THE MITCHIGAN DAILY Transportation Advances Are Stressed Here Conference Will Continue Today With Symposium, Speakers And Luncheon (Continued from Page 1) special Samples of Science program presenting short discussions by six University scientists in the Lydia Mendelssohn Theatre last night. The structure and function of the University's 100 ton cyclotron were presented in the opening talk by Prof. H. R. Crane of the physics depart- ment. Professor Crane pointed par-' ticularly to its use as a tool to pry the inner mysteries of nuclear physics and in producing artificially radio- active substances. Prof. Ralph A. Sawyer, of the phys- ics department continued with a dis- cussion of the work accomplished by himself and Prof. H. B. Vincent in the development of high speed meth- ods of quantitative spectral analysis of iron and steel. Prof. Ernest F. Barker of the physics department then outlined the research carried out here in the field of infra-red spectroscopy. Especially helpful in this work are the diffrac- tion gratings produced by the ruling machine developed here. Turning to the field of astronomy, Prof. Robley C. Williams of the astronomybdepartment described his method of applying aluminum coat- ing to mirrors. This process, which is carried out under a vacuum, re- cently won Professor Williams the Lonstreth Medal of the Franklin In- stitute. In a speech illustrated by slides, Prof. Jesse Ormondroyd of the en- gineering mechanics department de- scribed the 200-inch Mt. Palomar tele- scope for which he had charge of de- signing for the mounting. Prof. Robert R. McMath, director of the University's McMath-Hulbert Observatory on Lake Angelus, con- cluded the series with a discussion and motion pictures of the storms and other phenomena on the sun's surface as studied at the Lake Ange- lus observatory. Shown in the astronomical movies were solar cy- clones, whirling masses of atomic gas as high as 150 thousand miles above the sun's surface. Premier Mussolini Shifts His Cabinet Debate Coach CallsMeeting ornan Varsity Debaters1 Will OrganizeTuesday Women varsity debaters will organize at a meeting called for 7 p.m. next: Tuesday in Room 3209 A.H. by Mrs. i Frederic O. Crandall, women's de- bate coach. The first activity for the debaters this year will be a round-table dis- I cussion Dec. 8 and 9 at Ohio State similar to the one held at Northwes- tern last year. Four women will be chosen from the tryouts to work on the topic "Should Anti-democratic SOrganizationsbe suppressed in the United States?" After the two-day discussion, the participants from the Big Ten schools will present their conclusions on the topic in a radio broadcast. Last year Betty Jane Mansfield, '39, Mary Frances Reek, '40, Mary Virginia Bush, '41BAd, and Janet Grace, '42, traveled to Evanston for the first discussion group ever held. on the question, "Resolved: That Married Women Whose Husbands Are Gainfully Employed Should Not Work For Compensation." Enrollment Rise Seen In Literary College Alnost two ioiusand students are 1OW registered in the college of Lier- aue,, Science and the Arts, an in- 'I'ease of more than a hundred over last year's total, according to a bulle- tin issued by the Registrar's Office. This year for the first time Prof. Charles M. Davis, Director of Admis- sions with Advanced Standing, has included in the total students admit- ted to concentration with less than sixty hours credit. Also included are sixty-six students admitted in this manner by Prof. Arthur Van Duren, Jr., Chairman of Academic Counsel- ors. Most students are concentrating in the field of Economics Catholic Students Issue First 'Chapel Chronicle' The first number for this year of The Chapel Chronicle published by Catholic students, was issued this week. Besides news of coming events in the Newman Club, it contains a brief selection from John Henry Car- dinal Newman's 'Idea of a University' and a discussion by John Murphy of 3cholastic philosophy which is the philosophical basis of Catholicism. CAA Flight Training To Begin Nov. 10, Delayed by legal snares in the gov- ernment contracts to assisting air- ports, the Civil Aeronautics Author- ity flight training program will not begin until Nov. 10. Ground school for the 50 students who qualified for the training has already begun, but actual flying will be postponed until the government approves the contract with the Ann Arbor Airport. Once started, the flight training will be speeded up to permit the coin- )letion of the course in June, 1940. C AA rules have been changed to al- low for six in.tead of three 30-minute training periods per week. Foresters Hear Bartlett Prof. H. H. Bartlett of the Botany department spoke on "A Trip Through Formosa" at the second meeting of the Forestry Club held ai 7:30 p.m. yesterday in room 2054 N.S. He related his experiences as the first white man to cross the Island of For- mosa. On his trip he was accom- panied by a military escort. Prosecution Rests In E.M. Gibb Trial (Continued fromr Pagei menting his testimony Irving ReiMer, accountant for the Ann Arbor Sav- ings and Commercial Bank. Ralph Savage, Edward Zahn, George Camp and Benona E.' Pryer, tellers from the same bank, identified the deposit slips from which Gibb had deducted cash, and thus failed to turn over the full amount. Prosecutor Rapp declared after the trial that this testimony was a com- plete refutation of Gibb's explanation that two checks totallnig $5,724.01 from Ypsilanti City and Ypsilanti Township had been stolen. Gibb made his statement last April when the shortage in relief funds was first discovered. A sudden re-organization of the Fascist regime by Premier Mussolini gave Marshal Rodolfo Graziani (left) the position of chief of the Italian Army general staff. Lieut.-General Achille Starace (right) was shifted from, the secretaryship of the Fascist party to chief of the general staff of the Fascist militia. Several of the minitsers involved were credited with pro-German sympathies. Business as usual during alterations GACH CAMERA SHOP , °111 Television Set To Be Displayed Tomorrow At Hill Auditorium ENSIAN By KARL KESSLER Four tons of delicate scientific equipment which arrived here yes- terday heralded the Ann Arbor pre- view of modern television. Consigned to the special public denonstration to be given at 8:15 'p.m. tomorrow in' Hill Auditorium, the tangle of tubes, cameras and re- ceivers is being uncrated and set up in Hill Auditorium under the super- 'vision of Harold J. Markley and Wal- ter L. Lawrence, service engineers from the R.C.A. television labora- tories. Extremely essential in the success- ful transmission of television is the full illumination of "the subject. For this purpose, batteries of floodlights of the type used in the making of motion pictures are being set up in Hill Auditorium. Under the intense illumination provided by these flood- lights, the iconoscope -or picture- camera is able to pick out the details of the image and transmit the picture to the receiving sets. Since television utilizes an ex- tremely wide band of broadcast fre- quencies, about four times as wide as the whole broadcast band, the light- carrying electric impulses cannot be effectively transmitted over ordinary wire. For this purpose, special coax- ial-type cables have been shipped here to carry the image impulses between camera, syncronizing unit and receivers. The electric "eye" of the camera is a ladle-shaped glass tube about two feet long. Within this tube is, a flat screen about four by six inches in size on which, the sensitizing ele- ments are impregnated. It is on this senstive screen that the light image focused there by the camera is con- verted into electrical impulses. These impulses aire then amplified and transmitted to the receivers. PICTURES 1 4 Seniors, take advantage of the reduced price for your Ensian pictures. Make your appoint- I I ments before Nov. 4. To get the best in AMAZING NEW PRINCIPLE' NO DRY PENS or MESSY FILLING EVER APPEALING IN BEAUTY UNFAILING SERVICE FOUNTO-INK AiAg Set is a gift he will appreciate photography, come to . 111111 u :. ' ' Stationers, Printers, Binders, Office Outfitters 112 South Main Street Phone 4515 Studio: 319 EAST-HURON Opposite The Daily News Dial 5541 Established 1890 I I h, 1 ++ a , 'I U I ,1 '1 II When Mother s ' " 1 ' ... . .- iiii Used the TUB i N THE OLD DAYS, it was blue Monday, for Mother did the washing. 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