9_ Ili TIFF MICHIGAN DAILY F"= = m P A w %.- - - --- - -.w- Ij Peach Mountain Telescope Nears January Completion By BRUCE COLE An 85-foot wide radio telescope second largest in the world-is fast nearing completion on Peach Mountain, 15 miles northwest of Ann Arbor. The telescope, when completed,7 will receive radio waves from the: sun, moon, planets, and, a variety of nebulae and galaxies, Prof. Fred Haddock of the astronomy / and electrical engineering depart,- ments said., The giant "dish" has been com- pleted, but the system for feeding radio waves into the amplifier isn't ready yet. The telescope is scheduled for completion by next month.Y Prof. Haddock, director of the project, said from a study of the intensity of the waves and their frequency, theories will be de-, veloped on the generation of the waves in nature. Study Basic Physics NEAR COMPLETION -- Clist "The mediums are usually hot NERCMLTO -Gst gaseshand magnetic fields. Studies Mountain near Ann Arbor is an of the basic physics of these me- for use sometime next month. diums will be done through the England - is any larger. waves, Prof. Haddock said. theories resulting from the studies panels have been put on. The pan- Practical applications of the els, shaped in the form of a para- theories resulting from the studies bolic reflector, will catch the ra- will be used in the manufacture dio waves as they come to the Army Plans To Launch Space Probe By The Associated Press The Army missile team, hoping to shoot a space probe past the moon and toward the sun, is try- ing something net in the area of launching vehicles. The launching rocket will be a four-stage vehicle using the pow- erful Jupiter intermediate range ballistic missile as the booster. After the 17,00-mile Jupiter gives the payload its big push, three high speed stages composed of solid fuel sergeant rockets will blaze into action in sequence. Breaks From Gravity That should give the 15-pound probe enough acceleration to pull away from the main drag of the earth's gravity, according to ex- perts. As it passes the moon's course, two tiny photoelectric cells will be activated by the light, re- laying a signal back to earth, ac- cording to Dr. Wehrner Von Braun and Brig. Gen. John B. Medaris, two of the Army's top missilemen. The conical-shaped probe will also carry a tiny radio transmitter and two geiger-mueller counters to measure the intense radiation that hovers above the earth. Sees Good Chance Von Braun said recently that if the rockets do their job the chances for success are very good. He added that there is only a bare chance of actually hitting the moon. Against that chance, how- ever, the probe will be sterilized so that no earth germs may con- taminate the lunar surface. There is an extremely slight chance also that the probe may get caught in the moon's weak gravitational field and for a short period become a lunar satellite. ening on the summit of Peach 85-foot radio telescope scheduled Only one similar telescope - in I of thermonuclear generators, space vehicles and the problem of com- munication in space. "There has been talk of relay stations for television and radio and the problem now is the trans- mission of signals on higher fre- quencies than the waves in order to prevent interference," Prof. Haddock said. Applies to Radar Another item which relies on in- formation of this nature is radar. Radar may mistake noise effects of the radio waves coming from the sun to be noise effects from an enemy missile. Through study of the frequency and intensity, radar can be made to overcome this fault. To date, the telescope frame has been erected and the aluminum Car Production SoarigHigh Car production this week soared to its highest level in more than a year. Ward's Automotive Reports an- nounced yesterday the past week's )utput at 147,490 cars, more than any other week since the one end- ing Nov. 23, 1957, when produc- tion figures were listed at 151,846. The production rises - 20 per' cent above last week -were at- tributed partly to the fact that; the Thanksgiving holiday reduced output last week. earth in sheet form. The waves will then be focused into a small point, reflected up to a tripod obpect which concentrates the energy and sends it down a small pipe to recording devices. This tripod energy concentrator also acts as a discriminator, not picking up signals from other areas than where the telescope is aimed. tUV Exhillits Art Works Of Slusser An exhibition, "Prints and Drawings in Honor of Jean Paul Slusser," is currently being shown in the main floor display area of the University Museum of Art in Alumni Memorial Hall. The exhibition consists of 74 items, six of which are prints and the rest drawings. Half the prints were given to the Museum by Prof. Slusser, while the others were purchased by him for the collec- tion. About 35 prints were chosen by Prof. Slusser during a trip to Europe shortly after his retire- ment as director of the museum. There he chose examples by con- temporary printmakers-French, Italian, British and German., An equal number were chosen for the exhibition from the many works of modern and historic in- terest, which Prof. Slusser has presented to the University over a period of years. Almost all the prints are by contemporaries except for a few 19th century French prints and several by older masters. The lat- ter are 16th, 17th, and 18th cen- tury examples by German, Dutch, French, Italian, Spanish, Czecho- slovakian and Swiss printmakers. The two largest groups are German and French contemporary prints. The media include litho- graphs, woodcuts, aqua-tints, dry-' points, etchings and linoleum cuts. Some are in black and white and some in color,. "The University's collection re- flects Prof. Slusser's catholicity of' interest and his sound judgement" and taste," Miss Helen Hall, cura- tor, said. Since the tripod acts as a shield against stray waves, a stronger signal can be sent to the record- ing devices, Prof. Haddock said. Work was begun on the tele- scope on Aug. 1, 1958. Expected time of completion will be by spring of 1959, and the director said a dedication will be sched- uled at this time. To Complete Wiring Work still to be done includes the $7,000 wiring system, a storage house, 300 measurements of the reflector area to insure the pre- cision curve necessary for the greatest accuracy, and the align- ment of the gear teeth which will move the telescope to various aeas of the sky. A main control house has also been erected in which are control panels for manually operatiing the telescope, as well as room for a three-man office staff. Call Prof. Haddock Money for equipment and struc- tures except the foundations and the permanent houses was given by the Office of Naval Research. The remainder of the outlay was made by the University. The entire cost of the project is $300;000, The telescope is the best in the country for precision recording of short wave lengths of around three centimeters, the professor said. Other scanning telescopes of comparable size are the rational Radio Observatory's 85-foot, and California Institute of Technolo- gy's pair of 90-footers. The University originally re- ceived the Naval grant because Prof. Leo Goldberg of the astrono- my department wanted to do work in radio astronomy. He went to Dean Stephen Atwood of the en- gineering college and together they went to the Navy in 1954. Prof. Haddock was called to the University to direct the pro- ject in 1956 from the Office of Naval Research. Two main problems in the con- struction of the telescope have been the making of a perfect parabola reflecting surface and precision axis alignments. One alignment is parallel to the axis of the earth's rotation to one- hundredth of a degree, and the other alignment is perpendicular to the earth's axis by the same de- gree of precision, he said. Put on Automatic Beside manual control, the tele- scope can be put on automatic controls so that it can track a star or the sun all the way across the sky. Readings are taken every few seconds and plotted on an am- plitude-time curve graph. All graphs from the telescope will be interpreted at the Univer- sity. The main product from the telescope is the publication of scientific articles, data and theor- ies drawn from the data. RUSHING REGISTRATION LAST DAY 9:00-5:00 LEAGUE $3.00 Registration Fee Memoriam -Warsaw (MP)-Poland's great- est poet intoned a recessional today for Boris Pasternak, the outcast of Soviet Russian lit- erary circles. Antoni Slominski, President of the Polish Union of Writers, did not publicly mention Pas- ternak by name -he didn't have to. More than 300 leading writers and intellectuals ap- plauded the unnamed poet, de- spairing in his Dacha (Rus- sian country house). (The Mbscow Soviet Writers Union recently advised the Sov- iet government to exile the No- bel Prize winning author of "Doctor Zhlvago" but he has been allowed to remain at his Dacha in Russia after having declined the prize). Slominski compared Paster- nak to Diogenes, the ancient Greek philosopher who spent his life searching for an honest man. Slominski was just back from Paris where he was a Polish delegate to a United Nations educational, scientific and cul- tural organization (UNESCO) session. He read out his verses at a long-scheduled meeting on his return. Slowly and sorrowfully, Slo- mnski moved from the Joyous toines of his opening -verses to the great climax, braise for Pas- ternak. Painting a picture of free Paris, he then intoned: "And, meanwhile, in the far North, "In the wet fog, "On a bench made of birch, "In front of a Dacha, "Sits a poet: "Diogenes in a barrel "Whose staves are tightening his heart with despair." Urban Renewal URBAN RENEWAL AREA-The letters and numbers of house lots indicate the proposed Urban Renewal reuse plans. The va indicate either a one- or two-family dwelling to be built and the "C's" stand for future commercial uses. U' I' f 1 y j '- / J _ - _ i L. ! / i. Perplexed GIFT LIST A MILE LONG Adfi.Ad-'W A.&AW-1-0 a" W-i Old i--AgbdhfW tw.dr a". is DROP IN AND BROWSE AT I I I I I 1959 Christmas Present Finder . -. 1 Books-Records-Stationery Toys-Games-Typewriters Radios---Michigan Souvenirs ChristmasCards and Wrappings : * - Make.. Your Christmas Shop ping ,.1 parcels and structures would be pacethandrss e~ a aN ational R oundup acquired by the City as part of the project, Guy Larcom, Jr., city administrator, said yesterday. These include 44 residential struc- Gunaca Returns to Detroit tures and 24 commercial and in- SHEBOYGAN, Wis. () - John Gunaca, sought by Wisconsin dustrial structures. authorities for more than four years in an early Kohler Co. strike Not Reclaimable clash, was on his way back to Detroit yesterday, free on bond 12 They break down to 17 resi- hours after he was returned to Sheboygan. dences, housing 27 families, which He was arraigned on two counts of assualt with intent to do cannot be reclaimed in any fash- great bodily harm in the beating of Kohler non-strikers William ion. Seven buildings will be ac- Bersch Sr. and William Jr. at Sheboygan Falls July 6, 1954. quired for planning purposes and Municipal Judge Clarence Whiffen rejected District Attorney 20 more structures, housing 28 David Weber's motion for a bond of $50,000, and set bond at $7,500. He exces ie costs (more than $5,000) ordered a preliminary hearing on the charges Dec. 18. necessary for their rehabilitation. Some 11 mixed-use structures Little Rock Election Probed (those used for both commercial WASHINGTON (AP) - A House Committee yesterday took the and residential purposes such as first steps toward a possible inquiry into the election of segregation- a store with an aoartment above ist Dale Alford to Congress over Rep. Brooks Hays of Little Rock, Ark,. it) will be purchased by the City. The committee, which was set up to check on campaign expen- These house 17 families. ditures, said it would consider a complaint alleging irregularities in All of the families displaced the write-in campaign by Alford. must be given safe, sanitary, ade-. Squate housing, Mayor Eldersveld The complaint came from John F. Wells, publisher of the weekly explained. This, he explained, Arkansas Recorder. He said an investigation would disclose various means the financially able must evils including a conspiracy involving Gov. Orval Faubus to "over- be given the most liberal mort- turn the will of the majority of Democrats." gage-financing terms possible to* * build or purchase new homes, Health, Medical Research Year Seen either in or outside the area. UNITED NATIONS, N. Y. WP) -- The United Nations General Federal Requirements Assembly recommended unanimously yesterday that 1961 be made The federal government's re- an international public health and medical research year. quirements for an acceptable plan It adopted a Ukrainian resolution urging that the UN-affiliated ' requires ethati -n,' rloa tedalay. _ MAIN SHOP on Forest off SU Corner opposite Campus Theatre SPORTSWEAR SEPARATES at Campus Togs 1111 South U. 1 % Blocks from Main Shop 1 77,11 " -: ." We'll be glad to help 1 1 I F"