__ TU M~cHGAN ill TELESCOPE TROUBLES: Sevei-Days' Scrubbing In Store for 'U' Mirror , , The mirror of the University ob- servatory's 37 inch telescope is about to have its ahnual bath. A considerably longer job than the ordinary Saturday night dip, however, the bath and the subse- quent recoating of the glass with Lyster, Maker Of Filter, Dies In Washington The Michigan alumnus who made it possible for thousands of University veterans to drink puri- fied water from a Lyster bag dur- ing their service days died last Wednesday in Washington, D. C. Col. William J. L. Lyster, Uni- versity graduate of the class of '92, the inventor of the bag, was buried in Arlington Cemetery. Heart dis- ease was the cause of death. Receiving his degree of bachelor of philosophy, Col. Lyster joined the army medical corps in 1899 and later received an M.D. from the Detroit College of Medicine and a Ph.D. from the University of Pennsylvania. He invented the bag for use in World War I, and it was later per- fected and enlarged for use in the last war. The unattractive con- traption consists of a canvas bag containing a solution of chlorine, and suspended on tripods. Water from jungle streams and bomb-ruined city conduits was run through the bag to purify it for consumption by the army and navy. This purification process re- moved typhoid, dysentery, and other harmful bacteria. Col. Lyster was liaison officer between the British and American armies during World War I, and the recipient of the Order of Com- panion of St. Michael and St. George, from the British govern- ment. Library Group To Meet Today Reunion To Include Luncheon at Union The Library Science Alumni As- sociation will mark the 20th anni- versary of the establishment of tie department with the holdingt of a reunion today. The program for the alumni meeting includes a luncheon at 12:15 p.m. in the Michigan Union, with Miss Katharine Harris of the Detroit Public Library, presiding. Miss Harris is president of the As-1 sociation. Other speakers at the luncheon will be Mrs. Ione E. Dority, chief librarian of the Uni- versity Bureau of Government, and Dr. R. H. Gjelsness, of the de- partment of library science. Dr.'William W. Bishop, Librar- ian Emeritus of the University, will speak to the alumni group at 2:30 p.m. in the Rackham Build-c ing on "Biographical Fragments." The lecture is open to the public.r A adedie. ) (Continued from Page ]) aluminum will require the equiv- alent of seven work days. The efficiency of the mirror will be increased 300 per cent by the cleaning. Prof. Orren C. Mohler of the astronomy department will offici- ate at the ablutions. He will be assisted by Prof. Leo Goldberg. Removing from the telescope the 400 pound mirror, which is valued at $25,000, is the most ticklish part of the job. One slip of the pulley which lifts the glass from its mount and lowers it through a specially constructed hole in the floor could be fatal. However, there has been no casualty during the annual clean- ings thus far. The same glass has been used since 1911, when the telescope was built. When the mirror has come safe- ly to rest after its perilous jour- ney, it will be cleaned chemically with caustic potash, hydrochloric acid and alcohol. It will then be placed in a va- cuum tank, to which a special paint has been applied to stop any possible leaks. All air will be re- moved from the tank by a suction pump, small pieces of aluminum will be attached to tungsten fila- ments, and electricity run through the filaments. Tufts to offer Stage Course Credit to Be Given In Summer Theatre University students may attend a summer session drama course to be offered on a full-time nine- credit basis at Tufts College, Med- ford, Massachusetts, it was an- nounced yesterday by DIr. John F. Tilton, director. The course, which will be held from July 1 to August 16, will ad- mit fifteen men and ten women. It will be conducted as an actor's theatre, producing five plays, each for six nights a week, in the cam- pus theatre for audiences from Boston and its suburbs. Individual and group instruc- tion in traditional and experimen- tal stage techniques will be given by Dr. Marston Balch, head of the Tufts department of drama, and Prof. John R. Woodruff of Tufts. Students will form the casts of the plays and technical production details will be handled by the thea- tre staff. College drama majors, graduate students, teachers and directors of school and community plays are eligible for enrollment in the course, to which the benefits of the G. I. Bill are applicable. Bank Course Being Offered A training course in In- vestment Banking is being con- ducted at the Rackham Building in Detroit by Prof. M. H. Water- man, of the business administra- tion school. Open to employes of member firms of the Investment Bankers Association of America, the course is designed to cover, the fields of corporation finance, corporate and government securities and invest- ment banking in its relation to other economic institutions. Lectures by leaders in the field of investment banking will supple- ment university instruction in the course. Course sponsors are the School of Business Administra- tion and the Michigan group of the Investment Bankers Associa- tion. Aviation Questions To Highlight Quiz "Stump the Professor," the Uni- versity's weekly quiz program, will consider aviation questions during its broadcast over WJR at 2:30 p.m. today. Prof. Waldo Abbot, quizmaster, will put the questions to William B. Stout, chairman of the Michi- gan State Department of Aeronau- tics and four faculty members: Dr. Frank E. Robbins, assistant to the president; Prof. Emerson W. Conlon and David T. Williams, of the aeronautical engineering de- partment and Prof. George Kiss, of the geography department. The program has been arranged in honor of Michigan Aviation Week and the dedication of the University's Willow Run Airport. Fraternity Picnic Phi Lambda Upsilon, honorary chemical fraternity, will hold a picnic at 1 p.m. today at Edison Field, beyond the Arborteum along the Huron River. The affair is Reading List For-Humadnities Coirses Given 16 Clses Required For Tr'il clas-see Sixteen literary classics will compose the required reading list of Humanities 1 and 2, the new great books course for freshmen, Prof. Clark Hopkins, of the clas- sics department, said yesterday. The course will begin in the fall on a two year trial basis. Greek and Latin classics will be covered in Humanities 1, Prof. Hopkins said. Medieval, Renais- sance and modern literature will be studied the second term. Instructors for the courses will be drawn from the English, clas- sics, history, philosophy, geogra- phy, romance language and Ger- man departments, Prof. Hopkins said. The instructors will be free to stress their own particular fields and to use their own techniques for stimulating student interest, he said. The required list of reading is taken from a list of 30 readings compiled for a simlar course at Columbia University, Prof. Hop- kins said. The list includes, for the first semester, Greek plays, works by Plato, Aristotle, Homer, Herodotus, Thucydides, Vergil, Tacitus and the Bible. The sec- ond semester list includes Dante's "Inferno," Shakespeare's comedies and tragedies, Cervante's "Don Quixote," Milton's "Paradise Lost," Moliere's comed i es, Fielding's "Tom Jones" a n d Goethe's "Faust." Classes finishing the required books ahead of schedule will read up to a maximum of ten additional authors from an optional list, Prof. Hopkins said. Commenting on the Columbia schedule, Prof. Hopkins said that although it calls for one book a week, the committee for the Uni- versity course is limiting the list of required books in order to allow more thorough coverage of each one. Prof. Hopkins estimated that there will probably be eight sec- tions of 25 students each. Department Adds Astronomy i1, 12 A new course open to freshmen, astronomy 11 and 12, will be added to the astronomy department this fall. The course will aim primarily at giving students an understanding of the scientific method, as well as acquainting them with the solar system and the universe. It will also integrate other sciences pre- viously studied. Library,... (Coninued from Page 1) :uppiez sthe material at the re- quist of the sevice itself. A lot of clipping from newspa- pers aid magazines goes on in the extension service. In the thirty years of its existence fifteen man- sized filing cabinets have been filled to the brim. The extent of the information is as wide as the field of printed matter itself. In answer to the question, "How do you know what to clip?" an as- sistant said that only experience with the different kinds of requests gives some idea as to where to ap- ply the scissors. "We have to be prepared for emergencies," she added. This year when the state high schools were debating about social- ized medicine, the extension serv- ice sent out pamphlets to 125 high schools. Church News Bishop Leslie Marston, noted re- ligious leader, will address the Michigan Christian Fellowship on "An Examination of the Christ- ian Experience" at 4:30 p.m. to- morrow at Lane Hall. The Student Religious Associa- tion will hold its annual banquet at 6:15 p.m. today at Lane Hall. Kenneth Morgan, chaplain at Colgate College, will be guest speaker. Morgan was director of the SRA from 1937 to 1941. Allene Golinkin, '47Ed, has been awarded the annual Arnold Schiff Interfaith Memorial Scholarship for "outstanding leadership in de- veloping and strengthening inter- faith ideals on the University campus." James Trautwein, '47, is second place winner, and Roland Ure, '47E, received honorable mention. Theta Sigma Elects Officers New officers and initiates have been selected by Theta Sigma Phi, national honoraxry professional journalism society. President of the Alpha Theta chapter of the group is Vivian Bean, with Eleanor Brightmeyer, the new vice-president; Alice Carlson, treasurer; and Esther Giovannone, secretary. New members of the society are: Lois Altman, Jean Baird, Caroline Godley, Helen Gregory, Gloria Johnston, Ann Leverenz, Betty Jane Lobensky, Holly Pederson, Monica Stevens, Laurette Taylor, Adele Trenchi, Mary Lou Webb and Virginia Frye. AP' FP JT HOMETOWN SOUVENIR - Over the fireplace in his home in far-off Hollywood, actor William Bendix has en. J 'shrined a street marker from Brooklyn, his old home town.( H A P P Y C O U P L E - The proud husband and admiring, wife are Mr. and Mrs. Eric Guerin, snapped after hubby, had ridden Jet Pilot to victory in the Kentucky Derby./ I N CO CN I T O-Margaret O'Brien, child actress, didn't go quite as far as smoked glasses on a trip to New York, but claimed nobody recognized lher In these spectacles. T R A C T O R S F O R O V E R S E A S-First shipment of 1,000 tractors bought by UNRRA for Greece, Poland,.China and the Philippines is inspe-te4 by Frank Cohen at Empire factory, Phila.I Campus Highlights ' y Council on Academic FreedoM, hosts to the delegates, the prospec- tus drawn up by his group and similar groups at Wayne, Michi- gan State and Olivet will best ex- press the "purpose, spirit and tenor of the meeting." The prospectus in question rec- ognizes that a healthy and vigor- ous educational system is a prize necessity for a democratic nation, and thus the preservation of aca- demic freedom and the integrity of educational institions is the con- cern of all citizens and citizens' or- ganizations. "In view of certain recent and impending events in Michigan and elsewhere throughout the country, which constitute a threat to aca- demic freedom," the prospectus reads, "it is imperative that think- ing people take stock of the situa- tion and guarantee that their voices be heard." Authors Pubhlish Hopwood Books Two Hopwood award winners have published books recently. Beth Merizon has published "April Trees," a collection of poems taken from her "The Skater and Other Poems" which won a $50 Hopwood poetry award in the summer of 1942. Miss Merizon is now on the staff of "The Religious Digest" in Grand Rapids. "Stop Looking and Listen," by Chad Walsh, will hit the book- stores June 4. Walsh won a $600 ma ',. 'Lr vnnxnA a nr xari, a nrma in Flute Recital ... Mary Alice Duncan, flutist, will present a recital at 8:30 p.m. to- day in Rackham Assembly Hall. She will be assisted by Dorothy Johnson Heger, Earl Bates and William Weichlein. Her program will include com- positions by Loeillet, Griffes, Dem- ersseman, Haydn, Ibert, and Kuh- laun. * * * IRA Picnic . . Inter-Racial Association will sponsor a picnic at the Island beginning at 1 p.m. tomorrow. The picnic 'is open to all stu- dents, and those attending are asked to bring their own box lunches. Refreshments and fa- cilities for softball and other entertainment will be provided. AYH Square Dance ... The second of a series of three square dances sponsored by the American Council of American Youth Hostels will be held at 8 p.m. today in Ann Arbor High School gymnasium. The dance will be open to all students. Tickets may be pur- chased at the door. * * * Taui Beta Pi Outing.. . Tau Beta Pi, engineering hon- orary society, will hold its an- nual outing today and tomor- row at the University fresh air camp. Over 40 couples are expected to attend the affair, which will feature swimming, boating, dancing and softball. This will be the last meeting of the so- ciety for this semester. *k * * Armenian Students . The Armenian students associo- tion will meet at 10 a.m. tomor- row at the Rackham Building for an all day picnic to be held at the Island. Officers for the coming year will also be elected at the picnic. All students of Armenian parent- age may attend. Chitge f Address If you are planning to leave Ann Arbor for the summer, be sure to notify us of your change of address. Bank state- ments cannot be forwarded by the postoflice. L U C.K Y A N G L E R-While his pet dog looks on with in- terest, 12-year-old Oscar Brett of Philadelphia lands a nice trout to start the new fishing season right. Ic }. ::i . :"r" ?{ .:}}}_" :. . ...? "?. . .{.:;:re >{.!.: " j