s63 THE MICHIGAN DAILY I TOTAL IN MAINE, PARTIAL HERE: Eclipse of Sun To Facilitate Scientific Studies By ALTON BLAKESLEE Associated Press Science Writer NEW YORK-The sun, earth and moon have a date today for a dazzling celestial treat-a total eclipse of the sun. For some ancients, an eclipse was a case of a dragon swallowing the sun. For today's scientists, it's a rare opportunity for a host of studies and measurements, with some as- tronomers planning to chase the moon's shadow in airplanes, and space satellites engaging in some special snooping, too. For the public, it can be an awe- some display as the sky darkens and the air cools, as stars appear and the great pearly halo or cor- ona of the sun springs into view. Full Spectacle Only a relative handful of Amer- icans will be lucky enough to see the full spectacle, for the eclipse will be total only along a, path, averaging about 60 miles wide, sweeping across Alaska, Canada and Maine. In Maine, totality will occur between 4:42 and 4:44 p.m., EST, depending on an observer's location. But, weather permitting, almost everyone else can see the sun par- tially eclipsed as the moon swings between the sun and the earth. The sun will be 83 per cent cover- ed in Ann Arbor, 94 per cent in the Boston area, 49 per cent for those in Miami, 77 per cent in Chicago, 54 per cent in Denver, and 34 per cent in San Francisco, for exam- ple. Hawaii loses out altogether. Your eyes can be irreparably damaged unless you take the greatest precautions in watching the show. Experts advise using a double thickness of black and white film which has been expos- ed and developed to maximum density. Ordinary sunglasses or a hunk of smoked glass are by no means safe enough; they warn. Indirect Viewing Best S U N I \ 11 iI SHADOW OF i THE MOON -I- SHADOW OF THE EAR TH During totality, the sun's outer atmosphere or corona glows in pale yellow and pearly white hues, reaching hundreds of thousands of miles into space. Behind the moon's rim, scarlet tongues of gases may come jetting up, the solar prominences born of violent reactions on the sun. As totality ends, Baily's Beads may be spotted again, then slowly the moon ends its obscuring journey, full daylight returns, sometimes to the puzzle- ment of birds which had taken to early roost. The eclipse begins in northern Japan about dawn, then the dark racing shadow of the moon sweeps over the Pacific, entering Alaska near Nunivak Island, across the Yukon Territory and Great Slave Lake, over Saskatchewan, Mani- tobe and Ontario and southern Quebec, then into central Maine. The path dashes out to sea at Bar Harbor, Me., less than three hours after it touched Japan. Japanese astronomers and scien- tists get the first crack at special eclipse studies, and are setting up for measurements of the pre-sun- rise zodaical light and the colors and polarization of light from the sun's corona. In Alaska, where the American Astronomical Society is meeting at the University of Alaska, profes- sional and amateur astronomers will have front row seats. Some astronomers aboard a spe- cially-equipped Royal Canadian Air Force turbo-prop plane will speed along the -moon's full shad- ow path, hoping to win an extra 18 seconds of total eclipse over the 100 seconds available on the ground. A DC-8 rigged as a flying ob- servatory is et to fly from Califor- nia into the Canadian eclipse path in a joint venture of the National Geographic Society and Douglas Aircraft Co. Astronomers from the Hayden Planetarium in New York and Smithsonian Astrophysical Ob- servatory in Cambridge and some newsmen and photographers will fly nearly eight miles high over Maine for a super view of the eclipse aboard a special American Airlines Jet eclipse flight. A Tiros weather satellite may help forecast cloud conditions for astronomers with equipment at lo- cations on the ground, and other instrumented satellites now circl- ing the earth may, from their high vantage points, take revealing peeks at phenomena associated with the eclipse. Canadian, American, German, British and Dutch astronomers will work from pre-selected sites on the North American pass of the eclipse probing for new under- standings and details of what nature reveals when the moon comes along to make the sun blink. r , "'rWo , n ooun locality and its figure (such as 21.00) To figure approximate eclipse mid-point, subtract 5 hours for Eastern Standard Time, 6 for Central, etc. Thus 21.30 in a Central zone would be 15.30, or 3.30 p.m. el444itvstb ,* .G WA'.'- r. rAP Nwtaue the ground. Or you can produce them yourself by poking numer- ous holes into cardboard held sev- eral feet above the ground. The big treats come to those in the path of totality, and Maine is expecting scores of thousands of eclipse viewers, at least some of them making the journey at urgings of space-conscious young- sters in the family. Television cameras will try to record the big show, too. Moon Over Sun Gradually the moon moves over rim. Some observers may spot the diamond ring effect, when light is streaming through only a single lunar valley. 3 3 ENDING - TODAY DIAL 8-6416 DIAL 5-6290 Hope bags that most elusive of all species.*~ an Ekberg! I' v t Y "{{,M- Vt . Y' t e1:;:r :":" ; ,+,.. r, v ,r v+"' M y4' [.v~v r y~e j' r¢ }j~j'I"+y.. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . v ':{fi+ DAILY OFFICIAL BULLETIN The Daily Official Bulletin is an official publication of The Univer- ity of Michigan for which The Michigan Daily assumes no editorial responsibility. Notices should be sent in TVPEWRITTEN form to Room 3564 Administration Building before 2 p.m. two days preceding publication. Registration and Records window Num- -Prof. Ingrid Strom, Indiana Univer- ber A, 1513 Admin. Bldg. sity, "Implications of Research for Eng- lisl in Secondary Schools": Aud. B, Aug. Teacher's Certificate Candidates: Angell Hall. . f All requirements for the teacher's der- 4:15 p.m.-School of Music Degree Re- tificate must be completed by Aug. 2. cital-James Miller, tenor: Aud. A, An- These requirements include the teach- gell Hall. a th statement :and i s t t +4 f l In all arear where the eclipse the sun's face, and for a minute is not total, indirect viewing as will cover it completely in Maine, safest. One method is to make a with but one millionth of the sun's small hole in a piece of cardboard, ordinary output of light and heat and hold it toward the sun, let- coming to earth. The sky darkens ting the sun's image ble projected to about half the light from a full through the hole onto a white moon, and stars and planets be- surface. On that tarket, you can come visible. watch as the moon takes a bite For an instant before the sun is out of the sun. entirely obscured, Baily's Beads 'Where sunlight is s h i n i n g may be seen-the last flashes and through foliage, you may see many rays of sunlight shining through little crescent suns projected onto valleys and gorges on the moon's conoe .e TEHNICOLOR MARIO ANN LANZA-BLYTH ;latrineA, KATHRYN AVA HOWARD GRAYSON "GARDNER'" KEEL t I STATING SUNDAY "NEVER LET GO" & "THE GREAT CHASE" HELD OVER 2ND BIG WEEK Dial HELD T Matinees...$..75c 2-6264Eves. & Sun. $1.00 Children........40c I I SATURDAY, JULY 201 Day Calendar 7:00 and 9:00 p.m.-Cinema Guild - Audrey Hepburn, Gregory Peck, and Ed-' die Albert in William Wyler's "Roman Holiday": Architecture Aud. 8:00 p.m.-Dept. of Speech Univ. Play- ers Summer Playbill-George Bernard Shaw's 'Androcies and the Lion": Ly- dia Mendelssohn Theatre. General Notices Seniors: College of L. S. & A., and Schools of Education,A Music, 'Public Health, and Business Admin.: Tentative lists of seniors for Aug. graduation have been posted on the bulletin board in the first floor lobby,, Admin. Bldg. Any changes therefrom should be re- quested of the Recorder at Office of er-s +otn te n r rw t u the Bureau of Appointments material. The oath should be taken as soon as possible in Room 1203 Univ. High School. The office is open from 8-12 and 1-5. Events Sunday. School of Music Degree Recital Carol Fenwick, pianist,' at 8:30, Sun., July 21, Lane Hall And. Events Monday 8:00 a.m.-School of Public Health Institute on Arthritis and Metalobic Diseases - Registration: Room 3038, School of Public Health. 2:00 p.m.-Audilo-Visual Education Center Filn Preview-"A Fire Called Jerimiah," "The French and Indian War," and "The Cave Community": Multipurpose Room, Undergraduate Li- brary., 4:00 p.m.--Dept. of English Lecture Series, "How English Should Be Taught" .. ,. /I~ileIat MICHIGAN Doctoral Examination for Robert Frank Adams, Economics; thesis: "De- terminants of Local Government Ex- penditures," Mon., July 22, 217 Econ. Bldg., at 1:30 p.m. Chairman, W. H. L. Anderson. Doctoral Examination for Robert Lin- dell Jones, Chemistry; thesis: "An Electron Microscopic Investigation ofn8 the Adsorption of Long-Chain Fatty1 Acil Monolayers on Glass," Mon., July 22, 3000 Chemistry Bldg., at 1:30 p.m. Chairman, L. 0. Brockway. Placement PLACEMENT, INTERVIEWS, Bureau of Appointments-Seniors & grad stu- dents, please call Ext. 3544 for inter- view appointments with the following: TUES., JULY 23-.- Des Moines- Community Playhouse - Seeking a Technical Director, with background in Scenic Design. Position will be equivalent of Assistant Direc- tor. Would like to interview men or women with such desire and back- ground. WED., JULY 24- Socony Mobil Oil Co.-Seeking men1 with any degree in any field- of con- centration for Marketing Training Pro- gram. Socony Mobil has no formalj Mgmt. trng. prog. as such. Instead, Management & administrative person- nel are selected from among the Mar-] keting & Sales Promotion Trainees.- Several openings in Detroit as well as world-wide locations. POSITION OPENINGS: Management Consultants in Detroit- Seeking Personal Secretary to Manager of Professional Placement Co. in North- ern Mich. Secretarial skills, interest in Personnel field. Any degree. Recent grad with above average scholastic standing. Age 21-25. Desire attractive, exception- ally intelligent young woman who can organize & work independently without supervision. Potential to advance to staff position. Oregon Civil Service-Vocational Re- habilitation Specialist I-Must meet one of the following requirements: a) MA in Vocational Rehabilitation; b) Degree plus 2 yrs. exper. as vocational rehab. counselor; c) Degree plus 3 yrs. exper. in counseling & guidance, so- cial work, educ., personnel mgmt., pub- lic employment service, or business mgmt. For further information, please call General Div., Bureau of Appointments, 3200 SAB, Ext. 3544. i ,,-A Sundjay, July 21, at 5:30 p.m. SUNDAY SUPPER. CLUB 4.;."delicatessen at its finest" College Libra "Half of our four-year collegesI and four-fifths of our junior col-I leges are inadequate as education-t al institutions if we. really believeI that the library is essential to edu- cation at the college level," Uni-1 versity Library Director Frederick H. Wagman said yesterday. Addressing the American LibraryI Association at its 1963 ChicagoI Conference, Wagman said, "Fail- ure to improve the majority of the existing college libraries . . ., may prejudice the opportunity for the intellectual growth of hundreds of, thousands of our young people." Wagman claimed that college students are forced to use public libraries, special libraries and li- braries available in the urban areas 'in an effort to overcome the inadequacies of the book col-, lections of their own institutions." However, he said, few of these oth- er libraries offer the student need- ed resources. The inadequacies of university ORGANIZATION NOTICES Gamma Delta, Hayes State Park (Irish Hills) for 11 a.m. Service & all- day outing of Northeastern Region of Gamma Delta, July 21, meet 10:15 a.m., 1511 Washtenaw. Lutheran Student Chapel, Worship & Communion, 10 a.m., Prof. E. Roma speaking on "The Philosophy of John Dewey," 7 p.m.; July 12, Hill at S. For-= est. Graduate Outing Club, Picnic-Swim, Sunday, 1:45 p.m., Rackham Bldg., Huron St. Entrance. U. of M. Friends of SNCC, Talk by Rev. Albert Cleague of Detroit, July 23, 8 p.m., Union, Rm. 3G. ries Lacking libraries are equally as serious, Wagman charged. "Few if any of them can meet the demands for book and reader space imposed by the growth of the collections and the increase in graduate and pro- fessional enrollment." He called "the intensified use of books" one of the most significant recent developments in higher ed- ucation. Strom To Speak On Research Role Prof. Ingrid Strom of Indiana University will speak on "Implica- tions of Research for English in Secondary Schools" at 4 p.m. Mon- day in Aud. B. The lecture is part of the summer series at the Uni- versity on secondary school Eng- lish teaching. Shows at 1-3-5-land 9 P.M THE MOST WONDERFUL ENTERTAINMENT EVEkR EVERI COLUMBA fCRLS 3 A KO[MAR 00Y t JNEX WD ANN- NY B B"UME MED 1. NEXT: WALT DISNEY'S "SUMMER MAGIC" NARRY SAITMN .AtBERI R. BROCCOLI Bob IAnitaf HOPO IEKb6rg I r -COM ING- "l'RMA LA DOUCE" I I ... ..; W., III III - - N Corned beef potato chips,l or pastrami sandwich; salad, pickets, beverage and dessert. only 75c CO ME (10 Crl J i 1*1 STARTS DIAL SUNDAY 8-6416 EUZABEH S EIS W AND IN ADDITION "THE / GENERAL" and 60 Years -* of Great Movie Chases SUMMER 1963 (All showings Friday and Saturday at 7 and 9 P.M., except where otherwise noted.) JULY 19, 20 William Wyler's ROMAN HOLIDAY Audrey Hepburn, Gregory Peck, FIRST PRESBYTERIAN CHURCH 1432 Washtenaw Ave. NO 2-4466 Ministers: Ernest T. Campbell, Malcolm Brown, Virgil Janssen. SUNDAY Worship at 9:00 and 10:30 a.m. Presbyterian Campus Center located at the Church. Staff: Jack Borckardt and Patrica Pickett Stoneburner. FIRST METHODIST CHURCH AND WESLEY FOUNDATION State and Huron Streets. Tel. 668-6881 Dr. Hoover Rupert, Minister Rev, M. Jean Robe and Rev. C. J. Stoneburner, Campus Ministers 9:00 a.m. and 11:15 a.m. Morning Wor- ship. "Believe the Best!" Sermon by Dr. Rupert. This service is broadcast over WOIA 1290AM, 102.9 FM from 11:15 a.m. to 12:15 p.m. SUNDAY 10:15 a.m. Seminar: "Our Mission Today"- discussion, Pine Room. TUESDAY 7:30 p.m. "Inquiry into Theological Issues" Guild House, 802 Monroe. n.Ai c"KyA BETHLEHEM UNITED CHURCH OF CHRIST 423 South Fourth Ave. Rev. Ernest Klaudt, Pastor Rev. A. C. Bizer, Associate Pastor 9:30 and 10:45 a.m. Worship Service. 9:30 and 10:45 a.m. Church School. 7:00 p.m. Student Guild LUTHERAN STUDENT CENTER AND CHAPEL National Lutheran Council Hill St. at S. Forest Ave. Henry O. Yoder, Pastor SUNDAY 9:00 a.m.-Bible Study. 10:00 a.m.-Worship Service and Communion. 7:00 p.m.-"The Philosophy of John Dewey" -Prof. Roma, Dept. of Philosophy. PICNIC-Saturday, July 20-Meet at Center at 2:30 p.m. UNIVERSITY LUTHERAN CHAPEL (The Lutheran Church-Missouri Synod) 1511 Washtenaw Ave. Alfred T. Scheips, Pastor James H. Pragman, Vicar Sunday at 9:30 a.m.-Bible Class. Sunday at 10:30 a.m.-Worship, Sermon by Pastor Scheips on "MARK: A Failure Who Succeeded" (Holy Communion). Sunday at 10:15 a.m.--Gamma Delta meets at chapel to leave for all-day Regional Outing at Hayes State Park, Irish Hills. Wednesday at 9:00-Discussion and Review of Martin Luther King's book, "Strength to Love." Wednesday at 10:00 p.m.-Midweek Devotion. ST. MARY'S STUDENT CHAPEL William and Thompson Streets Rev. John F. Bradley, Chaplain Rev. John J. Fauser, Assistant RELIGIOUS SCHEDULE Sunday Masses at 8:00, 9:30, 11:00, 12:00 and 1,2:30. Daily Masses at 7:00, 8:00, 9:00 and 12:00. NO 2-3580 Cr)' SA~BAAH FIRST BAPTIST CHURCH AND BAPTIST CAMPUS CENTER 512 and 502 E. Huron Rev. James Middleton, Minister Rev. Paul W. Light, Minister of Education (Minister to students) SUNDAY n0 . _ M,,.rninWo,,,h,, le ,d by U of M -ALL IN- 1! m ST. ANDREWS CHURCH and the EPSICOPAL STUDENT FOUNDATION Vlmff' AMUM'DIMIX I ,I