___TuEMICHIGANDAILY - - FRDAY, APRIL 4, i§47 W,.,. ..., .... ;; ,. , .. _ , ... _._._ _.,. [RUSES VIEWED: Electron Display To Be Featured At Open House By ROBERT BALL. These days it's important to :now what molecules and elec- rons are doing. Two devices that have told sci- ntists a good deal about the pri- ate lives of those tiny particles oe the electron miscroscope and Chem Exhibit [ii Open House Engineers Will Make Plastics For Visitors Use of chemistry in industry ill be the natural pivot of the hemical engineering department's xhibits for the Engineering Open louse April 18. Kingpin display will be a full ize ethyl alcohol distillation col- mn, which will be in operation eparating alcohol from a mixture f alcohol and water. Unfortu- lately for any visitors who might lesire samples, the end product, bout 196 proof, will be pumped ack into the water and run ,hrough continuously. The department's plastics lab- ratory will turn out samples for lie visitors. Manufacture of both hot" plastics, which are poured n a mold and heated, and "cold" >astics, which are pressed into hape, will be demonstrated. Anyone planning to start a sul- huric acid plant or a gasoline efinery will be able to find out LovI to do it by studying the dis- >lays in the plant and equipment Design group. All the steps in :onstructing the lay-out and all he fine points of design and plac- ng of machinery will be shown by Irawings and models. North Main Opposite Court House LIT'LE MEN" & "Durango Valley Raiders" Starts Saturday Roy Rogers in "HELLDORADO" Plus Tom Neal in "MY DOG SHEP" "JUNGLE GIRL" Chapter No. 4 RKO World News the Wilson cloud chamber. Both of these will be on display April 18 in East Physics Building as part of the physics department's ex- hibit for the Engineering Open House. The department has two of the microscopes, which look just about as complicated and formidable as a layman would expect. Anything down to a size of a five-millionth of an inch is fair game for the apparatus. This remarkable range brings such formerly invisible units as viruses and molecules into view. Done with Electrons It's done with electrons and a flourescent screen. A stream of electrons traveling at high speed passes through the specimen. The electron beam is then megnetically focused to throw the image of the specimen on I h e flourescent screen. Not content with forcing mole- cules to "sit for their pictures," Prof. R. C. Williams and Dr. Wy- coff of the physics department figured out a way to get three- dimensional photos with the mi- croscope. By putting a film of metal on the molecule--no small accomplishment - the electron stream can be retarded in such a way as to give shadow patterns on the screen. Analysis of these shad- ows gives accurate data on the thickness of the specimen. Electron Behavior An electron, of course, is much smaller than a molecule, but that doesn't mean that it's safe from investigation. The Wilson cloud chamber, while not presenting a picture of the electron, does show vhat it's doing. The chamber of the apparatus is filled with a saturated vapor. The electron is allowed to enter the chamber under carefully con- trolled magnetic conditions. As it flashe's through the chamber it ionizes particles of the vapor, Wives.:. (Continued from Page 1) literature. She has found Ameri- cans very friendly to foreigners, and admires American women for their ability to do many things in addition to being good housekeep- ers. University education in France' is based on ability rather than time spent in the classroom, Mrs. Yager said. If a student is able 'to pass the necessary examina- tions, he may receive a degree without spending four years. in residence at a university. Faculty Asked To Aid Hayden Library Fu 'nd '' of Philippine To Benefit by Dionations Faculty members may contrib- ute books from April 7 to 12 for the Joseph Ralston Hayden Me- morial Library to be established at the University of Philippines. Almost all types of books ap- plicable to a modern university curriculum are needed. Scientific, medical and other works, however, which tend to become outdated quickly must be of reasonably re- cent publication. Such books is- sued prior to 1.920 are not likely to be useful today. Possibly the best criteria will be the donor's own judgment of what he believes a modern college library can use. Anyone having books to donate may bring them to the General Li- brary or to any branch library, or if the number of books is large they may call the General Library and arrange to have it collect the books. The names of all contribu- tors will be compiled in a volume to be placed in the Hayden Memo- rial Library; for this reason it is important that everyone contrib- uting books give their names. Approximately 25,000 books have already been sent to the Univer- sity of the Philippines from the General Library. These included many duplicates the library has had on hand and also a large pro- portion of University Press pub- lications. A substantial number of the books already sent were at one time part of Professor Hayden's personal library and have now been contributed by his family as a memorial collection. May Atttnd ance Upon presentation of identi- fication, University students and their dates may attend without charge the alumni dance to be held by the University of Michigan Club of Rochester, N. Y., at 9 p.m. April 11 at the Brooklea Country Club. A nthropo logy Trip Prof. James B. Griffin, anthrop- ology museum director, and a party of six students will leave to- morrow for excavation work in two pre-historic village sites in Cal- houn County, I1. In mid Nineteenth Century New York the city council was served oysters and coffee at city expense during its meetings. Frost Enjoys ROMAN EMPIRE: 'C I I S I1ke Priiceton Pro Big Selbool' Jerome Histo sta° Ve trans Not The second series of Thomas ad a e od Spencer Jerome lectures, i will be Given by Prof. Allan Chester {tf0t..~l2.:.,,: . I ~ ) Johnson of Princeton university on"the eneral subject of Egypt gnd the Roman Empire, will begin ghen's but~ sm nt hn e else inTuesday after vacation and con- hi er snY al w ay s inn e thro u gh A pril 24. Ho did remmbr' one nature tProf. Johnsonany atihority in t.pem hwv, , tha' t wroe xx'en the field of papyrii and ancient pe li wever i hAn Arbor history, was chosen by the officers of the American Academy in Rome "I iivel (it on Pontiac Road and the Board of Regents of the t ' he iaid. "'Oie night I sat Univesi>ty to deliver the lecture atone Ky my~ ropen fireplace and el e. w't J m e 'Spring Pore.s It was a- r.mem: er t clearl , lthogh ablished in accordance with the I do't einenx~'rthewri lu (4provisions of the will ofG-te late mdnof rmyomer he tn g f Mr. Jerome, who was the son of a man!t fmy the p!ms former governor of Michigan and ,hen speaking of poetry in gen- graduated from the University eral, Frost said that sheer emo- in the class of 1884. The will pro- tion dosn't explain it : "All this ?vided for lectures to be delivered crued. at the University and at the Americani Academy in Rome on somepailseofancient civilization. The first lecturer was Prof. John G. Winter of the Department of Classical Studies, who gave a ser- ies of lectures at the Academy in 1929 and at the University in the autumn of 1930. All of the Jerome lectures will be held at 4:15 p.m. in the Rack- ham Amphitheatre. The specific dates and topics follow. April 15. Fiduciary Currency and its Problems; April 16, Inflation; April 18. Systems of Land Tenure; April 21. Sc4fdom April 23, Tax- ation in the Byzantine Period: and April 24, Byzantine Adminis- tration. Hold Those War Bonds fessor To Give rical Lectures & 4 MINE INSPECTION TRIP - Members of the fact-finding board get ready to descend into the Centralia Coal Company's No. 5 nine at Centralia, Ill., for a first hand inspection of the pit where 111 miners perished in an explosion March 25. Visible, left to right, are; James Sneddon, State Mine Inspector; Fred Halhmeyer, mine electrician; Wilbert Hohl, State's Attorney; a reporter; William Gallagher, Bureau of Mines; and John Jones, Coal Mines Administration. DeanLloyd Explains Postion - --- - -- - - --- -- -b- - --Ao OfResponsibilityHeld b(Ce 4 _ (Continued from Page 1) sibility for what goes on in a fra- ternity house lies with the fra- ternity. The fraternity members Baud To' PIr At Music Mfeeting Approximately 105 members of the University Concert Band will leave Ann Arbor at 9 p.m., April 12 for Indianapolis, Ind. The band will present a special concert at 8:30 p.m. April 13 in Caleb Mills Hall, Shortridge High School, Indianapolis, for music instructors and band directors at- tending the North Central Music Educators Conference. Members of the Michigan group will have an opportunity to hear discussions and participate in activties of the conference. High school and college students in the vicinity of Indianapolis will attend a special rehearsal of the band in the afternoon. invite their guests or in some other way let them know that they are welcome. But undeniably the guests are accessories and there- fore have their full responsibility too. In a recent case when a fra- ternity was disciplined and seven members paid a fine, it would have been excellent if the seven guests had come forward volun- tarily and paid the fine also. A sense of fair play and a sense of honor are more important than rules or penalties and produce what everyone wants to have-- self-respect. "I want every woman on this campus to have all its rights and privileges, and by the same token I want her to assume the full measure of her responsibility. No man will report her, nor should he be asked to, but she herself should see that she shares with her friends any consequences of mistakes or infractions of rules in which both are involved. Only so can there be true equality and mu- tual respect." rollinlg a'round on the loor and kicking a d s r1aming, is1't poeiry. It must be controlled eltiOln mutst 1 e 6n e sd0 to a wit -mull andi tutrnedl out Ocaeully'" Noxv on h is way home. Frost has just retuineii from San Fran- cisco andi r'ii Lhe. !niversity of California wher h~ ole was given a degree. ''TIat.gli to round them olf,'" he said. lie will have a new volume. "t(l. Bush'hi published in May,I ht' said. In the next fewv months ie hOpes to pendl some time on his farm in N w Elnglandc, whore he says he can aiik across the fields. "stepping from stone to stogyol.', Ch reiesHold. r e (Continuted fron Pape 1) ist, Congregational, Presbyterian, Baptist, Memorial Christian and Bethlehem Evangelical and Re- formed Churches. Tre Ore services will be held at St. Mary's Catholic Students' Chapel from noon to 3 p.m. Mass of the Presanctified will be offered at 12:10 l).m. The time between 1:30 and 3 p.m. will be de- voted to prayers and sermons on "The Seven Last Words," deliv- 2red by Rev. Fr. Prank J. McPhil- lips and Rev. Fr. John Bradley. Stations of the Cross will be made at 7:30 p.m. at the Chapel. St. Andrew's Episcopal Church will have worship and meditations on "The Seven Last Words" from noon to :, p.m. The meditations will be led by Rev. John Burt and Rev. John M. Sliteclt. Althiough the Lutheran Student Chapel will hold no services today, Lutheran students may attend services at any of the local Lu- theran churches. Rev. C. A. Brauer will speak on "The Fourth Word from the Cross" at the service to begin at 1 p.m. at St. Paul's Lutheran Church. Mrs. Oscar Haab will be the soloist. Trinity Lutheran Church will divide its three-hour service into seven periods of 25 minutes each. Rev. Walter M. Brandt will lead the meditations on "The Seven Last Words." The Senior Choir will furnish the music and Rev. E. C. Stell- horn will speak on "Himself He Cannot Save" at services at 1:30 p.m. at the Zion Lutheran Church. - - --I - Light Lunches ... soups ..SALADS . SANDWICHES COKES 8:00 A.M.-10;30 P.M. Weekdays 8:0Q A.M.-12:30 P.M. Friday-Saturday Clark's Tea Room 217 Observatory from time to time, as funds ac- COLLEGE A School of Business-Preferrid b College Men and Women y 4 MONTH INTENSIVE COURSE SECRETARIAL TRAINING FOR dCLEGE ASTUDENTS AND GRADUATES A thorough, intensiecourse-starting Jutnc. October, February. 1Bul- lrhtin A oil rckjue,t SPECIAL COUNSELOR for G.I. TRAINING Regular Day and lEvening Schools Throughout the Year. Catalog 4Presidenit, J<)hn Robert Gr'egg, S.C.D. D~irectorI'Paul M.PaY, M.A. THE GREGG COLLEGE Dept. NW, 6 N. Michigan Ave., Chicag 2 I a ST. ANDREW'S EPISCOPAL CHURCH DIVISION AT CAT7HERINE' I2-3 P.M ...,T.HE THREE-HOUR SERVICE Vie O'nblie Is Cordinlly Invited r. { A N wIChIGAN -- Now Showing- f t DAILY OFFICIAL BULLETIN at the "rOOD sign I My favorite suit's been cleaned by THE EMO DERN METHOD!~g #'s the finest in scientific,. ODOR- LESS dry cleaning! SEE the difference --FEEL the difference. . . . You'll KNOW the difference! CLEAN E RS 630 S. Ashley Phone 4700 Publication in The Daily Official Bulletin is constructive notice to all members of the University. Notices for the Bulletin should be sent lit typewritten form to the office of1'the Assistant to the President, Room 1021 Angell Hall, by 3:00 p.m. on the day preceding publication (11:00 a.m. Sat- urdays). FRIDAY, APRIL 4, 194'7 VOL, LVI, No. 131 Notices Automobile Regulation, Spring Vacation: The University Auto- mobile Regulation will be lifted from 12 noon, Fri., April 4, until 8:00 a.m., Mon., April 14. Seniors and Graduate Students who have received invitations to the Honors Convocation on April 25 are notified that orders for caps and gowns must be received by the Moe Sport Shop no later than April 15. Graduate Students: All courses dropped after Friday, April 4, will be recorded with a grade of E. Faculty, College of Literature, Science, and the Arts: Midsemester reports are due not later than Friday, April 4. Report cards are being distrib- uted to all departmental offices. Green cards are being provided for freshmen and sophomores and white cards for reporting juniors and seniors. Reports of freshmen and sophomores should be sent to 108 Mason Hall; those of juniors and seniors to 1220 Angell Hall. Midsemester r e p o r ts should name those students, freshmen and upperclassmen, whose stand-I ing at midsemester is "D" or "E." not merely those who receive "D" or "" in so-called midsemester examinations. Students electing our courses, but registered in other schools or colleges of the University should be reported to the school or col- lege in which they are registered. Additional cards may be had at 108 Mason hall or 1220 Angell Hall. Ann Arbor Conference on IHos- pital Planning under the auspices of the College of Architecture and Design will hold sessions from Thursday evening, April 3, through Saturday afternoon, April 5. Thursday and Friday evening meetings will be held at the Mich- igan Union at 8:00 p.m. On Fri- day, meetings will be at 10:00 a.m. and 2:00 p.m. in the Library, Architecture Building, and on Saturday at 9:30 a.m. and 2:00 p.m. in Room 102, Architecture Building. All persons profession- ally interested in hospital plan- ning are invited to attend any of the sessions. Library Hours During Spring Re- cess: Prom Friday, April 4 through Saturday, April 12 the General Li- brary will be open week-days from 8 a.m. to 6 p.m. Study Halls with- in the building and Angell Hall Study Hall will be open from 10 a.in. to 12 noon, and from 2 to 4 p.m. Gi'aduate Reading Rooms will be open from 9 a.m. to 12 noon and from 1 no Sunday 13. to 5 p.m. There will be service on April 6 and In general, Divisional Libraries will be open on short schedules, i.e. 10-12 and 2-4 daily. Exceptions are: the East and West Engineering Libraries, which will be open from 9-12 and 2-5 daily except Saturday, when they will be closed in the afternoon; the Physics Library, open 9-12 daily, closed afternoons; the West Lodge Study Hall at Willow Run, which will be closed. In the event there is a telephone strike on Monday, April 7, 1947, the University switchboard will operate to handle only emergency calls, both local and long distance. All users of University telephone facilities are urged to avoid mak- ing any unnecessary calls in the event the strike develops R. P. Briggs Women students referred to specific housemothers for supple- mentary housing by the Office of the Dean of Women for the fall semester, 1947, are reminded that (Continued on Page 4) For Real Dancing Enjoyment The Melody Men Orchestra Phil Savage Evenings 25-8084 Special Student Breakfasts 7:00-- 11:00 A.M. GOOD FRIDAY CLOSED FROM 1-3 P.M. TODAY'S LUNCHEON SPECIALS Lake Trout Tuna Fish Salad Special DAli 328 East Liberty Street I AI I 4 v .. y i, Also CARTOON - SPORT NEWS I OVR~ PR!CL Weekdays until : P.M., 25c Evenings and Sundays, 30c Today and Saturday GALLANT JOURJ~NEY wit Glenn Ford-Janet Blair --and-- TGS ON ' l WILD x\i.![ii. in iniIn Jr. C oinizng Sunday TH'IE JOLSON STORY ___:__T. _ __ _ v____ .._ _ _ _T 'i I i II 7 I i 11 TYPEWRITERS Bought, Sold, Rented Repaired STUDENT & OFFICE SUPPLIES 0. D. MORRILL 314 S. State St. Phone 7177. I THE FARM CUPBOARD Specializing in FRIED CHICKEN DINNERS Olien 11:00 A.M. to 9:00 P.M. including Sundays. 5400 Plymouth Road (on the way to Detroit) Phone 9387 HOME OF GOOD FOOD Lunches 11:30-1:30 - only 65c Dininers (family style)-5:00-8:OO P.M.-$1.45 to $1.65 418 E. Washington (one-half block off State) Phone 9717 THE MAYFLOWE BREAKFASTS . . . LUNCHEONS ... DINNERS Waffles our specialty . . . Better Coffee 307 South Main Street Continuous Daily from 1 P.M. .WA kI .4' ~ I I 1 .. __..__..__. _ ._ 77 STARiNG EDDIE ALBERT For that Delicious Midnight Snack T*n I1 COTTAGE INN Specializing in Home Cooked Food.. . Steaks and Chaps Open Weekdays 11:00 A.M. - 1:30 P.M., 5:00 - 8:00 P.M.- Sundays 11:00 A.M.. -2:00 P.M., 5:00 - 9:00 P.M. Closed Saturdays 512 East Wililam I I MAI I I I 11