Battalion Vol. 65 No. 102 College Station, Texas Friday, April 17, 1970 Telephone 845-2226 Lunar Lander Released; Apollo 13 Heading On In APOLLO 13 iRE-ENTRY By Howard Benedict Associated Press Writer SPACE CENTER, Houston — The Apollo 13 astronauts today kicked loose the lunar lander that has served as their lifeline and headed in the command ship for a dash through earth’s atmos phere to a splashdown in the Pa cific Ocean. Their splashdown was set for 1:07 p. m. EST. Their service module, crippled by an explosion Monday, had been cast off earlier. As the astronauts jettisoned their services module they re ported, “There’s one whole side of that spacecraft missing . . . it’s a mess.” The damage was the result of the oxygen tank rupture that aborted the moon-landing mis sion Monday night and forced the astronauts to fight for sur vival with the resources of their lunar lander. The separation of the service module came at the end of an hour of furious activity in which James A. Lovell Jr., Fred W. Haise Jr. and John L. Swigert Jr. turned on the electrical pow er in the command ship and fired a control jet to aim for an after noon landing in the Pacific Ocean. The service module damage would present no problem to the astronaut’s return to earth. Following the separation, Lov ell said one whole panel, 22 feet long, and part of the engine bell were missing. “Looks like a lot of debris is just hanging off the side,” Lov ell said. “It’s near the S-Band antenna.” The service module contained > candi- i start- season ;n with Termed 6 Too Costly’ Ao Space Rescue System Planned: NASA Officials s. DaviJ 1 hurdki top tt 1 11 run hi) mile !«• will nile relay 11 run tht ig leg oi will 1* st befon ill be to for thosi and tli! There vri® ales n nners 2 for tilt ? one predictei et will Is cents to age ill be Is. SPACE CENTER, Houston 05*) —Despite the perilous flight of Apollo 13, the United States has no plans to develop a space res cue system in the near future. It would be too costly with pres ent hardware, say officials of the National Aeronautics and Space Administration. Even if another Saturn 5 rock et had been standing by on a launch pad at Cape Kennedy, it might not have been useful if Apollo 13 had needed immediate rescue when an oxygen tank rup tured Monday night. Apollo 13 was nearly three days from earth, near the moon. The Saturn 5 would have re quired several hours checkout 219Candidates Seek 70 Offices ye 1) it critical early to lough foi : planned is plenty 30-hour lule oxy- 00 extra r moduli rned oil d space' ’he com- become d turned s low as Two hundred nineteen candi- hates are seeking 70 positions to be decided in the April 23 gen eral election, Tommy Henderson, Election Commission executive vice president, announced Thurs day. Henderson said that polls will be located at the Memorial Stu dent Center, Sbisa newsstand, dorm 2 guard room, and north east of the library. A mobile poll unit will also be used, he said. Polls will be open from 7:30 a.m.-8 p.m., Henderson said. The TMJthta vityA. vnW Y>e at the North Gate post office from 7:30 a.m.- 11 a.m., the architecture parking lot from ll:30a.m.-4 p.m. and the parking lot of the student apart ment office from 4:30-8 p.m. Candidates, according to offi cial Election Commission lists, are: Student Senate Executive Committee: President — Kent Caperton, William M. Maskal, Jim Weaver; Vice President — Roger Miller, David L. Moore; Recording Secretary — Dale Fos ter, Bill Hartsfield; Treasurer — Jimmy Alexander, Eddie Duryea; Parliamentarian — Michael Martin Essmyer; Allen Eugene Giles; Life Chairman — Rudy de la Garza, John Sharp; Issues Chairman — Kirby Brown, Dale Foster, Charles R. Hoffm&n; Welfare Chairman — Charles Hicks; Public Relations Chair man — Jimmy O’Jibway, Mike van Bavel. Student Senators: College of Agriculture (two senior, two junior, two sopho more representatives): Senior — Randall E. Betty, David E. Frost, Charles Mueller, David Reynolds, Gerald Witkouski; Junior — Chuck Donnell, Kenny Hensley, Court Koontz, Mike Latta, Ira F. Lee; Sophomore — Mark Stephen Kidd, Paul Eldon Puryear. College of Architecture (one senior, one junior, one sopho more) : Senior — Gary Boyd, Matt Carroll, Joe Flores, Robert Riggs, David Stephens, Jr.; Jun ior — Pearre Chase Jr., Ric de Neve, Bob Thompson; Sophomore — Darryl Baker, Cortland Piarce Houchard, Edward Earl Huckaby. College of Business Adminis tration (two senior, two junior, (See 219 Seek, page 3) and at least three days to reach the troubled astronauts. The cost of a Saturn 5 is $185 million. The Apollo spacecraft would require modification, at great cost, to serve as a rescue craft capable of carrying at least five men. There are several other ideas, from orbiting rescue stations to one-man space lifeboats that could re-enter the atmosphere. But they too cost money. Because of economics, the space agency has concentrated on elim inating the chance of failure by building backup systems in its space vehicles. That approach showed' short comings when the command ship’s main and backup supplies of pow- 6r and oxygen were drained by an oxygen tank rupture. But the astronauts did have the lunar module resources to keep them alive. NASA does expect to have a space rescue capability when it develops a so-called space shuttle system, perhaps late in this dec ade. The shuttle would operate like an airplane, taking off with assist from a reusable manned rocket to ferry men and supplies to large orbiting space stations. The shuttle would land like a conventional airplane on any run way, and could be flown 100 or more times. With fast reaction time, it will be able to serve in an emergency situation. most of the long-life oxygen and electrical power for the Apollo 13 command: ship. The explosion Monday night rendered the command vehicle useless until today when power was restored with batteries. The astronauts discarded the service module to expose the command ship heat shield which was to protect them during the blazing re-entry through the at mosphere. The spacemen used a tricky “push-pull” technique to separate the service module. Lovell fired the lunar module jets to push the service section forward. Simultaneously, Swig- Apollo 13 splashed down in the Pacific Ocean southeast of Samoa today, ending a perilous four-day flight. The prime recovery carrier, the USS Iwo Jima, and a cargo ship, the USS Hall, were in the area, along with rescue planes, to take the astronauts out of their cap sule. The crew rode its command ship Odyssey to a pinpoint landing at 1:08 p. m., EST just four miles from this recovery carrier. The spaceship landed close enough for television cameras aboard the ship and a helicopter to relay dramatic pictures as Odyssey broke through a layer of slfltfids 2,000 feet high. The command module dangled under three huge orange and red para chutes. Hundreds of sailors on the deck cheered and clapped as the astro nauts splashed down in warm, rolling waters. ert, in the command ship, fired explosive devices to effect sep aration. Lovell quickly reversed the lunar craft to back away so there would be no collision dur ing re-entry later in the day. The astronauts photographed the damage. The pictures could provide possible clues to the cause of the rupture. Earlier, Swigert slipped into the command ship cabin to start the batteries and oxygen sys tem. These operate from a sep arate system and are designed for use during re-entry. Lovell and Haise fired the lunar craft’s small jets for 23 seconds to zero in on the landing site 610 miles southeast of Samoa in the Pacific. Splashdown was scheduled for 1:07 p.m. EST. “Right on the money,” Mis sion Control said of the firing. Without the firing, Apollo 13 would have missed the target area by about 50 miles. There was no immediate word on how much the firing improved the accuracy. At the time of the burn, Apollo 13 was 43,222 miles from earth, traveling 6,220 miles an hour. Following the reading of the lengthy checklist all three astro nauts settled down to rest several hours. They were bushed after their long ordeal. “We’ve got to establish a work- rest cycle up here,” Lovell com plained at one point when asked to make a battery check. “We just can’t wait around here and just read the figures all the time up to the burn . . . We got to get (See Lunar, page 3) RE-ENTRY PLAN—The Apollo 13 crew was to begin per forming these events approximately S-'As hours before splashdown in the Pacific Ocean, scheduled for 1:07 p. m. EST. Dallas Lawyer Speaker At 68tli Muster Tuesday On Student Problems Smith, Ags Confer HOMETOWN REMEMBRANCE — Three Biloxi, Miss., youngsters hang up a sign renaming their street after astronaut Fred Haise Jr., who grew up on Church Street. (AP Wirephoto) Two A&M student leaders are in Austin today participating in the Governor-to-Presidents Con ference. Kent Caperton, Student Senate vice president, and Tom Hender son, president of the Texas Inter collegiate Student Association, were invited, along with student leaders from across the State, to discuss some of tht most pressing problems facing the state. Gov. Preston Smith is sponsor ing the conference, which will discuss environment, higher edu cation, drug abuse, welfare, alien ation of youth and the legislative process. Former Atty. Gen. Ramsey Clark was scheduled to speak this morning and CBS news correspon dent Dan Rather was to speak at noon. The remainder of the day was to be spent in seminar ses sion. The conference resulted from the Presid6nt-to-Presidents Con ference held by President Richard Nixon last summer. A Texas conference was pro posed by Bill Wright, student body president at Southwest Tex as State University and planned through the (Governors Office. Gov. Smith said that this con ference was a continuation of his policy of meeting with student University National Bank “On the side of Texas A&M.” —Adv. body presidents, one which had already expanded his knowledge and awareness of the ideas and ideals of Texas youth. “I think that this is a very encouraging sign from our gover nor that he is interested in our problems and our approaches to their solution,” Henderson said. “With cooperation between stu dent leaders and governmental officials, I feel that we can go a long way toward the solution of our common problems in a responsible yet satisfactory man ner,” he said. Dallas attorney Yale B. Griffis will be the speaker at the annual Muster program on the Texas A&M campus Tuesday. A&M students and staff and Brazos County former students will assemble in front of the east entrance to the System Admini stration Building for the 5:30 p.m. program where A&M stu dents pay respect to deceased Ag gies. Collier Watson, chairman of the Student Senate’s Student Life Committee, will preside at the 40- minute Muster. The program will begin with the Texas Aggie Band playing “Texas Our Texas.” Civilian Stu dent Chaplain Ed Donnell will give the Muster prayer. Student Senate President Gerry Geistweidt will explain the Mus ter tradition. An official from the Association of Former Students will bring greetings from the as sociation. A&M’s all-male Singing Cadets will follow with “The 12th Man.” Gen. A. R. Luedecke, acting A&M president, will extend his greetings and introduce Griffis. Following the address, the band will play the “Spirit of Aggie- land,” with the audience joining in the singing. The roll call of deceased stu dents, Brazos County former stu dents and all Vietnam deaths during the past year will be read by head yell leader Sam Torn. The Ross Volunteer Firing Squad will give a 21-gun salute and Silver Taps will be sounded. Griffis is a 1930 graduate of A&M. A liberal arts major, he was a Distinguished Student his junior and senior years. He played trom bone in the Texas Aggie Band four years and was a member of “C” Troop Cavalry. Following graduation, Griffis studied law at night at the Dallas School of Law from 1932-36, serv ing as president of the senior law class. He was awarded the LLB degree in 1936 and began an in dependent practice in 1937. Griffis is a member of the American Bar Association, Dallas Bar Association, Texas Bar As sociation, Texas Trial Lawyers Association, Texas A&M Associ ation of Former Students and Century Club member, and Dallas A&M Club. A&M’s Muster tradition dates back to 1903, when the 300-mem ber Corps of Cadets mustered to gether in observance of the inde pendence of Texas. It was agreed that “forever aft erwards” April 21 would be a day of mustering for A&M men wherever they might be. Aggies have mustered on board ship, in foxholes on the battle field, in the Swiss Alps, in air planes, and even on Corregidor, shortly before the Japanese cap tured the island in World War II. More than 500 Musters will be held around the world this year, including several in South Viet nam. Aggies Favor Coed Housing, Student’s PEAR Poll Reveals A majority of the Aggies par ticipating in a poll conducted Wednesday and Thursday strong ly agree that on-campus housing is necessary for women and that pollution is a very threatening problem to the human race and environment. Sophomore accounting major Julio Richer, initiator of the poll, has founded the PEAR Associa tion to conduct statistical re search polls and surveys on the A&M campus. According to Rich er, the word PEAR is derived by taking the first letters of the phrase, “Resident After-Election Poll” and spelling them back wards. He conducted his poll among Moses Hall residents. Richer said that it took him over 17 hours to interview the students and to calculate the re sults. Students were asked whether they strongly agreed, moderately agreed, slightly agreed, were in different, strongly disagreed, moderately disagreed or slightly agreed with the 21 questions Richer asked each of them. Most of those questioned strongly disagreed with chang ing the name of the “Aggie War Hymn” to the “Aggie Fight Song.” One hundred five of the 149 students interviewed strongly agreed that the Student Senate should make announcements in The Battalion with regard to the time and place that a senate meeting will take place. Most Aggies participating said they at least agreed that the fac ulty and students should have a voice in the nomination of the permanent president of the Texas A&M University System. Richer said that any dormitory wishing to participate in the April 22 and April 27 election polls must supply four volunteers per dorm. Anyone wanting informa tion, he said, about the poll should contact him at 845-4075. Civilian Week Begins Monday Civilians begin Monday the week that is theirs, one that climaxes with Civilian Weekend April 24-27. Several activities are planned for each day during the week, according to Garry Mauro, presi dent of Keathley hall and chair man of the Civilian Student Council’s Civilian Week-Weekend Committee. A dance and selec tion of the 1970-71 Civilian Sweetheart next Saturday will end the week. Monday, Mauro said, has been designated Residence Hall Day. From noon until 6 p.m. a CSC- sponsored auto show will be held in the quadrangle area between Sbisa Dining Hall and Davis- Gary Hall. Several local auto dealers will be participating in the show. Beginning at 6 p.m., halls will participate in egg throw and molasses drop contests, held on a run-off type basis, in the quad area. At 7, Aggie Cinema will show “The Great Race” in The Grove for 50 cents admission. In the event of rain, the film will be shown in Room 113 Biological Sciences. Tuesday is Academic Day- Aggie Muster. A noon banquet will honor faculty members who, in the opinion of the CSC, are student-oriented. Muster will be held at 5 p.m. in front of the System Administration Building. A Black Awareness Rap Ses sion at 7 p.m. ends the day. Be tween four and six black stu dents will be on hand in lounge A-2, between Boses and Eugene Halls, to answer questions other students might have about black student life at A&M. “This is one of the few oppor tunities for the average Aggie to talk with a black student,” Mauro said, “and find out what he really expects to get out of Texas A&M. It’s a chance for Aggies to find out what the real situation is, instead of going by rumors.” Wednesday will be Earth Day, in honor of the national environ mental teach-in being held that day. All day will be devoted to programs presented by A&M’s Symposium for Environmental Awareness. A voter rally will be held at 5 p.m. on the drill field, and mud football, horse shoes, push ball and tug of war contests will be held on the intra mural field at West Gate. Pool tournaments will begin at 6 in the Aggie Den at North Gate, and spade and chess contests will be held in the MSC. Get Out The Vote Day is Thursday’s title. Throughout the (See Civilian Week, page 2)