Tuesday, May 26, l93l ARMOUR TECH NEWS 8:30-i0:20 ‘ Descriptive Geometry... .. Foster Drafting Room, Seegrist 5th floor Sear Machine Design.-. ...................Swineford Room D, Winston Mission Chemical Engineering. . ,..McCorrnack Room C, (Junior Ch.E.) Missmn Heating and Ventilation"... .,..Perry Room l3, (Architects) Missmn 10:30-12:20 _ Hydromechanics ....Paul Gymnasmm Applied Mechanics Leigh . Marigold Elementary Surveying ,,,,,, Jacobson Room D, Misswn Strength of Materials ............ Wells Room ]_3, Mission 1:10-3:00 ‘ Physics I Kt II ..... Wilcox Gymnasmm Doubt Physics (Arch) ..... Colvert Thompson 3:10-5:00 ’ Quantitative Chemistry... ...... gilfibals Gymnasmm l - Carpenter Schommer Elements of Elect. Engrg .............. Richardson Room D, Mission Saturday, June 6, 1930 8:30~10:20 Precision of Measurements ...... Doubt Gymnasium (Physics Laboratory) Colvert Thompson Organic Chemistry... ....... Freud Room D Mission 10:30-12:20 Leig Gymnasium Engineering Mechanics I & 11 Calculus 11...... College Algebr' Analytic Geometry. Review Algebra... Instructors Thermodynamics .Nachman Room B, .. Mission . 1:10-3:00 Plane Trigonometry. . ,,....Mathematics Applied Trigonometry... ,. . Gymnasium Calculus 1.... . Instructors Steam Power Plants .. .Nachman Room B Mission 3:10—5:00 writer charisma trons Second Semester, 193%31 Friday, June 5, 1931 Monday, June 8, 3931 8:30-10:20 Mathematics Gymnasium 10 so; 12 :20 . Mathematics Gymnasium Experimental Engineering..,.,,... Laboratory Gymnasium (Jr. ME, Jr. EE, & Jr. CE) PLEASE REPORT ALL CONFLICTS TO THE OFFECE OF THE DEANS IMMEDIATELY Marigold Instructors Instructors Recommended by Professor George L. Sahel-gar, Ph. D. Durante, Story of Philosophy. Paulsen, Introduction to Philosophy. Dorsey, George, Why We Behave Like Human Beings. Dimnet, Abbe, The Art of Thinking. Schopenhauer’s Essays. Emerson’s Essays in Compensation and Self-Reliance. Carlyle, Sartor Resartus. Emil Ludwig, Napoleon. l Emil Ludwig, Bismarck. l Emil Ludwig, Goethe. John Morley, Voltaire. John Morley, Rousseau. John Morley, Gladstone. Lord Charwood, Lincoln. Carl Sandburg, Lincoln. Woodberry, Washington. Randall, Benjamin Franklin, the First Civilized American. Bowers, Claude G. Jefferson and Hamilton. Sfrachey, Life of Queen Victoria. Autobiography of Herbert Spencer. Life and Letters of Charles Darwin. Norton. Life and Letters of Thomas Huxley. Jeans, J., The Universe Around Us. Eddington, The Universe Around Us. Dampier, Whetham, History of Sci- ence. Marcus Aurelius, Meditations. ‘ Epictetus, Handbook. Farrar, Canon, Seekers After Omar Kayam, Rubayat. Wordsworth, Poems. Keats, Poems. Shelley, Poems. Browning, Shorter Poems. Tennyson, In Memoriam. Goethe, Faust, (Bayard Taylor’s Translation). Benvenuto Cellini, Autobiography. Shakespeare, Hamlet and Macbeth. Victor Hugo, Les Miserables. Rolland, Romain, Jean Christophe. Tolstoi. Anna Karenina and War and Peace. Dostozeski, Crime and Punishment. Galsworthy. The Forsyth Saga. Galsworthy. Collected Plays. Ibsen, Dolls’ House and Other Plays. A. ll. Ch. E, Holds Annual Smelter On Wednesday evening, May 13th, the Armour branch of the American Institute of Chemical En- gineers held its annual smoker at the Sigma Kappa Delta house. Dr. C. D. Lowry Jr., of the Uni- versal Oil Products Company, was the guest of the evening. Dr. Lowry presented a very interesting lecture on “Alchemical Abstracts." in a very humorous style. The assembled chemicals were en— lightened by Dr. Lowry on distilling operations and apparatus of the pic. neer chemists. All through the pro» gress of chemistry it is rather singu— lar that methods of separation have not changed. A guaranteed hair restorcr, con— sisting of a solution made by boiling a horse‘s neck in a lead jar full of a oil, was described by Dr. Lowry. A method of obtaining a delicate facial rejuvenator by distilling snails was also presented for the benefit of the “chemicals." Following the feature of the eve- ning, entertainment of different char- acter was presented in a group of piano selections by J. E. Westenberg ’31. The guests of the evening of the active chapter included Dr. Lowry, Professors C. A. Tibbals and W. J. Bentley of the chemical engineering department, in addition to “Grip?” of storcroom fame. PRYSICS LAE CLOSES MAY 29 The physics laboratory will be closed for this semester after May ‘29, 1931. All reports, in order to be credited on this year’s record must be handed in on or before noon, June 7, 1931. Seniors inspect Telephone Want The senior electricals recently made an inspection trip to the Illinois Bell Telephone Company. The telephone industry deals With some very com- plex and advanced phases of the elec~ trical art, and its works are always interesting and instructive exhibits of ingenuity and engineering skill to visiting students. Perhaps this fact accounts for the no absence record which seems to be concurrent with the telephone inspection trips. Last Tuesday‘s trip was a visit to the long lines division. located at 225 West Washington Boulevard. Before the actual inspection bewan, the men assembled in the lounge for brief in~ troductions and talk. The first speaker dealt with equip ment design, touching upon the vari— phases, such as construction, place of installation, and also pro- vision for future needs. The second talk was by an “outside" man whose realm is the actual construction and maintenance of overhead wires, cable ducts, and all the other factors which play their part in t 1 ,‘ ' communication. The last speaker came from the plant where the long lines equipment is operated, and his topic was on the operation and maintenance of the many units which come under his at- tention. These talks ai'l’orded a better understanding of the different appar- atus which was later seen on the tour. ous Attenuation of currents is one of the high hurdles for the telephone en- gineer, but repeaters and amplifiers can usually surmount most of the difficulties. Where radio chain pm. grams are involved, these repeaters and amplifiers must he designed so Trackeray. Vanity Fair. Dickens, David Copperfield. George Eliot, Romola. Lytton, Last Days of Pompeii. Scott, Ivanhoe and Talisman. White, Natural History of Selborne. Darwin, Origin of Species. Darwin, Descent of Man. Henry Fairfield Osborn, Origin and Evolution of Life. Henry Fairfiel'd Osborn, Men of the Old Stone Age. Travels of Marco Polo. | O’Brien, Shadows in the South Seas. Haliburton7 Royal Road to Romance. Beebe, Galapagos. Beebe, Edge of the Jungle. Lecky, W. H., History of European Morals. I.ecky, W. H., A Memoir. Buckle, History of Civilization in England. Burckhardt, Kare, The Culture of the Renaissance. J. R. Green, Short History of Eng~ land. Trevelyan, History of England. Fiske, John, The Critical Period of U. 8. History. Frazer, .‘I. B., The Golden Bough (Abreviated Edition. Neuman, E., Richard Wagner. Romain, Rolland, Beethoven. Faurc, History of Art. as to operate with a flat amplificw tion curve over a wide range of fre- ouencies. For high class broadcasts, this range is from thirty-five to eight thousand cycles. . By using carrier waves of (liii‘erent frequencies for the various sm‘vices, as many as seventy~two circuits can be carried on one pair of wires. The guides distributed pamphlets and wiring diagrams at the end of l the tour and also presented 9 Cole l photo picture of the president of the l A. T. and T. This picture was sent: l‘ Iby long distance and was practically 1 l perfect in every detail. 3 nouns ro as scant l Paulen, System of Ethics. Westermarck, Origin and Develop— ment of Moral and Religious Ideas. Browne, Lewis, This Believing World. William James, Varieties of Re- ligious Experience. God. i traditional on m treatment M RHD DELTA RHO A successful dinner-(lance was held at the Carleton Hotel in Oak Park on May 23. Professor and Mrs. Nach- I'nan and many of the alumni chapter were present. DELTA TAU DELTA Dave Baldwin, F‘. P. E., '30, has announced that he is “taking the plunge" on Independence Day. Stan Owens and Jeff Aplanaogh were down for Circus Day. Herman Meithe, an illinois Belt, is still residing at the house. Pl—ll KAPPA SEGMA The Indiana Dunes have been se. lected as the location of the annual Phi Kap picnic, which will be held next Sunday, May 31. Most of the active members of the chapter ex- pact to attend. THETA Xl Last Sunday Theta Xi had its an- nual Spring Picnic at the Dunes, Indiana. Everyone had a fine time. Eats were plentiful and various games were played and combats fought. The parents of Ray Ellis came down from Petoskey, Michigan to pay a visit. Several of the other boys had their parents down for Open House and the Concert. Life and Letters of Charles Eliofi A... l. E. E. To ELECT OFFlCERS Election of officers of the Armour branch of the A. I. E. E. will be held next Friday, May 29, in room D, Mission building. W At the University of Idaho, se- niors will wear formal attire for 1931 annual pictures instead of the p and gown. l l l \ Gibbs Award Winner Tendered’ Banquet Phoebns A. Levene, the 1931 re» cipient of the Willard Gibbs Award, was the speaker at the banquet giv- en in his honor by the Chicago sec- tion of the American Chemical So~ ciety last Friday at the Steuben Club. On Saturday Dr. Levcne delivered his formal address on “Chemical Structure and Optical Activity" at the Archibald Church Library on Mc- Kinlock Campus under the auspices of the Northwestern University Med— ical School and the Chicago section of the American Chemical Society. At the banquet on Friday evening, Dr. Levcne’s subject was, “The Re- volt of the Bio-Chemists.” The act- ual presentation of the medal was made by Professor F. C. Koch of the University of Chicago. Other speak- ers were Dr. L. V. Redman, Presi~ dent~elect of the society, and Presi- dent R. M. Hutchins ol’ the Univer— sity of Chicago. Six of the major prizes in the Camel Cigarette Contest were won by college graduams. A total of 952,228 answers were receivled in this widely advertised competition. 'I‘hirty— 'ght prizes were awarded, with a first prize of $25,000, second prize $10,000, and the third prize $5,000. The winners represented men and women from every walk oi life. Page Three Senior Mechanicale Have inspection trip On May 14th Professor Ge‘uhart led the senior mechanicals on a trip to the largest generating station of the Edison System. They had a. very enjoyable trip for the subject was interesting and the guides were well acquainted with the plant and did not try to rush the men through. This particular station has six tur- bine units ranging from 50,000 to 104,000 K. W. These are all mod- ern turbines of the reheating—extram tion type and develop a combined output of 440,000 K. W. Water is taken from the sanitary district canal and the steam reaches a tem- perature of 750 degrees F. in enormous boilers which are stokcr- fired. This steam is supplied to the turbines at a pressure of 600 pounds. The electrical end of the instal— lation handles 3-phase, 60 cycle, 12,800 volts. This is the largest plant of the Edison System and cost about 45 million dollars. It has the world's record for the largest one-day out- put of energy and has a potential power of almost a half a million horsepower. MOELEDAY'S DELUXE. SMQE REPAE R "" 60. ms [HAN are. easy. a. 3.. \ Attiltjh RESTAURANT 3H7 Wentworth Avenue WHERE QUALlTY AND SERVHCE RElGN SUPREME: Home Cooking titans... the Mdtft‘ermrece Militants dice clitd’tierrerree like an oasis in the dusty desert of dried tobacco, the new Camel Humidor Pack brings you the delight not line quality cigarettes in factory-ireeh, mild con- elation. Now, wherever you go, you can always lino sure of gelling a fresh, throat-easy cigarette when you demand Camels. it’s easy to tell the difference. Your sense of touch detects it as you roll a cigarette between your lingers. Dry tn- bacon is stiff and crumbly. Camels are full bodied and pliant. liven your car can tell the difference. For a dried-out. cigarette crackles when you roll it. But the real test is taste and taste is causing a great nation-wide switch of men and women alike to Camels in the scientific new Humidor Paola. As you draw in that fragrant, mild, cool smoke, redolent with the joy of choicest Turk- ish and mellow Domestic tobacco, only then do you realize the full importance of; this new Humidor Pack. For scorched or dried tobacco is brash and tasteless and its smoke is unldndly hot to the tongue and throat. if you are already a Camel smoker you have noticed the improvement in this your favorite cigarette. llil you don’t smoke Camels, try them for just one day to see how much you’re missing. After you’ve known the mild- ricss and delight of a really fresh ciga- rette, switch back if you can. I: is the mark o; o nouridrrcle 53:83:. 3 of :15.» Humidor Pack. to m r Buy found! com). 2:. i. Kcymidn (5053.6er Company V'Cxxaxngkm, :\‘. e.