THE MICHIGAN DAILY Democrat Leader Ready Ft aHard Winter [A-9 BTPH HOLDS IOTINNER Prof. Miller Elected as Faculty Member; Cooley, Anderson Give Addresses. Tau Beta Pi, honorary engineer- ing fraternity, held its initiation dance Friday night at the League to honor members recently elected. Names of the initiates were an- nounced yesterday by Marshall' Anderson, '32E, president o the society. Prof. Henry W. Miller was the faculty member initiated this semester. Seniors initiated were Robert . Barr, James G. Bryant, Harry k Chesebrough, David S. Culver, Wil- son J. Dalzell, Alfred R. Decker, Glenn V. Edmonson, Abe J. Hanje, Hugh C. Hotchkiss, George R. Innes, George H. Knowles, Howard H. Koster, Gary Muffly, Arvin I. Philippart, Donald J. Renwick, Ed- win F. Russell, Ame Vennema, Ron- ald G. Wilson, H{arvey M. Workman. Juniors initiated were Edwin R. Boynton, Ward K. Parr. At the initiation banquet, held Wednesday night in the Union, the members of the fraternity were ad- dressed by Dean Emeritus Morti- ner E. Cooley. Prof. H. C. Anderson, of the engineering college, was the toastmaster. Wolhes, Spartans Fail to Score on Wet Field (Continued From Page z) most of his 73 yards in that man- ner, once crashing the Spartan for- wards for 44 yards before being downed. As in the Indiana game last week, the Wolveine backs showed mark- ed improvement in open field run- ning, although general conditions of the field made it harder for them to get away to long gains. Heston and Pay especially, were handicap- ped by the slippery footing, al- though Heston more than made up for his meager yardage total by his brilliant punting. Pitted against one of the best l {k i ck e rs in the mid-west, E1i o- ' witz, he manag- ]manag- ed to average on- ly one yard less than the Spartan sace in 15 tries In a dd i ti on t that, his work in placing the bal. out of bounds near the Green arid White's goal Hazer line brought bacl omemories of the days when Harry Kipke used tc handle the kicking for the Wolver- ines. One notable feature of the game 'was the small number of substitu- tes used by either team. Michigan State, as it has done in several of its games this year, went through from start to finish with the same lineup on the field. The Wolver- ines, usually accustomed to using 1 MICHIGAN'S TELESCOPE WILL RANK SECOND ONLY TO MOUNT WILSON rsl 80-Inch Reflector Is Now Being iector, though weighing over 200 Designed from Observations tons, was in reality quite air, easy t instrument to manipulate. by Professor Curtais, "Some 57 electric motors are used about this great instrument for all the various movements and adjust- Until th proposed 200-inch tele- ments, so that physical strength on ;cope or the California institute of the part of the observer is not Techno o -,, is completedtet or fif-necded," Professor Curtis said. Both the 72-inch at Victoria and ten years from nv, the new the 100-inch and 60-inch reflectors Michigan 3c -inrh ill rank second at Mt. Wilson are "two-man" in- in the world, Professor Heber D. struments, but the aim at present. c- iic y, is to make the future 80-inch Mich- igan telescope on the site near Base stated y^sterday.I Lake an instrument which may be P fi sor Curtis recently return- completely operated by one man. Cd from a visit to the great observ- The large mirror probably will be tories c1 the Pacific coast, where made of pyrex instead of fused he studied the largest telescope quartz, as originally planned, be- niountings now in existence as a cause experiments made by the preliminary to tne design of the General Electric company have 80-inch reflector for the observa- shown that such construction is not tory of the University of Michigan. pown fh r such oncons n Dr. Cuitis described his trip asp Quartz would be the best mate- Imechanical, rather than astronom- rial for- the great disks of large re- ical, in that he observed especially fiecting teleopes becaUie It does the functioning of large telescopes not warp out of shape with temper- in use. He is designing the new re- ature changes, flector, which will weigh about 150 Dr. George Ellery Hale, in charge tons, to make ib the most flexible ci the California project, has re- in existence in the e se of manipu- cently closed a contract with the lation and in rapidity of change, Corning Glass corpany for experi- from one type of astronomical re- mental work leading to the even- search to another. "The problem tual casting of the great 30-ton is one of engineering, rather than disk for the 200-inch telescope. of astronomy, he raid. While pyrex is not so good as Easy to Operate. uartz, it is much better than glass He first visited the Do 1inion As- for this work, Professor Curtis stat- trophysical observatory at Victoriaed. B. C., which has an excellent re-____ flector of 72 inches aperture, and similar in mounting to the one - planned here. At Victoria, as well as at the other observatories, he S worked with the instruments at night and observed them in actual use. After a visit to the Univer.ity of N AI N California at Berkeley, and Lick NODPIrPiiiIN( observatory at Mt. Hamilton, Cali- fornia, the greater portion of the A I time was spent at Mt. Wilson ob- servatory, near Pasadena. No "Smari" tadjetivee are "It was something of a surprise needed when a truly great' to find that the great 100-inch re- picture comes to the screen. PERONNL .APLRT TO S.PEAKONDAY Rubber Company Man Will Talk Under Auspices of Business Administration School. Cyrus S. Ching, personnel direc- tor of the United States Rubber company, will -peak on "A Sound Industrial and Public Relatins Policy" under the auspices of the business administration school at 3 o'clock MVonday afternoon in room 25 Angell hall. Ching is a very unusual charac- ter and is recognized' as probably the foremost authority on indus- trial relation operations in the United States. His present wbr'k embraces the creation and develop- ment of industrial policies of all of the units in the 26 large plants as well as the many branches and sales divisions of the rubber com- pany. He is six feet, seven inches tall. Started as a conductor on the Bos- ton street railways and worked his way through night school, taking a law course and passing the Massa- chusetts bar examination. Since then he has steadily advanced to the position he now holds. He has always been interested in men and their problems and is con- sequently well fitted for the posi- tion he is now filling. Rep. John N. Garner of Texas, Democratic choice for speaker of the House, brought his annual supply of pecans rvh!n he rettiei wtc Washington. Ordinarily he has a few in his pockets and visitors to his office nsually come away with a handful. He raises them on his farm. 7 J 3 r1 t I 5 1 } i F L ' r r reserves in great quantities,-sent only three replacements into the game, Kowalik. relieving H o z e r, Cantrill replacing LaJeunesse, and Wistert going in for Samuels. For Michigan Ted Petoskey again was outstanding for his work at left end. This sophomore star looks more and more as if he were des- tined to become one of the great flankmen of the Western Confer- ence before he concludes his foot- ball days at Michigan. Ivan Wil- liamson, at right end, played his usual steady game, although he did not have a chance to come out in- to the limelight as much as he has had in former contests. Doc Morrison, veteran Wolverine center, also looked good in the line, as did Howard Auer, who continued to play the type of steady game that has characterized his work throughout the whole year. For Michigan State Captain Milt Gross, Buss, and Vandermeer were the best of the line, with Monnett and Eliowitz easily the stars of the Spartan backfield. .. ..:..._ ,I 4w IP vv tjERTH TsO D AY! ALL SEATS 400 Continuous Shows 1:30-11:00 I PuIf~ 'U .. *"'*:i I Ii