l\ shift, ISO show your _:apprec;l ..t1Q~~ passed an~h!ng of -this type ever wit-. For further Information, address ntest Ahow·up at the "iBmQIJ. headqua.rters as indicated above.. ,(Contl~u~ on ~ ~.) .nessed. -'
-T_ .LU
as
I
who