TUESDAY AFHItr 17"I95!T Z
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Far, Near East
To Be Object
Of Research
Gordon Gray, chairman of
the Ford foundation board on
overseas training and research
overseas training and re
search, yesterday announced
the establishment of a new
foreign fellowship program
designed to stimulate increas
ed knowledge about Asia and the
Near and Middle East.
; The funds appropriated for this
program are adequate to provide
100 fellowships of from one to
three years. The fellowship pro
gram will be administered by the
board.
The text of Gray's statement
follows:
, 'The Ford foundation is offer
ing at this , time fellowships to
American men and women who
wish to initiate or continue train
ing or research pertaining to Asia,
. Council
(Continued From Page 1)
the governed, our self govern
ment gains authority from a
source other than that granted
by the governed ..."
"The Student -council as the
gole interpreter of the student
constitution should take notice of
state and federal constitutional
provisions only when the action
of the Student Legislature vio
lates a right granted all citizens
under the provisions of the state
and federal constitution,
"The Honor and Campus codes
as we know and live under them
have no counterpart in civil gov
ernment ...
contrast to the state and federal
constitutions contains no provi
sions defining eligibility for vot
ing in student elections or defin
ing general qualifications for
holding office in the student
government . . The power to
define must therefore be vested
in the. Student Legislature ...
The University does not have
a commonly-accepted definition
of a student in good standing . , .
In defining a 'student in good
Standing in the University', the
1 Student Legislature must keep in
mind the academic standards re
quired by the University for res
idence in . . . and graduation
from this University ... ,
"The Student council finds that
the requirement that candidates
for office prove an ability to
maintain a C average ... is a
reasonable definition of a stu
dent in good standing in the Uni
versity', as expressed in the stu
dent constitution ..."
Chicago College of
OPTOMETRY
(Nationally Accredited)
An outstanding college serv
. .ing a splendid profession.
'Doctor of Optometry degree
in three years for students
I i entering, with sixty, or, nipre
semester credits in specified
Liberal Arts courses.
' FALU REGISTRATION '
I v i-MOWOPEN- Mi.i..!jv;
Students are granted profes
sional recognition by -the tJ.
;S.,, Department of , Defence
and Selective Service.
Excellent clinical facilities.
Athletic and recreational ac
tivities. Dormitories on the
campus.
CHICAGO COLLEGE OF'
OPTOMETRY 1 i t i
the Near and Middle East. The
funds appropriated for this pro
gram are adequate to provide sub
stantial assistance to as many as
100 qualified applicants.
"This program . is intended to
stimulate increased knowledge of
these critical areas and to help
meet the urgent need for large
numbers of men and women well
qualified in business, education,
government, agriculture, labor re
lations arid the professions
throughout Asia and the Near and
Middle East.
"The program has a threefold
purpose. It is intended to aid
young college graduates to deep
en their general understanding of
Asia; and the Near and Middle
East, to afford advanced training
for specialists, and to enable
men and women of promise, al
ready launched upon their car
eers, to study, live and work in
these areas.
'The foundation has establish
ed these fellowships in keeping
with its concern for reducing
present international tension and
furthering world peace. The pro
gram is based upon a conviction
that the development of mutual
understanding and respect among
the peoples of the world is essen- i
tial to these ends. "A necessary
step toward such understanding
and respect is to increase the
number of competent Americans
who have achieved sympathetic
insight into the cultures, histories,
institutions, aspirations, and ..cur
rent problems of peoples and gov
ernments of vital regions of the
world."
The conditions of the fellow
ships are:
1) Candidates must be United
States citizens who will not have
reached their 35th birthday. Sub
ject to this general age limitation,
fellowships are available to:
Students completing their un
dergraduate studio this year;
Men and wno have done
graduate work - relating to - the
specified areas; Persons who have
had experience or are now en
gaged in business, government,
agriculture or labor relations, or
training in economics, education,
engineering, journalism, law, and
other fields, regardless of whe
ther they have lived and worked
in the areas.
2) Awards will be- made for
periods of from one to three
years, and in amounts that will
be determined by reference, to
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the applicant's academic qualifi
cations and experience, and the
program for his individual train--ing
and research. '
3) Candidates may propose pro
grams to be carried out in the
United States or abroad. Programs
need not be limited to work in
colleges or universities. It is sug
gested, however, that .students
completing their undergraduate
work in 1952 should plan to spend
at least a year in an American in
stitution that offers language
training and courses pertaining to
some part of Asia and the Near
and Middle East. .
Applications for support of tra
ditional graduate work in pursu
ance of graduate degrees will be
considered, provided such study
contributes to the objectives of
the fellowship program.
4) Each fellowship application
must be accompanied by a com
prehensive statement of the ap-
"Ile's not the handsomest bar
tender in the world, hut he's
generous with the Angostura."
AROMATIC BITTEBt
Makes bitter drinks
P.S. Any bartender's reputation is
made by Old Fashioned with enough
Angostura. And for added glory as a chef,
try a few dashes in your salad dressing.
apei Hi
- i CIRRBuRO .
spoilt Inwane Corp. : .
BANK
plicant's proposed plan of work
and study, including his purposes,
the institutions or groups with
which he hopes to be associated,
his travel requirements, and sim
ilar information. To this state
ment should be attached an esti
mate of the funds required to un
dertake his program.
5) In a limited number of ex
ceptional cases the foundation
will consider providing funds to
enable the immediate family of
the applicant to accompany him.
6) Application forms may be ob
tained from the Board on Over
seas Training and Research, the
ForoT foundation, 575 Madison
avenue, Room 534, New York 22,
New York. Applications must be
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Through the cooperation of the distinguished publishing house of
Alfred A. Knopf, Inc., weare offering, during the month, of April
only, a group of outstanding back titles at about half their regular
prices. A glance at the list below will show you that these are top
cut titles, and the only reason you're getting this break is that they
looked so good that the publisher over-estimated their market.
Note The supply of these books at these prices is limited, and we
already have our full quota. If there is a title you particularly want,
please drop in and get it before someone beats, you to ill
Physics and Politics by Walter Bagehot. The great nineteenth-century
study of power politics and the political man. Regularly $2.75
Sale prica 1.53
In My End is My Beginning by Maurice Baring. The story of -Mary,
Queen of Scots, told as it might have appeared to four friendly
but not necessarily uncritical witnesses. Was; $4.00 Sala prica $13
Early Stories by Elizabeth Sowea Twenty-five short stories by cna
of the subtlest and most delicate masters of English. Published
at $3.00 v Sale $13
Collected. Tales of Walter de la Mare Stories of glamour; terror
surprise, with mystical overtones, for the" collector. Published at
$4.50, . Sale $143
New Deal in Old Rome by H. J. HaskelL Parallells between Roman
decadence and our own. A wealth of material presented with scholar
ship but without pedantry. Published at $3.50. During Sale $1.S3
This Was Cicero by H. J. HaskelL A scholar: who is also a keen
judge of the genus wardheeler takes a fresh and refreshing look
at the great Roman orator. Published at $4.50 During Salo $23
......
Dr. Fausfus by Thomas Mann. The author of "The Magic Mountain
reworks the Faust legend to produce a profound novel with an un
dertone of comment on contemporary man.5 Published at $3.50
- ': Sale $1.S3"
Seeds of Liberty by Max Savelle. To find the roots of our national
character and faith, the author explores every aspect of our colonial
civilization. Published at $6.50. .r . ; Our Special $2.S 3
John Brown by Oswald. Garrison ViHard. The)' definitive' - biography l
.of a strange and fanatical leader. Revised edltiok with biographical
and critical addenda. Published at $5.00. ' : ' ' ; Sale Price $2.43
LOTS OF OTHER, TITIS-lfcOME
Titles of which only, one or
pi. ices am not AisLeci.ciDove, out
not listed, above, but,
usual,"' the, Intima;ej
vo for a; surprise' for.
week. As
plum or two
T H E .1 N T I M AT
205 E. Franklin St.
completed and .e turned on or
before May 15, 1952. The awards
will be announced on or about
July 15.
In addition to Gray, the mem
bers f the board are President
John S. Dickey, Dartmouth Col
lege; Alvin C. Eurich, vice-president,
Fund for the Advancement
of Education; John W. Gardner,
vice-president, Carnegie Corp. of
New York; Edward R. Murrow,
radio commentator and consul
tant on public affairs to the Col
umbia Broadcasting system; Milo
R. Perkins, foreign trade consul
tant and f crmer government of
ficial, and Carl B. Spaeth, direc
tor of the Ford Foundation Divis
ion of Overseas Activities. j
U"
SEE' OH TOtJltSELF
two copies i' are available at sale
wui oe snovm in me snop xnis
will be sh'own'fn the snop this
Bookshop; .jsH'' saved; J k' . juicy
early 'shoppers! 1 Kt 5 " ' 4 5 '
E , B O OICS H O. P
" Open'- Eye!ilnr3':
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Chicago 14, Illinois