WEDNESDAY, DEC. 6, 1939 THE MICHIGAN DALY PAGE SEVEN i_ Are AS Sophonor To Incl Movies (Continu liams, '42; A Patricia Mac Wolfe, '42; Co Gram, '43; '41A, and Loi The list cc Bolgiano, '43; Jeffrey, '43; A Wood, '42;, Phyllis Lovejo '42; Marjorie Eady, '43Ed; Ruth Streelr Bloxsom, '41;1 Margaret Gig Jayne, '41; Mi Gish, '42; Joy othy Cummin '43A; Beatric bara DeFries,' MoreI Hostesses S elude "Patricia Noble, '43; R bara Foote, Kristin Lee, ' women Frequency-Modulation System War Is Probed Selected Is Heralded By Broadcasters By Roundtable' Hostesses'Experiments Prove Static adverse conditions. Experiments have International Relations s1er se By N wshown conclusively that such fac- Club s s Is Decreased By New tors as lightning and faulty electrical Discusses.War r'e Cabaret Plans a Development In Radio machinery, which would render, re- ude Floorshow, De-e- I ad; ception over the common amplitude Nine students and three faculty A Exhibits Heralded by technical journals as modulation receiver impossible, only men last night attempted to probe And Exthe greatest advancement, in radio slightly affect frequency modulation into the origins of the Second World since Marconi's phenomenal discov- reception. War at an International Relations ued from page s}eries, the frequency-modulation sys- Also greatly decreased will be in- nn MacDonald, '42A; tem of radio broadcasting is now be- ter-station interference. Many sta- C d tal 4ing tested under actual broadcasting tions today are rendered ineffective, few definite conclusions.a 'r ,'conditions in many sections of the not because of any inherent fault in It was the second forum sponsored ora Hackett, '42; Ruth country, according to Jerome Wies- the station, but because more distant by the Club on the same topic, em-i Josephine Alexander, ner, technical director of broadcast- stations operating on the same fre- bracing the various aspects of the s Kuhlman, '43. ing at Morris Hall. quency range cause distortion in the war-economic, political and. geo- ontinues with Jeanne Some experiments with the new I'received signal. With the frequency graphical. Discussion began with the Jnue irth'4; Jeansystei have been tried here by Wies- modulation system, the chance of dis- value of Czechoslovakia and Poland Jane Eiffert, '43; JeanJsytrhaebntidheeyWe- torting interference is minimized by to Germany, shifted to the situation nn Faden, '43; Barbara prr, and further extensive studies are two characteristics of that system. in the Far East and ended with a sur- Katlee, Sith 14; #plane. Kathleen Smith, '43; Chief advantage claimed for the First, the frequency modulation re- vey of Russia's invasion of Finland.; oy, '43; Nancy Gould, I new system of frequency modulation ceiver will reproduce only the strong- The students represented almost all Kephart, '42;" Eugenia is the static and interference-free re- er of two signals. If the signal volt- political opinions and nationalities- Nancy Knappen, '43; ception it affords even under the most age of one station is twice as great conservative and liberal, German, nan, '40Ed; Dorothy as its competitor on the same wave Hungarian, Chinese, Siamese, Scan- Virginia Dykema, '42P; , band, the second will be inaudible, dinavian and American VriiDyea'4P '43; Virginia Frey, '42E, and Mar- invaadAmrc. nac, '4lSpec.; Calistra garet Bancroft, 42. The second characteristic of the The faculty men were Prof. Charles arion Conde, '41; Lois More Names Given frequency modulation system which F. Remer of the economics depart- 'ce Engstrom, '42; Dor- The list continues with Grace limits inter-station interference is ment, Prof. Howard M. Ehrmann of gs, '43; Joan'Clement n "la 1M i O that these stations, operating on the historvy de afrt f t d r Brown, G. Brown, Sorensen, Liima- T Mass Meeting of all the girls who DAILY OFFICIAL tainen, Landis, Haberaecker. , are to act as hostesses at Sophomore 1 The following men will leave at4: Cabaret, at 4 p.m. Thursday in the BULLETINreLeague ballroom. I BULLETIIN jwith Jack Secrist from the Union.: oe' ,wigTunaetwl Tuttle, Hines, Penn, Berger. Women's Bowling Tournament will (Continued from Page 4) jstart on Thursday, Dec. 7. All wish- Transportation Club will meet ' ing to participate must sign up by sion on "Can a Religious Person Justi- Thursday, Dec. 7, in the Michigan) Wednesday, Dec. 6, at Barbour Gym- fy Capial Punishment?" at Lane Hall, Union at 7:30 p.m. Speaker: Prof. nasium or at the Women's Athletic Thursday, 7:30 p.m. Baier of the Naval Architecture De- Building. - partment. Plans for the trip to Fort Political Science Round Table on Wayne will be discussed. Michigan Dames: Click and Stitch group meets Thursday at 8 o'4lock in Thursday evening, Dec. 7, a t 7:30, Phi Tau Alpha: Saturnalia will be thehome of Mrs. Ira Smith, 4 Geddes East Conference Room, Rackham celebrated Thursday, Dec. 7, at 7:30 Heights. Bldg. Subject: The Application of p.m. in the Upper Room at Lane Hall. Scientific Methods to Political Sci- A discussion of the play will be held,[ Michigan Dames music, group will t 3 1 F ence. I Actuarial Students: Mr. Henry Hopper of the Maccabees, Detroit, will speak on "Selection of Risks" on Thursday, Dec. 7, 8 p.m., West Lec- ture Room of the Rackham Building. All interested are invited to attend. i , f l } so all members are urged to attend if possible. Refreshments. All girls eligible and interested in ushering for ,Play Production's "One Third of A Nation" given in the Lydia Mendelssohn Theatre, Dec. 6, 7, 8 and 9, sign up on the lists in the Under- graduate Offices of the League. Finance Committee for Sophomore Cabaret meeting at 4 p.m., Thursday, at the League. Ticket Committee (Peggy Polum- baum's division) for Sophomore Cabaret meeting at 3 p.m., Thurs- day, at the League. Imeet priuay, Lvec.?0, at the 1teague at 8 p.m. vrocuer, -43; Miargaret E. Br e Snoke, '42, and Bar- Virginia Morse, '43; Mary '437 '43; Gloria Carll, '43; Ann Hostesses Listed rick, '42D; Barbara Foote, aturday night will in- Homer, '41; Ruth Allen, '4 Hadley, '42; Charlotte Stock, '43; Mary Lou Ev uth Parsons, '42; Bar- Nancy Ostergren, '43; Patri( '42; Alice Lord, '41; '43; Eleanor Rakestraw, '4 42; Bettye Mueller, '41; Goldberg, '43: Janice Ba Jean Borland, '43; Alice Hoff, '41; Betty Clement, '41; Helen King, '43; Beverly Hagelshaw, '43; Lorraine Judson, '43; Ruth Bennett, '43; Mar- garet Collins, '43; Florence Wright, '43; Eleanor Feldrappe, '43; Eleanor Rakestraw, '43; Helen Neuberg, '43; Eleanor Hughes, '42, and Patricia Young, '43. Other women who will act as hos- tesses Saturday night include Eliza- beth Shipman, '42; Helen Barnett, '41; Dorothy Cummings, '43; Cath- erine Hood, '43; Helen Smith, '42; Casmira Buszek, .'43P; Joanne Woodward, '43A; Barbara Baggs, '43; Jeanne Kilmer, '43A; Rosemary Al- drich, '43A; Jean Jeffrey, '43; Mar- jorie Strong, '43; Dorothy Morris, '43A; Virginia Capron, '43; Marjorie Allen, '43; Isabella Lugowski, '42; Sally Walsh, '43; Marjorie Mullin, 'wnv Va ~ iV , VWa 4 i Lenore Jaslow, '43; Isabel Shirley Altschuler, '42; Rut] '42; Pauline Shear, '43; B man, '42; Eleanor Hughes, aldine Granfield, '42; Patri strom, '43; Marjorie Hov Kathleen Kridler, '43; Glor '43; Esther Stevens, '43; ME '43; Mary Edna Alter, '41 Cardill, '43; Adele Bartholc and Beatrice Kroodsma, '4 The list concludes wit: Present, '42; Ardis Watson, Natheson, '41; Aida Mei Eleanor Verdon, '43; Olga '43; Barbara Clark, '43; Bowen, '43; Elaine Baird,' via Caspar, '42; Gertrude C Grace Procter, '43; Carol Pi Beverly Vercoe, '43; Barb bary, '43; Mary Haferkam Louisa Pfretzschner, '43. . Unae'4it IZVu9 C'. 1225 SOUTH UNIVERSITY . . . WE DELIVER PERFUMES YARDLEY'S BOND STREET CIRO'S REFLEXIONS & SURRENDER BOURJOIS' MAIS OUI CHANEL NO. 5, NO 22 - COIR DE RUSSIE CORDAY - TOUJOUR MOI HOUBIGANT - QUELQUES FLEURS & IDEAL rI * BEAUTY f" for The FINGERTI -. by "--- REVELON - PEGGYUT O"LA CROSSE -- ® *Q *oGAY CHRISTMAS s STATIONE o. ASSORTED COLOR O 50 " MEN'S OT SE j Y~ARDLEY ...--COT WOODB 0 MINNEN '0" r... COLGATES rown, '43, Va V1Q VVW1; W IV11j V V1 1ZV1 U LJ e T Bantingt shorter wave-lengths, have an effec- cal science department, ette Der- 'tive radius of only 100 to 150 miles. Howard B. Calderwood of 42; Janet This is the area of primary recep- faculty adviser. . 1; Nancy tion, and the area of secondary recep- Be A Goodfellow ing, '43; tion, which causes most of the trouble cia Young in the present methods of transmis- 3; Agnes sion, is eliminated. This secondary BOSTON, Mass.-Ninef xter, '43; area is that territory covered by the versity of Michigan stude Ross, '43; radio waves reflected from the upper sioyled in h garvard h Aleinek, atmosphere, over which the signal roed in the Harvard etty Alt- is too weak to be picked-up with an Graduate School of Busin '42; Ger- appreciable degree of fidelity, yet it ion is semester. cia Dahl- is sufficiently strong to interfere dis- well, '43; astrously with nearby stations on the ia Donen, same channel. ary Knoll, From the standpoint of- high-fidel- 1; Jeanne ty reproduction, the new frequency omew, '43, modulation system has proved itself 40. far superior to standard methods of .h Shirley broadcast. The range of frequen- '41; Joan cies which can be transmitted is much ndez, '41; greater than that reproduced over Gruhzit, amplitude modulation systems. - The Marjorie quality of sound is greatly increased E '42A; Syl- and there is less distortion than in ohen, '42; the case of present systems. Both tcher, '43; speech and music have a more natural ara Ams- sound and represent a truer duplica- p, '42, an tion of the original program in the studio. 11 IS To the Ladies PSx TOILET SETS by SAGE EVE IN PARIS EX COTY - YARDLEY 0 "OUBIGANT BARBARA GOULD MAX FACTOR CHERAMY 18th CENTURY RICHARD HUDNUT V KS For Men Only. PIPES and TOBACCOS TOBACCO POUCHES POKER SETS BRUSH SETS LEATHER GOODS Whitman's Yand Gilbert BURY CHOCOLATES II __ { ana Proi. the Club's the politi- Harvard former Uni- English Journal Club meeting on Monday, Dec. 11, at 8 p.m. in the West Conference Room of the Rack- ham Building. Paper by Bernard Baum. Attendance restricted to grad-' uates and faculty members includ- ing those of other departments. Varsity Glee Club: The following men will go to Fern- dale on Thursday. Bus leaves from the Union at 4:15. Carry full dress suits and "Trial by Jury" costumes. Holt, Kelly, Weller, MacIntosh, Scherdt, Ossewaarde, Heininger, Al- len, Mattern, Stitt, Steere, Erke, Crowe, Peterson, Barber, Vandenberg,' Parkes, Pinney, Reizen, Luxan, Strick- land, Davis, Loessel, Mason, Gell, Gibson, Whitney, Fromm, George, C. i i CHRISTMAS Nativity Music from Many Lands PEASE AUDITORIUM, Ypsilanti Thursday. Dcc -7. 8 P.M. Sharp DOXCANDY Sfor Christmas SPECIALS on Whitman, Gilbert, Goblein Miller Drug Store 727 N. University _ __ . /nouncmnq. r 0 YPSILANTI NORMAL CHOIR Singing Unaccompanied 250 Voices FREDERICK ALEXANDER, Conductor The ANNUAL voodfe1Iow Issue Of The Michigacn Daily MUSIC Old Music - Young Voices No Reserved Seats Admission 25c On Sale kionday, Dem. 11th All proceeds from single copy sales and advertising will be given to local charities. r I. 4 t y A s ray "a A GOODFELLOW Buy a Goodfellow Daily II I