Gaines Selected Continued from page one large, chairman of the Millrace committee. The senate passed a motion by A.SUO vice-president Hollis Ran som to enlarge the athletic card committee. Sam Vahey. senator at large, was named chairman of the committee. Committee members are Don Smith, .Gary West and Tom A rata, senators at large, and Russ Cowell, junior class represen tative. Pictures Reported Successful The committee will continue the study started last winter term of adopting some better means of identification for athletic cards. Vahey reported that question naires returned from the Univer sity of Washington. University of Southern California, Washington State College and Oregon State college all indicated success with picture cards. Len Calvert, vice-president of the senior class, and Marcia Cook, sophomore representative, ' were appointed to contact other schools during the summer to determine what controls are used over ex change assemblies. A senate committee was ap pointed to assist Kenneth S. Ghent, faculty adviser to foreign students, in orienting foreign stu dents to the campus. Doug Johnson, president of the Oregon Insurance society, spoke to the senate briefly on the ASUO group insurance plan. Johnson ex pressed confidence that the num ber of policies sold will increase next year. $6000 Paid in Claims He said that he had discussed the group insurance plan with Oregon State's chairman, and that $6000 in claims were paid to OSC ENDS SATURDAY WarAraow Steel LADY UfttfEO ARTISTS STARTS SUNDAY WO WHffE MAM Dgg CROSSED IT! NO RED MAN EYERWENT BEYOND IT! !■ i l • [ i [ Released thru UKiTED ARTISTS i. VIVID COLOR by Color Carp, of America Q*?mTitCoioi. raotKai SKfflH S(£PU£«-Sa»«n« t>» mchabo maihaum mi ftUM-HUSOU ■ ltor» by Wuy St tow* taMfcn, ad«M fram Ira boot, "Tb* (M Benr ■ fra*>:>« 0) *WIC AUBtmO HJtM ». OMCCO.I • Oir«t»l b, TEWIC£ row*: J saeo'wuuMcm |$U 4.4152 tilG&Yf DRIVE-IN THEATR students during the past year. Kitty Fraser, a member of the housing committee during the past year, explained the work already i done in establishing a permanent housing committee for campus ! visitors. She told the senate that the question needs more study. Bud Hinkson, junior class pres* : ident. was appointed chairman of i the housing committee. Committee j members are Harriet Hornbeck, sophomore class representative, and Light. Summers opened the meeting by ; outlining the general duties of the ; senate. “There are two major areas in which we should accomplish a lot." Summers said. He requested that the senate take the lead in pro moting school spirit and in stimu lating respect for the ASUO and its functions. DICK TRACY, HERE WE COME UO Does Transistor Work by Joe Gardner Emerald Newt Editor Dick Tracy's wrist radio is not entirely fantasy. In fact, it may become a reality ns the result of research currently being; conduct ed on the University of Oregon campus. This research is in the field of semi-conductors, a whole class of substances which fall halfway be tween those like copper which con duct electricity very well and those like rubber which don't con duct it at all. It has been found that certain of these semi-conduc tors in minute sizes can be used as transistors to replace the vac uum tubes in your radio or TV set. Lighter Equipment Seen Electronic equipment of the fu ture may be smaller and lighter if the Oregon project and others Campus YWCA to Join Centennial Celebration The campus YWCA, in conjunc tion with the national organiza tion, will be celebrating the YW centennial during the 1954-55 school year. The year-long celebration will have three goals. They are: l» Rededication to the purpose of the YW; 2) Strengthening and in creasing membership; and 3) rais ing a $5,000,000 centennial fund. The University YW has pledged $1500 toward the fund. A special YW centennial board, composed of students and advis ory members, has been sent up to work toward these goals. Advisory members are Mrs. Carl Wicklund, Mrs. R. Grant Mortenson, and Mrs. Hubert F. Willoughby. Student members of the YW cen tennial board are: Ann Erickson, chairman; Sally Cummins, pub licity: and Barbara Bailey. Karen Dahlberg, Mary Rae Bergeron, Mary Sweeney, Margaret Tyler and Ann Stearns. The campus YW will be work ing with the Central Lane YWCA on the centennial program. —r Fulbright Competion For 1955-56, Open Fulbright competition for gradu ate study abroad for 1955-56 i9 now open, the Institute of Interna tional Education, N.Y. has an nounced. Fulbright awards are authorized by the State Department under the Fulbright act and are made entirely in the currency of the country in which the winner studi es. They are financed by the sale of war surplus property abroad. Pay for One Year Awards cover transportation, tuition, books and living expenses for one school year. To be eligible for a Fulbright award, a graduate student must be a citizen of -the United States, have an accredited college degree, know a foreign language and be in good physical condition. Final selection of grantees is made by a board of foreign scholarships ap pointed by President -Eisenhower. iNDRIHiEND, D/Uue Utiltoabte NOW PLAYING Walter Wanger’s RAW-TRUTH ALSO “Affair in Monte Carlo’’ in Technicolor With Color Cartoons & News Fulbright adviser at the Univer sity is K. S. Ghent, associate pro fessor of mathematics. Folders de scribing overseas study awards may be secured from him. Competition for the 1955-56 school year ends Nov. 1 of this year. Oct. 15 is the closing date for application to study in New Zeal and. Under the Fulbright program. 3500 U.S. students have studied abroad since 1947 when the pro gram was established. like it across tlio nation arc suc cessful. In addition to being small, transistors arc important because they would eliminate filaments, which get hot and burn out eas ily. Transistors would also last years, whereas many vacuum tubes last only months. The Oregon project In the field of semi-conductors is operated un der a grant awarded last month by the U. S, Army Signal Corps. It. T. Ellickson, head of the physics department, is in charge of the project. Working with him are I’. A. Goldberg, assistant professor of physics, and three graduate stu dents James T. Nelson, Jeremy P. Taylor and Herbert Mathews. Hum Worked A Year Ellickson actually ha* been working on the project here for about a year. Previous to the awarding of the army contract, he worked with a grant from the University's graduate school. In 1952 he was on leave for six months working at the University of Chicago on a closely related problem. There are only two pure ele ments that seem to behave well as semi-conductors, E 11 i c k s o n ex plained. These are silicon and ger manium. However, certain com pounds of other elements also act as semi-conductors. Much of the research is with such compounds. Oregon Works on ('otii|Miiinds The specific ar«a of the Ore gon project is with compounds of tin and magnesium. Both are good conductors of electricity, but when formed into compounds they lose their metallic properties and be come semi-conductors' Researchers at other colleges and universities across the nation are working on different com pounds. When the work at Oregon on tin and magnesium is comple ted, the researchers will next tac kle compounds of magnesium and silicon. No Dingy Hideouts Gone forever, apparently, are the days of the alchemists when scientists worked in dingy, secret rooms. Work on the Oregon pro ject is carried on in a large and well-lighted room in the basement of the Science building. A clut tered hodge-podge of equipment, which somehow makes sense to the physicist, fills the room. Work revolves around an induc tion furnace, but don't think of the furnace as a huge brick oven, glowing with white hot coals. An induction furance is actually a HERBERT J. YATES presents FLIGHT NURSE JOAN LESLIE- FORREST TUCKER * REPUBLIC PICTURE ALSO PLAYING INVADERS ATTHE POLE! RED SNOW •taring GUY MADISON With Color Cartoon & News copper coll protruding from n rr» ther complicated piece of much* incry. It. was built by graduate students for considerably leas than $.'br)00, the commercial price for such a piece of equipment. Heated and Cooled A carefully weighed amount of tin and magnesium Is placed In a graphite rod, which Is then Insert ed In the coll for heating to tem peratures of up to MOO degrees ; fohrenheit. After the compound is I removed from the furnace, it i.i al lowed to cool. The researchers then must make a series of rneas I urementa to see if the product pos sesses the desired properties. Preparation of the compound is S by no means haphazard, nor do the researchers proceed on guess work. Much paper work must be done before each experiment. There is a very substantial amount I of theoretical knowledge on the subject, according to Ellickson. Although results can be predicted In the office, they must be proved In the lab, he added. Work In General Field Actually the Oregon project does not deal with translators, but rather with the general field of semi-conductors. These pinhead aired replacement.1! for vacuum tubes are being produced at such commercial laboratories as Gener al Electric, Radio Corporation of America and the Bell Telephone company. Much of the early work in this field was done by Bell, which continues to lead in the field. A prediction for th<- future? In dications arc that the electronic industry is Just getting underway with the development of the tran sistor, El lick son said. Hearing aids, raidos and television sets of the future may be revolutionized as the result of their use. But for now, EUlckson and his associates are Just trying to learn as much as possible about semi conductors. r HEILIGa - NOW PLAYING - "Prisoner of War" Ronald Reagan Steve Forrest Dewey Martin plus Travel, Novelty, News Cartoon "it Should Happen to You" Judy Holliday Peter Lawford FRIDAY - SATURDAY "STRANGER WORE A GUN" Randolph Scott Claire Trevor western "SEA DEVILS" Kook Hudson - Yvonne DcCarlo Tech-Drama SUNDAY "HERE COME THE GIRLS" Bob Hope - Tony Martin "SAADIA" Cornell Wilde Technicolor