FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 10, 1967 THE MICHIGAN DAILY PAGE THREE FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 10, 1967 THE MICHIGAN DAILY PAGE THEEE .:. * Apollo Missile Survives Fiery Return to Earth UAW Locals Picket Despite 3-Year Pact DETROIT (P)-A picket line skirmish at Belvidere, Ill., in which 50 men were arrested highlighted yesterday a series of local plant work interruptions that slowed Chrysler Corp. auto production to a trickle. Chrysler and the United Auto Workers reached tentative agree- ment Wednesday night on terms of a new three year pact covering 95,000 production workers, but the "In a couple of cases, such as the Jefferson Assembly plant in Detroit, we had a parts shortage that caused some workers to be kept off the jobs," Chrysler offi- cials said. The Belvidere incident was the most serious as police tangled with pickets who had extended their lines five miles from the big new plant and had barricaded all roads leading to it. DON'T WRITE HOME Send 764-0058 I CAPE KENNEDY, Fla. ()-In a spectacular debut, America's Sat- urn 5 super-rocket hurled an un- manned Apollo moonship 11,234 Miles into space yesterday and the spacecraft survived a blistering dive back through the earth's at- mosphere to a parachute landing in the Pacific Icean. The splashdown followed a fiery dash back through the atmosphere in which the spacecraft reached lunar return speed of nearly 25,000 miles an hour and had its heat shield blistered by 5,000-degrees re-entry temperatures. The test demonstrated that the Apollo ship can withstand the searing re-entry heat that astro- nauts will encounter in coming home from the moon, one of many significant achievements of the momentous mission. The impact occurred in the Pacific only 6 miles from the prime recovery ship, the aircraft carrier U.S.S. Ben- s nington after a flight of 8 hours, 37 minutes. Cheers Crewmen aboard the Bennington cheered as they spotted the space- craft floating down under its three huge orange and white parachutes. Aircraft were overhead imme- diately and dropped divers into the water to secure the craft. The rocket worked with perfec- tion and drilled a space vehicle weighing a record 140 tons into orbit. Included in the orbiting weight was the still attached third stage, which re-started after three 4 hours in space to boost Apollo A' to the high altitude. The combined weight of the rocket and spacecraft that left the pad today was 3,100 tons. The Apolo craft that returned to earth weighed just 10,600 pounds. Shot in the Arm The historic flight gave this na- tion's man-in-space program a much needed shot in the arm and revived hopes that U.S. astronauts can still land on the moon in this decade. With a thundering burst of power, the most powerful rocket ever assembled blasted away from its launch pad at 7 a.m., EST., to- day after a perfect countdown- something that few people believed possible for such a complex ma- chine.. Thethree stages of the monster Saturn 5 ignited with drill-like precision during an 11-minute boost phase and shoved the mas- sive payload, including the still- attached third stage, into orbit 115 miles high. Three hours later, after two orbits of the globe, the hydrogen- powered third stage restarted its engine on ground command and propelled the 64,000-pound Apollo 4 vehicle outward toward a high point of 11,400 miles. Anxious Moment The re-ignition of the third 4 stage gave flight controllers their first anxious moments of the mis- sion. A vent valve refused to re- spond to commands to close, until the last moment when it finally closed. The spacecraft separated from the stage and a motor on board W fired for 15 seconds to provide final power to reach the planned alti- tude. Had it burned a few seconds longer, Apollo 4 could have gone $o the moon, but that was not STARTS SATURDAY STOP WORRYINGI HELP' SISDN THE WAYK N planned for today's flight because of the need to test the heat shield on re-entry. An hour after the world's most powerful rocket blazed away from Cape Kennedy on its maiden test flight, the Apollo program man- ager, Air Forse Maj. Gen. Samuel Phillips told newsmen: Positive Course "This mission will do a lot to get the whole Apollo team mqving again on a positive course. It will do a lot for the progress in coming months of the Apollo program. "Yesterday," Philips said, "I would have said that I think we have a reasonably good chance of accomplishing a manned lunar landing by ths end of 1969. Today, I think that reasonably good chance is maybe a notch above reasonably good." The Apollo moon program has been lagging since three astronauts died in a spacecraft fire last Janu- ary, on a pad not far from where the Saturn 5 started its historic flight. Early Phases Phillips described the early phase of the flight as perfect. He said the three stages of the powerful booster performed "right on the money" that the orbiting vehicle was working fine. He reported that a cheer went up in the launch control center when the Saturn 5 broke its earthly ties and rumbled into the sky on a massive tower of flame, vibrating the ground for miles around. .i firm's labor problems continued on More Talks a local level. Weary negotiators for Chrysler -Associated Press DR. WERNHER VON BRAUN (center), describes as a "workhorse rocket" the Saturn 5 missile which made a successful flight yester- day. Seated with him are Rocco A. Petrone and Dr. Arthur Rudolph,'both space flight officials. "We had been scheduled to build 6,500 cars Thursday but we had only one assembly line going and will be lucky if we wind up with 400 cars for the day's output," commented a Chrysler public re- lations man. Three Days UAW president Walter P. Reu- ther said after the contract agree- ment had been reached that it would take two or three days to get Chrysler back to normal pro- duction. The problem was that while the national agreement had been worked out, scores of local plant issues remained to be settled. Chrysler said a check at mid-' morning yesterday showed about 40,000 Chrysler workers off the job for various reasons with about 12 plants involved. and the UAW, who went through a marathon, 34 hour final bargaining session that resulted in the tenta- tive national agreement, returned to the table yesterday afternoon to resume discussions on pay rates and working conditions for 8,000 salaried workers. The Chrysler pact gives produc- tion workers wage and fringe bene- fit gains of over $1 an hour. The average hourly straight time for UAW workers was $3.41 before the new round of agreements was reached. With the Ford and Chrysler packages pretty well wrapped up, Reuther was expected to turn his attention - perhaps as early as Monday-to General Motors, the No. 1 auto maker in the world. He was expected to demand from GM the same basic package he won at Ford and Chrysler. I , . - J , a., ....... sv,. TONIGHT and TOMORROW CINlEM"A I1 Presents "SMILES OF A SUMMER NIGHT" Ingmar Bergman, Director plus Chapt. 3-FLASH GORDON 7:00-9:15 P.M. Aud. A-ANGELL HALL 50c ISRAEL'S TURN: Pro cedure Dispute Causes UN Delay UNITED NATIONS, N.Y.(AP) -A { berg argued that Israel as a party long delayed meeting of the UN to the dispute should speak imme- Security Council on how to settle diately after Egypt, which had the Arab-Israeli conflict was fi- asked for the urgent meeting. So- nally convened yesterday but im- viet Deputy Foreign Minister Vas- mediately bogged down in a proce- ily V. Kupnetsov contended that dural wrangle over when Israel Israel should speak seventh, be- should speak. cause that was the order in which U.S. Ambassador Arthur J. Gold- it had got on the speakers' list. Wilson, Ref uses To Budge On Credit, Deflation Policies, I I 6$$ 996 LONDON {P)-Prime Minister Harold Wilson refused last night to compromise on his Labor gov- ernment's policy of deflation de- spite a growing revolt within his own party and increasing unpop- ularity in the nation. Wilson told the House of Com- mons, however, that full employ- ment remained the Labor govern- ment's objective. The prime minister's statement to the House was heralded earlier in the day by a further tightening of credit control when the Bank of England raised its lending rate for the second time in less than a month. The bank's discount rate, on which all interest levies for lend- ing are based, was raised from 51/2 to 6 per cent Oct. 19 and to 61/2 per cent yesterday, putting it close to the "crisis level" of 7 per cent. The action, by making credit more expensive, may head off a minor boomlet in industrial expan- sion announced in the House Tues- day night by Chancellor of the Exchequer James Callaghan after 15 months of deflation-induced business stagnation. It seemed doubtful the govern- ment's critics in the party would let the matter rest there. They are too alarmed about the govern- ment's declining popularity in opinion polls, accompanied by steady losses of parliamentary seats in special elections, often in traditional Laborite strongholds. Many are beginning to wonder if the government's measures will actually succeed in their long term aim of renovating the economy and also whether there.is still time to reflate the economy and get things booming before the 1971 Confrontation The suspension delayed an ex- pected confrontation b e t w e e n Egyptian Foreign Minister Mah- moud Riad and Israeli Foreign Minister Abba Eban over whether the first step for settlement of the Arab-Israeli war of last June 5-10 should be withdrawal of Israeli trops from Egypt, Jordan or Syria or direct negotiations between Is- rael and the Arabs. Egyptian Ambassador Mohamed Awad El Kony sent a letter to the council president Tuesday' asking for "an urgent session to consider the dangerous situation prevailing in the Middle East as a result of the persistence of Israel not to withdraw its armed forces from all the territories which it occupied." U.S. Resolution A resolution sponsored by the United States would have the spe- cial representative "maintain con- tacts with the states concerned with a view to assisting them in elections The leftist weekly New States- the working out of solutions" con- man pointed out that this will be sistent with its purposes. the sixth successive year that Brit- One of the aims stated in the ain's foreign trade has been in the U.S. resolution was "withdrawal red, with every prospect that it of armed forces from occupied will continue next year. It said territories.". Another was "ter- devaluation of the pound is the mination of claims or states of only answer. belligerence." U COMING! Seats Now! I I "HEK'! I'm . lo$ on a tropic island!' "HELP I' munde4 The CoorfuyAdventres of THE BEATLES aemoeo orfulthaner...inCOLOR! EASTIAJiOOLOI AUITEARIMTiSmusL SHOW TIMES: SAT. 7-9-11 SUN 7-9 MON. 7-9 TUES. 7-9 -W DUsonMAN All the urgency and tension of the Award Winning play by Le Roi Jones is now on film! NO ONE UNDER 18 YEARS OE AGE WILL BE ADMITTED.g mue a s BY A STRIKING AND ORIGINAL TRAGI-COMEDY STUDS TERKEL. - * ~ £ - I Special Childrens Mat. Sat. -12-2-4 Sun. 1:30-3:30 I I I 0 U- Wd JIL JrvFn - fw m I