Page Four speeches to be presented by a guest of the student body of Armour, Dr. G. Vincent, one of the best known educators of the country received prolonged applause from a capacity audience at the general assembly last Tuesday. The energetic manner of presentation certainly did not re- flect a man of 74; on the other hand his: sagacity and wisdom and even the strategy used in the presenta- tion reflects experience that may well be considered difficult for men of longer yet to have acquired. lli'. Vinccn speech was formal- iy entitled, “As Others See Us," but' it is obvious that Dr. Vincent merc- ly used the nominal topic as a basis for emphasizing: his far more im- portant point. as he stressed it, to “think caliiilvavreason intellectually emotionally." llr. Vincent himself combined an emotional ap- peal—4m very thing: that he cau- tioned others to regard apprehen- sively—with such seriousness when clinching a point that his intense sin- cerity was immediately obvious and carried with merited applause. Yet. by th(‘ combination of his humorous build-up to his educational facts. ho is exceedingly clever in driving: home his point more forcefully than could probably be done ”is emotional appeal if his humor can be analyzed as such. has ultimale in that the facts facts no ninth-r rnnot o1 hci'wisc. justification m-ntcd remain analyzed. lls imn’icdiatc just is, that ill}: humorously emotional ap— poal is a superior method of gaining: interest when cleverly executed in was ably llHlH' l)_\' llr, Vincent. pm» how Typical of his characteristic l’lll YIIIH’ is his anal, is of lhv nppi-al of emotional ape l uhirh is inlvndl-il 1n influence \iilhunl rwonw—c to win yr. Vincent Stresses Vital i [Weed for flair/eel“ Vhiahing In one of the most dramatic son. In a choice of words which is Isuggestive of subtle humor in the lfirst sentence and obvious humor in the second sentence. Dr. Vincent l said: “Jumping to conclusions is one ‘of the most exhilarating feats of mental gymnastics. . . . Most of our like vintage wine-«they’re corked l" Beside the appeal to think ration— ally Dr. Vincent stressed the desir- ability of defining: terms. By doing this, he said, the “area of discussion will be limited to a large degree," thereby preventing misinterpreta» tions. l‘Ie appealed to the students to be tole'int. “Tolerance in these days." he said, “has come to mean indifference.” Carrying out the idea that others lmay see our country in a different 3 light which does not reflect our true lcharacteris (. he pointed out that ’among the items from Ann ' a that ,appcarc-d in a certain newspaper of l India were the following): which were printed because they seemed char- , actei'istic of this country. They were: (an account of the number of bank, li’ailures in this country, inform i ltion about Al (‘aponeiithe typical. l American figure as they put it, and‘ ‘ the increased facilities for divorce in ‘ Reno. These points load up to \h(- ‘dis 'sion of the value of proper‘ thinking: in detecting: ”'H' pos-‘hililics of these items hi'lll}! uiisreprcscnla» live it interpreted literally. l lcollege [graduates are l l l llr. Vinci-nl w inlrmllirt-d to lhr audience by Prof .. Il‘ John SCl’lllll’l‘ nicr who was a student at lho ll. of (‘. lJr. \iincenl was the “can. In. Vincent‘s appearance was ar- ranged by tho Institute in line with its poliry of hi'inciiiu before the slu~ drnl, body. from liuw to time. nationr when ally known Ilfllll'i's‘ in their i'l'~)il‘i'll\'1- fields. News $2110ka ”Halli/mm: from [mg/4' .mm “we enthusiastically pi'lwlwl h} 1hr men. Inosl of whom hull unikml wilh (hi-m lust yrui. liiissoll Knlol. chivl’. urn-d tullllilrlll- |llil>IU| of prwum m lltwl and WW «monies. Sin-och making was ol t'illli\t- won n mdw. Professor llvndrirlcs ow hirmlni'cd. “l‘ n'iodlnsll)‘ twain-ll praise on the work of llllll'lllli\ i'r-i h;s initialin in publishing lllv l'irsl 53‘ H“. thow days but whatever it was. llt‘ cave John the credit for havmg it left nothinu‘ unsaid that possibly make anyone fail to srv l’ro- Hendricks~ sincere Lion oi' the first vditor‘s work. and fl ssoi' Staff Doenn'i Worry Hendricks? in Iui‘n, when Hoinmcs spoke h:- ulso modestly praised l’rol'cssor Ill-n- (hicks. saying: "ll was hr lhal. gaw- ns the and somehow we iwlicvcd it could be down ll couldn't confidence l’l'l\" been done it he hiidn'l had the faith in us,” Reminiscing ol' the problems connected with the first publications, John said of Professor llt-ndricks: "it looks like ~rou fellows him He he used lo then. doii‘i worry looks young-ri- than llv was an old man whi-n we worked l‘oi him!" Thr- dil'l’irully of regular pulilii'zr (ion even as lair as in '32 lili'~.\t_\'.~l1'i’l\ a.» a llll‘lllhtl of measuring- lhr pi'mlnrtim’i of human labor. luv lpoinicd out llli‘ niil't’vrmirr lu-Iuwn [the ~y>lcin and ll‘ll- ordinary llllil' : study. 4-, lo. With llw Huh-nu sys- ll'l‘nl the rinployw Ls rrwlilcd \iilli Thur ll is npm‘ulinu' an :iulo llu- uoi'k liv ai'luall) does. an malir machinu requiring liltlv :lllt'll‘ lion the work rcqnin-s lll rm ploycc with it is rrvdi‘lml he llt' only elm-r \\ hvii lviilinii. The ill-dram \‘\\ll'lll standard is a B unit, to lhc . which corresponds ‘standard \h’ul‘ls door by an avv' I l workman H :i ll’llllllli'. liacli job i: ivxan‘iim-rl and a B rating- ;m n. The employee 1. rrcdilwl wilh ith’c work he dos-s in B units. The of R's llw amount considered noi nial '< applied nunihvr :ni-mo is calculated and the worker is H'Vlzll'lll'll hr ll'll' ' iii.s bonus )ll addition to Thus a to urge thr it the production of a uni-Lt-r falls lll'lUH mom ul‘ It guarantvwl hourly \R'Hu't'. \K3'.1(‘ lili‘t‘nin‘l' “\l'll \l’4il'lfl’l" ll. E'l‘i‘hil‘l l‘ll.l(‘l('lll‘_\/. tho normal a vhvrk is made and the liziizll corrected. Thus a l'l'lt'l‘k on tho oll‘u-i‘énry oi" ihw or . iizalion l:~'_ knmxn at all limo», llwausi- of tho lH‘l‘ll for I‘l'>i due to fatigue. :4 (Train allowance is lll:ill(- to: rust periods, 'l‘hr amounl of iiiuv allowed lr dependent upon thi- lipi- oi' wuil pcrfoin'u-d. Thur it lllnll rlliin‘llii‘; (-nal Would l'tt‘f'th‘ a laruvi i allowance \han a man HH-H‘l} liUmhlliS a lt'Vt‘I. ml. in (‘Hl‘l’l job and nolinc' lhe lime re» vat-h rlcn'u-nl, Each ,ioli is via sii'iod into operations such as ‘nhsl-Wing llw llllrlllrt'l’ elements , who rm- : loading. adjusting. securing, tool ad- l juslnn-iii. machining. oiling, tiling i and inspection. All these details lllill‘," with the insti‘urlions to: use are filed and are used as the Illlllllrlv Mr and guide for mljusli'nvnls (do. of tho machine. Al. ll)? for next meeting: officers 20“ per ('erit‘ lhw coming your will be elected. ll. ‘ N liavi iA .M.E, ‘ April 22. President of the Armour Friday National visii will The iaiing- ol' l-arli job is dour ht, ARMOUR TECH NEWS “Models" Topic at RE. Meeting o The Structural Division of the Western Society of Engineers held a quarterly meeting here at Armour Tech, April 4. in D Mis.,ion. In a program arranged by Dean Heald, four papers were presented on the subject “Use of Models in Structuifi al Engineering.” Dr. Grinter presented the paper “Misconceptions of the Usefulness of Models.” Prof. Dohrenwend's pa- per was “Use of Photoelust ity in Structural Anal. . He used a miniature polai‘is 0pc in his demon- stration, and passed polo ‘zed light through transparent bakclite. A rain» bow color is produced and the color can be interpreted as number or kind of flaws. “Model Studies in Soil Mechanics" was the presentation of Prof. Herbert Ensz. who used a model to investigate the pressure on retaining walls. Prof. Stevens pro- scnted a paper on “Model Analysis with Bogus Dcl'ormeter." which is applied to arch analy After the presentation of the pan pers, the large group of engineers inspected the new Civil Laboratories . W" 0 0 n all" _ VA >\ ‘ Upvnpli: 102+ Imoiri A MvrM lniunol‘u l l l l pending- upon the trend of the game. WW l . Vii fl Mu“ g3 vi" . “1» ‘ «53“ Teclwwks—Marooas l (Continued from page: three) l lowed six hits. he held the Techawks to one run. In accomplishing this, he also sent five men down on strikes. This year according to Coach Anderson, Paul has improved immensely and is due to be one of the best in the Big Ten. Because of the fact that most of the ballinen are newcomers and that anyone might start, it is impossible to name the starting lineup for the Mai-nous. The same holds for the Techawks since the battle for the outfield posts has been by no means settled. However it is certain that the infield of Green, Dunne. Wag~ her, and Gehel will start in addition to Seidcnberg behind the plate. Both Willie Kruse and Patsy Pncochn will see mound duty as might Alex Yur— sis. new rookie for the Hawks, de- and were shown load tests on two l2 by l2 foot concrete floor panelsl Students will be inspecting the l elaborate display of materiais for building: construction in line hasn»_ mcnt of Chopin Hall. 5 Sepia tC'ficma in Lead: U’Brien’a 243 Higheatl l One team already has prueticallyl clinched a position in the bowling finals. The snph chems who were ‘ st of four teams to finish their schedule last week, have rolled up enough points to secure this place despite the fact that more scores will be in this week. At present the chcms head the list more or less because of the 2452 series they bowled last Friday. This coupled with their former total of 4586 gave them a score of 7038 for? the tournament play. The team, composed of Carpenter. Natinchclc, Cultra, Grigas, and Pincus, has been fairly consistent throughout the tourney and will enter the linals as the favorite. l 'l‘ho other outstanding- .l'caturc of the week was the crowning, of a new individual scoring king: when “Wild Bill” O’Brien of the senior mechs supplanted Winblad, the former holder of the mark which was 231.‘ Bill dropped a total of 243 pins to take the crown. Despite his high score. the team bowled only 223]- . “I“i'osh" Tuesday. April l2. i938 Forecaster Sages~~ (Continued from. page three) providing the li'eshi'ncn don’t pull an. other one like they did last year. Since no one has seen them play yet, there is no opinion about them that can be expressed. ’l‘lio Soph Meclis look the stronger of the two teams in that they have a couple of fence busters wlm. if they co-opemtc with the steady hitting o‘f Pacocha and Wolniak, will not only win their bracket but the school chain~ pionship as well. The chums will have to rely upon their fielding with powerful batting by three or four members of the team. This team is practically the same as last year when it sprang an upset while playing under the title of Meteors. These are the known teams of the tournament but thon—-—a “dark horse" scored last iar. and it appears that they will be eliminated. They now need a 2500 series to make the finalfi. If they should be eliminated, the tourna» ment will lose its most colorful fig- ure as well as; its high scorer. Step right up and ask for Chesterfields . . . they’ll give you, more [)Ieasare than any cigarefly you we?" saw/seal 1‘3fiéfil