,Y; JULY 9, 1959 THE MICHIGAN DAILY PAGE THREE V. XTJLY 9. 1959 THE MICHIGAN DAILY IAGE THREE Astronauts Prepare; For Space Travel, LANGLEY RESEARCH CEN- TER, Va. W) - The Mercury As- tronauts, after trying out for a few seconds the weightlessness of space travel, say it really is a" comfortable feeling-infact, fun. The seven lean young men who have been picked for pioneering space trips in United States satel- lites two years hence expressed their opinions after watching, with a group of visiting newsmen, a motion picture film of three of them undergoing "zero gravity" conditions. This occurred in the cabin of an airplane fying part of an out- side loop to produce the weight- less condition through centrifugal force. Float in Cabin The Astronauts floated about the padded cabin, pushing them- selves off ceilings and walls, play- fully shoving each other into the air in what seemed slow-motion time. It was similar to the floating effect in skin diving - which the Astronauts also have experienced as part of their training. The Astronauts' trainingyin- cludes experience' in a variety of weird and sometimes nerve and muscle testing experiments. Under Strain They have undergone the stress' of high "G" force at Johnsville, Pa. There a centrifuge or whirl- ing machine built up a force equivalent to 25 times the weight of the man. That probably is a greater weight than a man would ex- perience in launching or atmos- pheric re-entry in space flight. Officials of lthe National Aero- nautics and Space Administration showed newsmen one of the couch-like devices in which the Astronauts will ride in the cap- sule. An individual couch will be molded from plastic to fit the form of each man and help pro- tect his body during acceleration,, deceleration and landing impact. See Preliminary Tests Some, but probably not all of the seven men will be given pre- liminary test flights in a rocket- launched capsule before the first trip around the earth in orbit. Army Redstone rockets will be used to fire the man-carrying cap- sule high into space in these tests, with a landing in the Atlantic several hundred miles off Cape Canaveral, Fla. Others will take off for orbital flight aboard a capsule mounted. on the Air Force Atlas intercon- tinental ballistic missile. Escape Device Also shown were models of an escape device intended for res- cuing an Astronaut if - as has been happening with some mis- siles-the launching device starts burning on the pad or takes off too slowly. This is a rocket which will pluck the capsule clear of the mis-; sile and carry it 2,000 feet high, where an automatic parachute will, pull the pilot out and drift him backtoathe surface. NASA- has ordered 26 booster rockets for the "Project Mercury" manned satellite program. Atlas Dominates -Of these, 10 are Atlas missiles, the type to- be used for manned satellite flight. Eight are Red- stone rockets, to. be used both in short flights by Astronauts and in testing. Six others are the special- ly designed "Little Joe" boosters for 100-mile high test rshots of equipment. Two are Army Jupiter intermediate range ballistic mis- siles. However, it is probable NASA will cancel plans for using the Jupiter launcher. Brandenburg Concertos Recital Set The six Brandenburg Concertos of Johann Sebastian Bach will be presented in two concerts at 3 p.m. and 8:30 p.m. Sunday in the Rackham Lecture Hall, by a group of music faculty members. Both concerts are open to the public. The concert at 3 p.m. will be devoted to concertos No. 1, in F Major, No 3, in G Major, and' No. 5 in D Major. After an intermission over the dinner hour, the musicians will complete the program with con- certos No. 6, B fiat Major, No. 4, in G Major, and No. 2 in F Major. Participating in the program are Gustave Rosseels, second vio- linist of the Stanley Quartet; Clyde Carpenter, instructor in French horn; Prof. Florian Muel- ler, oboe; Prof. Theodore Heger of music literature; Raymond Lynch, teaching fellow; Lewis Cooper, in- structor in wind instruments; Gil- bert Ross, first violinist of the Stanley Quartet; Robert Courte, violist of the Stanley Quartet; Paul Olefsky, guest cellist, Stanley Quartet; Prof. Benning Dexter, piano; Prof. Nelson Hauenstein, woodwind instruments; Prof. John Flower and Prof. Josef Blatt. TU' Schedules Fall Institute The University will conduct an Academic Year Counseling and Guidance Training Institute for secondary school teachers and counselors starting this fall. Financed by the National De- fense Education Act, the Institute wil run from Sept. 14, 1959 to June 11, 1960. Prof. Stewart C. Huislander of the education school has been named director of the Institute. Approximately 40 teachers and counselors from across the nation will receive appointments to the Institute, designed to improve the ability of secondary school coun- selors. PREPARING FOR TRIP-Olin Sewell Pettingill, well-known ornothologist, places an identification band on one of the female Purple Martins at the University Biological Station near Pelston. Pettingill, who is on the teaching staff at the station, is conducting experiments on "homing" instincts. After banding, the birds are placed in cigar boxes for their trips to various midwestern cities. Two birds released July 2 from Ann Arbor and Chicago both.have returned to the station. "This is the story of illusion and reality - of what you expect and what, unfortunately, you get," says Neil Snortum about this week's University television pre- sentation in its "Accent" series "Love Songs and Marriage Songs," to be seen at 9:15 Sunday. Balladeer Snortum, an instruc- tor in the English department, will take his audience through the various stages of romance begin- ning first with a boy's ideal con- ception of a girl as depicted in the song "Colorado Trail." The reality of marriage is not so gay and light as that of love, Snortum indicates. In fact, he says, there are no happy marriage songs. They all have a rather scornful note. * * * "Hi-fi has made more people interested in classical music, but it is not teaching them to be in- terested in music." This statement is made by Thor Johnson, noted American con- ductor, as he appears on "Man with a Baton," this week's Uni- versity presentation in its "Un- derstanding Our World" series, to be seen at 9:30 am. Sunday. According to Johnson, a com- poser spends most of his life try- ing to make a masterful blend of the materials of music. Our mod- ern engineers have come along and taken that blend apart. Music under the microscope is not how we were intended to hear music. Johnson discusses the methods, problems, and rewards of con- ducting in America today. He cites the importance of the uni- versity as a patron of serious mu- sic, and he believes that while most of our conductors today are European trained, this will not necessarily hold true for the fu- ture. "There is a revival of serious music across our land," says Johnson, "and out of this interest in- music will come topflight American born and trained con- ductors." Because modern man is so in- 'U' Biologists Conduct Studies Variety of Shows Planned In 'U' Television Series A BARGAIN: University Starts Hunt For Dinosaur Funds Two Chosen For Writing Studies Here Two foreign journalists have The University wants money to purchase a dinosaur. The Development Council and Exhibit Museum are hunting for some $2,000 to spend on the "bar- gain": the remains of a meat- eating dinosaur found recently in northwestern Utah. Bones of 19 of the dinosaurs have already been uncovered in an area 25 by 35 feet, near a former water hole used by the beasts 150 million years ago. If the University can acquire a 25-foot Alloaurus and other dig- gings available for $2,000, Ann Arbor will have the best collec- tion of dinosaur material between Pittsburgh and Chicago, Museum Director Irving G. Reimann said. Five schools, including the Uni- versity, have been invited to sup- port the project and share find- ings on a first come, first served basis. The University of Utah, which found and excavated the original dinosaur grave, plans to expand its diggings to cover a 75 by 200 foot area. Reimann said the cost is far less than would be required for the University to send its own ex- pedition to the area, since addi- tional funds would be needed to 'ship the bones and mount them in Ann Arbor. Persons or groups interested in supporting the project may con- tact Gilbert Bursley of the De- velopment Council or Reimann. been selected to spend two semes- ters at the University and than work with three Michigan news- papers for three months each. Recipients of the University of Michigan-University Press Club of Michigan fellowships are Barrie Zwicker, 24 years old, of Canada, and Jaakko Bergqvist, 27 years old, of Finland. Each will receive about $4,500 for his period of stay. The two were chosen from a panel of 12 candidates from countries throughout the world. The program gives foreign journalists first-hand knowledge of the United States, so that on their return home, they may be able to write about America with greater insight and accuracy. tent on saving time he no longer knows how to write beautifully; in fact he seldom writes legibly. This criticism by Prof. Leonard Zamiska of the art school is made on this week's program in the University television series on "The Public Arts," to be seen on "U of M Presents" at 1 p.m. Sun- day. On "The Written Word," Za- miska and series host Guy Palaz- zola trace the significant steps in the development of caligraphy - beautiful hand writing and of calligraphic type faces that .are used on store fronts, in advertis- ing design, in books, wherever the word must speak to people. Zamiska also blames the mod- ernized versions of pens and pen- cils for our poor writing because these tools do not lend them- selves to artistic writing.' Using chisel-pointed and flex- ible quill-pointed pens, Zamiska letters the famous styles that were historical landmarks in the development of writing; Greek Script, Roman Square Capitals, Irish Uncial, German Gothic, Chancery and Spenserian. To show that beautiful writing is easily learned, Zamiska teaches a nine year old boy how' to letter in Roman style in a matter of seconds. The University will present "Time of the Tribe" on its an- thropology series, "The Progress of Man," to be seen at 8:30 p.m. July 18. Host for the series is Prof. Mar- shall Sahlins of the anthropology department. Prof. Sahlins, who lived for a year' among the tribes of the Fiji Islands, shows us how peace is kept by the feud. There was no government, no police. another man he was responsible "A nmar knew that if he injured to that other man's whole clan," Prof. Sahlins says. This was how internal order was kept. As for external order, it was at this time in the progress of man that war first began. Due to the invention of agriculture, food could be stored and hunters re- lieved to fight. As productivity in- creased due to improved methods of farmers, war developed from raids to campaigns and conquests. 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Academic Notices Doctoral Examination for Thomas Natsoulas, Psych.; thesis: "A Study in the Perception of Causality: Principles of Momentum and Kinetic Energy in the Perception of Collisions," Fri.. July 10, 7611 Haven Hall, at 3:00 p.m. Chair- man, J. D. Birch. . Placement Notices Personnel Requests: W. R. Grace & Co., Cyrovac Division, Simpsonville, S. C., young man with degree in food technology to do field studies and experimental work. Organization Notices B'nai B'rith Hillel Foundation, Sab- bath Services, July 10, 7:30 p.m., Zwerd- ling-Cohn Chapel. Sailing Club, regular weekly meeting, July 9, 7:30 p.m., 311 W. Engineering. Govt. Intelligence Agency, Chicago, Ill. Intelligence Agents, for promising7 young men who have discharged their military obligation. U.S. citizen, un- questionable background and a Bache- lor's degree. Govt. Agency. Translator for Wash., D. C. area. U.S. citizen preferred. Re- quires at least two and preferably three of the following languages: Russian, Polish, Ukrainian. Man, should either spend much time in the areas speci- fied, or lived there. Should know lan- guage as a native would. Organization in Detroit, Mich. Sales Engr. for firm which manufactures hy- draulic fittings and screws. Man with bachelor's degree, prefer engrg. degree., but not absolutely necessary. Must have sales potential, recent graduate,; and age up to 32. Firm in Owosso, Mich. Persons with B. S. degrees in Mech. Engrg. or Elec- trical Engrg. Contact the Bureau if interested. U. S. Civil Service Commission an- nounces job examinations for: Air Commander, Aircraft Instrument Re- pairer, Air Navigation Tech., Architect, Bacteriologist, Chemist, Construction Inspector, . Communications Officer, Digital Computer Positions, Draftsman, Electronic Scientist, Electronic Tech., Electronics, Mechanic Engrs., Architec- tural Engr., Engrg. Designer, Equip- ment Specialist, Geographic Name Spe- cialist, ,Letterer and Graniner, Mathe- matician, Medical* Tech., Metalurgist, Naval Architect, Nurse, Physical Sci- ence Admin., Physical Science Air, Physicist, Prosthetic Tech., Publica- tions Writer, Ranger Conservationist, Refrigeration and Air Conditioning Mech., Research Psychologist, Soil Sci- entist, Statistician, Teacher 7- Princi- pal, and Training Instructor. New York Civil Service. Engineering, Maintenance and Construction, Admin- istration, Public Health and Education, Medicine, Tuberculosis Control, Psy- chiatry and Psychology, Pharmacy and Laboratory, Nursing, Dentistry, Reha- bilitation, Education and Interviewing, Nutrition, Community Planning, Ma- chine Shop. For further information concerning any of the above positions, contact the Bureau of Appointments, 4001 Admin., Ext. 3371. The fallowing schools have listed teaching vacancies with the Bureau of Appointments for the 1959-60 school year. Albion, Mich. - Elementary. Arlington Heights, III. - Early Ele- mentary. Battle Creek, Mich. (Pennfield Sch.) -Girls PE. Buckley, Mich. - 5th grade. Caro, Mich. - Elementary. East Jackson, Mich. - 2nd grade; Mentally retarded. Elkhorn, Wis. -- Latin; Library. Flint, Mich. - JHS Home Economics; Dietitian. Garden City, Mich. -- Visiting Teach- er. Granit City, 111. Latin. Hartford, 'Mich. - Elementary Mu- sic; 5th grade. Holland, Mich. -- German; English; Home Economics. Livonia, Mich. (Clarenceville PS) - Elementary; Speech Correction. Medicine Bow, Wyo. - Elementary. Middleville, Mich. - Elementary. Onaway, Mich. - -Homemaking (or Homemaking/Lang.). Quincy, Mich. - Chem./Biol.; Guid- ance (boys); 2nd grade. Springport, Mich. - HS English; JHS Soc. Stud./Asst. Coach; Elementary. sterling, Ill. - HS Latin. Urbana, Ill. - Elementary; Remedial Reading; Conversational French; Arith/ Sci. Specialist; Teacher/Consultant for the gifted; HS French; JHS Gen: al.; EMH teacher for JHS; Elem. Vocal Mu- sic. Venedocia, Ohio French/English. For any additional information con- tact the Bureau of Appointments, 3528 Admin. Bldg., NO 3-1511, Ext. 489. ;C': f 't~if :;a?' ..' SEii: i: . sS. 7x i«' c! -2s: ______AND or- ~ 4 ./.T ' aar, ' b~~r . 'r .'.s"a+'.u : andat 00 to 5:30 Daily 306 S. State 9:0 I 0 f a fo F 1' - I. 1 ~C .r L" _._. ----_ ....,. .r 0 DIAL NO 2-3136 STARTING TODAY Please Note Unusual Schedule Feature Starts 1:00 - 3:40 - 6:20 - 9:10 / - I / ~ f / er "You'll never be the kind of nun your convent expects you to be," the doctor said. Sister Luke worked with this cynical surgeon in the dangerous Belgian Congo. But now she was afraid that what he was saying might be true. This young and beautiful girl gave up all worldly pleasures to become ,, '4, r a nun. Here is the story of her struggle to keep 1 more than a fascinating look behind convent we with dramatic action. her vows. But it is far alls. It is a tale filled. UI A/ - O Y h J )DIAL NO 2-2513 ENDING FRIDAY Call it the "Giant" of Southern California! Filmed in the Nada Valley with all the boldness -a in 1 Brur $; Pais whi c*,:tiny ., and k v' :r' nd you'll look like an angel this Basila new Backrap inchie of Drip 'n Dry cotton sley print. Blue and pink on te background, and at the price of 3.98. Sizes 10-20 141/2-241/2. .5 #<" s:4 44a. s {{4 RUDREY HEPRd IFMA A / ! &E Alf I' Afrn 7/MNA 11 I I r