THE MICHIGAN DAILY' THITMRDflAY. JANUTARY . 1 BR Dow, Crane Differ on SocialSignificance of Radar to .Moon Dow Denies Impossibility of Visiting Moon in 50 Years Feteh Enolfor lCotifere,iee m (iatte Mt IaiI~a l-(hd Vatii )- Radr -to lMooni Is scliiiifi Earvard, where methods of 'radar amming were perfected. "Too many things can happen which would materially alter pres- ent speculations about scientific studies of the moon," he said. "It is much more dangerous at this time to express an opinion that any specific scientific development is impossible than it is to say such progress may well take place." Evaluating radar contact with the noon, Prof. Dow speculated that it aay mark the beginning of an era of eaching beyond the earth's confines o an extent hitherto undreamed of. "In 200 years men may look back nd see radar contact with the moon n its proper prospective. The devel- >pment may rank with other scien- ific landmarks in history," Harold early, a graduate student in electri- °al engineering, said. Mr. Early as- isted Prof. Dow in many radar re- earch projects at the Radio Research .aboratory Asked about future contacts with he moon, Prof. Dow predicted "that idditional similar experiments with nore powerful and improved equip- nent will bring radar echoes fron the noon much stronger than have been eceived thus far. "From the communication engi- neer's standpoint, some of the tech- nical developments necessary to achieve radar contact with the moon were in themselves more in- teresting than the achievement it- self," he continued. "It is not at all absurd to imagine that radar echoes from the moon may some day be of value for navi- gational purposes, for example to, aid ships and airplanes at sea in determining their positions. "Also, it should be pointed out that ,he reflection of radio waves from the ipper atmosphere is an effect that aas proved useful. This has been be- 3ause it enables radio reception at )oints geographically remote from -he point of origin, of radio waves in ,ertain moderately high frequency ,anges. "The reception of radar echoes is similarly a reflection phenomenon, anough so to suggest the possibility that it too may aid in radio reception it points geographically remote from the transmitter," he continued. Reception of radar echoes from the moon is "tremendously easier" he pointed out than similar reception of echoes from the planets. "To a person familiar with radar developments of the past few years, the moon radar contact was defi- nitely predictable; something bound to be achieved before too long," Prof. Dow said. "The same cannot be said of radar contact with the planets-that is an im- mensely more difficult problem and I see no likelihood of its happening for many years to come, although it would be wrong to say it is im- possible." Wenrich Appointed To Education Staff Ralph C. Wenrich, former profes- sor at Penn State College, has been appointed to the staff of the School of Education. Wenrich will conduct courses in vo- cational education on campus and at extension centers in Detroit and Grand Rapids. u' Exteusioin. Service Work 64 Take Courses I Correspondence Dept. Sixty-four veterans have enrolled under the GI Bill of Rights in cor- respondence courses designed for completion of University entrance re- quirements or for college credit, ac- cording to Mrs. Berenice H. Lee, who is in charge of the Correspondence Study Department of the University's Extension Service. 38 Have Paid Since the signing by President Tru- man in early January of the amend- ment to the bill authorizing the use of correspondence courses, the de- partment has been able to accept enrollments of veterans who have the necessary certificate of eligibility. Approximately 38 of those who have enrolled, however, have paid for the courses themselves with the idea of applying for reimbursement when their certificates of eligibility arrive. To be acceptable in such cases, the certificate must, Mrs. Lee stated, pre- date the enrollment. Must Enroll At Bureau Enrollment of veterans in corre- spondence courses is considered, she said, only after the veteran has con- sulted with the Veteran Service Bu- reau, 1508 Rackham Building. The Correspondence Study De- partment, she pointed out, is also co- operating with Veterans' Institutes in different parts of the state, providing courses particularly adapted to the specific need of the locality or to the educational plan of the veteran him- self. Such institutes now availing themselves of this service are situated in Ann Arbor, Bay City, Benton Har- bor, Dowagiac, Port Huron, Hastings, Stambaugh and Ypsilanti. Exhibit.. (Continued from Page 1) contrasts in style and subject should satisfy a variety of artistic tastes. Pappas'. Grecian landscapes, "By the Waterfall in Greece," and "The Old Mill,"' two of his most appealing pictures, are done in vivid, impres- sionistic splashes of color, with al- most primitive contrasts of brilliance and quietude. His other landscapes are subdued in tone, with more con- ventional and realistic brushwork. The artist's imaginative use of color. one of his fortes, is shown to still better advantage in still lifes. A favorite with gallery visitors is his "Farmhouse in New Hampshire," done with a softness and placidity unusual to Pappas' work. Though dominated by greens, mauves and off- blues, a row of bright flowers, near the base of the picture, make for contrast, adding to its vitality. Sarkisian unorthodox work pro- vides either warm enthusiasm or be- ligerent disapproval. He is a master of mood-colors and even his more conventional portraits have an ab- stract and ideational quality, which seems to arise from his unusual sen- sitivity to the psychological and emotional nuances of color. Clowns are a favorite subject and the por- trait of a Pagliacci caught without his comic mask is outstanding. The chalk-white face wears an expression of tragic dejection, accentuated by the somber background. One of the larger canvasses is distinctive for its primitive quality, pointing up another strain of Sarkisian's unorthodoxy- his apparent fondness for bizarre de- sign. Yet, the artist is too imagina- tive and original in his use of color to permit his abstractionism in design to stray too far from the limits of orthodoxy. I SchoI Mic ~ Will Open Here ' Dr. Adams, Provost, To Deliver Welcome The Eighth Annual Midwestern Conference on School Vocal and In- strumental Music, sponsored by the Michigan School Band Orchestra As- sociation, the Michigan School Vocal Association, and the University, will open here tomorrow and continue through Sunday. Dr. James P. Adams, Provost of the University, will deliver the ad- dress of welcome at the banquet meeting at 6:30 p.m. tomorrow in the League ballroom. The Ann Arbor High School Choir, directed by Rose Marie Grentzer, will present several Xq pap ea 'uaed pue :suoppalas Clyde Vroman, assistant professor of music education at the University, will discuss "The Future of Your Job." Dedicated to the improvement of music teaching in the schools, the Conference will present reading per- formances of 1946 festival music by the University's All-State High School Band, All-State Orchestra, and All-State Chorus, each of which met for two weeks last summer at Interlochen. Special clinics for meet- ing problems of teaching music will also be held. Guest conductors for the Confer- ence are Guy Fraser Harrison, con- ductor of the Rochester Civic Orches- tra, Rochester, N. Y.; Morten J. Lu- vaas, composer and conductor of choral music, Allegheny College, Meadville, Pa.; and Lt. James Thur- mond, USN Officer-in-charge of the United States Naval School of Music, Washington, D. C. Radar contact with the moon holds forth no revolutionary social signifi- cance, Prof. of Physical Research H. R. Crane said yesterday. Prof. Crane, who had spent four months doing early radar research in the MIT Radation Laboratory at the time it was first opened in 1940, de- clared that "the actual contact of the moon was a striking demonstration of the progress made in radar during the war. He added that its one possi- ble real significance will be in aiding astronomers to correct their calcula- tions on moon distances." Missiles Probable "From the radar side of the pic- ture," he continued, "it is not at all improbable that som'e day missiles, varying in character from atomic bombs to rocket ships, will be directed to the moon and even more remote places. The limitation lies not in radar's ability to guide an object through the air, but rather in man's capacity to build such a missile. "To any point it is possible to send a radar beam, it is similarly possible Radar Forecasts NEW YORK, Jan. 30--VP)-Use of radar by weather forecasters was ex- plained today at a meeting of the American Meteorological Society and the Institute of Aeronautical Science. Lt. Col. Harry Wexler, attached to headquarters of the Army Air Forces Weather Service at Langley Field, Va., told the session, the radar scope permits details of weather disturb- ances to be observed as never before. It is "very likely," he said, "that provisions could be made for "a weather scope for the weather man." to direct an object. The best example of this, and so far the greatest degree to which it has been achieved, was during the war when a group of ob- solete bombers were radar-control equipped and sent pilotless over Ger- many." Dr. Crane explained that with the amount now knowledge at the scien- tists' fingertips today, the building of such a moon-to-earth craft is out of the question. Such a development must await some new radical discov- ery. Aware Of Limit "Men of science," Dr. Crane pointed out, "were long aware of the limitations imposed by the Earth's ionosphere on certain lengths of radio waves. It was an accepted fact that short enough waves, transmitted with sufficient force, could pierce this bar- rier. This is precisely what the Army did in its experiments of last week." "This development, therefore, rep- resents no great advance in our sci- entific knowledge." "It was with much greater diffi- culty, and immensely more impor- tant," Dr. Crane concluded, "when we were first able to pick up an air- plane 100 miles away than was it to reach the moon 240,000 miles off." IUS.4 $lSchool To Have Use Of Harris Hall The School of Music will have the use of Harris Hall, now occupied by the fJSO, at the beginning of the Spring Term, Vice-President Robert P. Briggs announced yesterday. The University has leased the building, located at the corner of State and Huron streets, for seven years and may renew the lease at the end of this period. The arrangement was made with the Harris Memorial Trust. It will be acoustically treated and ready for use March 1. Thursday Splash Time The Union pool will be open to women from 7:30 to 9 p.m. every Thursday. All women may swim at this time, and members of the WAA Swimming Club are especially urged to use this time for practicing. TYPEWRITERS Bought, Rented Repaired STUDENT and OFFICE SUPPLIES 0. D. MORRILL 314 S. State St. Phone 6615 CLASSI1FIED ADvEUIUSI'tNG ATTENTION STUDENTS! Now is the time to have your hair permanently waved for that coming J-Hop. Be the belle of the ball with your coiffure styled just for you. $15 ColdWave Special. . at$12.50 Permanents. . . $7.50 --$22.50 OBSERVATORY BARBER AND BEAUTY SALON WILLIAM DOE, Prop. WINIFRED BENN, Mgr. HESTER ANN KEI.LY, Operator 1402 Washington Heights Phone 2-3413 w m LOST AND FOUND LOST: Pair of pink shell rimmed glasses on campus last Thursday. Finder call 5974 and ask for Bar- bara. LOST: Black Shaeffer life-time bottom, 'between North Hall West Quad. Friday 25. Contact 15 Michigan Daily. Reward. pen and Box WILL THE PERSON who walked off with a navy blue overcoat from the basement cloak room of the Law Library Saturday afternoon return same. Your old greenish-blue over- coat is still there. No questions asked. LOST: Of course it was picked up by accident-little round brown purse left on Greyhound bus stalled at Stadium and Packard 10:00 p.m. Sunday. Reward. Please return. Lucille Waldorf 2-2591. LOST: Simulated pearls Tuesday eve- ning in or near State Theatre. Call 3582 days and 7292 evenings. Re- ward. FOUND: Fountain pen on diagonal. Will be returned upon identifica- tion. Call 7438 between 10-12 p.m. PERSONALS THE F.A.S.D. & C.C. will meet Fri- day afternoon as usual to cele- brate its founders day. MEN: Tired of studying for finals? Confused by refresher courses? Re- lax with 26 beautiful instructors of all arts at the "Final Fling" Fri- day 8 to 12. White House, 1617 Washtenaw. WANTED ALTERATIONS: Ladies garments, suits, coats, evening wear, near Stockwell Hall. 410 Observatory Street. Phone 2-2678. STUDENT would like a ride each week Monday thru Saturday to and from West Dearborn. Phone Dear- born 0982. WANTED TO RENT WANTED TO RENT: ROOM by full- time University employee. Garage is desirable but not vital. Walter, Phone 5539. WANTED TO RENT: Apartment or house, two or three bedrooms. Three adults, one-year-old child. W. J. Mason, 23-24-1. FOR SALE J-HOP BOUND? Tuxedo, brand new, for sale. Size 39 coat. Inquire 1038 E. Huron. ANNOUNCEMENT THE COLONNADE wishes to an- nounce its opening from 7-2 and from 5-12. Our specialty: Fresh Downy Flake doughnuts - daily. Orders taken. No deliveries. Also sandwiches and dinners. REAL ESTATE IMMEDIATE POSSESSION: 3-room apartment on first floor; second floor now rented at $60 per month; large lot; fine location. 10-ROOMS on Geddes Avenue; one block to campus. 6-ROOM BRICK beyond city limits; Southeast section; excellent condi- tion. For additional information call eve- nings, DeVries 3670; Heger 23702. H. J. McKERCHER 604 Wolverine Building PHONE 2-3249 BEER VAULT Beer - Wine - Mixers - Keg Beer 10 to 10 Daily 8 A.M. to 11 P.M. Sat. 303 N. 5th Ave. Ph. 8200 I MICHIGAN Playing All Week C,, lM v t? s L ING1ERIE EL EGANCE Lace and satin snmothness is a combination which any girl desires in her slips. Our new supply of highly fashioned slips are supreme I d;- % tI II . - ' I Warm 'n' Cozy JAMMARETTES 11 t .; 260 Smartly tailored cotton flannel 1 1Ejammarettes in striped pat- I I I I I III 11111 Tf3 impa ven NI11 III I I II