s ecru iize 'Summer Sky' By GENNY LELAND "I saw eternity the other night, Like a great ring of pure and . endless light, All calm as it Was bright." With this bit of poetry Prof. Hazel M. Losh of the astronomy department concluded an inf or- mallecture on the "Summer Sky" Friday night. The lecture was the first of a series of three open houses given by the department in Angell Hall. Prof. Losh gave a general talk on the constellations, planets and stars. Slides and star charts were shown to supplement her talk and to show the location of' the par- ticular constellations. Telescope Shown When a picture of the antiquat- ed telescope that Galileo of fif- teenth century fame flashed on the screen, Prof. Losh speculated on what his reactions might have been if he could see the telescopes of today. The Student Observatory on the fifth floor of Angell Hall has two telescopes, one 200 inches and the other 150 inches. Prof. Losh told of some of the ancient astronomers who wor- shiped the sun and the moon. From their observations, they were able to tell, by the regular appear- ance of these bodies, the time of harvest and the flooding season of the Nile River. Later, a daily time system and a calendar were de- vised from watching the move- ments in the heavens, she said. "The ancients believed that the earth was the center of the uni- verse," she explained. "It was Co- pernicus in 853 A.D. who discov- ered the earth was only very small and the sun was part of another and greater system." The ancient Greeks discovered forty-eight of the constellations. It has only been since modern tinies that the other forty have been discovered, Prof. Losh con- tinued. Arabs Vest Eyesight The ancient Arabs used to test their, eyesight by looking at the double star on thie big dipper, she related. If theyhcould see both stars, they had good vision. Prof. Losh related some of the ancient legends that came from the star watchers. Qn a clear night one can see Antares shoot- ing ararrow at the heart of Scor- pio. In the winter time one can see Orion, the boastful hunter, be- ing dealt the fatal sting from Scorpio. It seems that Juno was getting tired of hearing Orion boast of his great hunting ability, so she sent Scorpio after him. Prof. Losh also described the different colors of the stars. The blue stars are higher in tempera- ture than the red stars. Sun is Average Star Pictures were shown of the Milky Way and the. sun, which, she called- "Just an average star." There are others much bigger and] b ANN ARBOR r az entire stock Summ er Dresss 13 to ff0I Prices drastically reduced for this money-saving com- munity event! Choose from wonderful styles and fabrics of the current season in dresses - now at a fraction of their original price . .. just in time for your vacation, and summer activities. 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Untrimmed, flower trimmed, leather trimmed. Casual Dresses 6 to $15 A variety of fabrics and styles just in time for your vacation and summer activities. Broken sizes. -Daily-Al Erbe STAR GAZERS--Two visitors at the astronomy department's open house view the planet Saturn thirough the 150-inch telescope in the Student Observatory. warmer, she continued. In one constellation there are 100,000 stars brighter than the sui n. Sidaes were also shoWp of the planets Jupiter and Satu:n. The rings of Saturn are meteorites' and gasses revolving around the, planet. Some of the ri~ags re- volve.fastermthan other, which differentiates each pf them. After Prof. Losh's lecture the audience was directed to the top floor of Angell Hall to see the Stu- dert Observatory and to. inspect the telescopes and displays in the adjoining room. The audiience was able to see both Jupiter and Sat- urn, which is 400 million miles away from the earth. spring and summer Suits and- Coats The displays included old tele- scopes, pictures of stars and a set of six scales which would tell the weight of a person on.. the sun, Jupiter, Mars, Vesta, the Moon and Sirius, the dog star.. One woman seemed a little be- wildered when she hopped on the Sirius scale and weighed in at 5000 pounds. She went Saway, mut- tering something about a sack dress. as muchas off! SPORTSWEAR -Daily-Al Erbe LOOK CLOSELY-The planet Saturn is admired from afar by two guests at the open house. The famed rings hold a fascination for one young fellow. BLOUSES r $3 4 ."s. i OSU SURVEY DISE LOSES: Students Care Less About Immorality COLUMBUS, 0. (P)-A survey of today's college students discloses they shoW less disapproval of im- moral acts connected with sex than any of their predecessors of the past three decades. The study just completed by two psychiatric researchers at Ohio; State University here shows, for instance, that: A man's desertion of an unwed mother, which studeents of the past 30 years ranked high among the "top 10 sins" of our times, has now been relegated to last place on that list. Condemn Aduitry Today's students, while still con- demning premarital sex relations and adultery, ,do so less strongly than their predecessors. However, divorce for incompati- bility, where no children are in-' volved, was acceptable to many students of 1929 and 1939, yet it is meeting wih growing rejection to day. Similarly, disbelief in God was never strongly condemned by the, surveyed students of previous dec- ades. What disapproval there was reached a low in 1939, but is now rising. Values Unstable "Perhaps the most important findings of this study," said its po- directors, Drs. Solomon Rettig and Benjamin Pasamanick, "is the great lack of stability of many moral values" and their apparent change with economic and political changes. They note that 1939 students represent the parents of today's undergraduates-yet responses of the groups differ. Either parents aren't getting across theirvalues to their chil- dren or the parents have changed too," said Dr. Pasamanick. Judgements Conflict The two researchers are inter- ested, too, in the conflicting moral Judgments represented in dent replies. the stu-1 "The least we can do is point them out," they said, "and make people think about thiem." 'i'heir findings were drawn from anonymous responses to a 50-item questionnaire by near'iy°'50 under- graduates-204 men and 285 wo- men. Rightness Conipard Student ratings.of moral acts or specified situations, In degree of "rightness or wrongness," were then compared with studies of three previous decades at other m idwestern schools. Students of all 'the decades sur- veyed, with the exception of a 1939 study, regarded kidnaping and hit- skip driving as the two worst mor- al sins. Showing the most consistent in- crease in moral condemnation over the period are suicide and "a doc- tor allowing a badly deformed baby to die." Scientists see this as a growing value for the sanctity of individual .life. - ;<- ---rnrz~zal BARGAIN DAYS 200o OFF All regular Stock of Current Fiction Nlon-Fiction Children's Books Stationery Fountain Pens Paperbacks Many other items Overbeck Bookstore 1216 South University NO 3-4436 5'Z$ ~28 $34 5 FALL and WINTER COATS Shining blacks, tweeds, and imported wools as. much as half off! Misses, juniors and custom sizes. $58 Cashmere Coats . .. 188 Originally $135 SHOES Save on summer's smartest dress and casual shoes at a fraction of their original prices. Navy, white, beige, brown, two-tones, calf. 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