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Meet your official host on the special sailing of the S.S. FRANCE to the Convention of Rotary lnternational':' He's "Charley" Hogan of Beverly Hills, California, and he'll be ,, ce|ebratinghis50thanniversarywithFrenchLineinI967. Whatbetterwaytohe|phimce|ebratethantojoinhim,andhis lovely co-host, Nora, on the special Rotary Convention sailing of the FRANCE? So come live the life you've always wanted the Convention. Come aboard the FRANCE! It's the life aboard the FRANCE {q-en the way to : that makes the difference. Special sailings for Rotarians to and from Le Havre. For example: Leave Quebec, Saturday, May 13; arrive Le Havre, Thursday, May 18. Return from Le Havre, Friday, June 2; arrive New York, Wednesday, June 7. Convenient connections to Nice (air, rail, car, sail) so you can arrive at your leisure. See Thomas Cook, American Express or your Travel Agent for the details. *The Convention of Rotary International is in Nice, France, May S. S. FRANCE is of French registry. lt 21-2b,1g67 was constructed and is maintained grenr/n{Uu 610 Fifth Avenue, New York to tho highest classincation of the American Bureau of Shipnin0 and Bureau Veritas. both call a pound a Pound. t Stamford, conn. 06904. Scales, Addresser' For information, write Pitney-Bowes, Inc., 8992 Walnut St.,'Counters & Imprinters, Collators, Copiers' i.l"t"r-.,-F.!t.g" M"t"r", U.ifop""ij*, Folders, Inserters, JeNu,tnv, 1967 Going to Nice? We have some hot numbers for you to look upin London - i+|,.1.t^uz (tA&&fd irr/ Good thing you get a free stopover in London on your round-trip f light to the Nice convention. We said f ree. "* t ^ f:d ; z lf your travel agent hasn't told you abcrut You'll want to see Westminster Abbey. Piccadilly. Soho, The 'iirst and latest discothdques. Carnaby Street, where boutiques do a thriving business in mad mod clothes. this, you tell him. Say you want a solid week in London. After all, you need at least a week to look up peoprle Look up a few of London's 42 theatres. Best seats in the house cost $2.80. And even if you don't drink, look up London's you've heard about ever since you were born. The Beefeaters for instance-those frienclly homey pubs for c,lnversation's sake. There's no better place to meet the British. One iast number: 45,693. Britain has45,693 Rotarians, and they're known throughout the land. So in the m dst of exciting foreign sights, you'll feel right at home. To learn more, write British Travel, Box 4100, New York, Nevr York 10017. We'll send you our 52-page booklet /acations in Britain fre:e. Then see your travel agent. He'll be able to add some numbers to your list. men in fierce red uniforms, who show yrraround the Tower of London. They'll answer ,a your questions, f rom bloody h istory to the weight of the crown jewels. And the guardsat Buckingham Palace. You',, f ind them Changing the Guard at 11:30 AM, to a tune of glory. You're invited to tap your foot. You don't need a number to f ind the Houses of Parliament, Just follow the chimes of Big Ben. .,ANUARY. I967 VOLUME IIO, NUMBER T TFIE ROTARIAN Ollicial Pubtication ol ROTARY INTERNATIONAL IN THIS ISSUE 5 A NEW YEAR-AND SOME SEIF-SEARCHING, by Richord L. Evons 22 EUROPE: WONDERFUT WANDERI-AND 44 ENCOUNTER WITH EUROPE: IF I COUID WANDER THERE JUST ONCE MORE (Symposium) by Clycie Mendes Corneiro, C. L. Eprile, Fronk Gollego, Horoce Sutton, Kyoso Yuoso 48 ROTARY'S EYRIE ON THE RIVIERA 52 NICEI THE CONVENTION DAY BY DAY BY THE \^/AY. -. SHE'S truly a high-stepper, the prancing drum majorette in our cover picture. Compare her for size with the real live girls standing on the drums. They all, and the snare drummer, and the gargantuan, self-playing brass sec- I PROMISE, by Thomos John Corlisle 55 BE MY GUEST, by Rolph by Florence B. Bugg 57 COMPULSION, tion, are on a float gliding down the Promenade des Anglais in Nice, in the carnival parade for which the city is 71 PUZZLES BY PIGEOI,ET 72 lT SPEAKS FOR lTSEtF. by loipo? Levi, a Parisian photogra- 75 RUNAWAY, famous. I. pher, took the picture. Freelance Photographers Guild made it available to us. oN! ON TO EUROPE! ON TO FRANCE! ON TO NICE, FRANCE, for Rotary's 1967 Convention May 21-25! That is the message of nearly every word, photo, drawing, and advertisement in this special regular issue. Now you may miss the carnival parade in Nice you go in February-but ah, -unless the parade of flowers!-you may catch a drift of petals right in your face during Convention week . . . and it is our hopeful prediction that where'er you wander in this wonderful wanderland of Europe your way will oft be blocked by the little processions and the elaborate parades that so often pop up be- fore the traveller, or vice versa, in mountain village and city boulevard. ADVERTISEMENTS we mentioned. So many advertisers are so sure you're going and are so eager to serve you when you do that they have come in this month with the greatest volume of advertising (lineage-wise and dollarwise) in any issue since February, 1955, which cele- lContinued on page 8) J,lNuenv, 1967 Jocobs Roi by lodene Brown Hothowoy DEPARTMENTS o 5 This Rolory Month . 14 Your Letters o 16 o Z/ Stripped Geors Peeps ot ThinEs to Come . 53 The Clubs in Action Gonerof Offlcers of Rotory Inlernotionol tor 1966-67: President: RICHARD L, EVANS, Solt Loke City, Utoh, U.S.A.; Firsl Vice-Presidenl; WlttlAM E. WAIK, JR,, Ontorio, Colif., U.S.A.; Second Vice-Presidenl H. J. BENNEIT, Wrexhom, Woles; fhird Piso, ltoly; TH !OCHEAD, Fo Woggo, Aust Oklo., U.S.A.; Secreforv; GE Editor: KARL K. KRUEGER . Adverfisins Monoser: LAWRENCE S. KLEPFER r$.r,filR cLLu =Ylvsz drs"ffi s,s. STATENDAM 32S FETT FROM 8OW PROMENADE DECK On thcrc cnriscs, tlrec b no fitst or tourirt clare. You havc tlc nin of tlewhole ship. ni( We'd lihe to thanh thc passcngers who've askcd us to write a Hollanil-Anciica cookbook. pLrces to stop atrand made o z : isn't ix ha ita Tlrewhole new wayto go t " The l6-dayAd' Cwi**,, ',1',..1 . .;i':!./, starr$qg;at $555 on Ho.l d : o I (, ' .'$ o z E zU Surtitd L NEWS FROM T600 RIDGE AVENUE. EVANSTON. ILLINOIS. U.S.A. Year's Day will find President Richard L. Evans and his wife Alice in Pasadena, Calif., attending the annual Parade of Roses. 0n January 4 the President will be the featured speaker at a Multi-District meeting of Rotarians in Los Angeles. Leaving California on January 8, the Evans' will fly to Guatemala to begin a series of visits to Clubs and Rotarians in Ibero Anerica. Later in the nonth the President wiII preside over the January meeting of the R. I. Board of Directors and wiII address an intercity meeting at the Rotary Club of Evanston, I11., Rotary's headquarters city. 0n pages 6-7 President Evans asks Rotarians to pause for a mid-year inventory of ains and acconplishments. PRESIDENT. New Some 600,000 men in more thon I30 of the 12,000plus Rotory Clubs ossocioled o! londs ore members Rotory Inlernolionol. Rotory Clubs, which meel weekly, usuolly for lunch- or dinner progroms, ore eoch composed of o leoding cro59-rection eon of lhe of o business ond profersionql life communify. With fhoughlfulness of ond helpfulness lo olhers consiitut- ing itr idecl of service, Rolory offers praclicol meoni of enlorging one's friendships, porticipoting lify-be{iermenf und in ing high stondcrds in business ond proferdonol life, ond odvoncing interndfiondl underslonding. goodwill, ond peoce. Noned for its proctice of lhe ftrst Rotory Club wos formed in Chicogo, lllinois, U.S.A., in THEM-OnIy I40 days until the opening of Rotary's 1967 International Convention in Nice, France. Advance registration and "request for housing" forns have now been distrlbuted world-wide. Housing accomnodations are assigned on a firstcone first-served basis. Convention planners are hard at work to nake the days in Nice memorable. A summary of plans so far and news on early travel arrangements by sone Rotarians appear COUNT on page 52. commu' erlokings, promol- rotolirrg meeling ploces, A GOOD TIME . . . to begin looking for candidates for 1968-69 Rotary Foundation Fellowships and Technical Training Awards is now! Half of all Rotary Districts are eligib1e to submit candidates for regular 1968-69 Rotary Foundation Fellowships. Every District may submit candidates for the 50 TechnicalTraining Awards and the 23 Rotary Foundation Additional- FeIlowships which wiIl be available for 1968-69. Applications of candidates for all awards must be in the hands of sponsor1ng Rotary Clubs by March 15. Applications of District-endorsed candidates nust reach R. L Headquarters by May 15. I905. 22-28...is Rotary's Magazine Week. Your Club may have a program for the occasion weII advanced, one based perhaps on the kit of naterials sent late in 1966. If not, here is a suggestion: Using this issue of THE ROTARIAN, ask members who have travelled in Europe's Wonderful Wanderland to give a JANUARY brief talk, (illustrated with slides, if possible), about their experiences in these countries. NEED A PROGRAM? "Principles of Rotary Club Membership,rl R. I.'s 100-frane, 35nm slide program is a long-time favorite way to inforn new menbers and remind old members about basic membership facts. It's now available in a newly revised form and includes a script in a choice of English, French, Japanese, and Spanish. Thls month at R. I. Headquarters j-n Evanston, III': Nominating Commi-ttee for R. I. President, 1968-69..January-20. MEETINGS. R.I. Board of Directors.. .January 23-28. ...of Rotary International are scheduled 2I-25, 1967; Mexico City, Mexico, May I2-L6, 1968; Honolulu, Hawaii, May 25-29, 1969; Atlanta, Georgia, May 3l-June 4, 1970. FUTURE CONVENTIONS for Nice, France, May 30 there were 12,575 Rotary Clubs and an estinated 600,50o Rotarians in 133 Countries and geographical regions. New Clubs since JuIy 1, 1966: 119. VITAL STATISTICS. On Novenber JeNuenv, 1967 5 By RICHARD L. EVANS P resi de nt, | 966-67, Rotary I nter nation al a whole year Nothing does itself. Someone has to do everything. gons-and a tirne lor self-searching. And since tinte goes so swiftly, we ought to look at q'hat we do u'ith every day. with every hour, with every The journey of a thousand miles begins with one step. HE CLOSING of thc calendar rs oppr:rtunity. and make sure we do not repeat the cycle suggestod by rhese familiar lines: Il'e ring the bells und we raise the stain, ll'e lwnp ttp gurlutrd,s e'u'ervw'here' And hitl the tapers twinkle f air, Autl f ettst and lruilic-und then w'e go lJack ro rhe :ume oltl live,t usuin. No man who has felt the warmth of fellowship and service should go back to the same crld life lgain. "l wish it rvas 1'esterday." said a regretful bo1". un- grammaticalll'" Often ue u'ish it were yesterday. Often we wish rve had done diftcrentll , Nt.ru' '"ve u'ish we had nr;.rde ir ditTerent decision. But lifc moves onc rva\ ttnlrwc nrove with it--with the pronrise o[ thc fu-and turc. irnd thr' pclssibilit v of repentance and inlprove - Ottcn lve til'e bcnvcen regret and grlrtitude: regret ti:r what u'e should have clone and didn't do-gratitudc for having livcd through another vcur-griltitucle fcrr l'utrrrc. distant scenel on(: step enough for me." It is good to c,rganize a program, but to comfort. to encourage. to help someone persclnally. to give ourselves is amons the greatest of the gifts. Do not make tife hard to any. "Make yourself necessary to somebttd)'."-Rulph Waldo Emers'on A good once done is not sufficient. The need for service never ceases.* a + "Life is a stron: walk along a narrow thread but in reality never ends," said Arthur Brisbane. "and, long or short, it is all that rve have.'' Life is all we have. "We have nothing to lose--except everything."Alberr Cuntus. itx* "Conrc my fricnds. 'Tis not too late to seck a newer "-.4 ll re tl, Lord'l' e rt nr son Don't let the relr run dorvn like an unrvinding watch. "Dear Lord. don't let me \\'aste this year." wtrrld. mcnt. the As our beloved Past President Nitish Laharry used to quote it: "Lead, kindly Light. amid the encircling gloom, lead thou me on . . . I do not ask to see the + + 4 Some rruil and rvondct rihr tht'r lta','en't been called t() s()nrc Lrlrrticular serttc,: But if \\c \cc sr.lntcthir-tg lhirt nceds ttr trc clr>nc. rre slrorrld n()t \it ancl uait but call oursclrL-\ I() \et'!'ice \\'t should hegin to be w'hat uc ought to be. lncl bcgin to clo \\hat \\'!'ougltt to do. and he sr-11-starlcrs in se rvtcc. *t+ And so. wc errd tlre old and face the nerv with faith of futut'c da1's. "There is i,L futtrre. O than< God!'" as tinle mo\jcs (rn t(r cternit\. --11 j1l1 the nr:vcr-cnding flight ;l*:l I'J;huter er lttttl't heett n'rittett shall renratn, he eru:ed, ttctr v'rillen e'er uguin, utrv rirten onl.\' ,still helongs to Iltee, '[uke lrcetl untl notuler well u'ltut tlutt slrttll bt. '\rtr ['lte \ .13 S WE PAUSE to reappraise our progress at thE If ;d\ halfway mark of another Rotary year. we sug- gest again "Ten Things to reminder' * Do"--for x rententtrrance and "You have not done enough* you have never done enLrugh so long as it is still possitlle that you have something of value to coutribute."-Dag Hamntur.skidld "I don't know what your dcstiny will be. but one I know; The only ones among you who will be thing really happy are those who have sought and found how lbert *'hu'eit:tr TEN THINGS T() l. snlnr * DO RoTARy By ADDING NEW MEMBERST We have Rotary because someone shared it with us. Share Rotary with others. Let each Rotarian seek an additional member. Fill new classifications in your club. 2. snnnE RoTARv By ADDTNG t{EW c[uBS: Help organize new clubs in other qualified communities. 0rgan. ize additional clubs in growing metropolitan areas. 3. entov RoTARY FELLowSHtP, Attend and participate in club activitles. Enioy Rotary's prestige, but also contribute to it. orscovrR AND sERvE THE NEEDs 0F youR coMMUNITY: Be concerned with youth; with employment and education; with health; with safety; with respect lor law; with home and family solidarity, Serve the needs of y0ur own area. 4. 5. tulxr y0uR YouTH: 0rganize lnteract cluhs. Promote youth exchange programs. Give counsel and encouragement to the young who are trying to find their future. x ""lt is not only u'hat we do, but also what we do not do. for rvhich we are*accountable."-Moli?rt. A 6. srnvr BUSTNEss 0R pRoFEsst0N BETTER: lmprove your service to patrons. lmprove your relationships with employees. lmprove relations with your competitors. lmprove your standards and practice and product. 7. puRsus EFFEcTIvE puBLtc REtATt0NS: Let the public know what Rotary is and what Rotary does. Enlarge the influence ot Rotary by performing significant service, 8" rNpnRsrzE THE INTERNATIoNAI tTy 0F R0TARY: Develop friendships and contacts widely over the world. En' c0urage international y0uth exchange between clubs and districts. L rnemr rN fvoRLD coMMUNtTy sERVtcE: Look beyond your own borders for opportunities to help-world' wide. l)on't letyour knowledge or experience or time go t0 $raste" There are urgent needs everywhere. Do something-for some' one-somewhere. 10. coHrntsuTE r0 THE RoTARY F0UNDATIoN: Its great possibilities are barely beginning. Support the Fellow" lor lnternational Understanding, Group Study Exchange, activities. Awards for Technical Training, ships :nO "n: We rvish ;-ou a Happr Neu lgnr--nnd health and hopc and faith anrJ pr'ace and purposc. Wc u'ish vou success and satisfactitln irl Servicc Above Sel[. as vou do sonrething. for somcone . some- where-and rrtake this year count. [ctr' Thrclugh Rornrl .'' * jjr "A Better Worlcl + l-i{e it t lettj ti l,ilp(r \ltit( Wlureott earlt r,tne ol lt\ rtuv n'riIe Hi,r n'ord u ty :(.), und rhen rotnes ttiglti. Creutll, begin.t T hctttgh thou huve tittte But ior a line, be 7h117 s1lbli1nglt'ot jnilure, but lttu' uitn, i; critne. R. Lov'ell -J. (spEcIAt LIMITED OFFER-FOR THE "OVER-5o" SET) [Continued from page 3] brated the 50th birthday of Rotary International. Many thanks to them. Many thanks to tqioy a |tllondorful Uaoafion iq, lounly Apartrnent many others: to the photographers, illustrators, travel writers, engravers, printers, paper-makers-to everybody at ili='i,{i," lrow olrrY whose arts and sciences and good efforts helped us get this thing together. And a special blast of the alp horn for Assistant Editor Frank Fayssoux who picked up plans for this issue laid by others, improved the shape of them, brought the Boautild f whole interesting mess tidily together as a good Issue Editor should. And another Art Editor Frank J. Follmer who, as so oft before, has given the "book" its handsome look. blast for Enioy resort luxury in a furnished, garden apartment, A complete vacation! Dive right In. Swimming, sunning and pool. side pleasures at their best, champlonship golf course at your door. Your yacation includes two free gamesl 4 DEC. 16 THROUGH APRIL I5 ($35, APRIL I6 THROUGH DEC. I5) Treat yourselt to a labulous uteek of lan ! Enjoy a King's ransorn in resort facilities, Cboose one of tbree Sun Cities . , . Anterica's ntost beautilal ad.ulr, commanities, located. in tbe heart of tbe nost popular ttacation areas, It's "[n lntroductory 0ffer". Introduce yourself to resort living . . . at its *ltimate ! The million dollar facilities the warmth and friendliness of the people who live -there-the unique health and happiness of this ex- citing, carefree way of life. A wonderful vacatioo; complete with lovely, furnished apartment, is yours at just $50 for far less than what you'd expect to pay the entire week for two people, anytime- from Dec, 16 through April 15. The one stipulation is that you or your companion must be 50 years of age or more. Free Guest Activities Gard! Your passport to pleasurgawn bowling, bridge, yegs5 to enioy -2[ Hall and modern wn shopping centers. Bask in the warrn sun or iust loaf in your garden apartment. Be a Sun Citizen for a week. You'll discover what tbey enioy euery week, for only $2O a year...5YzQ a day. It's all iocluded in this fabulous Sun City Vacation Offer. Play Tro Goll Games Free! All Sun Cities boast beautiful l8-hole championship golf courses located dt yotrr door. Two free games are included in your vacatioo week. Sun Citizens have the advantage, though tbey can play golf every day, all year long for only- about 50d a round on an annual basis. Your Ghoice of Three Beautiful Locations! Enioy the great- Southern California, 25 miles south of Riverside on U.S. 395, a short drive from spectacular mountains and the famed Pacific Coast Playground. 0ffer l-imited To Ayailabilities! Reservations will be filled ete details nt will be 0ur shuffleboard courts are tun! You meet such interesting people. Act nout MATL THIS COUPON TODAY ! Start Reservation 0n: ItE[ E. WEBB CORP. Dept. RN'17 P.0. Bor 7588, Phoenix, Arizona 85011 (Date) E Please send an apartmenr reservation application on the "Vacation Ofier" in the Sun City checked: E Atizona I California tr llorida Name Address Your Guest Activities Card is your to sun City social life. H p...t. wr"r..a-"jorotron ffi ?ip Ciry State tr Send complete informatioo about litting in Sun City. f am interested in: E Arizona E California ! Florida IF you have visited Europe and could go back only one more time to only one place, what would it be? You see how five travel-writers answer in our svmposium of the month. You see in Iniide Rotary that we propose you stage just such a symposium in your Club-as a weekly program. That's such a good idea we are underscoring it here. Tell us, please, horrr.,it went . . . and note that next month when spatial pressures are less Inside Rotary will fill out to its more normal girth. "THE CAMPERS ARE COMING!" is coming in next month's issue. This is PROMISE The Young in love show promise but the old know promises grow tenuous and cold All that the heart can press is hope and openness and these will lead to realms where promises we neither seek nor ned Thomas John Carlisle Watertown, N. Y., Rotarian 8 Tne RorenreN STOCKS TO SPTIT BEFORE MARCH I Stock splitting cuts cr stock's price per shqre to c more populcn buying level. This usuclly qttrqcts more investors. Demqnd for the stock very often goes up. And olten, but not olwcys, so do prices 6rrd dividends. That's why mcny investors like to know which stocks ore going to split. To help, we've compiled c list of compcnies which plcln to exchonge 2, 3 or 4 shqres of new stock lor one of the old before Mcnch l, 1967. The fcct thot these compcnies plon their oppecl since ility thct the price dividend wiII be increased. We'll be hqppy to send you the iist of 6 STOCKS SPTITTING gEFOnn MARCH I when you moil the cord ottqched. You will qlso receive the Dow Theory Forecqsts (one of Americq's lecding Investment hdvisory Services) for the next 4 weeks on oru Introductory Trisl Olfer. ONLY $l $5 VALUE This 30 dcy subscription to Dow Theory Fore. cqsts is c $5 vqlue bcrsed on regulcr subscription rates but for this triql qll we qsk is $l-which will be promptly relunded if you cre not completely - sctisfied. Dow Theory Foreccsts is one of the ncr- lion's leqding Fincncicl Advisory Publiccrtions and is bqsed on the well-known Dow Theory. MAlt 2 BONUS REPORTS AT NO EXTRA COST STOCKS UNDER $10" and "ADVICE ON t8 BIG MOVER$' Finolly, for c prompt reply, we will send you our list ol 20 low priced stocks with 4 under $10 ond our buy-sell-hold odvices on l8 Big Movers including: Boeing, Chrysler, Control Dqtd, Communicotions Scrtellite, Foirchild Ccmelcr, Generol Electdc. IBM, KLM Airlines. Litton, Moqmqvox, Poloroid, RCA, SCM, Syntex, Texqs GulI Sulphur, Texos fnsEuments, Xerox ond Zenith. These will be mqiled qt no extrcr cosl. FilI out qnd return the card todcy. No solesmqn will coll qnd there is no Jurther obligotion in ony woy. (OIIer open to new reoders "4 only.) POSTPAID REPTY CARD T0DAY for allthis valuable information Included in the weekly Forecosts, which you will receive Ior the next lour weeks. you will get oll this investuent guidonce (not every one is covered eoch week). l. <r weekly con THE STOCK SERVICE DIGEST sensus oI whot 16 other leoding- Investment Serv. ices ore recommending. WEEKLY STOCK MANKET COMMENTARY _ ond whot oction we recommend thot you loke eqch week with regard to the morket. lour speciol sug. 3. MODEL STOCK PORTFOLIOS - investments of gested portlolios bosed on lotql $1,000; $5,000; $10,000 ond $25,000. Corelully superuised ond kept up-to-dote. 4. MASIER LIST OF INVESTMENT AND SPECUI-E. TM STOCKS key lists lor both the conservd. tive qnd rnore- speculotive investors. written di5. oVERSEAS BUSINESS OUTTOOK rectly lrom London every rnonth, 5. GROWTH STOCK RECOMMENDATIONS _ d corelul study oI stocks thot shcw exceptionol "growlh" possibilities. 2. JeNu.c.nv. 1967 7. 8. 9. mony lesser-known present unusuol stocks sold "over-the-counter" OVEB-THE-COUNTER IJST opportunities to the investor. cr regulor look ond combusiness, industry CURRENT BUSINESS OUTTOOK qt current lrends in melce. INDUSTRY SURVEYS industries thot - cerloin potentiol. oppedr to hqve ouistonding IO. MONTHTY BUY.SEIL.HOLD-SWITCH ADVICES _ ll. on over 600 individuol stocks. MONTIITY GROUP STITDIES showins which - best qnd which groups ol stocks qre doing the stocks within eoch group ore leqders. 12. OVERNIGHT WARNING SYSTEM Speciol Bul. letins rnqiled between regulor publicotion ddys when we believe the mqrket \ rorrqnls it. ,,INcoME,. STocKs FoR INvEsToRs wIsH. 13. 34 ING STEADY DIVIDENDS. DOW THEORY FORECASTS, INC. 333 N. Michigan Avenue, Chicago, lllinois 6061| 1l author Don Carner's report on the response of our readers to his article in the May 1964 issue, Camping the Continent. OUR report on San Juan----on the Car- of Mexico International Conference--is all worked up and ready to run in this issue but must go over to February where, with more space available, perhaps we can do a still better job ibbean-Gulf on what proved a big, delightful, and meaningful meeting. LAST month we launched "in Gear with a regular element in Stripped Gears. You saw it? You will find this month's installment on page 77. "Warshaw" stands for Jerry Warshaw, a Chicago free lance artist who does cartoons and illustrations for advertising, magazines, and books. Have you themes you'd like to see Jerry treat? Warshaw" as Driving urge to see See Mer Shoot them in, please. IT IS fine the way Rotary Clubs and Rotarians help and boost their magazine. This month hundreds, thousands of them will take notice in Club programs and in other ways of the 56th birthday of Tne RorenreN. It first saw the light of print on a January day in l9ll, coming off the press as a small Order your new Mercedes-Benzhere, then pick it up when you arrive in Europe. You'll enjoy driving the best-engineered car on wheels. And you'll enjoy all the pleasures of private motoring and sightseeing, at your own chosen pace. When your trip's over and you bring your Mercedes-Benz back home-you will enjoy years of superb driving performance. All this at a savings that can pay for a two-week vacation. There are Mercedes-Benz models in almost every price range: sports cars, family sedans and limousines. Your Mercedes-Benz dealer can help you select the best type for your needs. And he can make all necessary arrangements, including licensing, insurance, documentation, even return shipment. For full details of Mercedes.Benz cars and ovelseas delivery, see your authorized Mercedes-Benz dealer. Or rcfurn the cou. pon below and receive a free European Delivery kit. l2-page newspaper called "The National Rotarian." The philosophical searchings of Founder Paul Harris filled several pages. To help Clubs develop short or long observances of the magazine we have sent a kit of suggestions to most of them around the world. Too late to go into that kit were some candles, so to speak, and here are some of them: Cantlle fi I: The Magazine Committee of the Rotary Club of Leaside, Ontario, Canada, tape-records every month THe RornnIe.N for the Canadian National Institute for the Blind. Candle #2r Mrs. Frances Brown of Ravenna, Ohio, is having good luck with her second book-"The Singing Teakettle," published by Exposition Press. The titte of it comes from the first poem she ever sold-and it was to Tne RorenreN. "I was standing on the worn spot before the kitchen sink, she tells us, chuckling to myself at bits of light verse that I had heard the day before . . . suddenly I was roused from my rhythmic reverie by the teakettle, of the screaming variety, which started on a terrific tirade. Then it happened! A rhyme formed Please send me the Mercedes-Benz European Delivery information kit. I Name I don't know why it whistles Unless to let ofi steam!" R- 1.67 T2 have this singing teakettle And odd as it may I seem fL&** Tne RorenreN (Also Portugal, France, Italy Greece, Israel, etcJ 1. g3?1. Old TousL5 days. 3/z fabulous days in Lisbon, Portugal's sunny capital, discovering the sophisticated shops and touring the historic castles, monasteries and museums. Then fly to Seville, the enchanting capital of Andalusia. On to Madrid, the city that offers everything from the famous bargain-filled "Flea Market" to the Prado Museum with its priceless paintings, And, of course, the flamenco dancers. Price includes air transportation, standard hotel accommodations. breakfast and sightseeing. 2.frorn $406. Canary Wonderland Tours, 15 days. Iberia flies you overnight to Madrid, then to Grand Canary. You'll tour Tarifa, Angostura, Santa Brigida; discover great restaurants and night clubs, and the beautiful Bandama l8-hole golf course on this Island of Golden Sands, where fine sandy beaches stretch for miles and it's springtime all year round. Price includes all transportation, hotels and breakfast. (Alternate two week tour of both Grand Canary and Tenerife, from $436.) JeNueny, 1967 3. from $422. "Enjoy Spain" Holiday Tours, 15 days. llt"fr,t 5. from $999. "Spain/Israel Times Madrid. Then by luxurious motor coach you'll see Aranjuez, La Mancha of "Don Quixote" fame, Granada, Malaga, Torremolinos, Costa Del Sol, Seville, Cor- Four.tt 3 weeks. doba and Madrid again. Or choose the PalmaTour lor $22 more. VisitMadrid, Barcelona plus six days on sunny Isle of Majorca. Prices include all air travel, first class and deluxe hotels, most meals, Greece, Turkey, Israel, Cyprus. 2 ) Spain, Israel, France, Greece.3) Spain, Israel, Portugal, Italy. 4) Spain, Israel. You'll 4.fuorn $535. t'Spain, Jamestt 4 fabulous itineraries: 1) Spain, Italy, France, plus Mediterranean cruise to see all the highlights of the cities you visit plus the wonders, both ancient and modern, of Israel. Price includes first class hotels, sightseeing, most meals and all air travel. 15,days by Private Car and Chauffeur. 3/z days to explore Madrid. "James," your English-speaking chauffeur, will drive you to Toledo, Merida, Seville, Fuengirola, Granada and Cordoba. Price includes transportation, hotels and breakfast. 'BER'A AirLines of Spain... where only the plone gets mote oittention thanyou. t3 more waterproof than concrete. Each 4-12-16-inch adobe block contains one cubic inch of asphalt. This discovery brought about a renaissance in adobe construction in California. It would seem a natural for any country to use emulsified asphalt for inexpensive. comfortable, adobe construction. M. HolrY, Rotarian -FoRREsr Building Contractor Escondido, Calilornia has "Yentt Draws Applause We have read the article Yen for (Tur RoTARTAN for October). We would like to commend your publication on treat- Kindness, by A. R. Roalman How to Make Good Bricks Better In a recent issue of TnB RorlnreN I read an article on Korea (Hopes Rise on Chungnung HiIl, May, 1966) telling how houses are being made of earthen blocks in that country. These blocks are very durable, but with an asphalt emulsion now on the market the same blocks can be strengthened and waterproofed at a very low cost. In the past quarter century a petroleum company has developed a process of chemically breaking down molecules of asphalt and suspending them in an unnatural state, thus making asphalt soluble in water. This emulsion, mixed with water and clay-bearing soils (non-alkalinic), produces strawless adobe bricks ing such a wortbwhile topic as kindness. In fact, we thought it was such an excellent idea that we are transporting the idea from Japan to Belvidere, Illinois. Our pastor, Father McCarren, and our school principal, Sister Mary Julice, are both very much in favor of it as are all the teacbers. Our motto is "Let's Applaud Those Who Are Nice to Know." The parents of tbe school children have been made aware of our campaign. We hope to get a city-wide campaign going. MlunseN Tnenese -$151sa St. James School Belvidere, Illinois Drunk Driver Story Helps Judge Curb the Drunken Driver, in THe RotenreN for October is of great interest to me as I am sure it is to other judges confronted with the drunk driver. There seems to be no quick cure for the problem, but I feel articles such as this one by Robert E. Malkin do help educate the public to the problem. A man such as Mr. Malkin could be of great assistance to those of us interested in launching a program for a compulsory chemical test law in the State of Alaska. B. Leusrn, Rolarian -ft1sH4pp District Court ludge Ketchikan, Alaska o The article by Robert E. Malkin Curb the Drunken Driver (Tne RorenreN for October) was fine, but it takes more than a mathematical formula or computation to take the drunken driver off the road, reduce crime, and help salvage that seg- ment of our youth who tend to imitate adults on an increasing scale in this area. Mr. Malkin also probably revealed the number one clue as to where the trouble is today in this country with alcohol as a beverage when he wrote, and I quote: Nor am I against drinking. I take a drink nearly every day. (WHY? my query) But I use personal discipline. I am not against the man who has a drink or two, enjoys his dinner, and drives home. Rather an amazing statement coming from a man who has lost a son because of this very process---drinking, then driving. The blood-alcohol tests Mr. Malkin suggests lContinued on page train: With a Eurailpass, the more time you spend in Europe, the less money you spend to see it.For instance,for just $99, a 2L-day Eurailpass will give you 2L days of unlimited first-class rail travel throughout Austria, Belgium, Denmark, France,; Germany, Holland, ltaly, Luxembourg, Norway, Portugal, Spain, Sweden and Switzerland. Which works out to just $4.71 a day. A l-month Eurailpass ($130) will give you the same thingfor just $4.33 aday; a 2-month Eurailpass ($175) works out to just 92.91 a day; a 3-month Eurailpass ($205) to just $2.28 a day. One card is all you carry. One price is all you pay. And since children urider 10 go half-fare and children under 4 go free, we've also worked it out so you can take the whole family for next to nothing and nothing at all. For more information about Eurailpass, Eurailgroup (reduced rates for groups of 10 or more) and Eurailtariff (special savings on shorter trips) see your travel agent. And write us for this free fact-filled. Eurailpass folderand planning map. Dept. 3R, Box 191, Madison Square Station, New York, New Yofk 10010. l8l Announcing a llew Travel Service for R0fARlAllS *JET CHARTER MONEY-SAVING TRAVEL *lnitiol ovoifoble Jel lravef pockoges for Roloriqns HAWAil . 16 lncluding Las Vegas, Los Angeles, ore.. DAYS $459 lncluding lhese oulslonding feolures: *,r,'u r Deluxe or Top First Class Hotels o DG-8F Fan Jet with champagne or Open Bar Service o Gourmet meals in flight o All Airport/Hotel Transfers o All Baggage Handling o Gocktail Parties o Tour Escort throughout each tour San Francisco GRAND BAHAMAS 8 DAYS $119 + $r0 servtce charge 9 DAYS/8 NIGHTS MARBELLA, SPATN GOSTA DEt SOL $499::"J,t: EUROPE 16 DAYS ,NCI.UDES ALL FEATURES ABOYE plus ORIENT 16 DAYS : 3.Yo"gi"o;'I.J"l!??S?5 . Spanish Fiesta $749:t'fft: Tokyo, Kyoto, Taipei, Hong Kong $32 9 These exceptional tailor-made Jet travel packages to various parts of the world enable Ro- to include their entire family in their vacation plans because of the special low tarians EUROPE 9 DAYS 299*fif: lreland or Rome or Paris PUERTO RIGO 8 DAYS ST fu rates. Board and return on your Jet from your nearest home jet airport, according to arrange- ments to be made through your own padicipating Rotary District. .Slight Price Variance Of Several Programs Contingent On Home Jet Airport Utilized, AVAILABLE ONI.Y 7O ROT.AR'.ANS AND THE'R IMMED'ATE FAMTLIES J R( .IIII'!IIIIIIITIIIIITIIIII-IIIIIIIIIITIITIIIIIII PLEASE SEND FURTHER INFORMATION PLEASE PRINT SEND TO: Mr. Monty Winslow, Executive Vice President Transpojet Tours, Inc. 274 Madison Avenue New York City, N. Y. 10016 (2r2) 532-9500 tr HAWAII E E GRAND BAHAMAS E E PUERTO RICO E JeNuenv, 1967 EUROPE 16 ORIENT EUROPE 9 Days Name city State- Club DistricL- Days 15 shears. First are lobster shears which will easily cut through the toughest of It cuts the joints wide open so that the meat can be picked out lobster shells. neat and clean and in one piece. They are chrome-plated. Second are stainless steel kitchen shears which have an un- usual number of features. This one kitchen tool cuts paper, rubber, poultry, fish, and foods; sharpens knives and scissors; cracks nuts and hardshell seafood; opens cans and bottles; tightens (2) screws. o Bulone $ncih 0im[el will lin you u[ in lficG... by arranging to have a Hertz car meet your Air France jet at the airport. Air France and Hertz. The easiest way to get to-and around-Nice. Hertz will meet you in Nice with a brand new Ford or other Hertz car. A car that will get you around Nice, Cannes and Monte Carlo at your own pace. And with Hertz, you can split the cost of the car with the other members of your group. Four can ride for the price of one. lf you're leaving f rom the U.S., Sheila Gimpel will personally make your Hertz reservation. Just call, write, or visit Sheila in care of: Hertz lnternational, 660 Madison Ave., N.Y., N.Y. 10021. Phone: (212) PL 2-2000. lf you're leaving from anywhere in Europe, Sheila can't help you. But your local Hertz girl can-and will. So remember, whether you start from Europe, or Fly/Drive from the U.S.. a Hertz car will make traveling easier. And conventions more fun. BY ROGER W. TRUESDAIL. PH,D. . Bed of Air. Hospital patients with on tiny jets of air at London's Institute of Orsevere burns have been floated thopedics. One man was kept afloat for five hours with no ill effects, and the re- searchers want to see if this time can be extended. Pain is reduced, since the patient touches no solid surface, and the air helps dry tbe burns more quickly. Basically, the principle involved is that of an inverted air-cushion vehicle which skims along without touching the water's surface. a Shock-Wove Lure. It is constructed to create shock waves as it is moved through the water. An impressed crown at the center of the body creates these waves and causes the lure to swing from side to side, fluttering and flashing. lt's available in l) and l-ounce sizes. ( I ) . Speciolized Sheors, One manufac- turer makes two unusual models of Blozer. This new slim, weather- proof torch shoots out a five-inch flame at the flick of the wheel to light every time for back-yard chefs, campers, and It comes in handy, too, for lighting hot-water beaters, fireplace fanciers. furnaces, and outdoor gasoline lamps. The lighter flint is replaceable. When filling is needed, liquid butane, in an accompanying container, is poured into the burner end. It burns up to six hours per filling and is safe and sure. The torch is housed in anodized aluminum tubing with a wind guard and hanging ring. (3) o Bicycte Pedot Light. This is a practical, safe item which, when used in place of the ordinary bicycle pedal. beams a white light ahead and a red light at the side and rear of the bicycle. It shows motorists and pedestrians there is a bike "on the go." The pressure of the rider's foot activates the light and, it turns off automatically when the foot is lifted. Four type "C" flashlight batteries provide the power. (4) O Aulornclic Life Preserver. The size and shape of a small ball, this is a selfinflating emergency life preserver. It is activated when water enters it. Its main value comes from the fact that. in an emergency, the ball can be thrown to a person in the water up to 200 feet away and more accurately than any -further other kind of preserver. Within seconds after it hits the water it opens up as a life preserver with buoyancy 21-inch enough to support a 250-pound man. Simultaneously it releases a small sea anchor to prevent drifting. It weighs only 9Vz ounces and is easy to store in con- tainers such as a boat, tackle box. car. or beach bag. (5) For Further lntornolion, Write: Photo: The B. F. Goodrich Co.. Public Relations, 500 South Main, Akron, Ohio 443t8. (1) Ponriac Specialties Mfg. & Dist. Corp., 35 Lincoln Ave., Pontiac, Mich. (2) Marks Specialties, Let Hertz put ygU in the driver's seat. l6 Nol lt's not smoll enough to ft in on elephonf's trunk, but it'll fit hondily in lhe trunk of on outomobile, soving o lol ol spoce. lf's o flot spore lire, ond it's eosily infloted lo the size of ils counlerport o! lelt by using o porfoble oir pressure boffle. Inc., 735 Providence Highway, (3) Star-Fire, Inc., 1845 Pontius Ave., West Los Angeles, Calif. 90025. (4) Gae-Ann, Box 2205, Roswell, N. Mex.88201. (5) Zodiac Enterprises, Box 2006, Station "A," La Mesa, Calif. (l4hen wriling to firms, please mention Tan Norwood, Mass.02062. Rorlnrlx.) THe RorenreN PRE.CONVENTION T(lUR IN C(INJUNCTI(IN WITH THE t. ,'.'. * ROTARY INTERNATIONAL C(|NVENTI(IN ROUNII THB WORTII TOUR II VACATIONS INTERNATIONAL. INC. : Please send me your "Rotary International ConventionI Round the World Tour" brochure. !t- f] Ptease contact me regarding a guest speaker, T I NAMF I noonEss ! "'tt I srArE z*_---- VACATIONS INTERNATIONAL INC. 75 EastWacker Drive . Chicago, lllinois 60601 . (31217A2-OA3A NEW YORK CITY, NEW YORK 211 E. 53rd Street (2r3) 981-7430 HONOLULU. HAWAII 2500 Kalakaua Avenue-Suite 203 936-845 cHtcAGo. tLLtN0ts 7218 E. West Foster Avenue 418 Sutter street (415) YU 2-6678 774-6966 SKOKIE. ILLINOIS 3353 Weat Dempster 667-0570 ATLANTA. GEORGIA 2970 Peachtiee Road. N,W. (404) 267-766s NEW YORK, NEW YORK BRIDGEPORT, CONNECTICUI DETROIT, MICHIGAN 508 Michigan Blde. (313) W0 1-235r SAN FRANCISCO, CALIFORNIA Two West 46th Street (2r2) LT 1-0005 CLEVELAND, OHIO 1240 Terminal Tower (216) SU 1-3970 JeNueny. 1967 670 State Street (203) 366-18s1 ALBUQUERQUE, NEW MEXICO 6303 lndian School Road (505) 298-7587 GROSSE POINTE WOOD, MICH. 20930 Mack Avenue (313) 886-0822 DAYTON, OHIO NEW YORK, NEW YORK 14 Maiden Lane (212) 233-7474 716 Hulman BIdg. (5r3) 223-8281 CANTON, OHIO 137 Miles Avenue (216) 867-3087 RIVERVALE, NEW JERSEY 587 Whitenack Rd. SALISBURY, MARYLAND EIRMINGHAM, MICHIGAN CRANFORD, NEW JERSEY 631 Lincoln Park East 608 Twin Tree Road (301) 749.s720 725 West Adams Rd. (3r3) 647-7276 ATLANTA, GEORGIA 1584 Tully Circle BUFFALO, NEW YORK HARRISBURG, PENNA. (716) 8s6-0448 KANSAS CtTY, MtSS0URI 911 Main Street' (404) 26r-766s 222 Locust (717) 236-802t HAMPSTEAD, NEW YORI( 134 Jackson Street (516) 485-7600 14 Lafayette Square (816) Vt 2-9393 BATON ROUGE, LOUISIANA 2271 Vista Drive 926-4212 WHITTIER, CALIFORNIA 19419 Bogardus (213) 691-0537 SHERMAN OAKS, CALIFORNIA 15123 Ventura Blvd. (2r3) 981-7430 BEVERLY HILLS, CALIFORNIA 9300 Wilshire Blvd. (273' 273-2376 1.7 Take a Sunlane'Gruise on your way to the Gonvention next summer. Sail with the ss lndependence, Rotary lnternational official Headquarters ship to the | 967 Nice Convention. Come aboard the ss Independence in New York on May 9. We'll give you and the entire family 11 carefree days aboard ship and include a tour of 6 exciting Mediterranean ports. Then we'll deliver you in Cannes (a short drive from Convention Headquarters in Nice) in the a.m. of the day your Convention convenes. You'll meet many of your fellow Flotarians and their wives aboard ship and can discuss preliminaries on the crossing in excellent private surroundings. You'll enjoy spacious, air-conditioned cabins, outstanding American and Continental food, deck sports, bridge tournaments, outdoor swimming pools, parties, night clubs and we'll even have a Meyer Davis Orchestra aboard for your dancing pleasure. All this on a luxury liner of American registry and American standards of seamanship and safety-the highest in the world. You'll see exciting Madeira, Ceuta, Tangier, Gibraltar, Algeciras and Palma and arrive refreshed and relaxed at Cannes. Contact American Export lsbrandtsen Lines offices located in principal cities or see your Travel Agent. ArrBnrcAN ExPoRT IsnnlxnrsEN Lrxns 24 Broadway. New York, N-Y. 10004 lContinued lrom page 141 are merely a means of determining whether a person can be arrested, and maybe convicted-but are not a solution to the problem. Nor will there be satisfactory solutions, in an increasing number of people's thinking, to this and the myriad of other tragical conditions related to alcohol on a fast growing scale, until the use of alcohol as a beverage is wiped out. Whenever we are willing to face the alcoholic beverage problem squarely, courageously, and honestly, then there may possibly be some solutions found toward reducing crime, drunkenness (driving or not), alcoholism, youth erosion, poverty, child abuse, and the wrecking of family life in a multitude of ways. There is much conversation about "moderation" and "discipline," etc., in the matter of drinking alcoholic beverages. Up to date no one seems to have come up with an acceptable or remedying definition as to what is "moderation or discipline" in the use of narcotics and drugs as a beverage (science, I believe, includes alcohol in this category), especially when placed on the market legally for easy availability by the public with little restriction. Mr. Malkin's article does an excel- lent job of establishing the fact that there is a problem, much bigger than the limited area which he writes about. Unfortunately, in the same writing there seems to be an attempt to justify indulgence in the very basic contributor (alcoholic beverages) which creates the problem. It appears that the time is fast coming when we need to wake up and deal with this WHOLE problem of alcohol as a beverage, wisely, sincerely, and honestly-especially honestly. -!1,/1pr-14y T. ScHr-rcnrpn, Rotarian Bridge Contractor Clay Center, Kansas Main Strcet Gets New Look Sometime ago there appeared in Tne Rorenrex an article telling how Holli- daysburg, Pennsylvania, improved the appearance of its main street by reno- vating the store fronts (Old Towns Come Alive. March. 1965). The Chamber of Commerce secured the services of an architect from Pennsylvania State College, enlisted the cooperation of the business men, put on a campaign to improve the town. Your story gave complete details and portrayed before and after pictures of the buildings involved. Our own town of Honesdale was in need of a similar job. At a Chamber meeting I presented the article from Tnn RorenreN as a basis from which to work, and a plan evolved similar to the one printed in the Magazine. We put on a contest a for the best store front with Tnn RorentlN Rotary lnternational Gonvention May 21-25, 1967 Plan now to combine an ideal convention with an idyllic vacation. In the ancient and beautiful city of Nice, Located just a few miles from fabulous Monte Carlo, Nice is the largest and the gayest of the sunny Riviera resorts. 44 otticial tours, ranging from 17 to 45 days, have been prepared by your North American Transportation Committee. Every tour is an opportunity to meet more of your fellow Rotarians. All filled with more of everything it takes to make your trip unforgettable. These tours are available to all Rotarians and their families, including those participating in an air charter' Join this fabulous convention-vacation now. We'll make all the arrangements down to the smallest detail. You just relax and enjoy yoursell. Write or call for your copy of "Official Tour and Transportation Book" of Rotary International. lts 48 pages contain many pictures illustrating the official tours and all necessary travel information. GOMMITTEE NORTH AMERICAN TRANSPORTATION COMMITTEE ROTARY INTERNATIONAL 61 West 51st Street, New York, New York 10019. Telephone: (212) 581'4730 Or contact your local Travel Agent JeNuenv, 1967 19 The Gompleat Investor at Treasure Cay He's made his tax-free Bahamas investment here. He's watching it appreciate. Now he's faced with tough decisions. Will it be: Golf on l8-hole championship course? Tennis anyone? Five courts are ready. Skindiving? Miles of coral reefs or exploring and spear fishing. TYater-skiing? Boats are ready in the Treasure Cay marina-the water is perfect. FishiDC? Toueb selection trere. lqnefishing on the flats or trolling in the blue water? Photography? Really no choice here. Treasure Cay is too colorful for black and white film. Beaclcumbing? 3h mrles of sparkling sand for rest, sun and loafers. -made Secinlizing? Well-stocked bar at the Inn. As you can see, the Compleat Treasure Cay investor faces these decisions bravely after day. -day You should be faced with these or other selections. first prize of $250 and hired a designer. As of now we have 14 new store fronts completed and four more waiting for contractors to do tbe work. Main Street has a fine new look. And what's more last week we received a letter from the Scranton Chamber of Commerce inviting us to come over and explain to them how we did it. We're very happy with the results of our project, and proud that Tun RoTARTAN was the basis of the plan. F. KrnweN, Rotarian -(g5sBp1 Telephone Engineer fI one sdale, Pe nnsy Solved It In lvania 18 Minutes The article by Mathieu Pigeolet (l Puzzling Fellow in Tne RorenreN for November) was very interesting, and I enjoyed it immensely. The puzzle took me 18 minutes to solve. May we look forward to more of the same? (Yes you may. See page 7l of this issue-Eos. ) Rlonn, Rotarian -lyB11B11 Architect Flushing, New York But What of Ecological Eftects . . . ? It is interesting but also disheartening that A. E. Russell and Bo Lundberg mention the sociological and economic effects Or-should you spend several weeks a winter at Treasure Cay-or stay forever, as most people want to do. Our staff of clear-thinking experts wants t9 help you. make your selection. Why don't you write? in their debate on Super Sonic Boom, (Tun RorenreN for November, 1966) but make no mention of ecological effects. We (men) happen to belong to one species out of some 2 million other species of living things on earth. They form a very important, in indispensible, part of our fact environment. Sonic booms will certainly act as intense and totally unnatural stimuli to part or perhaps all of these organisms. I have no idea what the results before the planes go into use. What will happen to the great Springtime migrations of birds which are timed so accurately to the appearance of food during migration and during nesting? I realize that many of the proponents of super sonic travel will state that they couldn't care less, but this will only emphasize their almost totally complete unawareness of the world in which they live. I plead for a few years of ecological r---- ------.:-Treasure Gay, U. S. Office P.O. Box ------1 4567,Fort lauderdale, F!a.33304 Gentlemen: Help me decide. Send me information on: fl An island vacation E Homes E Bahama investment E Island inspection Name.. 20 testing of super sonic planes before they are put into use. Why must we always be in such a hurry? Do nations always have to act like a bunch of kids playing "Duck on the rock"? J. Tnnvslev -F. of Ecology Professor B et hle hem, P ennsy lvania Organizer Robinson Crusoe, so to speak, Began the 4)-hour week; He lived on an island, neat and tidy, And all his work was done by Friday. -F. G. KnnNe,N Tue RoreRraN Catch the action Down Under. See big booming cities like Sydney and Melbourne. Cheer yourself hoarse along with the world's greatest sports fans. Stand in the sunburned silence of the wide, brown Outback. You'll like Australia and the vigorous, outgoing Australians. lt's all less than a day away on Qantas, the airline with the jump on the South Pacific. You can't beat the fare and we have more flights than any other airline - at least one a day. Your travel agent will carry the ball. Or QantasAustralia's round-the-world airline. Conlinent of lreosures, crossrood of pleosures, il owoils Rotory's 'Feslivol of Friendship' EROM THE Arctic's frosty fiords twinkling in rhe Midnight Sun lo green orchipelogos owosh in the blue lAegeon, Europe offers the hoppy wonderer pleosuroble vistos on every hond ond without end. Look ot this lond-this third greolest of the conlinents! tt spikes the sky with mighty meunlsin5-fhe Alps, the Apennines, lhe Pyrenees. lt silts lhe seos with regol rivers Rhine, the Rhone, the Donube. lt beckons the quest-the ing lroveller to room routes poved by the Romons ond comp on meodows chorted by Chorlemogne. And the tourists come-from oll corners of the world 5qv6u1 the flovor ond somple the hospitolity of -[6 Europe-ond to meet rhe 340 million people for whom this is home. The Swiss, for exomple, eoch yeor ploy host lo more people thon live in their Alpine Confederolion, their populotion of five ond o holf million one yeor welcoming 30 million guests! As you wonder, remember thot Rotory is strong in Europe. lt took rool there in 191l-with three Clubs sprouting: Dublin, lrelond; London, Englond; ond, Belfost, Northern lrelond. Todoy there ore 2,000 Clubs with l2 members in 2l londs of Conlinentol Europe, ond 1,014 Clubs with 45,750 members in Greot Britoin ond 83,3 lrelond. Five Europeon Rotorions hove served os President of Rotory lnternotionol. All Rotory roods leod to Europe ihis yeor-lq Rotory's 58th onnuol Internolionol Convenlion in Nice, Fronce, Moy 2l-25, where o worm welcome owoits you. lt's lo be o "Festivol of Friendship." lt will be o hoppy "home' coming" for mony who enioyed Rotory's 28th ot Nice in 1937. So dust off your Boedeker ond plot your Convenlion course . . ond let the next 30 poges help you visuolize this Wonderful Wonderlonsl-fuv6pg. EUROPE: WONDERFUL WANDERI TND p IRELAND , MEDITERRANEAN IGELAND Fronr these volcanic shores set sail the valiant Vikings Eric the Red and his son, Leif Ericsson, who charted currents to the North American continent 492 years before Columbus, This icy island warmed by the encircling Gulf Stream spouts hot springs and gushes geysers, and lceland's most famous oneGeysir-gives its name to this phenomenon around the world, Volcanoes are still active, and lava blackly laces one ninth of the country, while glaciers silvr-.rily encrust another one eighth. But all is not bleak: moss, aspen, heather, and willow briglrten the barren landscape of Europe's westernmost country. A pork in the heort of Reykiovik-"city without q smokesiqck.' '.r irL.i"i.' ' :6i ' .."$tl q, *"..111,' .!i4"' A lod on o ledge views o ship snug in Geironger Fiord. NORWAY White nights brighten the bold northern mountains from May to July in this "Land of the Midnight Sun." Skimming down the coastal stretches, a chain of islands known as the skerryguard stand as ramparts in the sea. lt is a land that inspires love: "Ja, vi elsker dette landef," pledges the Norwegian anthem, "Yes, we love this country." The Arctic Circle swings down to claim one third of the country, and the 1,600-mile-long eastern f rontier is the longest of any European country besides Russia. Fjords form ice-free harbors, and the northern climate is kept mild by the flow of the North Atlantic Drift. - '' r t. h,. ;,1. , - lt. ;-- g: i. ,=. -a 'i r':li S'e "Der er et yndigt land," sing tlre Danes in one of :heir two national anthems:"There is a lovely land," Lovely, yes:"1he Fairy Tale Country" of Hans Christian Andersen, where wh te-washed and a bountiful land of some 200,000 farms, Over Akvavit, four and a half million Danes sav: "Skoa//" Four lovely lodies find o flock of feothered friends on Copenhogen,s Town Holl Squore a.:i ',;t:: r t.,, .t :. -.', ..:.;1. ...'t ..l: ;; .. 9szn {::ji The Poseidon Fountoin by Corl Milles in Giifeborg's G6loplotsen. In Sweden, superlatives are a way of life: it is the largest country in Scandinavia, its constitution is the oldest written one in force in Europe, and its bank, Sueriges Riksbank, is the oldest in the world. "Du gamla, du fria, du fiallhbga nord," sing the Swedes in their national anthem, "O glorious old mountain-crowned land of the North." Mountains crown 54 percent of the land, and on more than 56 million acres soar stands of spruce and pine, In this land of some 96,000 lakes, Stockholm sits solidly on the sea, whose blue ribbons flow in to embrace the city. JeNue.nv, 1967 i ,. .\$..r st. ..wrl**iz, t'N,:;. ?. I ti ." t- J. ':^ t,. "".l']', ';"; \a. 4...- The Hyvink6d Church sporkles in fhe splendor of o Finnish Winter. FINLAND Ingenuity, frugality, and hard work are hallmarks of the Finns, whose ancestors were hardy hunters and trappers. This land of lumberjacks and Lapps is dominated by its "green gold" of pine, spruce, birch, and fir:forests cover 70 percent of the compact country. Sparkling like liquid sapphires, 55,000 lakes spread serenely under the canopy of gigantic greenery. The "white gold" of Finland's water power resources is the other natural treasure enriching one of Europe's largest countries (total area: more than 130 thousand square miles). Here, the cuckoo is Spring's happy harbinger. 28 THn RotenreN IRELAND Glowing green midst blue mist of the lrish sea, this "Emerald lsle" is home to a host of hues: the flash of scarlet fuchsia hedges, the light lines of little white roads, the crimson splash of azaleas. There are names on this land that lend a lilt to the language: Macgillicuddy's Reeks, Ballycotton, Skibbereen, Mizen Head. lreland is mountains and moors and thatched cottages and ancient tales lingering by firesides-and a most hospitable people. "Th failte romhat," the lrish say: "You are welcome," And as you leave, they are likely to ask: "When will you be coming back to see us again?" Blorney Costle, with its fomous stone, is five miles from the city x3 JeNu.rnv. 1967 of Cork in County Cork. UNITED KINGDOM Costle Combe in Wiltshire is one of Britoin's l2 prettiesf villoges. The blood of lberians, Celts, Romans, Anglo-Saxons, Danes, and Normans flows through their veins. "Thus from a mixture of all kinds began that heterogeneous thing, an Englishman," said Daniel Defoe. And in the UK today there is the canny Scot, the lively Cockney, the dour North-countryman, the voluble Welshman. Much is made of the midland moors and the London fog. But the landscape seasonally sprouts yellow gorse or purple heather, and.even Londoners often savor the sun. Geography leaves its vivid imprint: towering cliffs and headlands looming over narrow lochs and wide firths. 30 Tne Rorenr.lN The whir of windmills, criss-crossing of canals, and colorful tumbling of tulips enliven the only land in Europe that grows from year to year. The polders or lowlands of The Netherlands are reclaimed from sea and lakes and protected by dikes, for two fifths of the country is below sea level, The Dutch have Europe's greatest population density-over 900 people per square mile. This is a land of industrialists and philosophers, agriculturalists and artists; the land of Rembrandt, Vermeer, Van Gogh, In Amsterdam's RijksmuseLrm, Rembrandt's "Night Watch" still radiates 17th century splendor. Sionding like sentinels, windmills cre o perenniol port of the Dutch sl J.tNuenv. 1967 3I scene- This quiet countryside is a tableau of scenic variety:tiny villages, soaring cathedrals, commanding castles and chateaux-plus the fragrance of flower markets and the fun of festivals. lt lies at the crossroads of the continent and offers a diversity of attractions: the diamond-cutting industry of Antwerp and the masterpieces of Rubens in Brussels. Belgium's modern capital city boasts broad boulevards running past tiny cobbled streets and intricate wrought-iron work arching over street-corner shrines. lt is the land of the Flemings and the Walloons and has the densest railway network in Europe. BELGIUM The citodel copping the iown of Dinoni gives o commonding view of the Meuse River. THe RorenIer.I The old.world cily of Clervoux, with its spires ond turrels. LUXEMBOURG This land of three languages presents a particular paradox: it is only 999 square miles in size and yet is the world's eighth largest steel producer! Now entering its second millennium (having celebrated its 1,000th birthday in 1963), little Luxembourg clings to its distinct ethnical character: "Mir woelle bleiwe wat mir sin," they say: "We wantto remain what we are." And so they remain a trilingual people, speaking the original dialect called "Lutzelburgisch," plus French and German. The land, like the preople, has its own distinct character: the fertile lowlands are c:alled Bon Pays-Good Land, JeNueny, 1967 33 GERMANY This land of Siegfried and the Lorelei has been shaped in many ways by its mighty rivers:the Rhine and the Main, the Weser and the Donau, Golden grapes in vineyards sweeping up the slopes bedeck the broad banks of the Rhine. Wines from these slopes are renowned the world over. Rivers soon give way to mountains and forests: the Black Forest and Odenwald gradually merging into the high walls of the Bavarian Alps, lt is fitting that Germany is a vacationland of scenic mountain resorts and salty seaside resorts, for its more than 55 million people are the most travel-conscious in Europe. J+ Tnn Ror.cnreN FRANGE "The land of France is remarkable for the clearness of its outlines, for the differences between its regions," wrote Paul Valery. These differences range from the sparkle of Paris, "City of Light," to the splendor of the chateau country and the Mediterranean warmth of the Riviera. And Paris remains a great center of intellectual and artistic life. The large regional cities-Marseilles, Lyons, Bordeaux, Nice-have their own well-defined personalities. Ruins of Roman roads may still be seen in a country that today has one of Europe's most highly developed transportation systems. The forlress ond obbey of Mont St. Michel tower toword the sky, ..v/,i 6,., 4r: " i .:3, JeNuenv, 1967 . *. ', h. . '. " From San Sebastian's Emerald Coast to the Costa Brava on the Catalanian coast, the spirit of Spain is captured in certain symbols:a matador's bright cape swirling in the sun, the frantic rhythm of a flamenco, the grandeur of works by Eil Greco and Goya, the Moorish and Gothic walls twining round Toledo. And the 30 million people of Spain reflect this spirit: the central Castilians, the northern Basques, the Catalans and Galicians, and the southern Andalusians. Tlre Balearic lslands offshore in the Mediterranean extend the territorial boundaries of continental Spain-and the sway of Spanish spirit, SPAIN Neor Gronodo, olive trees bloom in the shodow of the Sierro Nevodo nrounloins. Tsr, Ror,rnraN White-clod girls beoring flowers during Tomor's "Feslos dos Tobuleiros," PORTUGAL "One cannot define the Portuguese, one must tell their story," says an old proverb. The sea is a stirring segment of that story. During Portugal's "Golden Age" in the 1Sth century, her explorers sailed the world's seas. Today, her fishermen sweep the sea for sardines and tuna. Half of the world's supply of cork comes from the stands of cork trees dotting this littoral of the lberian Peninsula. Portus Cale, at the mouth of the Douro River, gave the country its name, A sense of history pervades the people, as does a feeling of saudades-a wistful word with many meanings, including z a sad but sweet memory, JeNuenv, 1967 37 "The World's Playground"-Switzerland's variety of attractions has earned it this name. And each year this country of some five million people entertains at least that many visitors. They come to relax in trim, peaceful villages or go shopping and sight-seeing in such bustling, cosmopolitan cities as Zurich. Many take to the ski slopes in the Alps, which cover three fifths of the country. They come to savor the contrasts in her architecturewooden chalets of roughly hewn timber and little pink houses with their pergolas-and her people-merry, music-loving countryfolk and sturdy mountain shepherds. Girls of Monlreoux gother norcissus on the slopes of Glion. S\MITZERLAND 38 Tne Rorenrex LIEGHTENSTEIN The costle of Gutenberg neqr Bolzers overlooks o peoceful countryside. This triangular principality is a study in small statistics:it's a country of 62 square miles whose greatest extent north to south is 17 miles and maximum distance east to west is seven miles. The some 17,000 Liechtensteiners are blessed by a warm, southwest Winter wind called the f1hn, which hastens the coming of Spring. This little land is dominated by the Rhine River, as her national anthem attests: oben am deutschen Rhein as gentian, on the German Rhine. A variety of alpine plants, such -Above edelweiss, and alpine rose, brighten her higher mountain reaches, which comprise most of the country. JeNu,c,nv. 1967 39 ITALY St. Mork's Coihedrol odds orchitecturol grondeur lo oncient Venice. Seas set the shape of this boot-like land: the Tyrrhenian to the West, the lonian to the South, and the Adriatic to the East. Two sea-shaped segments of her are islands: Sicily and Sardinia. Perhaps, as the saying goes, "all roads lead to Rome"-but their contours carry them past the canals of Venice, the lakes of Lombardy, the mountainous domain of the Dolomites. And along the roads are the people: warm-hearted and open-handed, and talking not only with their tongues but also with their eyes, arms, and hands. The ltalian patrimony, with a tradition that extends over 2,500 years, is the second oldest in Europe. 40 Tne RoreRrAN The Austrion Alps serve os on impressive bockdrop for this winter sports villoge in the Tyrol' AUSTRIA JeNuenv, 1967 4l GREEGE This land was the cradle of Western civilization: here was first tried the democratic form of government. The Greeks produced the world's first po_ets, dramalists, historians, and philosolrhers. Here rose the Temple of Zeus and the palace 6f Knos'sos. And the Aegean lsles spawned th I wandering the high mountain rimi-wild goat-which has disappeared Four fifths of Greece is wrinkled w level there flourish such fragrant fruits as figs, grapes, oranges, and pomegranates-in addition to crops of cotton and rice. The Porthenon dominotes the heights of fhe Acropolis, Spires of the Yeni Mosque tower over lstonbul's Goloto Bridge' TURKEY Turkey is Europe an important Marmara, beginning-the geographical end of Asia Minor. lt lies athwart the ystem: the Dardanelles, the Sea of The place that was once the kingly ty of lstanbul, and is in Europe. The low, rolling hills of Thrace; mi-arid Anatolian plateau. Mount Ararat's imposing heights and lstanbul's Byzantine church, Saint Sophia, offer a different kind of contrast. JeNuenv, 1967 43 ENCOUNTER WITH EUROPE: lf I Could Wander There Just 0nce More. r r Disfinguished trovel wrilers from five confinenls look bock to their fovorile ploces. A SYMPOSIUM ... I Would Wqnder Spoin soys FRANK GALIEGO It represents an encounter with history. Think of the Roman aqueduct in Segovia, for example, or the elegant architectural legacies left by the Moors all over southern Spain. |F PAIN is distinct, a land of poetry and romance. 'tJ Even if it were not my own, that is the country, I would most like to revisit. The wild barrier of the Pyrenees isolates Spain from the beaten track. Today, as yesterday, Spain-though part of it-is different from the rest of Europe. It represents an encounter with lost arts-the craftsmanship, for instance, of the swordmakers; with old, yet even more popular customs, like folk dancing and music. Yet Spain also represents an encounter with earth Where else would you see fiestas like those of Pamplona? Castles like those of Castile? Towns which seem to live in the Middle Ages side by side with fashionable resorts like those of the Costa del Sol or the Costa Brava? The landscape is different in every region and, even at its sternest and most desolate, as in Castile. it has a special quality that impresses itself upon the soul. The big cities of Spain can be bustling on certain hours, but they can also be quiet and still as cloisters. I shall never forget the astonishment in my wife,s voice when, after a hectic trip through other European capi- tals, she opened the window of our hotel room in Madrid. "Darling," she said, "the only noise is people talking in the street." The Spanish, it is said, are natural gentlemen. Washington Irving said there were more natural gentlemen in Spain than in any other place, except perhaps among the American Indians. Gentlemen or not, the Spaniards are natural. In a world where every day people are becoming more standardized, they are still different, even among themselves. Andalusians, Basques, Castilians, Galicians-not only their language and customs but also their temperament is different. Everyday life in Spain contains adventure for the visitor. Spain represents an encounter with art, mysticism, and the highest achievements of the human spirit. Think of places like El Prado Museum-Goya, El Greco; towns made historic by saints, like Avila; the spectacle of religious festivals-Holy Week in Seville; ports from which men like Columbus sailed to discover new worlds. 44 and the earthy, even the primitive, as in the bullfight. There is no other spectacle in the world which so powerfully dramatizes the underlying savageness of human nature. An encounter with Spain is always for me an encounter with truth, for more than one moment, under more than one symbol. That's why revisiting this country. I never tire of Sponish-born Fronk Gollego become Austroliq's first full+ime trovel ediior six yeors ogo, with the Sydney Doily Telegroph. Morried, with two sons, he hos trovelled widely in Europe, Asio, ond ihe Pocific. He speoks six longuoges, including French, ltoliqn, Lotin, ond Chinese Mondorin. Tae Ror,c,nIAN ... I Would Wqnder Portugol soys CLYCIE MENDES CARNEIRO E On US Brazilians, to arrive in Lisbon, after having I visited other European countries, it is the same as coming home. Upon entering the city, which for more than eight centuries has been periodically shaken by cataclysms but which it always rebuilt by its people, we feel surrounded by an atmosphere filled with human warmth. Ties of blood, of faith, and of friendship unite us. "Garden of Europe planted along the coast," Lisbon is bathed by the waters of the Tagus River which blend with those of the ocean providing magnificent scenery. There are churches, palaces, and museums attesting to the glorious and heroic past. About 20 kilometers away tourists from everywhere enjoy the sun-bathed beaches of Estoril. Contrasting with the city, Alfama appears like a separate post card. It is a picturesque, old, and typical section whose residents are of modest social conditions. Its narrow streets are lined with clothes drying in the sun, and among them is a labyrinth of alleys, patios, fountains, and remains of moorish walls. But Lisbon is not all that is beautiful in Portugal. The entire land will charm you with its fortresses built by the barbarians, the Roman ruins of Conimbriga, the towns of Porto, Braga, and Viana do Castelo, Figueira daFoz, the villages of Nazar6, Fdtima, Alcobaga, Obidos, Queluz, Sintra, Sesimbra, and Setubal, and the Algarve coast with a display of the most beautiful Euro- That is why, if I were to return to Europe and be given the choice of only one country, may it be Portugal, so that, upon arriving there, I can say to this brother people that magic word only found in our common language: "I came to satisfy my saudade5-py sad, sweet yearning for home." Clycie Mendes Corneiro is Direcior of the Tour- ing Supplement of lhe 56o Poulo doily, O Esfodo S. Poulo. She founded Brozil's Touring Cenier for Students ond hos trovelled extensive- ly throughout loiin Americq. Among her pean beaches. Euro- peon ports of coll: Fronce, Spoin, ltoly, Portugol' ... I Would Wqnder the Riviero sqys HORACE SUTTON arAKE ME back to the C6te d'Azur and set me I down in the old Greek settlement of Antibes, in the sybarites' roost known as the Hotel du Cap which is an overlarge villa the color of the thick cream the French use as a mortar to mix with wild strawberries. Awnings shade its windows and pebbled walks lead off across the grounds which are a kingly estate by the edge of the Mediterranean, a sea that varies between turquoise and royal blue depending upon the sun, the sky, and the season. Ever since 1888 the Hotel du Cap has been in the same family which has made a studied science of catering to the overprivileged. In World War I, U. S. Army nurses persuaded the management to stay open in Summer. Before that it had catered to the chilled English, the frostbitten Russian archdukes and snowdusted Polish counts. Winter was its only season. In JeNuenv, 1967 II, when the Army set up its Riviera rest it was the Hotel du Cap that became the World War command, exclusive resort of U. S. generals. It is one thing to swim off the crags at the hotel's watering hole called Eden Roc and to have lunch with the elegant by the side of the sea. But it is another pleasure, using the hotel as home, to journey off on excursions into the fascination of the hill towns that nest among the slopes rising behind the shore. Up at Biot, a village between Antibes and Cagnes, not far from a greenhouse filled with carnations, is the handsome museum exclusively dedicated to the works of Leger in the 50 fruitful years of his life, 1905 to 1955. Picasso dominates the village of Vallauris, the potter's center to which he came at war's end to try his hand in the plastic arts. One of his celebrated pieces of sculpture stands in the town square, a gift from the artist to the 45 village that gave him shelter. The shops still sell some limited editions of his plates and plaques, but the sidewalks are also lined with the art of other ceramicists, most of it brilliant and imaginative. Yet nowhere is the setting more appealing than high in the hills at St. Paul de Vence, a marvel of a town where villagers play a bowling game called pltanque and the walls all around are hung with the best of Chagall and Picasso, Matisse and Dufy. This is the Riviera and I return to it whenever the mind is grey, and life becomes daily. For here the sun lives, and flowers grow, inspiring the creative and cheering the souls of the merelv mortal. on the plaza, and the world's famous artists in their hungrier years left paintings instead of cash at the inn called the Colombe d'Or. White doves totter on the tanbark among the tables high on the terrace looking off to the carnation fields below. And the rooms upstairs An ossocioie editor of Sotvrdoy Review ond o syndicoted columnist, Horoce Sutton hos been o trovel writer for over 20 yeors, Morried, with three children, his recenl roomings included Tohiti, Boli, Indio, ond the Philippines, plus Poris, Copenhogen, Tokyo, ond Hong Kong. ... I Would Wqnder Stonehenge sdys KYOZO YUASA trIT IS Stonehenge." I "The heathen temple, you mean?" "Yes. Older than the centuries; older than the d'Urbervilles!" So they spoke, Tess of the d'Urbervilles and her husband Angel Clare, when they reached Stonehenge on the last night of their flight. Tess flung herself upon an oblong slab which was warm and dry, heated by the sun during the preceding day and she soon fell fast asleep. With the dawn the pursuers were upon them and Tess was taken to the prison at Winchester. The description of Stonehenge at midnight in the last chapters of Hardy's Tess ol the d'Urbervilles, which 46 I read when I was young, left such a deep impression upon me that when my wife and I had a chance to take a trip in the southwest counties of England about ten years ago, we drove to Stonehenge from Salisbury late one afternoon. Stonehenge is a circular setting of large standing stones situated about eight miles north of Salisbury, Wiltshire, which is a part of Thomas Hardy country of ancient Wessex in England. Modern research holds that the oldest part of the monument belongs to the late Neolithic period, about 2,000 B.C. We left the car at some distance from the outer earthwork and approached the huge central standing stones, Tne RorenrAx about 30 of them, all six to eight feet tall. The stones were still warm with the June sun. There were no other people around, no sound. My imagination was wandering in the scenes 4,000 years ago with these gigantic monument of huge blocks of stone mysteriously arranged. Nobody knows from where and how these stones were brought to the present site. These majestic stones have stood through the ages, through the wars, through all weather; and through all other natural and human happenings. The sun had already fallen beyond the horizon of the Salisbury Plain. Everything was still and quiet. There was no perceptible movement. Age of 4,000 years gave the massive stone pillars strange dignity. The neighborhood of Salisbury was one of the most important areas in prehistoric England and a meeting place of early cultures. Stonehenge is an example of such a site. Old Sarum, a prehistoric fortress, is two miles north of present Salisbury, where one of the oldest and most beautiful cathedrals in England is situated. Such moments passed in the quiet atmosphere "far from the madding crowd" is an important experience of our life. Salisbury and its neighborhood is the place I want to revisit in Europe. ... I Would Wqnder lstonbul sqys cEcll t. EPRILE Heod of Jopon's lorgest low ffrm speciolizing in internotionol ond polent low, Post District Governor Kyozo Yuoso is o seosoned world lroveller. He is on onnuol visitor fo ihe U.S.A. ond Europe, often occomponied by his wife, ond he hos olso visited more rhon l5 other countries. Blue Mosque (I had to buy one from each) looked like my own son (left, alas, at home). But Istanbul's charm far-from-homeness. I savoured sight, sound, and smell-the dirt and the glamour, the beauty and the ugliness, the good taste and dinginess existing side by side in the holy places; the splendor of the minarets and the grace of the quite young and lovely belly dancers at the Kervansaray (offering the tourist one of the best shows in Europe). I want to "do" Istanbul at leisure one day. The first for me is its time-with a connection to catch all too soon-you must take the tour. I fell in love with the sweet-faced Moslem guide who spoke an exquisite English and apologized prettily each time she found herself mentioning the fact that the Crusaders had looted a favorite monu- ment. She insisted on buying me tea, not Turkish coffee, outside the bazaar, and after accompanying us, on her own time, on an unsuccessful shopping expedition for a leather coat sweetly waved away all suggestions of reward. P,S. I must have another look, before I die, at the Chinese porcelain (roomfuls of it) at the Sultan's Palace. HE FIRST time my small son saw a pride of lions close up in South Africa's Kruger National Park, he said: "It's like a dream." Istanbul had a similar effect on my wife and me. People are people; and tire little vendor of two-lira whistles who burst into tears when a bigger and more aggressive salesman tried to undercut him outside the JeNuenv. 1967 Exquisite! Cecil [. Eprile's 35-yeor coreer in iournolism begon on flre Edinburgh Evening Dispotch. He hos trovelled in Europe, Africo, ond the U.S.A. He wos editor of Drum, Africo's lorgest mogozine, when he penned this piece, but hos ioined Forum World Feqtures in london, Englond' Rotory Club Secrelory Ren6 Fossio ond Presidenl Poul P6lissier shore the view from Eze's scenic botonicol gorden. ROTARYS EYRIE ON THE RIVI ERA An 'eogle's nesl' odds o medievql touch to o modern four-lown Rotary Club on lhe Riviero. II|}ALL IT the height of inspiration: Friedrich V Nietzsche, the dour German philosopher, climbed up and down a mule path here while mulling over one of his major works, Thus Spake Zarathustra. Call it a perched village, chosen centuries ago with a practical eye for defense and thus meant to be inaccessible. Call it, as sometimes it is called, the Eyrie, or eagle's nest, for the way it nestles atop a rock mountain high above the sparkling Mediterranean. And, finally, call it Eze, a medieval town that has been declared a French national monument where no modern buildings may be erected and all the wiring is underground. It is located near Nice on the Moyenne Corniche, or middle ledge, along the Riviera. Eze is one member of a quartet that speaks with a single Rotary voice: the Rotary Club 48 of Beaulieu-Eze-Villefranche-Saint-Jean-Cap Ferrat. Admitted to Rotary International in November 1957, this combined Club composed of members from the four towns meets regularly at the Casino de Beaulieu. President Paul P6lissier is an engineer who resides in Villefranche and Secretary Ren6 Fassio is a druggist in Beaulieu. The ntembers of this combined Club live in one of the most scenic sectors on the French Riviera. In the old port of Villefranche, the tiny Chapelle St. Pierre is decorated with a superb series of frescoes done by the French poet-moviemaker-artist Jean Cocteau. The medieval and the modern exists side by side in these four towns, everything from Rotarian Robert Wolff's converted castle in Ezr, to Secretary Rene Fassio's American-style drugstore down in Beaulieu. Tne RoremeN * ) I I J Fi ,:P Nestling olop d rock mounloin high o6ove the Medilerroneon, the medievol village ol Eze is sometimes colled the Eyrie, or eogle's nesl. Here, lhe lomous Germon philosopher Nielzsche once pondered lhe woys of mon' kind while plying o mule poth on lhese heights olong lhe Riviero's Moyenne Corniche, or middle ledge. The pride Fronce lokes in lhis oncient orchiteclure is evidenf: Eze hos been declored o nolionol monumenl. This meons thol no modern buildings moy be erected ond oll wiring is put under' ground. Eul some ospecls of the medievol mood of the posl hos been occommodoled lo the modern mood of the present. An old coslle of Eze has been converled inlo d picturesque inn (below, right) by Rolorion Rob- ert Wolft (center), who is flonked by Club Presidenl P6lissier (left) ond Secrelory Fossio. Foshionoble folk ol lhe French Riviero ore regulor potrons of this new inn with the rother old look. Bob Wolff calls his coslle converled into on inn, "La Chevre d'Or." + Fzl, &1 JeNuenv, 1967 49 F L i ?l * ,"$ w.& wt *e* 't'ii;il; Roberi Sguorciofichi (right), firsl Presidenl of lhe f our-town Rotory Club olong the Riviero, ond his wife. chot iilh President P6lissier on the sleps ol the hotel thot Bob monoges. ln his Americon-slyle drugstore in Beoulieu, Rotory Club Secrelor;, Ren6 Fossio (obove) confers wilh o {emole cuslomer, one of o' growing number of French citizens who find "/e drugsfore" fos. cinoting. Rotory is o quorlet ol towns olong ihis slrelch of lhe Riyiero: lhe Rotory Club ol Beaulieu-Eze-Villelronche-Soint. Jeon-Cop Ferrol, where member A. J. R. Visez (below,lefi) chots: with Pierre Cornmonn. Rolorion Serge Renord shows o friend f rom Poris the frescoes ol Jeon Cocteou in lhe tiny Chopel/e St. Pierre. 50 Tue RoranrlN In front ol lhe old church in Beoulieu, (left to right) Secrelory Fossio ond President P6lissier lislen lo fellow Rotorion Jeon Polfer describe plons for o new gorden he plons on lhe sile nexl lo lhe hotel he monoges. lnside this Iiny Chopelle 51. Pierre (right) in Villefrqnche ore o set of superb frescoes done by French oriist Jeon Cocleou. Boots bobble in ihe beoutilul blue Medilerroneon wolers of lhe horbor in Villefronche. The slopes rising beyond this horbor hoven ore bright with mony new buildings, bolh individuol homes ond oporlment houses. The four-lown Rotory Club, which includes Villefronche, often meels ot the Yocht Club along here. J,c,NuenY, 1967 5l fhe lostelully modern Polois des Expositions will house plendry sessrons ond some enlerloinmenl evenls ol Rotor/'s 1967 convention, Fl otarv's 1967 International Convention is still F( n.urlv five months distant. but the delishts of Nice, on the elegant French Rivieia, are already" working a magnetic spell on the world's Rotarians. Plans for travel to Nice are bubbling in hundreds of Clubs and Districts. The largest single effort is the work of the RI North American Transportation Committee. It will guide Convention goers to dozens of planes and ships, including the S. S. Independence, which sails from New York May 9, carrying, among others, many past, present, and incoming officers of Rotary International. The RI Australia and New Zealand Transportation Committee is arranging passage for Convention goers from its area on jet flights and aboard the S. S. Orsova, which sails from Auckland April 15. Rotarians of District 516 in California have engaged a special train to whisk Convention goers from Paris to Nice. With space for up to 700 passengers, the train will make the run using equipment similar to that used on the French National Railroad's 100-mile-per-hour Mistral. As the train races to Nice, passengers from District 516 and elsewhere will enjoy a full-course meal and events calculated to give an early start to Convention Fellowship. Rotarians and guests from England, Ireland, and Sweden will be aboard the 27.000 ton S. S. Andes when it sails from Southampton, England, May 16, for a two week cruise to Mediterranean ports. During a five-day stop at Villefranche, adjacent to Nice, passengers will live aboard ship while attending the 1967 Convention. In South Africa, Mexico, the U.S.A., and many other parts of the Rotary world, Rotarians are booking air liners to jet themselves and their families to the "Festival of Friendship" Rotary Clubs along tbe Riviera have planned. Nice will be the first Rotary International Convention in Europe in ten years, and May 2l-25 promise C(lNVENTI(|I{ PR(|GRAM It{ BRIEF Convention Theme-A BEIIER wORtD THR0I,GH SATURDAY, 9 A.M. to SUNDAY, 4:30 I 20 MAY P.M.-Registration and voting delegate credentialing (and daily throughout the Convention) 21 MAY to 6 P.M.-0pening MONDAY, ROIARY 22 Feature of Convention-Entertainment }TAY to Noon-First Plenary Session 1 P.M.-luncheon Reunion for Present, Past, and Incoming 10 A.M. R. l. 0fficers. Free afternoon Afternoon-Special events for young people 5 P.M.-Meetings of delegates (as may be required) Evening-Major Enteftainment Feature TUESDAY, 23 MAY 10 A.M. to Noon-Secondary Plenary Session 2:30 to 4:30 P.M.-lnternational Friendship Meetings Evening-Local hospitality in cities along Cote d'Azur WEDNESDAY, 24 MAY I A.M. to Noon-Ealloting 10 A.M. to Noon-Ihird Plenary Session 2:30 P.M.-Fashion show for ladies Afternoon-Special evenls for young people 2:30 to 4:30 P.M.-Vocational Cralt Assemblies Evening-Major Entertainment Feature-"Nuit de Nice" THURSDAY, 1l A.M. 25 MAY to 1 P.M.-Fouilh Plenary Session Free afternoon Evening-President's Reception and Ball held to be splendid days indeed when Rotary folk from around the globe gather along the Promenade des Anglars-why not pack up a friendly smile and join them? 52 The Convention program is still being developed. Watch for more details of the program in future issues of THE R0IARIAN. Tun Rorenr,lN HOLIDAY FOR SIXTY "A wonderful holiday" had been promised, and so 60 11 and l2-year-old boys laden with clothes, toothbrushes, and high spirits gathered at the Town Hall in Auckland, New Zealand. The boys, drawn from 30 schools in the area, climbed into cars driven by local Rotarians and whizzed off to a campsite at nearby Kelston. During the six days that followed the boys lived in cottages and enjoyed some of the busiest days of their lives. In addition to the usual sports, games, spirited singing, and other camp activities, there were trips to nearby places, movies, and several kinds of in-camp entertainment. Camp Rotaboy, the Rotarians called it, and it took nearly the entire Club to bring it off properly, plus donations and assistance from local businesses. All too soon for the boys, the outing came to an end, and the Rotarians delivered them to their homes. All of them thanked the Club members and some put their appreciation into letters, but the best assurance the Club had of the project's success came in a letter from David Tobsis, who wrote: "It was the first holiday I have had away from home, and I didn't even get homesick." LAW DAY, U. S. A. It's a relatively new observance and hasn't yet reached the picnic and parade stage, so Law Day slips by almost unnoticed in most U.S. communities-but not so last May 1 in Swanton, Ohio. Swanton Rotarians made certain nearly everyone knew about the Day and its Loouli Gorbo of tfie Republic of Niger is the focol poinl ol o borbecue stoged by Rotorions ol Wallinglord, Conn., on beholl of their Do-Good Chesf. Donofions by U.S. Peoce Corpsmen in Niger ond people in Conneclicul broughl Mr. Gorbo Io lhe U.S.A. for surgery olter he wos crippled in on occident. fhe Rotory Club, which donoted his sleel wolking broces, mode its tenth onnuol borbecue o solule to Niger. Two ol Niger's cvlturol otfoches, Conneclicul Governor John Dempsey, ond 1,500 guests ottended. Wirh Mr. Loouli ore Club Presidenl D. N. Wilfioms ond Joonne Kocillos of Troop 201, which fielped serve lhe feosf' Wives of Ponjim, lndio, Rotorions sorl clothing collected lor youngsters in Cvrco, o needy villoge to which the Rotory Club hos given ossisfonce for lwo yeors. A porty of Rolorions ond their wives visited fheir "odopfed" villoge on lndio's lndependence Doy lost yeor and distributed clothing ond sweets to | 5O children. purpose. With 3,500 pamphlets, numerous window posters, and four large billboards the Club told how the rule of law protects individual liberty and called for responsible citizenship to sustain the law. For its own members and nearly a dozen special guests representing the legal profession, courts, and law schools, the Club staged a Law Day banquet on April 28. The guest speaker was Jon R. Waltz, trial lawyer and author of the recent book, "The Trial of Jack Ruby." .'HOW CAN WE HELP?" Yarinacocha is probably not on your map of Peru. Spacious as it might seem to its residents, it's only a speck in the Peruvian jungle I2O afu miles northeast of Lima. Here 165 North Americans at the Summer Insti- tute of Linguistics are helping Peru's Indians prepare to meet and cope with civilization. By developing writJeNuenv. 1967 53 ,,LUTHER" ROBERTSON cqn hqndle qir, steqmer, tcilored Europecn itinerqries, rePresent Americqn Express, Thos. Co.'ok ond cll mcjor compcnies. See our qds in The Rotqricsr. At your service ROBERTSON TRAVEI POST 24L2 Canlerbury Rd. Mt. Brook, Alcbcrmc 35223 Au. OCCASIONS Write for FREE Cotolog P2l FOR Fo? llcdltt & T.ophis Catalo! T2l INTERNATIONAI. ERONZE IABTEI 150 W. 22nd Sl., l{. Y.ll, t{'Y. WA 4' languages to comPlement the tribal vocal languages the Institute's linguists, all volunteers, hope to encourage the jungle people to understand and take part in their country's national life, of which they are now hardly aware. Dr. J. Poulson Hunter, a Rotarian of Sugar House (Salt Lake City), Utah, got the whole story on a visit last year to Yarinacocha and ten carried it back to his Rotary Club. What happened next is typically Rotary: Someone said "How can we help?" Someone else said "Send the Institute's clinic some medical supplies." The Club's Board agreed, and so did the membership, which put up a "generous" donation and authorized Dr. Poulson to select the supplies based on his knowledge of the clinic's needs and make the shipment. That shipment-about a cubic yard of surgical instruments, anesthetic drugs, soap, and disposable syringes at Yarinacocha late last -arrived year. "wE DID lT, BOYS!" It was the first major public ap- pearance for the three-year-old Rotary Club of Chembur (Bombay), India, and more than a dozen Rotarians spent months working on the arrangements for the Club's Conference on Employer-Employee Relations. The topic was a "hot" one, according to the Club, and no stone was left unturned in finding notable men of every shade of opinion to serve as participants in the discussion. 1965-66 Club President Kishore Udani opened the meeting by welcoming audience and participants and telling the Club's purpose in sponsoring the Conference. Then a justice of the Bombay High Court established the tone and topic of the conference and turned over the meeting to the participants. What followed was a four-hour discussion of wage policies, capitalism, employees' rights and obligations, socialism, and laws affecting employers and all received with "extremely favorable" reaction by the employees; audience. There was no charge to anyone for the conference. but the Club inIsrael. netted a tidy amount on the sale of advertisements in its program book. The money goes to the Club's charity fund. In the week following the Conference, the Club's bulletin "Apsara" rang out the headline: "We Did It, Boys! We Did It!" . One of-the pleasant things about touring Israel is that you don't have to go very rar rc go everywnere. The whole country is the size of New Jersey, Which means you can take in all the sights and still be able to take time out for a rest, For example: You plant yourself in Haifa and you're near Nazareth, Caesarea and the Sea of Galilee, Plant yourself in Jerusalem and you're near Mount Zion and the Judean .'ALL TOGETHER. NOW . . ." It's called the "North Carolina Rotary Cottage" in some circles, but to Hills. the 16 boys, members of the "forgotten generation," who live there, it's "home." They are among nearly 100 boys 10 to 16 who live at Boys Home on Lake Waccamaw, N. C. Gathered from the hands of juvenile courts and welfare agencies throughout the state, many of the boys have never before enjoyed a place called "home." At its 1962 Conference Rotary District 773 resolved to put its 43 Rotary Clubs Cont Gt yolr lrsy.l ag€nt or llr.el Coyernmcnt lburi.! Otne, 571 Filth Avc.' NY' Chicr3o, Lo! An8.l.!' Atl.ntr' Montre.l. behind an effort to help the state- liccnsed home expand and improve its facilities-the major aim of the projTHe RorenrA.N The ss United States is the fastest ship in theworld. We also have 5 acres of deckspace. (frnnisanyone?) One nice thing about taking the ss United States to Europe is all that deck space we put at your feet (five acres to be exact) ! Makes it easy to take a hike . . . or play a few fast sets ofdeck tennis . . . or curl up in a deck chair away from everyone else. It's hard to believe a ship so big can be so fast. Yet the ss United States is thefastest ship in the world, An average crossing takes just four-and-a-quarter days. Since rnost of our crossings include a weekend, a business traveler can enjoy a wonderful change of pace, yet be away from his work just three business days. Best of all, when you travel to Europe by ship you arrive at the top of your form ! Step ashore and tour a museum . . . or close a business deal. No need to spend valuable time recuperating. What else will you find aboard America's Superliner? Superb European cuisine...everything from steamed finnan haddie for breakfast to Schas- chlick a la Russe for dinner. The larg- ss est wine cellar afloat...stocked with the finest bordeaux, burgundies, moselles, ports . . . and 5000 bottles of vintage champagnes . Large air-conditioned staterooms with individual room con- trol. Swimming, dancing, the latest movies, and, for your peace of mind, the highest safety standards in the world. So this year, travel to Europe with us. There's no ship in the world quite like the ss United States. Call your Travel Agent or United States Lines, One Broadway, New York,N.Y. I 0004. United States America's we hope to welcome you aboard on your way to or lrom the convention in J,lNu.tnv. 1967 Nice, SUpeflinef ect would be to build an additional cottage to house 16 boys. Through voluntary contributions from District lln lnolol'in its rotlugr ulass will uo il$ lal. olt 0 uallms Rotarians, North Carolina Rotary Cottage was completed at a cost of $80,000 and put into operation early in il neuulal' uil$ illt il olto ninl il dl 1966. SHOW BIZ BONANZA The song you're most likely to hear sung and whistled by Rotarians of Virginia Beach, Va., these days is "There's No Business Like Show flusiness"-and they have proof to back up the claims made in this old tune: three years of box office-busting success on stage with the Virginia Beach Civic Chorus (see photo). Beginning in 1966 the two organizations have presented "Carousel," "Show Boat," and "South Pacific," playing to audiences of 2,000 or more. Proceeds from the productions, aver- This is the 100 hp Evinrude motor that holds the world's outboard speed record (130.9 mph) ! How come it also beats all other big outboards in fuel economy ? There are two reasons: First, it has a unique fueling and ignition system. Each cylinder has its own fixed-jet car- buretor. . . its own straight-in manifold . . . its own individually sealed compres- sion chamber, with internal exhaust tuning. The combustion climate is thermostatically controlled. And ignition is all-electronic with no mechan- - ical contacts to wear or need servicing. It all adds up to faster firing, cleaner combustion, more power per fuel charge Second, the low-friction, low-profile V-4 design is inherently balanced. lt runs smoother. lts short, rigid crankshaft has less "torsional whip" than tall in-line designs. The high-torque, short-stroke V-4 design delivers higher thrust over a wider speed range. Propellering is less critical. Its versatile power is more efficient under varying load and speed conditions. lf you enjoy passing gas docks, you'll enjoy it oftener with a Starflite 100-S. -'l See the Starflite 100-5 at your Evinrude dealer. He's listed in the Yellow Pages under "outboard tlolors." Send the coupon tor free Evinrude motor and catalog. boat I I I I I I I I J 56 t{hot shocking truth hos she confided lo Goylord Rovenol? A copocity oudience heord lhe whole story ol o performonce of "Show 8ool" in Virginio Beoch, Vo. lt wos one of seyerol populor musicol produclions thol the Rotory Club ond the Virginio Eeoch Civic Chorus hove stoged (see item). aging a net of $3,000 per show, are shared by the two groups, with the largest part going to the Club's scholarship program. Four members of the Chorus, made up of citizens "who just like to sing," are Rotarians. One of them, Chorus director Charles Oliver, is a music instructor at a local college and formerly worked in commer- cial television around the U.S. With its singers on stage and its Rotarians on the street handling publicity and ticket sales. the combination is lookTHe RorenreN .fal -f ".'t n .$.; ,lb'll help you make mone ofyoar Convention trip. First of all, because we make getting to the 1967 Convention so easy. We fly directly to Nice, France, from the U.S.A. every day. But there's more. You can enjoy a tour of Europe before or after the Convention. We can show you how to have a grander time in Europewhile you're Conventioneering. Just see a Pan Am Travel Agent, or call us. Then fly ofi to the Rotary fnternational Convention with a good feeling knowing you've chosen the very best there is. Wbrld's most experienced airline First on the Jer.ruA.nv, 1967 Atlantic First on the Pacific First in Latin America First'Round the World 5'1 ing forward to even more successful years. Beginning April 28 for five performances : "Oklahoma!" I *ai :-f WETCOME TO 3I NEW CTUBS Since last month's listing of new Clubs in this department, Rotary has "llo Yotl tltuy a u|0rl[ Irau0l0t'?" Of course, we all do, but we don't have to. Let's join them this fall on this fine 53 day around the world tour. Available now at lowest rates for outstanding accommodations! This dream trip can now be yours. Jet planes whisk you to distant lands. where in- credi'bly beautiful vistas await you, cultures of ancient times in- vite your inspec- tion and Are under- to your Club Secretary include the names and addresses of the President and Secretary of each new Club sent enoug h listed below. The new Clubs (with their sponsors in parentheses) are AncnNtINe: Los Hornos (La Plata). Austnetre: Picton (Camden); Mulwaree (Goulburn). Bnezrt: Sarandi (Passo Fundo). CHINI: Tainan East (Tainan ). DeNN,Ilnx: Silkeborg @stre (Silkeborg); Holbaek @stre (Holbaek). FxeNce: Belfort-Est (Belfort Montbeliard) ; Montbeliard-Est (Belfort Montbeliard); Molsheim-Vall6e (Strasbourg). GnnunNv: Ansbach (Nurnberg); Aurich (Emden). IN- lre: standing. 21,000 trains entered 31 new communities in many parts of the world. Bimonthly lists Coimbatore West (Coimbatore) to see GERMAI'|Y? ; Hunsur (Krishnarajanagar) ; Tadpatri will travel in comfort, stay in deluxe new air-conditioned hotels, You enjoy excellent food, and delight in a well organized opportunity to become acquainted 4 and people.' Visit such excit- with lands ing places as: Hawa ii, Korea, Japan, Taiwan, Hong Kong and Macao, Cambo- dia, Singapore, Malaysia, Thai- land, India, Egypt, Syria, Lebanon, Jordan, lsrael, Turkey, Greece. Even with this gi- gantic schedule you will have ample time for sightsee- ing, shopping and learnins about far- off civiiizations. ON A FOR MORE COTOR BROCHURE, BEAUTTFUL 'NFORMAT'ON SEND THE COUPON BELOW TO: Mr. Bob Hardter. Tour Chairman Rotary Club of Niskayuna 424 State Street, Schenectady, New York 12305 6 {i il Please send brochure on "Join the 58 (Proddatur). JnpeN: Tamashima (Kurashiki) ; Kokawa (Wakayama). KonBa: Sangju (Kimchon); Jinju (Pusan); Kunsan (Kimje, Iri); Oesung (Andong). PnItrpprNE,s: Victorias (Bacolod); Ormoc (Tacloban). Rsoossh: Chiredzi (Fort Victoris). TnB NBTunRLANDS: Kerkrade Heerlen). U.S.A.: Hartsdale, N.Y. (Scarsdale) ; Clinton, S.C. (Laurens) ; Camillus, N.Y. (Marcellus); Whitewater, Wis. (Waukesha); Westland, Mich. (Wayne); Spokane East, Wash. (Spokane). ALONG THE AVENUES Taiping, Malaysia: Since last June life has been quite a bit more pleasant for youngsters confined to the tuberculosis wards of the District Hospital. That was the month TaiPing Rotarians completed their major project for the year: the donation of two 23-inch television receivers to the hospital. Santa Barbara, Calif.: "Youth in Local Government Day" last year put high school students into the chairs of municipal offices; including those of the mayor, fire chief, and city councilmen. The Day was sponsored by the Rotary Club to acquaint young people with the problems and responsibilities of operating their city's government. Luanshya, Zambia: When the Roan Antelope Amateur Dramatic and Operatic Society staged its show "Bits and Pieces" Rotary Club members You can't imagine just how wonder- fully comfortable train travel is in West Germany. The most modern equipment glides you through the fabled picture-book countryside., . at budget prices. Luxury express trains connect with 90 European cities. Take the Rheingold Express with its plush bar-observation car, aircondition i ng throughout, telephones, stewardesses and international cuisine. See your travel agent for more details and be sure to ask him about money-saving EURAILPASS. Send for free illustrated booklets to help you pran, EiERMAN FEDERAL RArL-Rooo 1I _Gjiil W. 42ND STREET. NEW YORK, N.Y. 10036 THe RorenHx Stay a week. So many g'enerations of Swiss have looked after The experience can be frightening at first. But look a little longer and you can find your own speck of time and space in infinity. And suddenly you feel quiet and unhurried. That's what Switzerland is all about. And why people so many visitors, that it's now become an instinct. In fact, if you did nothing but eat, sleep, and lounge around for a week, you'd have the time of your life. But there's something more imoortant in Switzerland. Go into the mountains and you'll spend a lot of time looking into the valleys. Go into the valleys and you'll spend a lot of time looking up into the mountains. Either way, the looking won't be a waste of time. Because you'll be looking at more than say, "Travel in Europe.Vacation in Switzerland." Visit your travel agent now, for your copy of the "Unique World of Switzerland"-12 delightful journeys by rail, boat, and bus-fascinating travel ideas to fill your Swiss vacation with excitement-or write the Swiss National Tourist Office, The Swiss Center, 608 Fifth Avenue, New York, New York 10020, or 661 Market Street, San Francisco, California 94105. Today. breathtaking scenery. You'll be looking at time and space and infinity. r i ------ Ptease send me the I have indicated: a A tr u r! JeNuenv. 1967 brochures Switzerland, general information 7-day all-inclusive, conducted "Swiss Aloine Tour" 4-day al l-inclusive, conducted "Swiss Lakes & Mountains Tour" "Unique World of Switzerland," independent tours "Stay a Week"-resort folders I -----] to: Swiss National Tourist Office, The Swiss i Center, 608 Fifth Ave., New York, N.Y. 10020, or 661 tvtait coupon Market Street, San Francisco, Cal. 94105. NAM ADDRESS I CITY ZIP CODE 59 BEFORE (lR AFTER IHE C()I{VENTI()N IN NICE IAKE (|NE (lR M(IRE (|F IHE \&r\&z \&z ii Gfl]tililffiIil TOUtr|S1g-E7 SEE YOUR IRAVET AGEI{T AND ASK F(|R THE FREE 16-PAGE FOUR C(lT(lR FOTDER were behind the scenes as sponsors of the musical production. Ticket holders enjoyed a cheese and wine suPper as a part of the event, and Profits went to the Club's Benevolent Fund. Nagpur, India: At a corner stone laying ceremony in September, 1966, the Rotary Club began construction of its new Maternity and Child Welfare Center. The building is expected to cost some 20,000 rupees, half of which will come as a donation from the Gundaker International Fund of Rotary Clubs of District 745 in Pennsylvania, U.S.A. Wickliffe, Ohio: Rotarians, Lions, and Jaycees joined forces last year to organize a Community Health Day for their city. More than 1,000 persons turned out for the event to receive free tests for tuberculosis, diabetes, and hearing and sight defects. Local medical men and You can go bY train from one end of France to the other in iust t hrs.15 min. ln Fronce lhe lrOinS O]e so fqsl you con go cleor in common is o roilrood stolion. numelous you con olso go cleor out of your mind iust lrying to resist them. There ore 4000 slolions in Fronce, Scofiered over 25,0OO miles of trock. So wilh one slotion for evety 5r/e miles, ond troins thol ore vir- you con see :"* J";.' i'"?; :: Y'iil' luolly mode of windows, You con eosily see whot you're up ogoinsl. lille So thot for troveling in Fronce the roilwoy is fhe righl woy. Unless you'rc so Belween com- pletelydifterent oll fhey hove ocross the counlrY in less lhon holf o doY. In either direction. On lhe olher hond, Fronce's roilrood slolions ore Lille ond Morseille. for instonce, you've gof to keep yourself from being seduced bythe cothedrol city of Amiens, the wine citY of Diion, fhe gostronomicol cilY of Lyon, lhe Poloce citY of Avig- non. Not to mention lhe irre' sistible city of Poris. Worse yel, you're dongerously close to I in ;T"ifi iToH" Frqnce's fovor, Your one chonce lo moke il oll the woY is lo shut your eyes. For free folder, wfile French Notionol Roilroods, Dept. PI3' Box l9l, Modison Squore Stolion, New York I0OIO. For tickets ond reset- vofions, see your lrovel ogenl or French No- tionol Roilroods, 6lO Fifth Avenue, New York 20; I I E. Adoms Street, Chicogo 3; lo severol other typicollY French 9465 Wilshire Blvd., Bevemototions. And even if you Yor lemptotions. erly Hills;323 GeorY don't hove o Euroilposs-the lowSireei, Son Froncisco. Also rost ticket thot gives you uhlimiled ovoiloble in our Conofirsl-closs roil trovel throughout oll of dion oftice. Also Norfh Weslern Europe-it's next to impossible Americon represenlonol to gel yourself enticed into lhe choteou tive for Inlernc. country of the Loire, lhe mountoin countionol Sleeping lry of the Alps, the Von Gogh countiy Cor Comof Provence. Or into the hunpony. dreds of fowns ond vil- volunteers manned the testing program, which did in fact turn up many previously undetected illnesses. Overland, Mo.: The 72 boys known as the "Whips" are classified in baseball as "midgets," but they apparently turn into "giants" when they take the field. Sponsored by Overland Rotarians, the "Whips" last year captured the Grand Championship in Midget Division baseball for Illinois and Missouri. Their six-year record includes six league championships and four undefeated seasons. FIFTY GOLDEN YEARS Rotarians of Greensboro, N. C., have planned a gala celebration of their Club's 50th anniversary to take place on January 30. Scheduled as guest speaker for the occasion is Luther H. Hodges, President-elect of Rotary International for 1967-68. t"t"? t!"t The odds are 4OOO tol you'll never make it! 60 Tns Ror.rnrlN can an tr Well, Nice is one good example. (And don't you have a convention coming up there?) See your TravelAgent. Lufthansa Offices in principal cities of the U.S.A. and Ganada About thot queslion, Are the Kozmoyer Tours still operoling? Answer is still, Yes. AND 1967 WILL BE OUR 2OTH YEAR OF CONI'NUOUS OPERAI'ON. Three of nexl yeor's Kozmoyer Tours: COG-nitions . . . /f, 'h ED HARDING'S ROTARY CONVENTION TOUR, "The luther Hodses Speciol," Moy I l, Scotlond, Englond, Netherlonds, Germony, Fronce, lfoly, ond Spoin, $976.0O oll expense excepl for time in Nice, Rotory Convenlion. Tour will be personolty escorled by Mr. Edmund Hording, DR. M Toiwo Indio, onon, S ROTARY'S 58th Annual In{slnsfional Convention in Nice. France, approaches it might be well to reflect upon the opportunity this will provide for visiting Clubs in other countries. We might start with the concept that there are no "foreign" countries in Rotary; there is your country, my country, and the other man's, and through us they all meet. Perhaps you will feel that when travelling in another land you should go arned with letters of introduction. Listen to the experience of one Ro- Write for ilinerories ... pleose indicofe tour desired. tarian who completed a trip around the world. "Yes, I had a sheaf of introductions. But what was it that took me down into the diamond mine in Africa me the great dam being -showed built in the jungles of India-seated me in the distinguished strangers gallery of the House of Commons-gave me entrance to countless homes both handsome and humble in the U.S.A. above all, brought me intimate -s1d, friendships with all kinds of interesting people? Not those letters from influential friends. It was this . . ." He pointed to his Rotary lapel button. That same button can be your "letter of introduction" as you travel to and from the Convention. A visit to a Ro___ I t______ coupon for complete "Driving Abrood,, brochure on oll Europeon i I ftfoit cors, economy plons, including tox free purchose in Europe, nome shipment, plonning mop, distonce chorfs/ etc. ! Volkswogen ! Peugeof I ! Mercedes ! Austin, MG ! ! Volvo, Soob 3 Fiot, Loncio ! ! Ford, BMW ! Renoult ! I Joguor ! Porsche ! Rover ! Simco fl Alfo Romeo Sunbeom Triumph Orher _ I TATE tCoh. in, phon., moil .ospo. or 3c. your trovcl qg.nl ItxItY clt llxt t 3 stus attoaD l0 Rockeleller lel: LT 1.7900 Plozo, New York, N Y 10020 9165 Wilshire Blvd, Eeverly Hills, Colilornio Tel: CR 3{492 Copitol Goroge. | 320 New York Ave , N.W., Woshingion, D.C Tel: 638-3435 318 Soulh Federol St,, Chicogo, lllinois Tcl: 663-l 23r 62 and again stimulated significant undertakings to advance international understanding, good will, and peace. This is in addition to the friends you make and the fellowship you enjoy. Here are some tips to help you plan your Rotary itinerary in other countries: NAME I I I tary Club of another country has time ( 1) Take along a copy of the Official Directory. (A copy can be obtained from R.L for 75 cents.) (2) Make sure you have Your Passport to Friendship, a publication in the form of a passport that provides space for your record in Rotary and for a list of the Clubs you plan to visit abroad. (3) Plan to visit Clubs in smaller or more remote places but if you are only going to visit larger cities, re- THe RorenreN She speaks Rotarian. Plcrrning to cttend the Rotarion Convention in Nice? FIy with Olympic-the oirline thot speoks your longuoge. If you're cr Rotoriqn, you'll like Olympic's mqtchless service, gourmet cuisine, crnd first-rqte entertqinment-the louder-thcrnwords lcrrgucae thot we speck fluently. A superb meql from "21" Club served on gold-rimmed chincr. lVith wine in Itolicn crystol stemwqre. All at economy-clqss fqres. A firstrun movie or qny of seven qudio chqnnels.* Sometimes our conventioneers turn ofl the oudio ond mqke their own noise. Olympic doesn't mind. Thqt's pcrt ol hoving cr good time. II you've been mixing too much business with not enough pleosure, brush up on your Rotaricrr crnd IIy with Olympic to EuroPe. Doily trcmsqtlqntic service. Direct llights from New York to Pqris, Rome, Athens, ond then on to Cqiro or Tel Aviv. Within Europe, Olympic flies to London, Amsterdqm, Fronkfurt, Zurich, Istcrrbul, Nicosio, Beirut. And to the Golden Isles of Greece. For lull inlormqtion see your trcrvel ogent or coll Olympic Airwcrys, 647 Fifth Avenue, New York (212) 838-3600. Olympic honors oll mojor credit cqrds. ) Movies/Audio by f nlfisht Motion Pictures JeNuenv. 1967 OLY-NP'G Inc.'At nominal charse Per wl' AIRWAYS 63 member there are often Rotary Clubs in the outskirts which can be easily reached. These Clubs are more likely to need international contacts than the metropolitan Clubs. Dir0cl, lrar$allil||lic $0r||icB (4) Learn as much lll'o[o,irfi tloflila Yio " Sunroule" Mediterroneon Conventioneers : I nclude the t/s Federico C. in your transportalion and vacation plans-for the 50th annual convention in Nice, May 21 - 25. 12-day crossings between Port Everglades, Florida and Naples, ltaly with stops at: Funchal, Lisbon, Barcelona, Cannes, Ge.noa, Naples (terminates in Naples.) 1957 trom Porl Everglodes, Florido April 20*. May 29 . luly 2 August5. September8 October 13 . November 16 Irom iloples, ltoly May 9 . . . . responsibility in this matter should result in a simple organization of Club and community resources for making rAdditional call at La Guaira & Ft. de France %FEDER,ICOC. ( with these Clubs. Here's a hint to Clubs which may be visited by Rotarians on their way to or from the Convention: much depends on the readiness of Rotary Clubs to welcome visitors from abroad. A clear recognition by the International Service Committee of its June 12 July 16 September 23 December 6* August 19 0ctober 27 as you can about the Rotary Clubs you visit, details of their procedures and projects of service. Also examine the possibility of arranging some joint projects the most of visits from Rotarians of 8 to l5-Doy ltalian Registry-Built 1958) (qribbeon (ornivol Cruises o Completely air-conditioned o 2l Knots o 20,000 Gross o Stabilizers o 4 Swimming r Elevators other countries. . Thomas. La Guaira. Tons Pools au-prince. Send for color brochure See your Trcvel Agent, Call or Write cosra LrxE Atlontic Cruise Line, Inc.-cenerat Agent3 520 Biscoyne Blvd., Miomi, Flo., Phone 374-4144 ?QUESTION OF THE MONTH? Q. If I should visit other Rotary Clubs abroad, ho'v can I use this experience to best advantage upon my return? A. Here are just a few suggestions: (1) Tell about your experiences at a Club meeting or a special fireside meeting. (2) with Just stop in before you go. We'll have a new Renault 10 waiting for you in any city in Europe. the license plates screwed on and the insurance policy in the glove compartment. .- _ The_n yog ca-rl drive all around Europe in a roomy 4-seater car, that has 13 cu. ft. of luggage space,4-wheel disc brakes, cruises at 80mph, and averages 35mpg. A car that can be serviced by any one of more than 6000 Renault dealers all over Europe. Y-ou can buy the Renault 10 just to use in Europe, and we,ll buy it back when you're ready to come home. (Ask about bur Financed Purchase-Repurchase Plan. ) o", v"r ,........ lrv tr'" Renault 10 for only g1802.- """ .....Ang.lt-"-:-e.i!.fg-t.hg-e-pp.:::f:::::.19*t.yl:i.y:.:,.1t.-?l:9ur.e.i.r: F[[|-llUIre] ............ Renault Inc., Overseas Delivery Dept., 750 Third Avenue, New York, 10017 Gentlemen: Please send me your free booklet on how to buy a Renault 10 (and the Dauphine and Caravelle) in Europe here, Name Add City 64 Prepare an article for the local newspaper or arrange for an interview over the local radio station. (3) If you have recorded your experiences with a camera or tape recorder, share your pictures and sounds at school assemblies and with other local groups. * * ,. TOPICS AND TIPS '. * * Now's the time to start building enthusiasm in your Club for the journey to Nice. This issue will help you arrange a program on the theme: "Europe: Wonderful Wanderland." Or collect the world travellers in your Club and have them conduct a symposium about the one place in Europe they wortld most like to revisit. And this might be a good time to look back and ahead as President Richard L. Evans does on pages 6-7, time to review his ten points for "A Better World Through Rotary." THB RorenreN when the Tripoli Shrine Temple went to las Yegas, when the Profesional Teachers Asociation went to london, when the Minnesota Twins went to lVashingtoa when the Texas Trial lawyers went to Honolulu, when Be My Guesf lord of Canada went to Cuacas, fhof visitor from o for lond is much like you. Here ore some tips on how to hosf him. By RALPH BUGG CHURCHWOMAN was dismayed when she was asked to arrange a banquet for international per- sons in her college community. How would she contact them? What would she feed them? Wbat kind of program would she arrange? After consulting experienced persons, she obtained a roster from the college's foreign-student adviser. Invitations stressed that although the dinner would be in a church hall, it was purely social. She followed up with letters offering es- corts. The menu accommodated most diets, and the guests themselves presented a program of music and readings. The party went without a hitch. Entertaining international persons need not be an ordeal. Often the seeming gulfs between cultures are figments of our caricaturing minds and the real differences are easily bridged by mutual interests and shared humanity. But because of fears and notions, many foreign visitors do not gain the intimate insights into their host land and its people which only volunteer ambassadors can provide. But, comes the protest, being a fire- side diplomat is a grave responsibility. A bobble might alienate rather than endear. If only there were some rales. True, an experienced host will relate a delightful exception to every projected rule. The only definite requirements are interest and common courtesy. How- J.clueny. 1967 ever, since counsel always is helpful, if liberally interpreted, here are a few guidelines: OVERSEAS NATIONAL AIRWAYS the jet airline the best groups fly. Whom to invite? Names may be obtained from colleges, Government agencies, chambers of commerce, trade associations, hospitality leagues, international settlements, international associa- Was the reason our delicious food? Our experienced pilots? Our stewardesses - over 100 of the loveliest and most helpful girls in the air? Or tions, the Red Cross, churcbes, hospital welfare services, and other organizations. With some of these you may regist€r either as a continuing host or as an think it's all we do. It is. Ask your occasional one. Obtain from the organization the visitor's name, nationality, language, age, occupation, and, if available, the length of stay; what he has seen thus far; and any expressed interests, Some sponsors keep detailed files. Identify yourself to your prospective guest and explain your interest in him. Describe the event to which you are inviting him, and, if expense is involved, state that you are treating. (This is of special concern to students.) Tell him when you will call for him and return him. A follow-up note is helpful. Calling for one's guest is the polite thing to do. Mass transit may be un- was it the great way we handle groups? The way ONA does it, you'd travel agent. Frrrrrq I'd like to know more about I I I nu', I I Group- I I I Title I AddressCitvI State Zip-- certain and time consuming. Taxis may be expensive and leave the guest wondering "Is this the house?" What entertainment? A visit in your home can be the best entertainment. Dr. John Chamberlayne, pastor of a 65 Why spend it all getting there ? F ffi&Et& TI|WEST AIR FARES T|| EURI|PE Save enough to STAY IOA]GEB.SEE MOBE.EA]JOY MOBE Lowest air fares of any scheduled airline . . . bar none! Lowest at anytime of the year . . . too . . . one way or all-year round trips. Pay tar less than Jet Economy fares. Save even more during Thrift Season, now in effect thru May 21. You fly in roomy comfort, aboard lcelandic's swift, new Rolls. Royce 400 Jet Props and long-range DC-68s. Complimentary hot meals, drinks and snacks, served on every flight. Special treat, enjoy an all-inclusive Z4-hour stopover in lceland for only $19.50. n FROM NEw YORK TO: ICELAND . ENGI-AND . SCOTIAND. DENMARK SWEDEN . NORWAY . FINI.AND. HOLI.AND. TUXEMBOURG Use these lcelandic Gateways-and save-to all of Europe and beyond. The PIONEER of Low Faresto Eurooe 610 Fifth Avenue (Rockefeller Center) IEEUIIDIEAmtNEs @ L@FTLEO@IR New York, N.Y. 10020 . PL 7-8585 NEW YORK. CHICAGO. SAN FRANCISCO SEE YOUR TRAVEL AGENT Write for Folder (RO) " I wanted to experience all modes of transportation," he said, "but I have not enjoyed the train. Without anyone to talk to. I have been bored." Whatever you do, don't crowd the clock and tire the visitor. Give him time to rest, as well as time to reflect and ask questions. It is said that the cities of the world all look alike, but the countryside reveals the flavor of a land. The area around Mayville, Michigan (pop. 900), has an exemplary entertainment program based on warm rural hospitality. eosiestwoy to getqVolkswogen in Europe The is to Methodist church in London, England, discovered a Chinese girl, lonely and homesick. who had an enorrnous collection of Chinese records which sbe could not play where she stayed. Dr. Chamberlayne invited her to his home to play the records whenever she wished. "In a sense, she was home again," Dr. Chamberlayne said. "Sbe could relax and be herself." Sbow your home to the guest. Don't shoo the children off to bed or shunt grandma aside, for most guests enjoy contact with persons of all ages. Of course, the visitor may enjoy visiting museums and concerts, if discreetly selected; factories; union halls; stores; residential areas of all economic strata; and transportation hubs. On a train, my daughter observed a man repeatedly pacing the aisle. When he heard she was from Atlanta, Georgia, his destination, he introduced himself. He was from Pakistan. And in Pelham, Georgia, citizens organized an "International Week-end" to give students visiting the State a "taste of life in a small Southern town." Would he like to visit my club? If.he's a member, or is otherwise affiliated, un- buy il here. doubtedly he would. Otherwise answer is "maybe." the A short-term visitor may experience the greatest fellowship with just a few people, not an entire organization. The willingness of visitors to appear on programs (especially in native dress) often depends on how meaningful the occasion promises to be. Naturally, they resent being put on display. Miss Ann Clifford, of the International Student Bureau in Atlanta. arranged for a Japanese girl to appear on From your neorest Volkswogen deoler. it tell him where you wont to pick up, ond he'll hove it woiting for Just or oggrovotion. Foct is, your VW deoler con sove you. Without ony red tope you from red tope in more thon 50 cilies in l6 countries. Becouse he hondles everything. Purchose. Insuronce. Registrotion. Licensingj. Delivery. And Volkswogen's fomous economy *ill sove you money oll over Europe. One lost point. You con get the some VWs in Europe thot you con get here. Bug. Squorebock. Fostbock. Ghio. Stotion Wogon. Compmobile. Toke your pick. lf you're interested, write us. We'll put you in touch with your neorest outhorized Volkswogen deoler. He'll hondle the whole thing from stort to finish. Write to Volkswogen of Americo, Tour- ist Delivery Dept. R-1 , Englewood Cliffs, N.J. @voLkswacEN oF AffERrcA, txo! 66 a television show. The project consumed an afternoon, and yet the girl's appearance was limited to walking on stage. "It hardly seemed worthy of her effort," Miss Clifford said. Receptions, teas, and banquets are cold if they receive rather than welcome. However, teas and banquets are valuable if they lead to more intimate contacts, especially when they give the newly arrived visitor a chance to meet others in his situation. Ideally, hospitality, of whatever sort, is continuing. A visitor to England was Tne RoranreN called into the office of his training director, who was poring over a calendar. "Can you have dinner with me two weeks hence?" asked the director. The roast beef and fellowship were superb, but because this was the sole contact they also seemed perfunctory. When should I invite him? Acknowledging that visitors are busy paves the for a "no" if the invited person wishes to decline. In some cultures. to refuse an invitation is to insult the bost. way But imagine how great the pressure TOUR DELUXE FOR ROTARIANS TO SPA'NPORTUGAI -noRocco would be on a student situated in a city of half a million if he were invited out by, say, one-fourth of the clubs and churches. Yet be feels he must perform well for his own sake, his family, his country, and, if he has one, his sponsor. "Don't feel badly if we decline," and other buildings owners have tried a Tucker High Window Washer and now wash windows from the ground up to a maximum of 80 feet hich-at less than half the former cost. Send for information on how to select the correct length to try on your windows free of any charge. Model illustrated costs less than $90 delivered. No salesman will call. TUCKER MFG. CO.. Inc. Dept. M2l. 615 2nd Ave. SE CEDAR RAPIDS. IOWA 52406 European* Vacations |1 'rnanG@.- *(or anywhere else you'd like to go) son for entertainment. Holiday entertainment is appreciated. "Nobody can imagine how lonely it is," said a student, "with two or three people where 50 normally live. The dormitory is like a ghost Hosting just-arrived visitors can be helpful, too. An agency may be responsible for meeting the student on arrival and getting him settled, but no doubt you can help, especially in oftering transportation for errands and with locating stores, services. etc. Because wives oftentimes are less proficient in a new language, or may be tied down by children, wife-to-wife favors may be especially appreciated. A warning: Counsellors suggest that academic programs and financial matters be left to institutions experienced in such areas. What shall we talk about? If common interests are not so obvious. the host or dip into savings lor "livingmoney" during that dream trip. We offer $1500 to $5000 person- al loans to qualified borrowers used. All details are handled by mail from the privacy of your office or home. Monthly repayments up to 2 years if desired. Our references: the First National or Northwestern National Banks of St. Paul or Minneapolis. For f ull particulars write Mr. A. J. Bruder, Vice Pres. fndustrial Credit Plan,Inc. 688 Hamm Building St, Paul, Minnesota 55102 "Ihe original Executive Loan Servic€" JeNueny. 1967 Granada COMPULSION I musl go out this morning, chart Blossoming orchards, learn by heart A single rosy crab, a peqr Weaving white lace upon blue air; Wander through meadows, overwhelm With contours of a wineglass elm My spirit; cool mysell in dark Backgrounds ol cedar, turn and mark, Dazzled, how dandelions spill A sheet of hot gold down the hill; Seville Gibraltar Madrid CONVENTIOII SPECIAL May 4th conv. tour ends in Nice on May 21st. Includes return to N. Y. town." There's no need to sellsecurities anywhere in the U.S. No collateral, no endorsement, no embarrassing investigation. Your own already-established credit rating is the lending criterion Lisbon Tangier said a student. "I have difficulty getting my own Chinese Club together." The college may suggest a good sea- Thousands of Schools, Hospitals, Churches TWENTY-TWO DAYS OF EXCITING TRAVEL AND ADVENTURE VISITING: FEATURING o Flights via TWA Superjets. All departures on regular scheduled o flights. o All lst class hotels and rooms with private baths. a Deluxe, air conditioned coaches. o Complete sightseeing including sions, guides and taxes. admil o All meals are included. o AND LOTS, IOTS, LOTS MORE 4 DEPARTURES 1967... ...$738.00 1967 ......$798.00 (special convention toud May 4, 1967... ...$738.00 luly 20,1967... ...$738.00 oct. 5, 1967. ......$738.00 Mar. 16, May 4, All inclusive, with tips, taxes, and a professional full time tour manager. For Rotarians, their families and friends Single Rooms Available M e morize tulip s, v elv et-lined. (I might be in a town, or blind, Some Maytime, need to close my eyes And let this tide ol glory rise.) -FronrNcs B. Jecoss 67 Rotarians! Thke the easywayto your convention. I Thke TI Ao you've arready picked the right time and place-Nice, France, May 2l-25. Now pick the right airline. Only TWA can take Rotarians from cities throughout the U. S. to France. Direct, no change of plane to Paris from New York, Boston, Philadelphia, Chicago, Detroit, St. Louis, Kansas City, Tulsa, Oklahoma City, Los Angeles and San Francisco. And you can charge your trip with TWA's Worldwide Jet Credit Card. Easy? Just call your travel agent and specifyTWA. Or call your nearest TWA office. Welcome to the world of TiansWorld Airlines* +Service mark owned exclusively by Trans World Airlines, Inc- may test his guest with comments on hobbies, newspaper items, sports, authors, family relationships. Read about your guest's locality. Country-by-country guides are helpful, as are books on understanding other cultures. Avoid triteness. A student com"I stepped off the plane and plained: immediately somebody asked me, 'How do you like it here?' I replied, 'I like it fine. It looks just like the airport back home."' As to controversial topics, some say that when host and guest are of equal status. each can take care of himself. Others say it should be the guest who introduces any issues. A criterion may be: can tbis topic be discussed fully, honestly, and mutually? (A student who was reluctant to discuss his unstable government and its sensitive officials noted: "One is hesitant to disparage tbe regime to which we must return.") The National Association of Foreign Student Advisers says: "In a hospitable situation, there is real encounter between persons of vastly different opinions in a genuine dialogue. The real issue is ftow one discusses an issue," Differences spice international friendships. And explaining things to an outsider may open your eyes to your own situation and clarify your philosophy. Sir Walter Scott wrote: "Breathes a man with soul so dead. Who never to himself has said. This is mv own, My native land!" Talking about there one's country is entertaining, but selling it too hard is being obnoxious. Il there is a language difference: Speak slowly and clearly, but not loudly. The foreigner (like the blind) often is addressed as if the din would help him to comprehend (and the blind to see). Repeat or elaborate, if necessary, but don't labor. The National Council for Community Services to International Visitors advises that escort-interpreters should be included in any invitations where it appears there will be a language barrier or ex- treme cultural difference between host and visitor. "If he is not needed. he mav well prefer to be excused. (You mav resolve the invitation problem tactfully by consulting with the interpreter in the visitor's absence. His experience and insight may shed needed light on the While you're in the neighborhood (they're less than 2 jet hours from most other European stops), you'll find a warm Polish welcome, And a few surprises. Centuries-old folk costumes and customs . . . sophisticated cities pioneering newways in the arts and industry. . . a thousand years of history, You're free to look over Poland's exciting new world while you enjoy the Old World amenities she never lost. And the top priced room with meals in Poland's modern hotels is just gl2.5O a day per person, ION IilFORiIATION and NESENYAIIOilS ORBIS 68 SEE YOUR TRAVET AGEI{T pousH TRAvEL oFFrcE situation....)" Should a lull follow active discussion. advises. "Silent, friendly,language can sometimes relax and reflect, the Council convey respect and understanding that words cannot." Sweetest is the sound of one's own name properly said. Pronunciation of the visitor's name may be included in a sponsor's file. However, Mrs. Lee Eden, of the Atlanta Committee for International Visitors, said: "The guest prob- Tne RorlnnN A4te .'PE @lioN o7r Your ability plus an Aamco Transmirrsion Center can eam you $5O,OO0 a year and rnore. Many centers show profits the lirst week! Aamco, world's largest transmission specialists, provides proven merchmdising, management, and advertising tehniques. No automotive experience required. We train you to tap a growing billion dollar market. Over 3OO centers coast to coast with an unparalleled success reord! Your investment, about tial, unlimited! Mail $17,50O. Your coupon below, or phone collect (215) 265-6200, "You'll be rcplocing Bornes." VN\ ably has grown used to his name being mispronounced, and certainly it is better to have a whack at it and miss than to avoid it altogether." Instant humor cuts language barriers. A Chinese student warned his banquet audience they might not get the humor of his folk tale about the old man who planned all marriages. Sure enough, when the student finished there was si- for example, of a business executive from abroad who was being served "Recite poetry-say anything," they replied. They simply wanted to delight oooin accent. ___r-- r- -rr- -n serve? Food is a uni- Again, Mrs. Eden: "Don't worry l:li i -ll: would enjoy. i i I am interested in typ" of car)-for Name- JnNuenv. 1967 French!. q, 19lf-9ml :"r"--,:-:l:--t-'rt3-1ll-:3-=-rev-tei.e-"-le-re-1'-:ye-'r-'-9yj'-1ee); ror vour rree Llil:l:ffl'"",.:t :::"^:l;T;;T.'':" to choose, a guest can select items acceptable and own dishes in your kitchen, perhaps first giving you a list of ingredients. Generally, the guest prefers to be entertained in a leisurely, happy fashion rather than lavishly. There's the story, ucHtsAtwAt -cHo. cHrYoDA -KU 4 S"t all the Auto Europe extras. . . free! in an Austrian castle; free cruise on Lake Como-and dinner Free much more free in "Hospitality Towns" from Sicily to Denmark. Get 10% off on hotels, restaurants, shops-with afreemembership in Given a variety-especially of vege- restaurant specializing in their home cuisine or invite them to prepare their l't, REQUEST PURCHASE the car vou've always wanted-for delivery abroad. lt's tax-free! ... Europe's biggest bargain. Insurance, Q. shipment home or RENT a car... and see the Europe only seen by car. doesn't care for other items, he can fall back on those. It is much better for you to be relaxed when your guest arrives than to have spent all day in the kitchen and be too tired to enjoy the guest." Long-term visitors may be starved for native food. You might take these to a CATATOG on Reserve your car now for Nice, France, or wherever you're going so you'll have one when you get there. about cooking foreign dishes. Let him taste your food-the things you cook best. You can't compete with his native chefs, anyway. However, it is not a bad idea to include in the menu some staple of the guest's home region (which may be fish, or rice, perhaps) so that if he palatable for him. If your guest will dine with you again, you can ask if there is some dish he FREE wtry DotrnGr s versal challenge. fruits-from which TRANSISTOR RADIOS TV SETS, \IYATCHES & BINO( "what's lelt?" "Say wbat?" he asked. tables and ress: Ganyou say speak. I Add strawberries when there was a knock at the door. A youngster was selling Cirl Scout cookies. The hostess bought some and served them. The guest found them tasty, and he was intrigued by the doorto-door sales. He asked if he might buy some of the cookies, and when he de- "End of story," he announced. This brought laughter. Dr. J. R. McCain, of Decatur, Georgia, relates that when he visited Rotarians in Hong Kong, they asked him to What shall ol Prussia, Pa. 19406 Name: lence. in a Georgia Transmissions Tor AAMC0 443 S. Gulph Road, King i llly-:]::-:- Rush this rorm ! buying n leasing n renting a (make or or about-. delivery at-on Address -ZiP 268 S. Beverly Drivc. TR 8-3535/CR 8-0044. Saz Frtnciro: 150 Powell Sa., EX 2-789+, Seaillel \Vhite-Henrv-Stuart Bldg. MA 2-!+56. l'ancouoer, B. C.: 999 Kinpwa-v. 874-6022- : parted there was a box in his brief case. What can my organization do? It can make every week World Understanding Week. who love the good life "How reassuring it would be if mature friends invited us to call if we needed advice or other assistance," a student said. "Not to hover over us, but just for the security of their interest." Students seeking employment some- times experience difficulty in trying to convince employers of their capabilities. There are complications, like a foreigner being able to drive a truck, but lacking a license. Businessmen can be especially helpful in such cases. AASTRttt AtRIttEg Frequent travelers are not surprised to see our pretty hostesses bring out zithers to entertain them. And they like the soothing waltz music on take- off and landing. lt's part of AUA's good life. So are delicacies like strudel,Viennese pastry, fresh strawberries deep in thick, sweet cream. Our Caravelles give jet comfort even on short jaunts, flying a network of virtually all major cities in Western and Eastern Europe, and the Middle East. Book Austrian Airlines-where the good life is great! An organization can operate or support a visitor's bureau-an office with paid and volunteer help, or merely a file of visitors and hosts, with pertinent 48 STREEI NEW YoRK, N. CAMPGR(lUI{D FRANCHISE of Nation's largest chain Proven supervised system. 0perated by investors or paid managers. For information about Kampgrounds of America, write to KOA, P.0. Box 1694, Pocatello, ldaho. for your own satisfaction. Let the student feel he is doing you a favor. Most of the needs that I meet through entertaining are my own!" As to responsibility, Atlanta's Mrs. Eden notes: "You may make mistakes, but then so do they, Your errors won't matter if you show you are really interested in the guest, that you really care." Of rewards, she said: "Few of us are likely to visit Afghanistan, and yet we campgrounds. PR(IGRAM CHAIRMEN ! ! Take your Club on a Colorful 26-Minute "Ride" thru some of America's most beautiful high country. Free to Rotary Clubs. Address Sonora Pass Vacationland, Box 607. Columbia. Calif. 95310 D. FEAU-Reat Estate For your: Apartments - Houses - Offices and Promotion Paris 132, Boulevard Haussmann Phone: 522. 69.34 8dme Now Available ! can very nearly do this by entertaining a visitor from that country." If you would melt down the world's barriers. reach out the hand of friend- ship and hospitality to visitors from abroad in your community. EMBLEM SUPPLIES Lapel Emb Shields Gongs Banners Badges Embroidered Emblems Sweat Shirts Pens Tie Bars Cuff Links Key Chains Y. 10017 TEL.: PLAZA 2.8388 AU I Men are valuable as guides, especially for visitors from cultures in which women do not lead men around. Occasional projects are appreciated. A club can invite guests to send "voice letters" home, for example. The challenge, the rewards: When you open your heart and hearth to visitors, your responsibility is great, your task is pleasant, your rewards are boundless. Harriet Van Meter, of Lexington, Kentucky, who for ten years has given Sunday-night parties for international students, remarks: "Be honest enough to admit you are doing this at least in part AUA AUSTRIAN AIRLINES EAST Hillsidc Avc., ls,:t:([| t{Xl flillsidc l{18 AvG., Janaica. Ncw Yorl Yorl I For inlomelion all )12-s??.SAs, For intometion clll 212.523.5E5t lrrrr-r--=--ir information on each group. FOR INFORMATION AND LITERATURE: 3 tt-t,='t,.JI ntiltl tuTo l{titET IUIU tltIERIAItol{A[ !l I a, f ary Pencils Desk Sets Trophies Neck Ties Bolo Ties Gifts Other Items Decals Write for complete listing and prices. l{cynirrll "Roger bid a honeymoon lo Poris. Going once, going twice . . ." Tne RorenreN Before HIOHTIGHTS (lF PUZzLES EUROPE T(IUR BY PIGEOLET from London, 28 days terminating in Paris on May 18, visiting Belgium, Germany, Switzetr land, ltaly, Greece, Yugoslavia, Austria, France, $52loo Reouest colorlul booklet describing thii and manll other |nteresting tours in Britdin anil lrelanil, Continent' ScanitrineDin, Spai'n, If,us sia from FRAMES' TOURS (II. Y.) tTD. 114 E. 32nd Streel FRANIHISING Leoding fronchise development ond distribution comPony wiih over 60 offices ond numerous exclusive clients in USA is exponding info olher countrles. Only high level businessmen or grouPs of investors interesled in conlrolling o fronchise morketing orgonizolion in lheir country should write for informotion Coble {rO WELCOME 1967: three bafI fl"rr containing New Year's greetin English, French, and Spanish. They come from the arithmeticallY adroit hand of Mathieu Pigeolet, master of the crypt-arithmetic puzzle and Rotarian of Anvers-Escaut' Belgium (See Mathieu Pigeolet-A Puzzling Fellow in Tns Rounrax for November, 1966). Designed to help puzzle fanciers get the New Year started with a sense of early accomplishment, these puzzles fall into the "easy" category. Each is ",:!.ITti,'l' TIoNAL lNc. The letter substitutions are consistent- 120 oll Mdll for PART example, all E's within a Puzzle represent the same numeral. Your task: determine what numbers were multiplied in each case. No prizes are offered, but successful puzzlers are entitled to boast and vigorously pat their own backs, Solutions next month. BONNE ANNEE *r({<{€* **{<tl.* MAKE YOUR YEAR OF AIDYENTURE 19617 AND HAPPY MEMORIES OF EUROPE OVER 3OOO CAMPS AND MILLIONS OF FRIENDLY PEOPLE ARE WAITING TO MEET YOU read "Camping in Europe" May, 1964 "R0TARIAN" then send $1 to Leslie H. Wilson ut$st't'tt"'-"'i'11t'ilit'lljlt 36 ACRE LANE, LONDON, S.W. 2 FOR THE "BOOK OF MOTOR CARAVANS'' AND FOLDER "SEE ALL EUROPE" WITH DETAILS OF GUARANTEED REPURCHASE PLAN AND LIST OF OVER 1OO NEW AND USED MOTOR CARAVANS FRoM $1400 (€500). TRAVET II{ THE C(IMF()RT (lF Y(IUR (lWN H()ME ABROAD WITH A M(lT(lR CARAVAII JeNuenv,1967 DATE WITH AUSTRIA based on the multiplication of two numbers. To vex you, Rotarian Pigeolet has replaced most of the numerals in the computations with letters or asterisks. qnd references: A lN te67! ings llew Yort, 1{. Y' 10016 BOOKINGS ONLY THROUGH YOUR TRAVEL AGENT MAKE ***** {c**{.* * {< | I67 l{<**9**€67* HAPPY NEW Y*E'<AR {<t<{<*** *:1.1967 *:F67* * x * FEL'Z Afto | * 9 *67 the looth birthday of -Celebrate "The Beautit'ul Blue Danube WaIt<." Follow the lestival trail in valley and village, in abbey and castle, in old and storied cities, in lovely Vienna (The great lestivals are: SaQburg at Easter, March 79-27 and lrom Iuly 26-August 37st; Vienna, May 2|-lune 78; BregenT, fuly 27-August 20). Be light-hearted at the little costume revels, grand in the paying guest castles. Become a gourffiet in the famous restaurants, coftee-houses, wine gardens, in the meffy countty inns. Acquire heirlooms 4t the homecralt outlets, the city shops; beguile your fuiends vith unigue souvenirs at trifling cost. Climb mountains effortlessly, Ptrsue your favorite sPort. Sving the ryhole Austrian circuit lrom the gatewdy cities through the Alps, the Danube banhs, the romantic lahelands. Do it aII at modest cost with every comfort-and be sure everywhere and always of a warm, warm welcome! Should you be interested in a cure or heeping fit program, write lor our booklet "Austrian Spas' and Heabh Resotts." Consult your travel agenl or send coupon lo nedtest offce of- THE AUSTRIAN STATE TOURIST DEPARTMENT 444 Madison Avenue 332 S. Michigan New York, N.Y. 10022 Chicago, lll. Ave. 00604 St. 195 So. Beverly Drive Portland, ore. 97210 Beverly Hills, Calif. 2433 N.W. Loveioy *rl€**** SEND INFORMATION TO: ******** NINilF +2('(, * * * * | 967 STATF 7l ffiffi This directory seciion hos been developed os o service to Rotorions so thot they moy stop ol lhe beiter hotels, motels, resorts ond restouronts. Write or wire them direcily for furiher informoiion ond reservotions. In doing so, pleose mention THE ROTARIAN. UNITED STATES OF AMERIGA ARIZONA TLUNOIS ''J@" Orqido, V.P. & Gen. Mgr. lnvitei you lo IHIS IS MY WII{IER AITIRE AI SHER,\4A\T HOTJ S E CAMELBACK INN In ol Chicago's grcat white way ! Headquarters tol Rotary No. 1 the swin7ing heart (Mee[s Every Tuesday at Noon) Randolph -Clark - LaSalle 312/FR 2-z|m Il 5p esks Jorquiet llself Rotory's wins over o persuosion skepficol guesf. By LAJPAT RAI Rotarian, Dehra Dun, India I T all happened when a professor I friend came down to spend six weeks of his Summer vacation with us. We EYANSTON have been very good friends since our college days. On leaving college we parted ways, I to business and he to education, which I would call "academics." There are, of course, various levels in "academics" as there are in other walks of life. There are also various types of academicians. My profes- COLORADO sor friend is of the serious type. Even the most trivial matter acquires with him a seriousness which many a time would be beyond my humble comprehension. MASSACHUSETTS FLORIDA SHORELAND-NORRIN on tbe ocean rvirh no aDd maid service. and Cottases. Direcile ComDtet;ty fumishea noea-aatoh. rtorib!. MOtE! ApT. I-ovety palmed sFt on wate!. EveMhins for vacation comfort. To; AAA dti;s. TREASURE ISLAND-MALYN 2ts2, lO?& Ave. (Sr. Pete's Cenlral Ave.) 6b. 36r.ra41 STURBRIDGE ORCHARD lNN. Bit I Mass. TllmDike & Rt. 15. 1OO rm. Motor lnn. Beated pool-Family Plan-Rated Bcellenr by Mobil. Visit Hisroric Old Srurb.idge Vrtlage. IEXAS DALLA-HOTEL AAKER. Prelened address lo Dallas. Drive-io Uoto! bbby. Complerety at-cond. TV ta dest rooE6.7OO rcoEs. kDnl€ H. With. cM. Wed. lt:oo. GEORCIA MEXTCO ATL.ANTA..THE. DINXLER PLAZA HOTEL. 600 .Rn."".#X"", kura n ts, modera F rate s. Ro ayireiis ffi ", dff TONTERREY-GRAN HOTEL ANCTRA. Fahous tbe wortd over. Old World Gam. 25O looms. Totally atr-cond. Ro: bry headquarrers. Arturo Tomatladona, pres. & cen. Mf. ROTAR|ANS TRAVEL Receni reseorch shows ers spend orr 4OO,OOO notes on current sociological problems practice which we both relish-I might be a little late in the -a told him I evening because Wednesday happened Rotary Club of Dehra Dun, India. I had hardly to be the meeting day of our uttered the word "Rotary" when I rejolt from which I took quite some time to recover. "Rotary, did you say? Ah, come on; how comes it that you are a Rotarian? Not a sensible rationalist like vou. I ceived a Rolqrion subscrib. s folol of more lhqn 7 MILLION nighls per yeor in hofels, molels snd resorls. you can issue more |han 4t/z million odvertising impressions per yeor in lhis Directory Section of o Speciol tow rqle. Wrile now! right nowr fo: Adverlising Depcrlment. ROTARIAN, 1500 Ridge Avenue. Evqnsion. 72 As chance would have it, it was on a Wednesday that my friend arrived. After having been together for some time in tbe afternoon and exchanging lll. 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I Desk lshownl or ! Door? Shipped 48 hou6 postpdid. 5oti3foclion guoronfeed or your noney bockl S&H Green Stamps,too!Busineis requeifs invited fot q free sqmple, brochure ond quontily discounls.SPeorEngineering DIRECT from Co 8l/H SpsrBuilding Colorcdo Springs, Colo8O9O7 You can reach nore than 400,000 active SALE BY MAIL readers for Less than 27 cents per thousand subscribers. Write Advertising Department THE ROTARIAN Magazine 1600 Ridge Avenue Evanston, Il1inois hill's, 425 Colifornio St.. Depf. fR, from this new Star Rose catalogwithout leaving your home or office. See over 120 rose selections. most shown in full color, and all guaranteed to bloom. Send for your free copy tday! '. eosi/y holds suif, hoberdoshery ond ' 'exlros " without crushing. Compocf in size ond shope. Mode in U S. of duroble wolnul brown woter buflolo leofh- er, imported from lndio. Zipper closing with lock, solid bross locks, extro /ong Star Roseq Box 371, West Groue, Pa. 19390 Kindly send me your fl'ee Star Rose Catalog. hondles for eosy corry, outside pouch pockets wilh locks. 20 x 12 x 8 inches, weighing 41/z pounds. Abouf $45.00 PP from Vonguord Products, 34X Downing Sfreef, New BUYERS SAVE MOilEY OII TABTES AiID CHAIRS" Address City State Zip Code .,w111 YOU SilOKE mY ]IEW KIND OF PIPE OOO I xo irolrEl'-xrsr l I sENo YOUR NA''E I I club, school or lodge can also save money on tables, chairs and other equipment. Mail coupon today! The MoilRoE Co. 17 Church St, Colfax, louva 50054 -1 Please mail me your new Factory-Direct catalog. I Name N. Y. lOOl4. send today for this valuable booffind out how your church, from Select the garden roses and other plants you want GLOBE TROTTER FLIGHT BAG {or o disfincfive os we/l os proclicol flighf bog, York. "How t00,000 Son Froncisco, Colifornio, aDout prpe smoKrnganq you'venever a M I I II r.l. clRrr, tszo sumYsidG nen ?ncr nhiBro l0 lll. Aro. a\ tstl I NAME L9i1-----s]lrj:---zlP---j JeNuenv. 1967 7:t should have thought. Wbat attracts you in that den of snobs, those hypocrites? It's a big hoax." He, of course, said much more than this. but these words should be sufficient to show what be thought of Rotary. And add to this the miserable 0ver A Century of Service expression on his face as he tried to muster all the sympatby he could for his poor dear friend who stood before him, a Rotarian. I must mention here that to a great extent my friend and I have identical ways of life. Each of us reserves to himself the rigbt to give full vent to what he feels about things, personal or otherwise, but neither of us ever tries to convince the other of his own "right- fhingr Done Bctter And Fortcr The BOARDMASTER saves time, cuts costs and prevents errors. You see what is happening, Shows facts at eye level, For Production, Scheduling, Inventory, Sales, Traffic, Etc. Simple to operate. Write on cards, post on board. Fully flexible. Million in use. Price $49.50 with cards. You Gct ness." lF RFE l'"'"i::'"1lfll3rlh,l5,'' Having met after a very long time, we would snatch every available mo- lf you need o helping hond in Swilzerlond, contoct . , . GRAPHIC SYSIEMS, Box 398, Yanceyville, l{.C. ment to be together. But Rotarians who UNIOl'| BA}| 1( OT SulIIZTRTAI{D Heod Officer ZURICH Bohnhofstrosse 45 take Rotary as a philosophy, a way of life, cannot help carrying Rotary with them all the time wherever they be. So, wbile keeping company with my friend, I was constantly carrying Rotary with me, though no word was ever spoken about it. Having known to my cost his views regarding Rotary, I did not think of .Send for "PREARRANGED IRAVEI" program. offending him by asking him to attend our Wednesday meetings. All I would Branches throughoul Switzerland say to him was that the Rotary meeting would be over by 8: 15 and that I would wait for him at the Dehra Dun Club if OII 26 MIY FR(IM I(l A.M. Tll MIDI{IGHT IFTER CLOSI]IG (lF THE ROTIRY CO]IYE]{TIO]{ do not leqve the Rivierq without porticipoting in the Cruise which the Host Club hos orronged on your beholf olong the French ond llolion Rivieros from Connes lo Connes oboord the frl.T. AKROPOLIS of the Typoldos Com- pdny. 17,000 tons, lwo swimming pools, orchesfro, deck gomes. Price per person $26.00 everything included except drinks ot bor. limited number of seols. MAKE RES- AGENCE MATHEZ, Avenue Guslove, V Nice, Fronce The illothez Agency orgonized olso on the Akropolis q posl convenlion cruise Jrcm 27 Moy to 3 June; Connes, Genoo, Elbo, Polermo, Molto, Tunis, Polmo de fllollorco, Borcelono, Connes. Cosl from $l8O ro $4O0 per person. (All outside cobins wirh borh or shower.l Detoiled plogrom ond regislrotion upon requesl. 74 to come and exchange ment. It usually turned out that after the meeting some Rotarian friends would sit together and discuss the talk given by the speaker that evening. I found that my friend, after a little while, would get involved and absorbed in the discussion. Seminars and symposiums are so much a part of the intellectual world that they tend to become the first infirmity of these noble minds. After one such occasion we were walking home when my friend remarked: "We had a good exchange of views. It seems that the speaker you invited was able to stir up the thought processes ERVATIONS NOW by sending your check for porticipoting ($26) to: 5 he would care notes in a somewhat "relaxed" environ- in many of you-and I liked what your friend with the glasses said about the dynamics of ideas. By the way, is he 1326 McKoy Tower, Grond Ropids, Mich. LIFE INSURANCE UP TO lF $5OOO YOU ARE 1{OT OVEh AGE 74. Supplement Social Security to help surviv0rs meet your aftetrdeath bills, debts or tamily needs Legal reserve lite insurance pays in all states and countries tor death from any cause, except during the frst policy year for either suicide 0r death from undisclosed preexistin! health conditions. Comoare lifetime Drotection and guaranleed rates. N0 medical eiamination. Easy to apply by mail direct t0 the Home 0mce- Introductory otfer and application mailed to you without obligation. Tear out this reminder and mail with your name, address, zip code and year ol birth to creat Lakes Insurance Company, Elgin, lllinois 60120. DeDt. A56X14. eg hls ! FORTITNE tnslde ltke r (orttm cooLte. ht e LUCKY NIIMBER lD tle eg8! -rwrrd prlzea to the wlr.leru. $35 per lL PortEvery peld. Color - Yellow ntt HASTVOOO COMPANY, lor ft, Fominedolo, N. f. a Rotarian also?" "Yes, not only the bespectacled friend, but all the six at that table were Rotarians." Another incident that I particularly remember took place in my shop. I was in my office when my friend came in. He saw an envelope lying on the table addressed to the Rotary International Fiscal Agent in Calcutta. "What on earth is this flscal business of Rotary?" my friend inquired, rather amused. Fortunately the envelope had not Travel with congenial Rotarians and RotaryAnns.-Meet International members for an er- change of good fellowship- AROUND the WORID To Nice-5Rl{, $2,159.00 32 days of leisurely yet excrting travel plus 4 days at Convention. Departing April 17, 1967, visiting Honolulu, Japan, Taipel (Formosa), Hongkong, Singapore, Malaysra, Thailand, India (Banares, Calcutba, Agra, New Delhi), Egypt and Greece. Stay over privilege in Europe after conclusion of Convention. Tour will be personally conducted by "Gene" Lindner, well-known for his "South America Holidays for Rotarians." All inclusiYe price. Please make reservations wibh: B,O,A,C.-R.C. World Tour-P.O. Box 464-West Covina, Cali- fornia, 91792. Tnr RorenreN yet. I took out the contents for his inspection. Tbere were a check and a covering letter. I explained to been sealed him that the amount being sent was the contribution We're looking for men age 50 or older . . . to sell our complete line of industrial maintenance products to businesE and industry. 65 years in business has taught us that middle-agbd men' with young ideas, can out-sell and out-earn younger men! Protected territory guarant€es r nt. . s. ACT ll open. IIRIIE I0llAY I0: Ilre lla4er 901 llaln St., Faiileld, -- my friend. Big packages of medicines were being packed for the Rotarian. you ork out steady ofyou xee-ps FAST. "Why so many medicines? You don't Companv lorl 52!56 look sick at all," said my friend. I left them with that query. When I joined them later, I was told that my | friend had gathered all the information regarding the humanitarian services being rendered by the Rotary dispensary at a Gorakhpur village for which those medicines were being purchased. My friend is, among other things, a bibliophile. He happened to be present when the postman brought a packet of PLAOUES tlF of our Club toward The Rotary Foundation. My friend is a true internationalist and thinks of nationalism as a great menace of our times. He was, therefore, quick to appreciate the idea and the motives behind such a program as The Rotary Foundation. One day both of us had gone to the shop of our neighbor, a chemist. There I met a Rotarian and introduced him to LASTII{G BEAUTY Exciting designs; expert craftsmanshio at the lowest possible cost...yours in bronze and aluminum plaques by United States Bronze especially fot Ftaternal 0rganizations. Write for Catalog now. . . books and pamphlets. "Are you taking up some course in business administration?" queried my irrepressible friend. "No, these books are on familY Planning," I said and explained to him that the Rotary Club of Dehra Dun was contemplating a project of family planning under Community Service activities. We had therefore requested the Family Planning Association in Delhi and Bombay to send the available lit- SPIAI( llAIUnAtlY ro AUDIENCE OF roo - soo with Portsbt our|D erature on the subject so that we would be better acquainted with the latest developments in the field. BY then mY friend had got busy turning over the pages of one of the family-planning I PlOJlCllllo Ledun' bulletins. o Built-in $und systcm . llobile nicroPl|or. rnd bDo fs(ds Ph!-in . Sii.ld.d rrdiu LnD During the last week of his stay with I invited a few friends to dinner. A few minutes after we all got together, the party was in full swing. I could see the pleased expression on his face, adus, il ll^l \ \ I D I tf It RENT OR BUY i{f re D t I I l\\! . PEUGEOT. VW. VOLVO. OTHERS FREE Prlce Llst ol all makes and modela. . . . FREE CTE OFFICIAL GUIDE-62 pages cove!ing ell questlons on cars Ebroad-also sent when you staCe make, model, trlp dBtes, slze of party. No obllgailon. All detalls srrenged. \-/ The wide, grqy rood is chead of me, And leods somewhere, somewhere; Let me follow it crs fqr crs it goes, And forther yet thqn there. Irresolute feet qre set to run The lenqth of this troubled dcy, But duty-clcyed honds ore holding me bqck And pointing the other wqy. CAR-TOURS lN EUROPE, lNC. 555 Fitth Ave., N.Y. 17. ox JeNuenv, 1967 7-5800 lent protection for your costliest office ma- chines. There's a Tiffany Stand model sure to fit your Needs. Send for our catalog and see. riffany@st 2l:ll 225 SOUTH MEBAMEC . ST, LOUIS, MO 63105 HEARING CA}I BE RESTORED WITHOUT A HEARING AID! While the use of a hearing aid is the solution to manY hearing problems, it isn't the only waY to restore hearing. Facts about some types of hearing loss that can be cbrrected through medi- cal treatment or by simPle surgery are found in Zenith's nationally prominent physician Runcwcy BIG SAVINGS SPECIAL LOW COST ROTARIAN CONVENTION PLAN (cre) - rigidity. Excel- Family Doctor," written by a AI: Jc)q Trade-lns, flnonciDB, shipplng, etc. Phone or Write DePt. R ,n, Heavy, precision construction elimiassures nates noise and vibration booklet, "Hearing Loss and the rnention THE ROTARIAN when writinp advert isers Please lfrl Safe, silent, strong. . . that's a Tiffany Stand. Lodene Brown Hothaway and published by the Zenith Radio Corporation. To obtain a free copy of this valuable booklet, simply fill out the coupon below. r-----'FREE BOOKTET For your free copy of "Hearing Loss and the Family Doctor," plus descriptive literature on Zenith Hearing Aids just write: zenith Radio corp., Dept. R lll. 60635 ZONE SIATE 6501 W. Grand Ave., ChicaSo, a aaaaaaaaaaaaaaoaaaaaaaaaaaaaaa GFA- Ir A- : a||ilGrui$Bl0 llic a a a a a a a a a a miring the warmth and fellowship that prevailed. He could not restrain himself and spoke out: "We all know that birds of a feather flock together, but in this grouP, how comes it to be that there are two doctors, two lawyers, an industrialist, a psychologist, and two businessmen? Which is the feather?" "It is the feather of Rotary," replied the psychologist. A few days later my friend have many sweet memories left. I of his to cherish. But one of them I a : Ihe R0lary MI$TRIL $Decial i lmls.ltcE a Mav zl 3 fhe most fabulous train ride since !. the days of Diamond Jim BradY! ROTARY DISTRICT 516 has 3 chartered the fastest train in Eu! 16ps-P1x1ce's famous MISTRAL ! toi a land cruise to remember. Rotarians will be on board 3 . French to share the fun and club members ! from all over the USA are invited !. to join. Plans a Fashion Shows, 3 host of spectacu ! fore offered on : Person. Gontact Rotary Tours a stay shall about cherish with pride. And that is something that happened on the eve of his departure. It was a night of full moon, and we decided to drive to Rajpur after. dinner. We stopped the car on one of tbe beautiful curves on the Mussoorie Road. It was pleasant, refreshing, as though the cool breeze was whispering the verse of Omar Khayyam in our ears-"unborn tomorrow, dead yesterday, why fret about it, today be sweet!" Just then I got the as sharp as the one my friend had given me on the afternoon of his arrival. And this too came from him. But if jolt a ! ntg Addison St. Berkeley, California :. tor MlsTRAt reservations and information on other Rotary tours to the Greek lslands, :a Eastern and Westcrn Europe. I aaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaa HELLO. HETLO WHAT. A. WONDERFUL COMING. TO. NICE FOR THE CONVENTION o Take advantagie of our the difference. My friend shook me by the shoulders and said, "Laj, I have a confession to make. I have stayed with you but I have at the same time lived with Rotary. I go back with different views about it. I am sorry for the ignorance under which I bave long labored. But I am huppy; I know now what you people are. And what I am nlore happy about is that during all this time not once have you tried to impress upon me about Rotary. You and your friends have answered my queries only. But I know you don't have to . . Rotary speaks for itself." SPECIAL DISCOUNTS to all Rotarians o Buy any European Gar Prices and SAVE MONEY at Tax-Free Factory o EXAMPIE: Mercedes "250 U.S. Specs Credils ore seporoled lrom lop lo bolroh by commos, IeIl lo right by doshes S" 1967 supply. Sedan Mfr's suggested list price, t{.Y.C.-$5,258.00 YouR cosT, EUR0PE-$3,947.00 YouR sAvlilGs-$l,31 l.0o o USE THIS SAVINGS TO PAY FOR YOUR TRIP o WritE tO: F(IREIG!{ EXPORT/SALES llllBlvd-Carnot-06, [e Cannet-France, Tel39-83-77, for a proposed contract 0f sale uyithout obliging yourself to buy. WRIIE N(lW. DI)I{'T WAIT. TAKE ADVAI{IAGE ]{(lIY. 76 Photo Sources Accurate records are required by companies subject to the strict wage-hour law. Clockstampd time cards provide prool ol compliance. And, production increases rhrough greater employee respect for time. Lathem offers low-priced side-printing models, such as above, for recording payroll and job time. Various inexpensive, automatic models pre vide error-free, one and two column payroll accounting. Whatever your need, Lathem catr 24, lcelondic Airlines 25, Norwegion Nolionol Trovel Offfce 26: Donish Nolionol Trovel Office 27t Gosto Nordin Photo for Swedish Tourist Trofffc Assoc. (Courtesy Royol Consulole of Sweden, Chicogo, lll.l 28: Consulole Generol of Finlond, New York, N.Y. 29: lrish Tourist Offfce (Courtesy Joseph S. Gould Assoc.) 3O: The British Trovel Assoc. 3l : Netherlonds Informolion Service 32: Belgium Inst. of Informotion (Courtery Belgion Cgnsulote Generol, Chicogo, lll.) 33: [uxembourg Consulote Generol, New York, N.Y. 34: Germon Tourist lnformotion Office 35: French Government Tourisf Offfce 36: Poul Rickenbock for the Sponish Notionol Touri:f Office 37: Portuguese Embossy, Woshington, D.C. 38: Consulote Generol of Switzerlond, Chicogo, lll. 39: Liechtensiein Governmenl Press ond Informotion Offfce 4O' Pon Americon World Airwoys 4l: Austrion Slote Tourisf Deporlmeni 42: Trons World Airlines 43' Turkish Consulole Generol, Chicogo, lll, 4,1: The Leicogroph Co. 48 thru 5 l: Almosy from Three lions r-----LATHEM TIME ---- RECORDER COMPANY 2147 Marietta Blvd. NW, Atlanta, Ga. 30325 Send me complete information and prices, also payroll time card samPles. 52' Erpe 53: Bottom, Gonesh Pholo Arl TnB Rorenr.lN I Here are the "best ten" last lines: "Never learning the 'when' and the 'whyJ " (Paul H. Stixrud, nenber of the Rotary Club of Guatemala City, Guatemala.) "And squawks like a pump when it's dry!" (William L. Imes, member of the Rotary Club of Dundee, New York.) "A typical 'fair weather' guy." (Mrs. John Anderson, wife of a Esperaoce, W. A., Australia, Rotarian.) ,,Now Sam is the ,broker,_poor guy!,, (Mrs. James Herman, wife of a Luverne, Minnesota, Rotarim.) "And says'Never, no more, will I try.'" (Mrs. Maurice Fennell, wife of a Shepparton, Vic., Australia, Rotarian.) "And hopes for pie in the sky." (A. C. Peoce. member of the Rotary Ctub of CoshGton, Ohio.) "And Limerick Gorner The Fixer pays $5 for the first four lines of an original limerick selected as the month's limerick-contest winner. Address him care of Tne RotlnrlN Magazine, 1600 Ridse Avenue, Evanston, Illinois 60201. *** This month's winner comes from Mrs' William W. Berg, wife of a Eugene, Oregon, Rotarian. Closing date for last lines to complete it: best" entries will receive $2. March 15, 1967. The "ten GIANT CLIENT A basketball star named McCalI, Al sixteen grew seven feet tall; is parenls, undaunted, Said all that they wanted, H STOCK AVERAGING Here again is the bobtailed limerick presented in Tnn RorlnrlN for September: Whenever the market is high Sam lones tells his broker to buY, But panics and dumps His stock when it slumps sits there and asks himsell'Why?"' (Keith G. Kerslake. member of the Ro- tary Club of Ayr, Qsld., Australia.) "As a bull or a bear he's too shy." (Mrs. W. Kenneth Miller, wife of a Greenville, Tennessee, Rotarian.) "Then sits down with his broker to cry." (Elgin E. Coutts, member of the Rotary Ctub of Toronto, Ont., Canada.) "Then watches it soar with a sigh." (James R. Nance, member of the Ro- tary Club of Shelbyville, Tennessee.) My Favorite Story The director, producer, and backer of a Broadway show were discussing matrimony one evening. The director insisted that marriage was 60 percent work and 40 percent fun; the producer thought 75 percent work and 25 percent fun; the backer said 90 percent work and 10 percent fun. The assistant stage manager then appeared at the door, and the backer asked him. He replied, "Marriage is 100 percent fun and no work at all." "How do you figure that?" asked the producer. "Very simple. If there was any work at all to it, you guys would have me doing it." G. S. RersrNcneNr -Mns. "",:lli,",Iiii, M0DERlt iltt lilD r|Jil! Be alive. Lifesee the great cities. Treat yourself to the sun, fun, entertainments. Thrill to the fablerl past and vistas unbelievably beautiful. Everything included, Always deluxe. Nothing humdrum when you holiday with Maupintour. Compare. You'll see. Ask for Maupintour's 1967 brochures about these new and different escorted holidays: EUROPE. Eight sun-and-fun- full holidays 3 weeks to 8 weeks. Tour by air, rail, motorcoach. Finest hotels and re- sorts. From $1238. Ask for 28- page "Europe" brochure. SCANDINAVIA. 16 to 22 days, Weekly departures, From $848. BRITISH ISLES. 22 days. heland, Scotland, England, Week- ly departures. From $1066, SPAIN/PORTUGAL. 22 days. Finest luxe holiday of the highlights. Isle of Mallorca. Weekly. From $998. MIDDLE EAST. 22 days. East- ern Mediterranean's great cities, Every month. From $1438. MEXICO GRAND FIESTA. 27 days. Experience the wonder and excitement of the little known and the famous. $1038. SOUTH AMERICA FIESTA. 24 days to 56 days. Four dif- ferent and all new escorted Fiesta Holidays. Monthly de- partures. Before you decide, ask for 2B-page brochure. Compare! From $1753 to $3417, ASK YOUR TRAVEL AGENT for brochures or write Maupintorur,777 W,23rd St., Lawrence, Kansas. 66044. 8M aupr ntour world-wide standard of travel excellence "Sorry, deor, buI you knew lhis wos my Rotory doy. JeNulnv, 1967 "S 77 Passenger-Garrying FREIG HTERS Are the Sebret of Low Gost Travel Yes, for no more than you'd spend at a resort you can take a never-to-be-forgotten cruise to Rio and Buenos Alres. Or througb the West Indles or along the St, LawreDce Rlver to lteDch Canada. ID tact, trlps to almost everywhere are wltbln your meaDs. And whot q(commodqlion! you gcl: lorge room: with bed: (not bunksl, probobly o privote bqth, lott of good food ond Plenty of.elqxolion os you rpeed f.on porl lo porl. the ltnes, tells whele they go, how mucb they charge, briefl.y describes eccommodatlons. Eundreds of thousands ol travelers all over the world swear by lt. Travel edltors aDd trovel wrlters say "To leartl trow to travel lor as llttle as you'd spend at a resort Eel Trueel Routes Arcurd ,he Wtrld." AMERICA BY CAR _This big book is your lnsur&nce of seeing all the four-st&r slghts ln whatever corner of the U. S. or Canada you d.rive to (and it eveu covers Mexico as well). DBy by day, America by Car teus you where to go from Alaska to Mexjco. Whether you're vlsltlng New England or eallfornia, Flortda or the Natlonal Parks, the Great Lekes, the Mlssissippi, the East, the South or the Soutlrwest, the Indlan country, etc., lt tells you road by road tlre sceDlc way to go and lt always dtrects you to- tbe importaDt slshts aloBs'o" *ttftlrgr*S""tJlTir*res. fn Niegara or Los Angeles, Washington washrnston or New OrleaDs, the BlBck Hllls or MoDtreal, America by Car takes the guesswork out of trayel. Of course lt names hundreds upon hundreds of recoEEended places to eat and atay. Amerlca is so btg, you caE ea,sily over- look or forget lmportant sights or make many a wrong turn. So get America by Car, the book that mskes sure you'll see everythlng of coDsequence and always travel rlght. America by Car is fully 170,000 words ln lengtb (as l&rge as three ordlnary sized novel6). But lt costs onfy $2.50, while lt helps you see any part of Amerlca es you've probably never before explored this part of the world. tion inIt's from or cludes going Mexico, ica. the South a wbole Indies sectioD called "How to See the Worlal at Low Cost." A big $1 worth, especlaUy as lt can opell the way to more travel tban you ever thought possible. For your copy, simply fiU out coupon. Where Bargain Paradises of the World Do you know where to f.nd an island rlght Dea! the U. S. so nearly like Tahiti in appearance, beauty, end color even the Detlves say lt was made from a ralnbow? (And that costs bere are so low you can not only reach it but also stay a whlle for hardly more ttran you'd spend at a resort ln the U. S.?) Do you know where to f.nd the wolld's best mountaln hldeaways or its most dazzling surf-washed coastel resorts where even today you can llve for a song? Do you know where lt costs less to spend o while, the surroundlngs are pleasant, and the climate well Digh perfect in such places as Mexlco, the West Indies, France, along the Medlterranean, and in the world's other low cost wonderlends? Or if you've thought of more distant places, do you know whlch of the South Sea Island.s are as unspoiled today as in ConrBd's day? Or which is the one spot world travelers call the most beauttful place on earth, where two can live ln streer luxury, wlth a retinue of servants for only $195 a month? Bargain Paradises of the World, a big book, proves that if you can afioral a vacation in the U. S. the rest of the world is closer tlran you tlrin[. Author Norman D. Foril, honorary vice presialent of the Bdtish Globe Trotters Club, shows that the American ilollar is respected all oyer the world, anal buys a lot more tb.an Jrou'd give it credit for. Yes, lJ you're planning to retlre, thls book shows that you can live for m you'd LDg tt In a,ny ln ew ree for hardly more than ou've dreamed of takow you can afiord it. case, wlren border to reach some learned how much yo tot Bafgain Paradises ol Round the World on a Shoestring rf you know the seldom-adv forelgn countries, you don't need fantastic to travel. You could speD.d $500-$1000 on a er to Buenos Aires-but do you know you can travel all the way to Argentlna througl. colorful Mexico, the Andes, Peru, etc., by bus and rail for just $179 ln fares? You can spend $5,000 on a luxury cruise around the world. But do you know you can travel around the world vla deluxe freighter for only a fourth the cost-and ths,t there are hau a d.ozen ottrer round the world routlngs for about $1000? There are two ways to travel-like a tourist, who spends a lot, or like a traveler, who knows all the ways to reach his destinatio[ economically, comfortably, and while seeing the most. Norman Ford's big new guid.e Hou lo Tratel Wilhout Being Rich gFtes you the traveler's picture of the world showlng you ttre lower cost, comfortable ways to practlcally any part of the world. Page after page reveals the shlp, rail, bus, airplane and other loutings ttrat save you money and open the world to you. What alo you want to do? Explore the West Indies? This is tlre guide that tells you how to see them lil(e aD old time resident who knows all tlre tricks of how to make one dollar do the work of two. Visit Mexico? This is the guiale that tells you the low cost ways of reaching the sights (how 76c t{,kes you via 8-passenger automobile as far as those not-in-the-know pay 95.60 to reach). Eoam around South America? Europe? Any other part of the worlal? Tbis is the guiale tb.at tells you where and how to go at prices you can really afiord. prove now, oDce and for all, that now for Hou to Travel Withoul Being words, Elled witb facts, prices, ,00O save nly $1.50. EYen oDe little hint can you ttrls suD several times over. Speciol Offer: oll fhree books obov+Trqvel loulc: Around the World, Borgoin Porodises of lho World, qnd How to Trovel Wilhout Being Rich- for 33. 78 to Retire or l|acation dt whol took like prewor prices <nd where no one ever heord ol nerves or wonies These Are Anerico's C)wn Borgoin Poradises Norman Ford's best-selllng book Of-the-Beaten-Par, names the really low cost I'lorida retirement and vacationlng towns, ttre best value-s in Texas, the Southwest, CaUfornia, the South and East. Canadaand a dozen other areas which the crowds have not yet discovered. Fabulous places like that undiscovered region wheie wlnters are as o France's only reEainlng outpost ln thls part of the world-completely surrounded by Canaaltan territory . or & village more Scottlslr than Scotland . or age-old Spanlsh hamlets rlght tn our owtl U. S., where no one ever hearat of nervous tenslon or the day life. ere vlsitors come by the score, so you always . , (but lhey never cone by the thoussnds ,o raise ou, ). o That remarkable town where a fee of 3c a day glves you an almost endless round of barbecues, muslcals, concerts, plcnlcs, pot luck suppers, smorgesbord dinners and a fine arts program. That soutlrern island trrst dlscoyered by mllllonalres who had all the world to roam ln . . and now thelr hideaways are open to anyone who knows wtrere to find them. You read of lsland paradlses aplenty in the UDited States and Canada, of art colonles (artists search for plcturesque locatlons where costs are low!), of areas with almost a perfect cll.mate or with f.owers or1 every sld.e. Ilere are the real U.S.A.-brand Shangrl-Las made for tlre man or woman wbo's }rad enough of crowds. Here, too, are unspoiled seashore viUages, tropics-like island.s, and dozens of otber spots Just about perfect for your retirement or vacation at some of the lowest prlces you've heard of since the gone-forever prel war days. They're all in the United St4tes and Canada, and for good measure you also read about the low-cost paradises in Hawaii, the Virgin Islanils and Puerto Rico. way Ofl-the-Beaten-Par, is a blg book fllled eauy to freedom from tenslon and vacetlon only afiord. About 100,000 words and plenty . $2. Moil to HARIAN PUBIICATIONS. 54 Shore Drive Greenlqwn (Long lslondl, New York 11740 I have enclosed $. . . . . . . - . . . . . . . (castr, check or money order). Please send me tlre books checked below. You wlll refund my money if I am not satisfled. ! TR,AVEL ROUTES AR,OUND THE WOR,LD-(thE tTAVeler's dlrectory of passenger-carrying frelghters). $1. tr BA-RGAIN PAR,ADISES OF TIIE WOR,LD. $1.50. ! IIOIV TO TRAVEL WITHOUT BEING R,ICII. $1-50. ! SPECIAL OFFER: AU five books listed above for only $6. Prlnt Nome Street Address ctty...... state. ..... ztP code. Tne RorlnreN Go French all thewaY to the 'fTconventioti. GoAirFrance. Rivieramood. f v attrroa.E rr." (R AIR^I-^ FRANCE .ll t1 I I ct 1 I I t" 1 $1 I ,. Where are vou most apt to run into a Picasso, Chagall or Cocteau? It mal' come as a shock. That starrv plavgrouncl, tne Rivrcri, has becomc one oi the great nruseunts ot modern art lf this startles y,ou remember that nobody appreciates beautiiul coLtntr\,- beautiiul tood .rnd hcaLrlrl.,l mrrdel. more than a French parnfer S,l, rranv setfled in the hrlls of the,\lediterTanean Cocteau illustrated the seasid,e chapel oi Villefranche lt's so enrhanting, it A Irnvel agenl can ht'lp with vour plans :)r lvrite R-l rn\ lhc plarnt,sl r!erJd ng rntO.t lairt, \latrsse' croated his nrastcrpiecc Irr lale ncarbv Thc,re,.cl, rrhrtc. and blLre chapel ol \/cnc.e Prcasso's ltr onze l-'l lon'tn'tt'.tu ,V/ouIon stancls srrack rn th:: sqLt; re oi Vallauri_c, .I llotIerV to\\'n near Canncs \lanV ol the ceramics her nracJe thr:rc'are orr in a goreeorrs '",illa in Antibers Leger's'l 50-fool mural ancl rrost Box 221 sonre s[arnecl elass $,indow are in Biot ,1ncl ,\lenfon boasts a uniqLre collection ot (.hag,all, Dufy, Modiglianiand Utrillo The Riviera is bountiful ivith salleries .tttd rt).ttoLtm. Butlor.t dr,n lhave to be ,r l)Jrrl^r or dn art hun to go r,,ierv a\.veNeu,\'ork l0 \ Y , French Covernment Tourist Office: \t,l i',*u"**[fr:f-i t there. York, Chicago, San Franc <co Blrerlr llr ls, \lontreal a