PAGE SIX THE MICHIGAN DAILY FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 21, 1947 PAGESIX RIDA, NOEMBE ~1,1H4 SEEK PERFECTION FOR INSTRUMENT:I 'Pencil' Enables Blind To Read by Sound A recently perfected device may soon make it possible for the blind to read a book with a "pencil." The instrument was demon- strated here this week before en- thusiastic delegates to a national conference on Psychological Diag- nosis and Counseling to the Adult Blind. W. W. Morris, representing the University's Bureau of Psycholog- ical Research, demonstrated to delegates the amazing things the new pencil can do. Dedicated to the establishment of "reading by sound," the "elec- tronic pencil" utilizes the principle of the photo-electric cell in trans- lating the symbols of the printed page into intelligible sounds. The amazing instrument is rea- sonably compact and easy to handle, the "reader" needing only to employ a large black plastic stylus containing the photoelectric cell. Other accessories are a stand- ard hearing aid unit and a com- pact battery case which also houses an audio-frequency oscilr lator. The cell fixed in the stylus is run across the lines of type, Mor- ris explained, converting light pat- terns into electricity by the well- known process. The impulses then are sent along to the oscillator which con- verts them into sound and brings them to an audible level. An individual trained to iden- tify the sounds created by various combinations of letters is thus able to "read." Morris termed the device as be- ing in a state of technical perfec- tion, but added that the prob- lems connected with its use have yet to be overcome. The primary difficulty, he said, SL Considers Varied Issues Return of Valuable Movies Is Planned Harvey Weisberg, president of the Student Legislature, called at- tention yesterday to a number of issues which the organization now has under consideration. " Promise of action for the return ,. 'f motion pictures which are con- sidered of present-day benefit to students has come from the Legis- lature's Cutural and Educational Committee. Poll forms were sent yesterday to student residences, and tabulations of preferences for pictures will be forwarded to local theatres. The Legislature's Varsity com- mittee is currently considering recommendations for the modifi- cation of rulings governing the distribution of football tickets to transfer students. Present sug- gestions call for greater practical University residence credit for such students than has been granted in the past. 'SEEING PENCIL' ... James Fika, a blind student at the University tries out the "Electronic Pencil," which may enable the blind to read by hearing. The stylus sends out a beam of light which is con- verted into sounds that are different for each letter. lies in the problem of translating the sounds created by the pencil into words. Discouraging too great enthus- iasm at the present time, Morris told the delegates that the rev- olutionary device will not be avail- able commercially until means of instruction in its use are more fully developed, a task which the University bureau is currently un- dertaking. Morris cited the case of theI Radio Serial casts Students Love rides a rockypath in these days of meat shortages and high prices when meat menus are all that keep the men happy. Still, a clever cook with vege- tarian inclinations, wins the day and her man in the speech depart-1 ment drama to be broadcast at 2:30 p.m. today over Station WKAR, East Lansing. The third in a new radio series, "Living for Moderns," the drama features an all-student cast and is directed by Garnet R. Garrison, speech instructor. Scripts for the series have been obtained from the NBC public service depart- ment, and were used in the cur- rent network series, "H'ome is What You Make It." Speech students Bill Bromfield and Carolyn Wheeler play the parts of the couple irl love, and Sam Rich and James Lynch that of their antagonistic fathers. most successful user of the in- strument to date-a man who, us- ing his own means of interpreting the sounds, has attained a read- ing speed of about twenty words a minute, approximately one third the standard rate of braille trans- lation. Looking to the future, Morris held out hope for a device which will actually pronounce the words on a printed page, but added that the instrument is still in the em- bryo stage. Both devices were born in the RCA laboratories at Princeton University, under the sponsor- ship of the National Research Council's committee on Sensory devices., *VETS CHECKS Checks are being held at the Ann Arbor Post Office for the following veterans: John M. Arnold, Robert P. Bar- rell, William John Bielauskas, Russell A. Brant, Mark N. Haller, Jr., Martin L. Joiner, Henry S. Ludwig, John A. MacDonald, Don- ald R. Murray, H. Janney Nichols, Robert W. Reisdrop, Beecher F. Russell, Patrick Clyde Huss, Sam I. Roth, Dane E. Smith, John W. Toma, Duane G. Ward, Richard L. Weigel, John B. Wood. Veterans listed above should pick up their checks by Nov. 28 when they will be returned to Co- lumbus, O. Events of Next Seen atKey to I By J. M. ROBERTS, JR. AP Foreign Affairs Analyst The next'100 days may turn out to be one of the critical periods in the history of the world. By the end of that time we will know how Europe has passed the winter, expected to be a cold and hungry one. We will have a good idea as to the immediate future of Germany. The Marshall Plan will have taken definite form. In all probability the immediate outcome of the current outbreaks in France and Italy will have been decided. Conclusive Battle These 100 days may not produce the conclusive battle-between de- mocracy and totalitarignism-that looks like a campaign which will go on for years-but the outcome will have an important bearing on the form which the conflict will take from here on out. As anticipated, the recent tide of conservative voting and the im- minence of the arrival of addi- tional relief from America have ISA To Hold Post-Football Campus Party Cider and doughnuts. wil be available to the entire campus after the football game tomorrow at an open house at the Interna- tional Center. The event will be sponsored by the International Students Association, the NSA Committee and the Center. "We hope that all students will drop in and get acquainted after our team's victory tomorrow," M. K. Raju, president of the ISA, said. The open house will mark the official end of International Stu dents Week, although the real climax will come next Wednesday at an ISA sponsored Thanksgiv- ing Dinner at the Masonic Tem- ple. American students have par- ticularly been invited to attend. Tickets are now on sale at Lane Hall and the Internationtl Center. Dean and Mrs. Sawyer will be guests of honor at the Dinner and Hickman Price of an automotive concern will be the principle speaker. International Student Week ac- tivities today will include a tea at Martha Cook dormitory and an- other at Lane Hall at which for- eign students will be the special guests. "Campus Quarter," weekly-: ra- dio program sponsored by the League and Union, will devote next week's show to foreign stu- dents. lund red Days Vorld's Future goaded the Communists of West- ern Europe into violent reaction. To Meet Crisis The French and Italian govern- ments are mobilizing to meet the crisis. Italy is mustering her armed police strength. France, torn by strikes and violence, has called 140,000 additional troops to the colors. There is talk of imminent civil war in both countries. However, the Communists, so far, have not demonstrated the strength for it. I hope it is not wishful thinking to believe the present outburst of vio- lence will reach its peak before I Christmas and then subside. It looks more like an attempt to bluff the governments- into according them greater power than a truly definitive effort to take over right now. Civil War Civil war in France or Italy would almost inevitably bring on World War III. Russia doesn't want that. She wants to keep the poit boiling, as in Greece, where it is noticeable that nothing is being done to increase the size of the bonfire. But she doesn't want it to boil over. She could and probably would call off the French and Ital- ian Communists before anything like war develops. Big Four Meets Following the expected failure of the Big Four foreign ministers to reach an agreement in their meet- ing which opens in London next week, France, England and the United States will face an imme- diate decision on the German problem. What they do will affect the history of Europe for a long time. How they approach it will depend at least in part on develop- ments in London. German Economy However, they are leaning toward development and re-inte- gration of the Western Germany economy into that -of all Western Europe under continued strict control, leaving Russia to go her own road in her occupation zone but not formally surrendering the idea that, one day, Germany must be reunited. This means using Germany to the fullest extent in the economic war with Russia. The three powers may resort to some Sort of central German adminis- tration, but retain the real gov- erning power themselves, just as we have done in Japan. Gathering Strength This period we are now entering, then, is one of gathering strength, cleaning up behind the front lines, organizing for the offensive and holding on until the European re- eovery program is really under dway. How well this job is done now may have a decisive long-term ef- fect. It is a new "Battle of Midway." 4~4 NADIA YESTREBOVA 7 ... has movie lead Russian Film F~ill Feature BalletExperts Three Russian ballet stars are featured in the film "Russian Bal- lerina," to be presented by Art Cinema League at 5:30 p.m. today and tomorrow at Lydia Mendels- sohn Theater. Maria Redina, star of the film, is a young dancer with her own ideas on how Tchaikovskys "Sleeping Beauty" ought to be danced. Galina Ulanova, outstanding dancer on the Leningrad Theater roster, is featured in a perform- ance of the classic "Swan Lake" ballet. Nadia Yestrebova is seen as the$ third in the trio of ballerinas. Now in its eighth week on Broadway, the picture is the first Soviet film based on the Russian ballet and features the company of the Leningrad State Theater., A new version of "Sleeping Beauty," as well as the classical Petitpas choriography, are fea- tured in the film. The plot of the picture is con- cerned with the backstage ro- mance of two young artists, played by Maria Redina and Vladimir Gardin, who are trying out for the regular company in the Len- ingrad Theater. Yearbook Office Hours Extended An extension of Michiganensian business office hours will allow seniors to pick up picture proofs during the following hours: From 9 a.m. to noon and 1 p.m. to 5 p.m. Monday through Friday, and from 7 to 9 p.m., Tuesday and Thursday. Students have been urged to come during the morning or eve- ning hours to avoid crowded con- ditions. Despite blizzards and rough terrain, science, represented this time by Prof. Karl F. Lagler. of the zoology department, has scor- ed again. Prof. Lagler has returned from the Upper Peninsula with a large catch of fish to be examined in an attempt to answer a number of fascinating questions as to their origin. They were netted in Mr- ror Lake, which is a thousand feet above Lake Superior and is, from Dr. Carleton Sprague Smith, the fishes' viewpoint, completely chief of the Music Section of the inaccessible. New York Public Library, will lec- The lake has been isolated from ture at the University on "Bra- other bodies of water since short- zilian Architecture" on Monday at ly after the rece.-sion of the last 4:15 p.m. in the Rackham Amphi- glacier, 25 thousand years ago, theatre. and just how the several speces The lecture will be illustrated of fish got where they are and with slides and is given under the what they have been doing in the auspices of the Department of way of speciation (specialized evo- Fine Arts. lution) are the questions being Dr. Smith graduated from Har- tackled. vard University and took his doc- Similar ::esearch by Prof. Lag- torate at the University of Vienna. He has taught at Columbia Uni- MCAF Committee versity Leland Stanford Univer- sity and New York University. He The Executive Committee of the has also lectured for the Sociedade Michigan Committee for Academic Felipe d'Oliveira, Rio de Janeiro, Freedom will hold a dinner meet- Brazil, at the Escola Livre de ing in the faculty dining room of Sociologia e Politica of Sao Paolo, the Union at 7 p.m. tonight. Brazil. F or HRChristmasx .4 BLOUSES Dress and sport styles in cot- ton, rayon and wool Jersey. $2.70 to $7.95 r f SWEATERS 4 Lovely all-wool jacquards and 4 Vsolidcolor pullovers and 4 W i cardigans. ROBES 'rebil ized velvet, wool flan- ~ nets, quilted satin and crepes, 4 rayon jerseys, and quilted r ' mandarin. Michigan Theater BuildingAA 4 4 SCIENCE SCORES: Prof. Lagler Snatches Fish Isolated for 25,000_Years A 4 ler on fish found on Isle Royale at a comparable altitude has re- vealed appreciable changes in their characteristics. Dr. Smith Will Speak on Art I I DAILY OFFICIAL BULLETIN (Continued from Page 4) will be given. Symposium will fol- low business meeting. Coming Events Inter Co-operative Council pre- sents Mr. Harvey Weisberg and panel in a discussion of "The Na- tional Students Association," 8 p.m., Sun., Nov. 23, Robert Owen Co-operative House, 1017 Oakland Ave. Social hour and refreshments. The public is invited. Graduate Outing Club: Ice- skate or hike. Meet at 2:30 p.m., Sun., Nov. 23, northwest entrance, Rackham Bldg. Sign up at Rack- ham check desk before noon Sat- urday. All graduate students wel- come. Latin American Society: Meet- ing, Sun., Nov. 23, 3 p.m., Rm. 319, Michigan Union. 4 p.m.: Moving pictures of Latin American coun- tries (open to public). B'nai B'rith hillel Foundation : Open' house, Saturday after the game. All students invited. B'nai B'rith Hillel Foundation will open its Corned Beef Corner at 8 p.m., Sun., Nov. 23. Open every Sunday evening. For that delicious lunch that satisfies try MILLER'S Fr i t@ A t01 CHRISTMAS SERVYICE Live out of town? Then don't wait until Christmas vacation to shop. 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