JFAUM rTHE MICHIGAN DAILY THURSDAY, APRIL 21, 1955 Y PRESERVATION OF POTATOES: Prof. Brownell Reveals Atomic Method By ETHEL KOVITZ A process for preserving pota- toes by means of atomic radia- tion may be ready for commer- zcial use within a year, according to Prof. Lloyd E. Brownell, of the chemical and metallurgical engi- neering department. The experiment, developed at the Fission Products Laboratory next door to Victor Vaughn House has been studied for more than a year. Prof. Brownell, head of the laboratory, has been aided by J. V. Nehemias and J. J. Bulmer. The researchers found that gam- ma radiation prevents northern grown potatoes from sprouting for 18 months. The radiation does this by killing the germinal cells that give rise to sprouts. Controls Sugar Content Besides controlling sprouting, Irradiation reduces the sugar con- tent which usually increases as potatoes begin to sprout. This tends to reduce the possibility of poor frying qualities. Before the process can be used commercially, three steps must take place: 1) The Food and Drug Admin- istration must agree that the food is wholesome. This fact is not yet established. 2) Radiation sources belonging to the Atomic Energy Commis- sion must be made available to industry. 3) Industry and the consumer must accept the product. Will Affect Industry If Prof. Brownell's radiation process is used on potatoes, the potato industry will be noticeably affected. Between 300 and 500 mil- lion bushels of potatoes are har- vested every fall. However, by April many of the stored, northern grown potatoes begin to spoil and it is necessary to import potatoes from states such as Florida. These cost more and a shipping expense is also involved. Irradiation of northern grown Epidemics New, But Polio Isn't Polio is an old disease but1 epidemics are comparatively COUNCIL HANDLES CASES: Students Run Engine Honor System <., polio new. PRESERVATION BY RADIATION potatoes followed by proper stor- age would make them available until the next crop is grown in the fall and save importing ex- pense. The farmer could sell them for a longer period and would have a larger income. "This would hurt the Florida potato growers, but they could grow other products in a warm climate, whereas northern grow- ers in Idaho, Maine, Michigan, Long Island and Minnesota, are much more limited in the crops that they could grow," Prof. Brownell commented. Experiments on Meat Prof. Brownell has also been experimenting with meat, milk and other foods. He has found that while some types can be radiated successfully, other foods lose taste,. vitamins or both. He cautions against too opti- mistic an attitude regarding food preservation for radiation. "It is not going to be a cure-all for food spoilage." To test the wholesomeness of radiated food, Prof. Brownell, with Prof. Henry C. Eckstein of the De- partment of Biochemistry of the Medical School, has been perform- ing what he calls a "long-term feeding and breeding experiment" with 124 rats. This study has been supported by Michigan Memorial Phoenix Project No. 41. In the ex- periment some of the rats are fed irradiated food while others live on the same diet of non-irradiated food. The experiment has reached the third generation of rats and thus far no important differences in size, health or breeding habits have been found. In December, if the fourth generation reaches matur- ity in good health, the experiment will be concluded. Panel To . Talk On- Automation Problems of overhead alloca- tion will be the subject of a panel discussion at the meeting of the National Association of Cost Ac- countants today, at the Ann Ar- bor Elk's Club. , A social period will be held at 6 p.m., with dinner at 6:45 p.m. and a technical session at 7:45 p.m. Discussion emphasis will be placed on special problems coming with automation. Royal will cite his foundry experience connected with the swing to automation. Munn will discuss the build-up of standard costs for products by tabulating means. Moderator James Handy, Jr. will explain the problems faced as the amount of automation increases in a plant. Researchers have discovered from ancient Egyptian murals and skeletons over five thousand years old that polio has an ancient his- tory. The first real polio epidemic took place in New York City in 1916. Thousands of children were sent away from the crowded city to avoid the dread disease. Polio itself is quite common. It is estimated nearly 80 per cent of the United States total popula- tioon has had it at some time. After a few days of headache, fever or nausea the infection dis- appears. In this way immunities are built up. Paralytic polio, the type feared in epidemics, is not present in pov- erty stricken or primitive areas. Apparently this type of polio is connected with sanitation, clean- liness and privacy. SUMMER FORMALS AT t~i " 4 Formulated and maintained by students, the Honor System of the Engineering College was inaugur- ated in 1916. "The Honor System is based on the principle that it is dishonor- able for any man to receive credit for work which is not the result of his own work," says the booklet on the system which is given to each freshman in the Engineering College. Principles Given The original declaration of prin- ciples which was submitted by the students to the faculty for its ap- proval stated that it was not fair for a student to receive aid in a written examination of any type. Also the prevention of dishon- esty should be in the hands of the students rather than of the facul- ty. It concluded stating that it is' the duty of all students to uphold these principles in word and act. These first principles have been widened and extended and now include not only honesty in exam- inations and written quizzes, but also in all other work. To handle cases that arise from this system, an Honor Council has been established which consists of nine members. Eight of these stu- dents are selected by the Council from petitions submitted each se- mester and one student is an ex-' officio member representing Vul- cans, engineering honor society. These members represent as many of the departments of the college as possible. Has Obligation + Beside their administrative du- ties, the committee also has an educational obligation. One of the members of the group speaks to the freshmen in one of their week- ly assemblies at the beginning of the year and explains to them the principles and rules of the Honor System. Similar talks are repeated during the year to insure complete understanding. If a student violates the honor code, he is brought before this committee for trial. There his case is investigated and the committee decides ,the guilt or innocence of the individual. "We are more anxious to help prove the innocence of any stu- dent as to find him guilty," said Robert Dlgenfritz, '56E; president of the Council. "Our main job i to do what we can to help the stu- dent who is in difficulty." Punishment Told Punishment may be anything up to and including expulsion from the University. The sentence is sent to the Faculty Discipline Committee in the form of a re- commendation. This committee re- views the case and handles it with power delegated to it by the En- gineering College faculty. Any student disciplined by this committee may file an appeal with the Secretary of the College within ten days of the committee's action. Before final action takes place the Dean of the College is consult- ed. "In the thirty-eight years of the existence of this system," stated Ilgenfritz, "the faculty has never reversed any action of the Honor Council." Ilgenfritz describes the code as more of a philosophy than just a system. "In this way, the diploma also stands for a definite achieve- nent of personal honor as well as graduation from studies." In IN THREE YEARS Profioial Recognition by U& DetCf . abid Sel. Service. Two Large Eye Clinics 1 University Environment. New Dorms and Apartments an large adjoining 1. I.T. Campus. Your Liberal Arts Credits Ap. plicable for Entrance (60 Semes. ter Credits in Specified Courseq. CHICAGO COLLEGE .o OPTOMETRY 3243 South Michigan Avenue TechnologyrCenter, Chicago is, M ll iii Chicago College of OPTOMETRY Serving an Attractive Profession Doctor of Optometry DEGREE U.41 Read and Use I I Robert _genfrtz, '56 presdentJgrduatio from sudies. ...Advance copies i, of Reader's Darticles! State Street at Liberty Store hours: 9 to 5:30 i! a butt ons Sand beaus BMOC and back- bench boys-go for AFTER SIX QC formals. Styling so trim, fit so "natural" "stain- shy"finish so safe from spots! For \ smore fun-go t s# - *t .I.... HERE'S HOW TO GET THEM: To ac- quaint you with the interesting arti- cles in The Reader's Digest, we make this special offer: From the descriptions below of some of the articles to appear in the June issue of The Reader's Digest, pick the three articles you would most like to read. Circle with pencil the numbers of these three articles on the coupon below. Then mail coupon to us with your name and address. We'll send you free copies of the three articles you choose. This offer is good for only a few days, so send us the coupon TODAY. mw HErYjTHERE! MORE LUCKY DROODLES I COTTONTAIL RABBIT ON MOONLIT NIGHT Arlen J. Kuklin University of Nebraska NOT DOG ON HAMBURGER BUN Burt Griffin Wake Forest WHAT'S THIS? For solution see paragraph below. ARE YOU LOOKING for a completely enjoy- able cigarette? Then get a clue from the Droodle above, titled: Smoke rings blown by riveter enjoying Luckies. Fasten on to TWO BIRDS FIGHTING OVER WQRM Joseph Bex U. C. L. A. Could you pass a 6th-grade exam? What is the tallest mountain in the United States? Which American colony did Roger Williams establish? Who discovered the Pacific Ocean? ... If you think your kids have it easy at school, here's a chance to test yourself on 10 questions they have to answer. 2 20-page book condensation: "Tiger of the Snows." "It has been a long road to the top of Everest," says the Asian nativewho conquered theworld's highest summit. "From a ragged coolie to a wearer of medals who rides in planes and worries about income tax." Thrilling story of Sherpa Tenzing, and how he climbed to the top of the world. 3 Lure that hooks fishermen. Why on earth do folks stand in ice-cold water for hours just to catch a few panfish, when chances are they'll only catch a cold? Philip Wylie shows what 40 mil- lion Americans are really after when they fish: the happiness that comes from being alone with one's inner self. 4 Beware of hitchhikers! One hiker wore a GI uniform-but he was really a madman who stabbed the driver, stole his car. Another looked like a college boy-but he killed the driver, tried to hack off his head. Here's a warning against picking up "harmless" hitch- hikers-who may rob, shoot, kill you. 5 You CAN be a stockholder. It used to be that almost all investors in common stocks were wealthy. But today thou- sands of wage earners are buying stocks on time, same as autos and refrigerators. Story of the Monthly Investment Plan: new way to own a share of American industry-for as little as $3 a week. 6 They're inventing the drudgery out of farm life. One machine milks a hun- dred cows in 212 hours flat. Another scoops up eggs the minute hens lay'em. There's even one that doles out feed to cattle, blows a horn to tell the critters to come and get it! Amazing peek at new labor savers down on the farm. 7 Don't drown! Do you know the safest time of day to swim? ... what to do if you get a sudden leg cramp? ... how to stay afloat even if you can't swim a stroke?...how to give the new mbthod of artificial respiration that the Red Cross recommends? Here are eight simple rules that can save your life. 8 Do European women make better wives? Why are our servicemen mar- rying them at the rate of 500 a month? Why do these marriages outlast those to U. S. girls by 3 to one? Here, in their own words, are the reasons why so many of our GIs are picking European. brides instead of the girls at home. 9 My most unforgettable character. Princeton's Dean Gauss would berate a boy in class, then spend all night solv- ing his troubles. He'd end a riot with a word, brave a hurricane to watch football ... and, best of all, he taught you to think. Here's the prof who gave his students hell-and made'em love it. 10 Are A-bombs poisoning our atmos- phere? You've heard that radioactive clouds from A-bomb tests are contami- nating people, upsetting the weather, possibly deforming unborn children. But evidence shows these reports have no basis in truth. Here are reassuring facts behind the sensational scare stories. 11 The Poles among us. They landed here 12 years before the Mayflower; they saved our first colony from collapse. They've given us musicians like Sto- kowski, patriots like Pulaski, sports champs like Musial. Story of 6 million Americans with a capacity for hard work-and a flaming love of freedom. 12 I took off 150 pounds! "A year ago,I' weighed 337 pounds. I couldn't cross my legs; I needed help getting my shoelaces tied. But today I weigh only 187-and almost anyone can accomplish the same thing." Here, to inspire anyone who's overweight, is Mac Tarnoff's own story of how he shed 150 pounds. 13 My adopted Japanese brother. It be- gan when Yashichiro wrote the Wm. Jennings Bryans: "I come to America, be your son?" The Bryans declined- but one night he stood bowing at the door: "My parents, I am come to your feet." Poignant story of how the lad won a place in their home-and hearts. 14 Red pipeline into our uranium supply. If you saw raw material for A-bombs being dug at the biggest mine on the continent, you'd feel protected from our enemies-till you learned the men who dig it are Communist-led. How Reds seized a key union thru which they can cripple our defense. 15 Drama in real life. Suppose you had a 3-year-old daughter. Then suppose you discovered that the hospital had given you the wrong baby-and she wasn't yours. Could you bring yourself to give her up in exchange for your real child? True story of a couple who faced just such a shattering.choice. 16 Golden rogue: Benvenuto Ceilini. The touchiest swordsman in 16th-century Italy, he made enemies pay with their lives; took women as he pleased-and battle only brought laughter to his lips. Yet this swaggerer created some of our most exquisite gold treasures. Adven- tures of the world's greatest goldsmith. 17 Artificial Insemination. Today, thou- sands of women with sterile husbands have babies this way. What is the tech- nique? Does a woman feel guilty, bear-- ing the child of a man she has never seen, can never know? Does a father accept a child not his own? Revealing report on a hotly debated procedure. 18 Private enterprise for public pur- poses. Most of us expect rivers to be controlled and "improved" by public authority. But Wisconsin has turned one over to a private company. Here's how it controls floods, gives free trees to farmers, teaches soil conservation -without charging taxpayers a cent. 19 Angel of the madhouse. From the day in 1841 when she saw four insane people chained in a frozen, filthy cell, this Boston spinster vowed she'd have the mentally ill treated as human be- ings. Story of Dorothea Dix, one of the most distinguished (and forgotten) women America has ever produced. 20 Radio City Music Hall. Did you know that GIs, mothers-to-be are whisked in- side when lines are long? That each Rockette gets a week off a month?That an operatic film-which the manager feared would be a bore-proved an all- time money maker? Behind the scenes at the world's most fabulous theater. 21 Ike's narrow escape. In'44 a hundred Nazis sneaked across enemy lines into France. Their mission: to trap Eisen- hower on the road to Paris and kill him. Exciting story of hbw Ike sped closer and closer to death-and how a strange and wonderful act of Provi- dence saved him in the nick of time. 22 Do-it-Yourself? Not me! Build your own boat? Fix your own drainpipes? Why not? It's fun! It's easy! And it's cheap-just 25ยข for plans. (Of course, you'll have to mortgage the baby for tools, materials, plus the doctor's fee for that mashed thumb.) Corey Ford rebels against the Do-It-Yourself craze. 23 Are you a delinquent parent? "The main cause of juvenile delinquency," says Bishop Fulton J. Sheen, "is delin- quent parents." The spiritual leader shows why your child's behavior de- pends greatly on the way you behaye; names3types of parents who are a bad influence on their children. 24 What organized labor wants. Says the president of the AFL: "Years ago, when union leader Samuel Gompers was asked what labor wanted, he merely said, 'More.' The answer is the same to- day." George Meany (leader of 10 mil- lion workers) tells what labor means by "more," and how it plans to get it. 25 How to grow old and like it. Your chances of living to a happy old age depend not only on your state of health, but also on your state of mind. A noted medical authority poses 7 searching questions to help you judge your men- tal outlook ... and suggests definite ways you can add years to your life. 26 What is'a Mormon? He believes the Second Cominghas already taken place. But he's not a "Mormon" (it's just a nickname for members of the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints)- and he doesn't practice polygamy. An- swers to the questions most asked about a faith that's over a million strong. 27 The sun: tomorrow's power plant? Sunlight has already been harnessed to light electric bulbs, run broadcasting sets-and the day may come when it will heat our homes, cook our meals, run our factories. Here's how this boundless source of power works, and why it may revolutionize our future. 28 Bringing the antibiotics up to date. Today, penicillin and other antibiotics have saved more lives than all other remedies put together. But their helter- skelter use has led to disappointments and disasters. Paul de Kruif tells of hopeful new possibilities-and dangers -of so-called "miracle drugs." 29 It pays to increase your word power. Does "glutted" mean glued together, lascivious, disemboweled, or filled to excess? Adding new words to your vo- cabulary increases yourself-confidence, your prestige-even your earning pow- er. Here's a word quiz that's fun to do, and may pay you dividends, 301 like pigs. Dirty? You never have to housebreak 'em. Greedy? Feed 'em right, and they'll eat only what they need. Stupid? One porker, maddened by fever, meekly gulped magnesia 'cause she knew it'd do her good! Alice Haines tells why she's hog-wild over the barn- yard citizen who supplies half our meat. 0 Luckies yourself. Luckies are such great shakes because they taste better. And they taste better for excellent reasons. First of all, Lucky Strike means fine tobacco. Then, that tobacco is toasted to taste better. "It'sToasted"-the famous Lucky Strike process-tones up Luckies' light, good-tasting tobacco to make it taste even better . . . cleaner, fresher, smoother. So, whenever it'-s light-up time, eniov vourself fully. Eniov the better- POORLY MADE SLICE OF SWISS CHEESE David Russell Watson Franklin & Marshall - OC' t LUCKY: STRtKF t;. EARN $25!* STUDENTS! .. . ' 'aw.*. f'1 .; ...... n.. . ' ttti Stratt s 'rs- : :::i>--aroma f '. : { . {..". }t <:;:r " . c' < :' :: };::;i" 'v."fi' :iii':;{'iii:,:;?::;i:"i:;.;i: i ri :,:'v:":"i k :: _,: ii.'"; Lucky Droodles* are pouring in! Where are yours? We pay $25 for all we use, and for many we don't use. So, send every I I e I ------------------------...----