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Show I :': - ip i Three postgraduate students from India are welcomed to the United States by Carolyn Graham, representative of the Institute of International Education. f Eii r 3 w M o : : ' :: ' T I and make your toilet bowl ttio cloancotf spotf in the houj 0 cleanser or bloach cloans, disinfects, deodorizes and No O I:. Smaller ' . : . It's specially made for this one job! Just pour, let stand, the Institute of International Education - -- 1 by Thomas Gorman . a 1 O i. ingredients disinfect" instantly. Exclusive Sodium Binoxalate "removes rust stains. Get hard-wate- r, Sani-Flus- ' at h market today. WHIM tttF- 7V - mIH yedlyoungjnanskede4fIJmew-ea- It's m .M mm M O O i ii bo safe! It bears the Good Housekeeping Guaranty Seal " i-IFiSlioJ Best Tor your toilet bowl because It's specially made for this one Job id booklets. As I thumbed throuch a bulletin I was surprised to find a ture of my friend in the elevator; and m Institute of I told him so we went I idly tried whether vtp guess my companion was from the Philippines or Indonesia, but gave up when we arrived at our floor. I showed him into the office and left him with the receptionist The Midwest regional office of the HE quietly bustled with people, many of them obviously from foreign countries. Now celebrating its 4lst year, the Institute is the most active American -- agency arranging exchange scholarships with other countries. At present it helps more than 5,000 for- eign and --American students and-sp-eciahsts a year, and has assembled a roster of more than a quarter-millio- n people with specialized training in almost every nation of the world. While waiting for my appointment, a young woman brought me a cup of coffee and I ' studied a few Institute fayfyd ; So thorough, . M your, o o is i approached the elevators in the building on Chicago's Michi- Avenue, a boyish, bright- - where he could find the International Education. I was going there myself, up together. On the way, fragrant, active , While diplomats wrangle and scientists develop new an deadlier weapons, o a n o " its- I quietly but effectively promotes peace. Sani-Fiush- ... Bwabrfluslr O o I removes rust stains liko 8 ' . . 20 Family Weekly, September 7, 1958 U Min Swe, a Burmese public-heal- th officer studying at ,Yale Medical School. But before I could read further I td Dr. Renatus Weber of Hamburg, Germany, a smiling, husky, youngish man of about 50. One of, the earliest international exchange students r Dr. Weter Jjikes. to call - himself a politician, and his warm,- - engaging manner leaves little doubt that he's a successful one. In addition to his law practice in Hamburg, he has served as state's attorney and deputy floor leader for the Christian "Democratic Uniorirparty in the Buergerschaft or city council, and is -- nownatoranoUHamburg's-reDresentative to the GermsSi federal gov ernment at Bonn. Last Spring he" visited the United States under the Foreign Leader Exchange. Program of the IL S. State Department. - Looking back over the 26 years since he studied at the University of Denver, Dr. Weber firmly believes that "each exchange student like myself is a worker in his own country for peace and international under-- , standing." He likes to recall the early role of the United States in international education, following the Boxer Rebellion in China. Though other, countries demanded financial. repara- tions from China, President Theodore Roosevelt arranged instead that Chinese students be admitted on scholarships to study in the United States. "To me, this was a typical American gesture in international understanding" Dr. Weber says. I also met and talked to other participants in the Institute's program. Iowa -- born Melvin Brorby, a Chicago advertising executive, has known the HE from its infancy. Following World War I he was awarded a scholarship in political science by theAmerican Field Service, and the Institute arranged his study for three years, at the University of Strasbourg, the Sorbonne, and l'Ecole Libre de , Politique in' Paris. has maintained his lively Brorby interest in world affairs for more than three decades as a director of the Toreign Policy Associatic"and "ffieZZ Chicago Council on Foreign Relations, as well as serving as a trustee of the HE itself for many years. T Lithe, sprightly. Kathryn M. Kula, general counsel of the Chicago Housing Authority, studied social legislation on a Fulbright scholarship at the University of Manchester, England, in IS56-57r- A ChlcdahTisTTCuta-ha- d her law degree from De Paul University and was admitted to the Illinois bar when she - came to the Housing Authority as assistant counsel 10 years ago. "Though my year in England didn't . Sci-en- ce |