Apollo HOUSTON -P)-Safe in the Yankee Clipper mothership, the Apollo 12 ex- plorers abandoned the mooncraft Intrepid and sent it crashing back into the moon, a final sacrifice to man's curiousity about the strange lunar sphere. Lunar geologists are eager to quiz the Apollo 12 moonwalkers about volcano-like mounds they sighted and to examine some ne wmoon rocks that one scientist said will be "the prima donnas of the scientific community." Gary Lofgren, a moon geology expert at the Manned Spacecraft Center, said comments from Charles Conrad and Alan Bean during their two moonwalks indicate the spacemen gathered a greater variety of rocks than the Apollo 11 crew. "They saw a variety of rocks we did not get from Apollo 11," he said in an interview after the astronauts completed 12 depar two four-hour excursions on the Ocean of Storms. The moon rocks from Apollo 12 should yield great scientifc data because they were gathered from an old crater, a young crater and a crater in which lunar bedrock was exposed. "We'll get a good idea what the bedrock is like," Lofgren said. "We haven't had that before." Intrepid's rockets were fired at 4:50 p.m. EST, and less than half an hour later the little moonship smashed into the moon's surface some 24 miles from its former home base on the Ocean of Storms. The three Navy commanders, Charles Conrad Jr., Alan L. Bean and Richard F. Fordon Jr. displayed only passing curios- ity about the fate of the little craft that had carried two of them safely to the moon and back. s witht It struck the moon traveling some 3,700 miles an hour. At impact, the slight hull of Intrepid carved out an elliptical crater on the moon's surface about 20 feet by 40 feet, but only 20 inches deep. Still the shock waves rumbling through the moon's surface provided a bench mark for earth scientists watching readings from ,the seisometer left on the moon's surface by Conrad and Bean in their 31 %,z-hour expedition. Lines on the seismic charts on earth showed a slight wiggle at impact. With that known reading from the seismometer, scientists can measure the impacts of other meteors striking the moon, and by the same readings infer information on the interior of the moon. It was the last major experiment in a long day that included Conrad and Bean blasting off from the moon in Intrepid, easures the end of their lunar scouting, and final- ly docking with the Yankee Clipper. "We're in. Stable as a rock!" Charles Conrad Jr. exclaimed as the two ships hooked up nose-to-nose at 12:58 p.m. EST. "Super job." Conrad and Bean had started their day on a geological field trip near their base on the Ocean of Storms. During a four- hour trek they gathered a treasure chest of rocks for scientists and clipped off parts of a Surveyor spacecraft which had landed on the moon 2/2 years ago. Everywhere they went, the moon ex- plorers left something behind. On the moon's surface they left litter that cost millions of dollars. The scientific instruments alone, meas- uring impacts on the lunar soil, the tenuous lunar atmosphere, and the flow- ing solar wind blown out by the sun, cost some $25 million. NEWS PHONE: three764-0552 Friday, November 21, 1969 Ann Arbor, Michigan Page Three the news today by The Associated Press and College Press Service Pentagon January4 decreases Eraft quota ARAB GUERRILLAS and Lebanese troops waged a gun battle in southern Lebanon yesterday shattering the calm restored ear- lier this month. The fighting was the first major clash between the guerrillas and the army since a secret peace agreement was negotiated in Cairo Nov. 3. An official Lebanese announcement said about 100 guerrillas op- ened machine-gun fire on an army post in Nabatiyeh, 40 miles south of Beirut. A relief force mounted a counter-attack. Lebanon said the incident was an attempt by unnamed "suspic- ious elements" to sabotage the Cairo agreement. THE WHITE HOUSE reported progress in negotiations be- tweenPresident Nixon and Japan's Prime Minister Eisaku Sato. Negotiations focused mainly on economic problems between the two countries. Decisions reached will be announced today. At their Wednesday meeting, Sato and Nixon agreed on condi- tions for continued U.S. use of Okinawa as a forward base in the western Pacific. The island will be back in Japanese control in 1972, Japanese and American officials reported. * s * THE SOUTH VIETNAMESE ARMY lost 479 troops killed in action last week, more than four times the U.S. toll. Allied commands say t h i s reflects Saigon's increasing combat role. American deaths totalled 113. South Vietnamese headquarters reported scattered fighting and enemy shelling at two central highland Special Forces bases. The South Vietnamese have taken heavy casualties in the past week while fighting about 5,000 North Vietnamese near the two camps north of Saigon. ARMS LIMITATION TALKS between the U.S. and U.S.S.R. continue with both sides remaining absolutely silent on matters discussed. The only known result of their relatively brief meetings is that they agreed to meet again Monday. Both U.S. and U.S.S.R. delegates to the Helsinki conference have pledged to seek the limitation and reversal of the strategic arms race. * * * A BAN ON DDT use against certain pests has been ordered WASHINGTON ( - T he Pentagon's manpoWer c h i e f said yesterday that the Janu- ary draft call would, be con- siderably below the originally announced quota of 35,000. Roger Kelley, assistant secre- tary of defense, declined to give the exact number but defense of- ficials are planning for draft calls next year to average about 20,800 men a month. Drafts in the final quarter of this year are averaging just un- der 10,000 a month. The lowered figures reflect the shrinkage of U.S. armed forces over-all made possible mainly through the Vietnam pullouts. The Nixon administration has reported redeployments of 60,000 men from Vietnam are d u e by mid-December. Further m a n- power cutbacks are under con- sideration. Also helping to lower draft calls has been a satisfactory r a t e of volunteer enlistments by A r m y recruiters. Meanwhile, 35 congressmen In a letter to President Nixon urged that all draft calls be suspended until the new lottery system can be implemented. Calling the present system un- fair, 29 Democratic and six Re- publican members of the House rwrote : "With both House and Senate having acted, it would be a tragedy to subject one more man to an inequitable draft under the old system." As a result of Senate approval of draft legislation, Kelley said the SelectiveiService can begin con- everting its records to summon men on a random-date selection process in January instead of on the current oldest-first basis. This switchover process, Kelley said, will be helped along by the fact that January's draft "will be very much lower" than previously a estimated. Kelley, describing the new method, estimated that under random selection a draft-eligible young man's chances of being called to duty in 1970 will be about one in four. 1 Under the system, he explained, a man's birthday will be the key to his likelihood of being tabbed. Sen. Mike Mansfield: Still uncommitted Haynsworth decision today; still a toss-up by the President's Environmental Quality Council. The ban, based on the possible harmful effects of this pesticide, WASHINGTON (,)-Two more involves about 35 per cent of the total DDT used in this country - senators declared themselves yes- some 14 million pounds, terday-one for and one against The council also announced it plans to cancel all other DDT the Supreme Court nomination of uses, except for emergency control of diseases and massive crop pest Clement F. Haynsworth Jr. But infestations by Dec. 31, 1970. the outcome continued to rest with 3members whose positions may not It called for comment within 90 days on this intention, bers utlse ois alled * *be known until the roll is called Subscribe to The Michigan Daily T SUBSCRIBE NOW! A DEMOCRATIC PARTY reform commission has voted to require states to allocate delegates to future national conventions on the basis of population and Democratic strength in the most reent presidential vote. The "one Democrat, one vote" principle is designed to assure that apportionment of delegates within a state will more accurately reflect its political makeup than has been true in the past. Thus, a state which elects convention delegates by congressional districts could not give each district the same number of delegates but would give more to those which four years previously had cast today. Republican Charles Mathias of Maryland, calling it one of the hardest decisions he has had to make in nine years in Congress, said he will oppose the nomina- tion. Democrat Jennings Randolph of West Virginia said he will vote to confirm because h e believes Haynsworth would serve on the Hugh Scott of Pennsylvania, most prominent Republican among the uncommitted, says he made up his mind several weeks ago but has told no one. "This is the hardest vote I have ever had to cast," he says. Scott denied that there has been any pressure on him from the White House or any administra- tion officials. But another of the uncommitted Republicans made the first public report of a threat to influence his vote. Sen. Mark Hatfield of Oregon said he received a telephone call earlier in the day from a good friend who reported a number of former financial supporters were saying "a vote against Hayns- worth can become the trigger to set up a conservative candidate against me in the 1972 primary. Both Scott and Majority Leader Mike Mansfield of Montana, who also remained uncommitted, said they expect all members to be present for the vote. Mansfield said he still rates the outcome a toss-up. I peseno 5 GREAT PLAYS! 0 2 Performances Each FRI.4AT., JADE. 23-24 "A REAL TIUMPH"-. BEST PLAY RseNCR rNd ulludeNtRx *A-eed T*S: WED., Ff3. 24-25 MILER'SI a larger Democratic presidential vote. court with "fidelity, high- purpose Another. party reform group will consider how the votes of the and compassion." JOSEPH P. KENNEDY was buried yesterday after a funeral The declarations brought to 45 the number of senators publicly service in Hyannis, Mass., not far from the family compound on committed to vote for confirma- Cape Cod. tion, according to an Associated The service included a eulogy by his son, Sen. Edward M. Kennedy Press poll. (D-Mass) and the recitation of the 23rd Psalm by his grandson, John The AP poll showed 42 com- F. Kennedy, Jr. mitted to vote against Haynsworth The former ambassador to Britain was buried in Brookline, Mass. and 13 undecided. GOP Leader ri ! i,: a a The Michigan Daily, edited and man- aged by students at the University of Michigan. News phone: 764-0552. Second Class postage paid at Ann Arbor, Mich- igan, 420 Maynard St., Ann Arbor, Michigan 48104. Published daily Tues- day through Sunday morning Univer- sity year. Subscription rates: $10 by carrier, $10 by mail. Summer Session publshed Tuesday through Saturday morning. Subscrip- tion rates: $3.00 by carrier, $3.00 by mail. THE PAGEANT PLAYERS STREET THEATER (indoors and out) Friday night Saturday night if Sunday night Saturday Afternoon I In the night, doors open A>.x I unur L ImpowNUMMORPMmmooft NUW SHOWING! Program Information 662-6264 SHOWS AT: 1 :00-3 :00 5 :00-7 :00 and 9:05 P.M. EASY RIDER' IS TERRIBLY POWERFUL!" RICHARD GOLDSTEIN. N.Y. TIMES "AN HISTORIC MOVIE!" "AN ELOQUENT FILM." -RICHARD SCHICKEL. LIFE -ROLAND GELATT. SATURDAY REVIEW "ASTONISHINGLY PERFECT!" 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