nesday, February 14, 1969 THE MICHIGAN DAILY Page Three ~esday, February 19, 1969 THE MICHIGAN DAILY _ . _--- A. - - ;1; MARINER 6 TO MARS TONIGHT I the NEW. REVISED THURSDAY- Discussion S.D.S. and 1421 Hill St. 8:30 P.M. 196 11 CAPE KENNEDY, Fla,. (AP)- Seeking possible clues to life on Mars, the Mariner 6 spacecraft sets forth on an interplanetary voyage next week to explore the mysterious red planet. The 910-pound probe is to be launched Feb. 24. A month later, on March 24, a twin craft, Mariner 7, is to rocket along much the same route. Both vehicles are to pass within 2,000 miles of Mars on July 31 and Aug. 5, respectively. 9:Asp The planet then will be 62 mil- lion miles from earth. During brief 30-minute en- counters with the planet before streaking into eternal orbit around the sun, each Mariner is to use its cameras and scientific gear to gather comprehensive scientific data and snap scores of photographs. aice I ntervarsity FRIDAY AND SATURDAY- GYPSY odyssey iisoll1illillIllIlliliiiiiiiiiilllllllllll111111111111111111111000ow, I ?010 UNIVERSITY MUSICAL SOCI 4r E~y I In order to sample different areas of Mars, Mariner 6 will fly above the equater and Mar- iner 7 will zip by the edge of the southern polar cap. S Officials of the space agency's Jet Propulsion Laboratory, which developed the spacecraft, emphasized the Mariners will not find life, but could detect conditions in which some form of life might exist-not the fear- some creatures of science fic- tion, but perhaps rudimentary plants. The findings will help scien- tists design two more Mariner craft intended to orbit Mars in 1971 and two project Viking ve- hicles slated to soft-land on the VOTER REGISTRATION INFORMATION 662-7394 MON.-THURS. 5:00 P.M.-8:00 P.M. planet in 1973. The latter could determine if life is there. Opportunities to launch a vessel to Mars occur only once every 25 months, so launchings are planned in pairs to double the chance of success and at the same time increase the amount of data returned. The strategy paid off in 1964 when Mariner 3 failed. But Mar- iner 4, launched successfully 23 days later, flew by Mars at a distance of 6,118 miles and transmitted pictures and infor- mation. The doubling up also was helpful last week when the At- last-Contaur rocket that was to boost Mariner 6 suffered skin buckling because of a pressuri- zation failure during a launch pad test. The launch team decided the rocket could not fly and shifted Mariner 6 to an adjoining pad where another Atlas-Centaur was being readied to boost Mar- iner 7, which is farther behind in checkout. Still another At- las Centaur will be flown to Cape Kennedy to hurl the see- ond probe toward Mars on schedule. Mariner 4 disclosed that Mars has densely-packed impact cra- ters much like those on the moon, little or no magnetic field, no radiation belt, and a surface atmospheric pressure one one-hundredth of that on earth. The Mariner 4 pictures did not show details of objects less than two miles in size. The pic- tures Mariners 6 and 7 talpe will detail objects the size of earth's dams, or about 300 yards across. At least eight pictures snap- ped by each will show the entire disk of the planet, with a reso- lution of one and one-half miles. Scientific instruments will record such things as tempera- tures in the atmosphere and on the surface, radiation levels, magnetic properties, water va- por and the composition of the atmosphere. The presence of water vapor and other ingredients would in- dicate that life might survive on Mars. Hope dims in search for a Mideast peace '"" Read I 'BOOKS' Every Sunday (inP ,t iM I dlan BEIRUT, Lebanon (MP) - As the big powers shape up for talks aimed at finding a Middle East solution, little has emerged from either Israel or the Arab states to encourage optimism. The Arab world seems con- vinced only the United States can break the dpadlock by put- ting pressure on Israel to with- draw from war-won lands. Few Arabs believe the United States will do any such thing. Israel itself seems in no mood, pending new guarantees, to ithdraw from the nearly 26,000 square miles of Arab territory it overran in the six-day war of. June 1967. Seen through Arab eyes, it is adopting an increasingly stub- born position. Mohamed Heikal, editor of the semi-official Cairo news- paper Al Ahram, has warned the Arabs against "expecting miracles" from talks among the United States, Britain, France and the Soviet Union. The chances of their coming up with a solution acceptable to both Arabs and Israelis are re- mote, he contended. Egyptian President Gamal Abdel Nasser, still the champion Rent your Roommate with a Classified Ad to many Arabs even though his image has tarnished a bit over the years, has restated his ac- ceptance of the U.N. resolution of Nov. 22. 1967 The resolution provides for Israel's withdrawal from occu- pied territory -not necessarily all of it-in return for an end to an Arab state of belligerence and free Israeli navigation through international water- ways. Nasser's room for maneuver is limited. He has his own prop- aganda to live up to and he can- /not risk an open break with the more radical Arab nations such as Algeria, Syria and Iraq. He refuses to negotiate direct- ly with Israel, an Israeli de- mand, and he has pledged sup- port for the Palestine guerrillas who vow to fight until Israel is destroyed. Iraq, w h i c h keeps 20,000 troops in Jordan, has rejected the U.N. peace plan. So has neighboring Syria. Israel meanwhile does not budge. Foreign Minister Abba Eban has rejected a Soviet plan, providing for a phased Israeli withdrawal, as "unacceptable and beyond discussion." Its aim, 0 said Eban, was to shrink Israel to its pre-1967 size and then leave it to the Arab guerrillas to finish off. Second Class postage paid at Ann Arbor, Michigan, 420 Maynard St., Ann Arbor, Michigan 48104. Published daily Tuesday through Sunday morning University year. Sub- scription rates: $9.00 by carrier, $10.00 by mail. the by The Associated Press and College Press Service AN ISRAELI AIRLINER was attacked by rifle fire at a Zurich, Switzerland airport yesterday. The plane was taking off for Tel Aviv with 17 passeng- ers aboard, including Gideon Rafael, director general of the Israeli Foreign Office. Rafael was not one of the six persons reported to have been injured in the attack. Arab guerrillas of the Popular Front for the liberation of Palestine claimed "full responsibility" for the ambush which was carried out by three men and a woman. This organization also took credit for the previous attacks on El Al planes. U.N. Secretary-General U Thant condemned the attack and expressed hope that no Israeli retaliation would follow. State Department officer Carl Bartch said the United States "deeply regrets and deplores the senseless attack". PRESIDENT NIXON'S BUDGET DIRECTOR yester- day told Congress that this year's $2A billion surplus is dwindling, Robert Mayo said the Nixon administration expects to ask for a one-year extension beyond June 30 of the 10 per cent surcharge on individual and corporate income taxes for anti-inflationary and budget-balancing reasons. He said the projected 1970 surplus may shrink also. RAY BLISS, REPUBLICAN NATIONAL CHAIRMAN, will resign April 15, the White House announced yester- day. There was no indication of who his successor will be, although the name of Murray Chotiner of California, a long- time political associate of Nixon, was mentioned as a pos- sible appointee to a "high committee position". Bliss said he is leaving the party job to return to private business. After Nixon's election, reports began circulating that the new President wished to replace Bliss with a more skilled platform performer. In his four years as chairman, Bliss has concentrated on the technical and organizational side of politics, leaving policy speeches to others. COMMUNIST CHINA yesterday called off a meeting with the U.S. ambassador scheduled for Thursday in Warsaw. A Chinese embassy spokesman blamed the cancellation on the United States, saying it had conspired in the defection of a Chinese diplomat in the Netherlands, and thus created a "grave anti-Chinese incident". Secretary of State William Rogers denied the charge. At the same time, he said the United States "continues to stand ready to meet with Communist China at any time." It would have been the first such meeting in 13 months. These meetings, started in Geneva in 1955 and transferred to Warsaw in 1958, have been the only official contact between the United States and Communist China. THE CALIFORNIA ATTORNEY GENERAL'S OFFICE said yesterday it will sue Union Oil Co. and the federal government for damage caused by oil leaks in the Santa Barbara Channel. A $500 million claim will be filed with the Department of Interior in Los Angeles and an $800 tiillion damage suit will be filed in Santa Barbara Superior Court against Union Oil Co. and other firms, a spokesman.sid at a news conference, The city and county of Santa Barbara and the city of Carpinteria are joining in the actions, undertaken on behalf of all public agencies affected by the leak. SECRETARY OF STATE WILLIAM ROGERS urged prompt approval of the long-pending nuclear nonpro- liferation treaty yesterday. In his first public Congressional appearance as Secretary of State, Rogers told the senate Foreign Relations Committee that the United States relates its plans for the anti-ballistic missile system to Soviet intentions in the nuclear arms field. * 0"* AN EAST GERMAN BLASTING JOB which starts to- day on West Berlin's border will complicate land travel during the next two weeks. The slow-motion demolition of the brick base of a Soviet war memorial planned by the East German army will restrict border crossing at that point until March fourth. The period of explosions will encompass President Nixon's visit to West Berlin and the eve of the meeting of West Germany's Na- tional Assembly which is planning to elect a successor to President Heinrich'Luebke. The memorial is located near the autobahn which spans 110 miles of Communist territory to link West Berlin with West Germany at Helmstedt. The East Germans apparently plan to eventually reroute the highway entrance. TATE Info: 662-6264 U LAST TIMES TODAY STEVE 11McQUEEN AS '.BULLITT' SHOWS AT 1:00-3:00 5:00-7:10 9:15 I U U * STARTS TOMORROW * PITY POOR' PAXTON GUIGLEY He went to college to learn about Love. Now he's locked in an attic with three beautiful girls, who are going to teach him, and teach him, and teach him that too much learning is a dangerous thing! presents THE INTERNATIONALLY CELEBRATED National Theatre of Canada 2 NEW PRODUCTIONS- BEN JONSON'S classic comedy THE ALCHEMIST with WILLIAM HUTT POWYS THOMAS BERNARD BEHRENS Directed by JEAN GASCON A New Version of SHAKESPEARE'S HAMLET' with KENNETH WELSH !1.! 0 *O 0 O 0 01 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0]0 0 THE. I NTERTAINER by John Osborne Lydia Mendelssohn Theatre February 19-22 presented by Department of Speech University Players BOX OFFICE 0 0 I 0- 0 0i 0 0f 0: U - m m - II uUini Ob j I I