1 PA m' T TI n Ttr 141~r-MTC~AC'AN DAILY ThURSDAY, MARCh 13, 1930 r Avv J A £Ai.. IVIAY A .ARA'.S * ----- . _. ..-_ ! W TELESCPE HRADY1 Mirror of Pyrex Glass Is Only Part of New Instrument 1 Not Built Here. 'WILL BE DONE BY FALL1 niversity Observatory Anong B Eest Equipped Stations in United States. Professor W. C. Rufus of the Uni- versity Observatory department has amnounced that the new reflecting teescope is about ready to assem- ble and install in the Angell Hall observatory, although it will not be set for use until some time this ,criing fall. A mirror made of the famous Pyrex glass is the only part of this new machine that was not built in the observatory shop. This mirrorj is fifteen inches in diameter, and the delicate grinding and polishing of the surface was done by Fecker ,of ' Pittsburgh, successor to the Brashear Company who furnished the mirror for the larger reflecting telescope now in the observatory. Parts Designed Here. The remainder of the parts were designed and made in the oserv- atory shop. Everything about this new machine has been wholly com- plated and the telescope is now ready for assembly. The mirror, the finest piece of mechanism toe have ever been installed in a Ui- versity instrument, arrived but a few days ago, and although the ,,achine will not be mounted fore some time, the assembly of thez parts wi-ll take place at once. This new addition to the Angell. HEall Observatory will give two telescopes to this section of the Astronomy department, the other being a ten inch refracting tele-. scope that has been the only in- ,strument installed to date on top of the literary building. Since twov domes were built when the observ- atory was established, there will be. adequate space for the installation of this new telescope, and it will jnake the Angell Hall laboratory1 one of the most fully equipped of its kind in the country. Is of Latest Design. This new instrument has taken over a year and a half to build and is of the most efficient andI of latest design. It will be the sec- ond reflecting machine to be used by the University astronomy de- partment and its operation this fall will give many students an oppor- tunity for good observations, be- fore made difficult due to te large; number enrolled in the courses. Chief Justice Diligent in Preparing Speeches (By Asstciated Press) NEW YORK, March 12.-An in- teresting sidelight on the charac- ter of Chief Justice Charles Evans Hughes, showing the care which he prepares his public addresses,*was given at a luncheon meeting of the Delta Upsilon club of New York Tuesday by Col. Frederick Melvin Crawford, military secretary to Mr. Bughes when he was governor of 10ew York. After the Chief Justice's recent address before the City Bar Associ- aion on the World Court, of which he was then a member, hie was asked whether his speech was ex-I tenperainos, Col. Crawford said. The Chief Justice replied that it wamn't. He didn't speak from notes, but he said he had spent 40 hoursI preparing himself for the speech. "I arose at 6 instead of 7 every, morning for 40 days," he quotedl Mr. Hughes as saying, "Mrs. Hughes arising at 5:30 to make coffee for me. During those extra 40 hours 1 gained I outlined in my mind what I was to say." NEW WOMEN'S ALTITUDE RECORD [Mitche1 Mentioned ESTABLISHED BY ELJNOR SMITH' Lfor Supreme Court " :. , : > >;:" : :> .. G erm an U niversity Professor, ; T Now at Westinghouse, to * I. Instruct During Summer. ~ ".TIMOSHENKO ON LEAVE Prof. A. Nadai, research engineer for the Westinghouse Electric Co., and former professor of applied . Smechanicsat the University of Gottingen, Germany, will this sum-i mer fill the position of Prof. Ste-- phen Timoshenko, of the engineer- ing mechanics department, who will attend an international meet- ing of engineers in Europe. Professor Nadai will offer courses of an advanced nature in "The Plastic State of Material in Con-' struction" and "Applied Elasti- 1 ,ty epartmentsm oher thansbtild will . efI t Q engineering mechanics will build Wiliam r. ithe courses around Professor Nad~ai's Attorney general of the United work. States, who has been suggested to This will mark the first summer fill the vacancy in the supreme that the University has had the court caused by the recent death cooperation of a large concern in of Justice Edward T. Sanford. contributing to the summer school faculty; and according to Prof. L. A. Hopkins, secretary of the en- gineering college, the practice will 4e continued. Courses offered by these men will be primarily for teachers in technical schools in the United States and Canada. " ! Last summer Professor Timo- shenko gave a series of courses Original Plates of Nineteentf similar to those that will be off:}r- Century Artists Placed . , :, :, ti: , r"... ed by Professor Nadai. Approxi- on2Exhibition. mately thirty men from all parts __x____ ..... .~ - - ~of the country took advantage of the work. DISCARD SOMBER STYLES I DEPARTMENT BUYS, ELE PiCUL DEVICE Electrical Engineering School Purchases New Cathode Ray Oscillograph. COST MORE TAN $4000 #-0 :.1 .. M i IIiM ICY A Ilr IM+ r M1 r r r w w i r Prof. Benjamin F. Bailey. of the electrical engineering department,1 announcecd yesterday the purchase rf a cathode ray oscillograph by the U.iversity for experimental' purpo~se. The apparatus, whichw 2ost more than $,,Q00, was pur- I chased from the General Electric company, and is -the latest of its typ° on the market. Measuring the speed of the pas- sage of an elcctric current, espe- cially in arcs, and obtaining pho- tographs of curcnt passage are a few of the functons of the new oscillograph, which can measure wave intervals up to and exceed- ing one ten millionth of a second. The older apparatus, in use before the purchase of the new device, was capable of measuring speeds . near one hundred thousandth of a second, Professor Bailey stat cd. For the past month, the elec- trical engineering department has been conducting a series of ex- h periments to measure the speed of current passing through arcs, withj the aid of apparatus loaned by the Detroit Edison company for the purpose. The tests were conduct- S ed in the R. 0. T. C. garage, in the i What is believed to be a new altitude record for women pilots wasi I established recently by Elinor Smtih, 18-year-old aviatrix, when she as- M t CS cended to an apparent height of 32,000 feet at Roosevelt field, N. Y. She; tary C 1113 4W is shown here being carried from her plane by Carl Schneider (right), Increased Enr llment who installed her baragraph, and Ben Zebora, mechanic, after she ha' _ established the record. Miss Smith is also the holder of the women's Enrollments for the Citizens' Mil- record for staying aloft in sustained flight. itary Training Camps, which began March 1, showed a gain of a little Unimportant Coal Bill Amendment Defeat ay more than 20 percent for the first, Not Cause Fall of Labor Party, Says Hayden ten day enrollment period over the the same period in 1929, it was an- With the advent of Prime Min- to a revolt avgainst the leadership nounced yesterday by Phelps New- ister MacDonald's second labor of Mr. Baldwin. berry, civilian aide to the secretary government's first defeat, consid- "Both parties are afraid to oust of war. Enrollment for Michigan erable discussion has arisen as to the MacDonald ministry, for fear duringthis whether Mr. MacDonald will be that the prime minister, at a new ringhis period totaled 373, forced to resign on the outbreak of! election, will gain an absolute ma-j which is approximately 25 percent i i) ,) new agitation in the House of Corn- jority. Furthermore," continued oUI1e total a ot1Uito U WnigIIWfor monsg Prof. J. R. Hayden, of the Professor Hayden, "the Liberals fear 1930. political science department, in dis- 1the anger of the country if they ,500 applicants have been accept- cussing the question, stated that, oust the government at the time of Fnrollment will be closed when "Lloyd George and Mr. Baldwin the naval onfternacDonaldrec-ed, and oficials ask that all men mustered the full strengths of their of"PrimelinistertMatonald rec respective parties and outvoted the ognizes his defeat with the amend- who desire to attend the camps MacDonald group. ment to the coal bill, but refuses, this year submit their applications1 "It has come to be a constitu- to resign. His removal wile early to avoid the possibility of hav- tional practice in England," said ifee fteCnevtvshv Professor Hayden, "that the prime vote of censure passed in the House ing to wait until next year. minister does not have to resign )of Commons." - . when defeated on a relatively min-2Meanig or matter. Mr. MacDonald was AMHERST SENIORSC oiudTellm Manarn dfaeonaamnmntote* I of Coe n Antarct ic much discussed coal bill, and al- PERMIT TED AU TOS' though the coal question is of ma- (By Associated Press) jor importance, the amendment is Those with Scholastic Average DUNEDIN, New Zealand, March only minor, and its defeat does not o 75% Allowed Cars 11-Dr. Lawrence Gould of the Uni-, warrant the resignation of the pres- o 5versity of Michigan, geologist of the ent cabinet." t-expedition, said that the discovery Professor Hayden went on to ex- ;. Asscidted re s>)of coal on Mount Nansen had con-I plain that the fate of the Mac- AMHERST, Mass., march 12.-- vinced him that the Antarctic un- Partial abolition of a rule prohibit- ( til comparatively recent years had donald ministry has rested in the .cr a hands of the Liberal and Conserv- ing students of Amherst college either had a tropical or sub-tropi ative parties since the date of the from driving automobiles during a cal climate. Dr. Gould said he had last election. "The Liberals are very college year was announced today determined further that the great badly divided," Professor Hayden by Dean Geoffrey Atkinson, fol- barrier was a floating sea of ice' averred. "One section of the party lowing a conference with the stu- anchored to islands and, moun- is following Lloyd George and the dent council committee. tains; that the Ross sea extended other section are the former fol- I The ban, which has been in ef- many more miles eastward than lowers of Lord Asquith, now under! fect since the spring of 1928, will first supposed and that the Queen the leadership of Lord Gray. The be lifted after the spring vacation j Maude range of mountains was the. Conservatives are also divided, due next month so that seniors ,with a greatest in the world, and unlike --scholastic average of 75 per cent.or either .the Himalayas or the An- over, and with their parents' peri- des. It is of the fault block type, he Sentence Ex-Commoner mission, will be allowed the use of said, and o:R them were found two rear of the automotive engineering Original fashion plates of the laboratories, under the direction of ,nineteenth century are now on dis- Prof. William G. Dow, who is es- play in the down stairs lobby of the pecially interested in this type of library, it was announced yester- i.experimentation. da by W. W. Bishop, head librarian. Feeling the necessity of owning Close observation of many of apparatus of its own for wcrk of these plates will reveal a truth of such an iimportant nature, the character in the expressign of the Uiaiversity purchaised the present figures and other artistic qualities device, which now reposes in the that are lacking in modern work. basement of the west engineering of this kind. They illustrate the building, in the electrical labora- changing trends of fashion and tories. show how historical events fre- quently here influences changes Byrd Cs of dress.B r onsiders Scond At the beginning of the nine- Antarctica Expedition teenth century, for instance, we see a reaction against the somber (I11 Associated Press) styles of the French Revolution and DUNEDIN, New Zealand, March a return toward the Greek idea of 12-The possibility that Rear Ad- dress. Then subtle Egyptian in- miral Richard E. Byrd will take an- 1 fluences are the result of Napo- other expedition into the Antarc- leon's Egyptian campaign. Again, tic was forseen here today. his Russian campaign is later re- Admiral Byrd, in an interview, flected in the dress of the second said : "If I were to say what I am decade of the century. In the going to do next, my remarks early sixties the Garibaldi shirt is would cause a sensation." a witness to the popularity of that Although the intrepid explorer, here.. i ho returned Monday after more, The plates exhibited show quite ? than a year at the bottom of the completely the styles of the first world during which he flew over part of the century, but due to the the South Pole, declined to com- limited space the dress of the latter mit himself further, the trend of .part of the century is but brieflyreve12ts here and feeling amonag hsj illustrated. party indicates that he hopes to ye- turn to the Antarctic to make fur ther explorations:east of the Ross Senate Beats Kentucky sea.exporatinsseatiof Veto Governor's Falls Veto (BY Assuciatcd Pr'.s) ,II iE I FRANKFORT, Kentucky, March 11-The Kentucky senate today VL~ . 0 4-1 overrode Gov. Flem D. Sampson's MUM III111111 1841111111 1111 If liffiffi I I I I i r .r .. cr " r ALL " r r r r r r Irri r r r Yr Y Yi a'i! r r 4W WLEK r i! rr w ! r rr i 1 r w '" r r r r e r w i rw i e w. w 4°. i FY i i "r i w 1O1 i i i i i w "" i i M s M i Y1M IIIF Y i i i i 41 i w s nF w r r rril - r Y! w ' r r w r riw w r w w Fr r r w rrr r 4 'r r " "!r F rr " r W v yw w Y Lrl" r ! ! Y rYR Y !w Y r ! Y YIIIII . yr 1 fY"! 1 r YW Y WF 111E iM1 YYb w r Yrir r I + ' r Ls r:" r r wr r w r ilk Yirir r w r Yb _ T "YYF Yw A! r w r wr _ r .r i VYIII r" !WF r r 1114 Y:Y1 1Yw 1i r r IIIr rY r :11f! yw .. '. MY r "Iw Y 4 -s rr r I y!4. r r wr r F M r .r! r w r '. T I FP 11 " r wM r r ,lYr w r r r w At 8:-015 ~ '' MKIMES r i r i i w i iR w s A w ii e r w s r r r H W Y w ii R i 4r AM R rIR Iw IR i Y 111 _ wl ( Yr r MY 111 A Irk ' Y M 11 i 1! r M rr w 'Y r r r w "ife r W h1 it T ' yM 'inri +K i .. , _ rnr ww w n4 w r "F r , are rr w a 'Mrs ti IM . ,, r _ w r w w wr T ':M AY _ w r, r n. r ., , w a rrw is r w w , . wn s ; s a Mr1 w ,w rr +n a nn / vero or Lne Cumberland Falls bill which provides for acceptance ofE Coleman Dupont's,.offer to buy the falls and adjacent lands and give them to the state. The governor fa-! vored the plan proposec iDy the In- sull power interests to beautify the, falls and at the same time erect a' PORK CHOPS OR HAMBURG STEAK WITH FRIED POTATOES SALAD 35c power plant. to Serve Prison Term (By A sociated Press) OTTAWA, Ont., March 12.-Up- on conviction at his fourth trial of attacking a 17-year-old girl, Louis M. Auger, 27, former youngest member of the Canadian house of commons, Tuesday was sentenced to two years imprisonment in Portsmouth penitentiary. He has been in jail since last. May, having been refused bail dur- ing that time. motor cars while attehding the col- lege. Dean Atkinson also rulcd that ! three men--the owner and two others-may drive each car. UNIVERSITY OF VERMONT- In order to comply with the condi-! tions of a will which bequeathed! $5,000,000 to this institution, the enrollment has been restricted to [ 1,000 students, all of whom mustj be residents of Vermont.0 of the world's largest glaciers. Detroit Theatres M CASS THEATER FOlLOW THE CROWDS "NAUGHTY sMARIETTA" WARNER with Halford Youg & Co.BROS. Nights: 50c to X2.50 Sat. Mat.: 50c to $2.00 WORI Popular Mat. Wed.: s50c to $1.50 I .. RAE THEATRE TONDYS NOW SHOWING An All Talking Production WOMAN T WOMAN with BETTY COMPSON-GEORGE BARRAUD AND JULIETTE COMPTON Direct from showing in Detroit Positively first time in Ann Arbor. i t F {E E t# i{( i } 7 {) 7 (i f f V L.AST TIMEUS TODAY VUE jJIIam SH OWS AT 2RTH 0-3:30 7:00-9:00 R