FRIDAY, OCTOBER 14, 195 THE 1' UCRIGAN DAILY FRIDAY, OCTOBER 14, 1955 YW,~ ~flC fT1AW flATT.V PAGE ., t CANADA GETS MOST U.S. DOLLARS: American Travelers Spend Record Amount Abroad By DAVID L. BOWEN Associated Press Newsfeature Writer Americans, going abroad as nev- er before, are setting a new record for foreign travel spending this year. Last year United States residents topped all previous totals by shell- ing out $1,358,000 on trips to other lands. The Department of Com- merce, on the basis of reports for the first six months of 1955, ex- pects the total this year to grow, to about 11% billion dollars -- 10 per cent higher than last year and half again as large as expenditures just five years ago. As the accompanying map shows, the biggest target of these American dollars is E u r o p e and the Mediterranean countries, where Americans spent 484 mil- lion dollars last year, an increase over 1953 of 15 per cent. A simi- lar jump seems to be taking place this year since figures on the first half of 1955 run 17 per cent high- er than for the same period in 1954. Canada Profits Most The single country profiting most. from U.S. travel dollars is Canada, where 284 million was spent in 1954. Mexico is in sec- ond place among single countries with 190 million last year and a pace in the first half this year that indicates it will score con- siderably above 200 million in 1955. In addition to the 958 million dollars Americans spent in 1954 in the countries and regions shown on the map, they paid another 400 million getting to and from their destinations. United States car- riers garnered 214 million of these ticket fares, with foreign flag car- riers taking the other 186 million. This division reflects the tre- Tonight and Sati The Perfect IdeaI \YOU, TH Will Decie Child Choir ill Present 'U' Concert The Obernkirchen Children's Choir will open the Tenth Annual Extra Concert Series, sponsored by the University Musical Society, at 8:30 p.m. Monday in Hill audi- torium. The Choir, for whom the song "The Happy Wanderer" was writ- ten, is conducted by Edith Moel- ler and accompanied by J a m e s Benner. Proclaimed "Angels in Pigtails" by the late poet Dylan Thomas, their first concert tour last season broke box-office records and saw many sold-out performances. Their program will include se- lections by Brahms, Schumann, di Lasso and Schubert, and Welsh, Bulgarian and German folk songs. Tickets for the concert are still available in the offices of the Uni- versity Musical Society in Burton Tower. Music Student Given Honor A University music student will be honored by the performance of his original composition by the Louisville, Ky., Symphony Orches- tra tomorrow. Roland Trogan, a teaching as- sistant and doctoral student, is the author of the work. The young musician's work, "Two Scenes for Orchestra," will receive its premiere performance on this occasion. The performance was part of the cash award which Trogan won in a competition sponsored by the orchestra last spring. TV PRODUCTION: Max Liebman Adds New Meaning To 'Spectacular By CHARLES MERCER NEW YORK W)--An editor of Webster's International Diction- ary called the National Broadcast- ing Co. the other Gay and request- ed its definition of the word "spectacular." Thus, apparently, the big and splashy productions which NBC last year labeled "spectaculars" have found their way into the lan- guage. Interestingly, the man who biiught the "spectacular" to NBC- TV-Max Liebman-is a small, quiet man. Doing Less Spectacularg This season he's doing fewer spectaculars than last year. But he and the company he's formed are as busy as ever working at a series of half-hour shows between spectaculars. Eventually he hopes to bring these half-hour shows to the TV screen. Meanwhile, with the production of "Heidi" behind him, Liebman has quite a schedule of spectacu- lars ahead of him this season. On Nov. 5 Patrice Munsel will star in "The Great Waltz." A romantic comedy, "Dearest Enemy," starring Anne Jeffries will come to the screen Nov. 26. Christmas Eve there will be a repeat of last year's successful "Babes in Toyland," with Jeannie Carson, Dennis Day and Wally Cox. "From last year's experience," he says, "we learned that we must always bear in mind not to ape all the mechanics and thinking of the movies and. stage. The most important thing to achieve on the TV screen, says Liebeman, is a balance between intimacy and the big scene. Hatcher Sets Alumni Tri Five Upper-Michigan alumni groups will be hosts to University President Harlan Hatcher next week. Accompanying him on ti e northern trip will ber Arthur L. Brandon, director of University Relations, Robert U. Cross, ad- ministrative assistant to the pres- ident, and Alumni Association sec- retary, T. Hawley Tapping. 4Cinema CuiI4 4" Friday at 7 and SARTRE'S LHAND "A fancy intellectual exercise * ** considerable food for thought." -Crwtbv, N. I. Tim"j I mendous modern growth in Ameri- This speed-up in transporta-I can sea and air lines. Back in 1929, when 210 million was spent by U.S. travelers on transporta- tion, foreign flag carriers got 168 million of the total and American firms only 42 million. Air Travel Causes Increase The Department of Commerce believes that one of the factors causing the recent increase in travel to Europe is the develop- ment of air transportation. urday atf8 P.M. For Your Date .. . tion, incidently, would not affect a nearby nation like Canada, and may account for the slower rise in tourist expenditures there. Vis- its by families to military per- sonnel stationed abroad may be another factor in the postwar rise in European travel. A new element in the picture is introduction by air lines last year of "pay-later" plans for fin- ancing overseas trips. About 4 per cent of all European travelers used this method during the per- iod from October of 1954 to March of ti-q year. Mexican Travel Increases The Commerce Department re- ports travel payments to Mexico have increased by about 30 per cent from 1950 to 1954, a period during which transportation fa- cilities were substantially improv- ed. One explanation of the sharp rise noticeable in the first half of this year is lower prices re- sulting from the devaluation of the peso in 1954. Americans spent an average of $1,467 in 1954 for their European trips, about 10 per cent more than the average in 1950. The depart- ment says this reflects an increase of from $11.24 in 1950 to $14.98 last year in the average amount lion each and Germany was third Journalism Class Prefers The Daily In a poll of sophomore journal- ism students the Michigan Daily proved to be the most-read daily paper in Ann Arbor. The Daily, with 33 was, first, though closely followed -by the Detroit Free Press with 30 read- ers. Then came The New York Tim- es, 10, Detroit News, 8, Chicago Tribune seven, Detroit Times and Ann Arbor Daily News four, and the Chicago News, three. spent per day. This rise was part- ly offset by a decrease in the av- erage length of trip from 66 to 56 days. Average transatlantic fare was $628. The pattern of European travel has not changed materially in the last five years. France is the big- gest collector of tourist dollars, earning 72 million in 1954. The United Kingdom and Italy were tied for second place with 64 mil- with 34 million. 'Sweethearts' Scheduled Jerome Kern's "The Cat and The Fiddle" will be presented Feb.. 18 and Victor Herbert's "Sweet- heart" March 17. At the age of 53, after a life- time in show business, Liebman is still learning and experiment- ing. I Sunday at 8 only Eugene O'Neill? THE ! 111 1'1 LONG VOYAGE HOME Sturday at 7 and 9:15 with JOHN WAYNE and THOMAS MITCHEL Directed by JOHN FORD ARCHITECTURE AUDITORIUM 50c i .. .. Presented by the Ann Arbor Civic Theatre Production Directed by TED HEUSEL, Box Office Open Daily 10 A.M. - Curtain time Call NO 8-6300 for Reservations LYDIA MENDELSSOHN THEATRE I GRADUATES ......=======*1.'*.' F, %I in Engineering, Mathematics, Physics LOCKHEED * California Division represcntatiws r a Georgia Division wilbe on campuS TUESDAY, OCTOBER 1 .f. to diswm ym fawn in eecrgsexpancrm CORPORATION U Missile Systems Division and dcvelopment.hor ineerwieweryo lacememt jccr All three divisiot of Lockheed are engaged in a long-range expason program in thr fie k of endeavor. This is the FINAL DAY to sign up for Senior Picture appointments. Sign up on the Diag from 9 to 3 or at the California Division activities in Burbank cover virtually every phase of aircra both commercial and military. 46 major projects are in motion, including 13- models of aircraft in production- extremely high-speed fighters, jet trainers, commercial and military transports, radar search planes, patrol bombers. The development program is the largest and most diversified in the division's history. New positions have been created for graduates in: Aeronautical, Civil, Electrical and Mechanical Engineering and Mathematics and Physics. At Lockheed in Marietta, Georgia new C-13OA tubo-prop transportsand, B-47 jet bombers are being manufactured in the country's largest aircraft plant under one roof. The division is already o o of the South's largest industries. In addition, advanced research and development are underway on nuclear energy and its relationship to aircraft. A number of other highly significant classified projects-augmept the extensive productioq program. New positions have been created for graduates in: Aeronautical, Civil, Missile Systems DIvIsion in Van Nuys, California speciali"e"'in the technology of g''ed missiles. Its research and develoment cover virtually every field of scientfic endeavor, and offer engineers and scientists problems of increasieg complexity. Positions are open for$L& M.S. and Ph.D. candidates is: Aeronautical, Electrical and Mechanical Engineering and Mathematics and Physics. In addition, a scholarship program leading to M.S. Degrees has been established for those abl to quify for graduate ha cding. II 0 A=