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[[advertisement]] NOW...TELEVISED PICTURES VIA TELEPHONE-TYPE LINES [[image - diagram of flight progress system]] SUB-SEA AIRLINES BOSTON OPERATIONS FLIGHT PROGRESS CHART FLIGHT: DP 6 T.V. CAMERA ELECTROSTORE LOW-COST TRANSMISSION LINK ELECTROSTORE SUB-SEA AIRLINES ATLANTIS OPERATIONS FLIGHT PROGRESS CHART FLIGHT: DP 6 MAIN OFFICE STOCK EXCHANGE T.V. CAMERA ELECTROSTORE LOW-COST TRANSMISSION LINK ELECTROSTORE T.V. PROJECTOR BRANCH OFFICE REMOTE LOCATION [[/image]] BAND-WIDTH CONVERSION MAKES POINT-TO-POINT TV ECONOMICAL From Airport to Airport... from Wall Street to Broker... from Central Office to Branch... Communication by Television over voice-type channels is now available. FASTER THAN FACSIMILE Far faster than facsimile, the system using Image Instruments' "Electrostores" now permits rapid, accurate, economical transmission of images and text. Sample-storage technique using high resolution television equipment allows quality reproduction after transmission over standard telephone lines. For further information covering your particular application get in touch with Lester C. Smith '50, President. [[image - logo]][[/image]] 2300 WASHINGTON ST. NEWTON LOWER FALLS 62, MASS. Telephone (Boston) WOodward 9-8440 [[/advertisement]] Individuals Noteworthy (Continued from page 44) The New Provost CHARLES H. TOWNES, one of the nation's most distinguished physicists, came to M.I.T. this fall as Provost. In this post he will share with the President the responsibility for general supervision of the Institute's educational and research programs. "The office of Provost," President Julius A. Stratton, '23, said in announcing the appointment, "is being re-established at M.I.T. in recognition of the continuing growth and development of the Institute and of the tremendous range and variety of our interests. We are fortunate to secure a man of such exceptional scientific and administrative competence as Dr. Townes to fill this important position." Dr. Townes has been on leave from Columbia University for the last year to serve as vice-president and director of research for the Institute for Defense Analyses, a non-profit organization operated by M.I.T. and eight other universities. He is best known for his work on the theory and application of masers. "Maser" is an acronym for "microwave amplification by stimulated emission of radiation." As a member of the Bell Telephone Laboratories staff from 1939 to 1947, he did extensive work on radar bombing systems and in the then emerging field of microwave spectroscopy. He became associate professor of physics at Columbia in 1948, professor in 1950, and after serving two years as executive director of the Columbia Radiation Laboratory he became chairman of the physics department there. Sloan Teaching Interns SEVEN men from six schools are now Sloan teaching interns in the M.I.T. School of Industrial Management. They are Curtis H. Jones and Bernt P. Stigum, from Harvard; Arthur J. Boness, Jr., University of Chicago; Ernest A. Lowe, University of Leeds; James B. Ludke, University of Massachusetts; Donald E. Porter, San Francisco State College; and Richard D. Terrell, Oxford University. (Concluded on page 48) 46 THE TECHNOLOGY REVIEW