PAGE EIGHT THE MICHIGAN DAILX TUESDAY, APRIL 11, 1967 PAGE EIGHT TIlE MICHIGAN DAILY TUESDAY, APRIL 11, 1967 Apollo Investigators Find Faulty Wiring rmf::.v. : vv : :.nv :J....:.::::: v. ron rr:nrv:c:<^n:rf.:-.-n rJJ:::-s.:::::x...::..wnx :::::::Y.v: Y:.::Y::w ... ... ..... Y ...:..... ........... .. ....... ...................... ... .....,a.,.,.......,.,.... .. _ ... .: i'.".v R'+A? .T }F ..............3Y,..A. ..... F......... a........ ... .. .a. ,............:b J..1 { ..................:........ .....:: n:::............... . .. .r .. ,f. .., .. .... .:...: }:v. vv .................. . ,'ti}........... . F...,bfi ..:+s f. ., n....... n:. ........ . .., ,....:._ d: . .. f. . ..... a.x ,... Y .. ".: . . ......s:u3, r .. . .. ...... ...........................v. .:..,,.,............. ...... ...... .. . .......,,.....v .vv:{xx4,.,,... .:ii......... .. r'{-:{{,}.. }..,..., r. Y .F ~ih., r.: , .. ,. " "....."""""}.. t, h"1Sw .. ,,. , .t A .,. ,., ....a... 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Vffft. : .. 1 1. ffl...1 f.:J ....... .A ............. .... ...... ... .... ..x ..... ....... ... .... v .. ..Y:,{::4 '... .x :I.Y.: :'f::.... :.....4 f5.31:t.{}}}i}S n1 }}} ,.e:n,}44 xM..}rcr}...rrrlSr}fMwv4n.Af4}. }..:{%....... x ....... 1.{ n .".. ... ;...., i:.,..}{'. hv{. 'r:.}},.,; ."..::... h......x..\x... h::}.. }. ....}: .u. v.:, ... n":;.": rc,}. ..... . ..: .n...,........ . . .... ......:. .. , v.M1~vx:, nl'{J ...,""a....n :L.. ,. , '',. t"..:...... ......t { "..,. F......1...e........... ..... n... ,.. .... n..::: } ..: ....... .. .. f.. F......,M1i............... .........,......................n..........,.,,....,,.......bn.4.:n........>}."?vi..... }:..:.......,...v:...v...anv}:::::,".a.,:.vn:..::}:::::v. :n....,.......:':;?:i :,.:..nn....ny: :..._{::.?b}}}......,.:44}: YF}.. WASHINGTON (P) In a final report issued yesterday by the Apollo accident investigators, a faulty electrical wire was pinpoint- ed as the probable cause of the. fatal fire. The wiring was located beneath the seat of command pilot Gris- som. The review board, in a critical report on the accident Sunday, said studies of the fire damage patterns indicated "the most like- ly region for the start of the fire" to be underneath this access door. Dr.,Robert W. Van Dolah, an- other member of the review board, told the subcommittee the fire might not have happened, or cer- tainly would not have been so in- tense, if combustible materials had not been present in the space- craft. Design Changes Necessary And Dr. Floyd L. Thompson, re- view board chairman, said he feels certain spacecraft design changes will be made to remedy this situ- ation. "I am sure that in the future there will be far fewer flammable materials," Thompson said, "and that also there will be changes in their arrangement so that a fire couldn't spread so rapidly." Van Dolah, in response to a question from Rep. Richard L. Reudebush, (R-Ind.), said the three crewmen could have escaped "perhaps with some burns" if the spacecraft hatch could have been opened within two or three sec- onds. The wiring installation resem- wbles a Rube Goldberg invention, Rep. James G. Fulton, (R-Pa.), said yesterday. "Not Good Practice" His comment came after Dr. Maxime Faget, a member of a review board, told a Iouse science and astronautics subcommittee this installation "is not considered good practice." "There is the possibility of the wiring getting mashed against steel tubing or abraised by the door," Faget said. He used large colored pictures to explain his points and said the most likely region. for the Jan. 27 launch-pad fire was underneath a lithium hydroxide access door. Administrator James E. Webb of the National Aeronautics and Space Administration assured the congressional group earlier "we can move on to make the Apollo- Saturn system fly." Strong Criticism The week-long hearing began one day after the review board re- port outlined critical faults in the program. The investigators strongly criti- cized the Apollo project heads for "many deficiencies in design and engineering, manufacture and quality control." In the 3,000 page report, conclu- ded after 10 weeks of investiga- tion, the committee said that the exact cause of the fire "most like- ly will never be positively iden- tified." The board, in their report, add- ed that it had uncovered engineer- ing shortcomings and lazy pro- cedures on the launching pad that could have contributed to the ac- cident. Some Republicans complained that the board consisted of too many of NASA's own people and did not go into the fundamental conditions which permitted the ac- cident to occur. Webb said the board consisted of the best experts available. TV Union En The Daily Official Bulletin is ani official publication of the Univer- sity of Michigan for which The Michigan Daily assumes no editor- ial responsibility. Notices should be sent in TYPEWRITTEN form to Room 3564 Administration Bldg. be- fore 2 p.m. of the day 'preceding publication and "-by 2 p.m. Friday for Satarday and Sunday. General Notices may be published a 'maxi- mum of two times on request; Day Calendar Items appear once only. Student organization notices are not accepted for publication. For more information call 764-9270. TUESDAY, APRIL 11 Day Calendar Bureau of Industrial Relations Sem- inar-"The Management of Managers": 146 Business Administration, 8:15 a.m. Bureau of Industrial Relations Sem- ds Strike;" i inar-"Developing and Installing Stand- the present term, you are urged to go ANNOUNCEMENT:c ards of Managerial Performance": Mich Ito 515 Administration Bldg. not later INTERVIEW, APRIL 13-1 igan Union, 8:30 a.m. than April 14. This does 'not apply United Airlines-Interview primarilyt to students in Law and Undergradu- sophomores, will consider jrs. for School of Music Flute Student Recital ate College of Engineering. Stewardess Campus Representative. Fly -Recital Hall, School of Music, 12:30 with United this summer and return I p.m., Student Identification Number Fail to Michigan to represent United andc 1967: Effective for the fall term 1967, its stewardess programs. Depts. of Philosophy and Classical the official student identification num- -rsprg ._ Studies Lecture-Gregory Vlastos, pro- ber will be the social security numberPOSITION OPENINGS: fessor, Princeton University, "The So- with a check digit assigned by the POTIONFooPEllNINs:etotf~h cratic Paradox": Aud. A, Angell Hall, 4 University. Any students .who do not , dThe Football News, eDtroit, nMieh. - C p.m. possess a social security number should rad rn a or ed o make application at the Ann Arbor i Pref. man, 21-2, service obliga-- Slavic Dept. 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International Conference on Stratified cial security number on their last re. Trainee I, in one year exam for promo- Fluids: A series of 29 lectures on re- istrationnaire. These new cards vill tion is given. cent research in stratified flows will be availabl with the fall registration Hanna Mining Co., Cleveland, Ohio- be presented: Emphasis on geophysi- materials. Programmer, Sr. or recent grad with cal phenomena, laboratory research The Registrar's Office should be no- exper. on Fortran or Algol. Littie ex- wave theory and stability analysis: tified a hoon as practicable of all name per, necessary, familiar with large com. Tues., April 11 through Fri., April 14, changes prior to the fall registration. puting equip., 10-20 per cent travel. Rackham Amphitheatre. This notificatiin will allow name chang- Young Women's Christian Associa- es to the new student identification tion, St. Joseph, Mich.-Teen Age Pro- cards and materials, gram Director, for service, social and General ,Notices ...educational activities. BA in soc., psych. orrelated fields, exper. in group work Hopwood Lecture: Robert Brustein, with young people helpful. dean, School of Music Drama, Yale, The following foreign visitors can be Local Committee - Secretary-recep- "Classical Actions, Modern Eyes": to- reached through the Foreign visitor tionist. Shorthand necessary for mi. morrow evening Rackham Lecture Hall, Programs Office, 764-2148. Iof meetings. Also caling, no filing. 8 P.M. A. Nduka, secondary high school Partime, approx. half time, this sum- Sigma Xt: Dr. Bernard A. Galler, as- eacher, Nigeria, April 8-12. mer, could be flexible, would like full socite iretorof cmpuingcener, M. F. Mohtadi, professor of engineer- time 8-5 or 9-5 in the fall, Sept. socfate director of computing center, ing and head, Department of Chemi- Riblet Products, Inc., Elkhart, Ind. professor of mathematics, Department cal Engineering, University of the West -Engineer with structural or civil de- o ommunicaton Sciene en Indies, St. Augustine, Trinidad, April gree. Recent grad pref. Analyzing strue- Problems in Computer and Program 9-11. tural stability for steel bldgs., cost esti- Organization": Wed., April 12, Rack- Enrique Pinilla (accompanied by Mrs. mating, coord. sales & drafting, and I ham Amphitheatre; open to the pub- Pinilla), head, Music and Film Depart- production. ment, and professor of history of music, * * University of Lima, Peru, April 9-11. For further infirmation please call Zoology-Botany Seminar: Dr. Efraim Ferenc Madl, professor of law, Hun- 764-7460, General Division, Bureau of RMoclarchairan, Biochemistry and gary April 11-15, Appointments, 3200 SAB. ca Sciences, Co elly Divns of Bioi Prof. Nellie Villalon, leader of group an Sciencesonellaniv.,Structureh of librarians from University of Zulia. SUMMER PLACEMENT SERVICE: and Function in Choroplast Phosphor- Maracaibo, Edo. Zulia, Venezuela, April 212 SAB-- ylaton": Thurs., April 13, 1400 Chem- 16 istr Jag.,n.1'1. ?Vp+.im.WS campus the following year. Prefer to interview sophomores, will see jrs. con- tact Bureau of Appointments, 3200 SAB, 764-7460, for appointments. Camp Sequoia, N.Y.-Coed. 10-5 pim. Positions open In waterfront, arts & crafts, nature, pioneering, ham radio & general counselors. Details and applications at Summer Placement Service, 212 SAB, Lower Lev- -. Part-T im e Employment Waitresses-For April 18, 22, 27, 28 & 29. Experience helpful but not nec- essary, Possibility of summer employ- mrent. Pay rate-$1 .64 per hour. In- terested applicants please contact: Part-Time Employment Office, 2200 SAB. Phone: 764-7283 BEFORE YOU BUY See the JOHN ROBERTS College Ring ULRICH'S Your Fritendly Books/ore Academy Awards Televised NEW YORK (MP)-The AFL-CIO American Federation of Television and Radio Artists ended its 13- day strike last night against the three big television networks. ABC's telecast of the academy awards went on as scheduled. "The strike is over, the picket- ing will stop and the show will go on as scheduled, an ABC spokes- man announced less than two hours before the Oscars ceremony in Hollywood. AFTRA's national board ap- proved terms of a contract reach- ed at dawn with ABC, NBC and CBS. Formal approval is required from the union's 18,000 members. Meanwhile, however, union lead- ers called a halt to picketing pending the rank-and-file ballot- ing. ABC's Motion Picture Academy Award telecast was canceled last. Friday, and the $1.5 million spon- sor contract with Eastman Kodak apparently went down the drain. But rehearsals continued in the hope the strike would end and all remained in readiness to set the cameras rolling on the spectacle. The network said 70 million viewers watched the award ritual last year. lock involving the networks' FM radio outlets. Negotiators emerged in their shirt-sleeves from an all-night bargaining session to announce at 6 a.m. EST that a new contract appeared to have been worked out. Across Campus SUBSCRIBE TO, THE MICHIGAN DAILY 4 COLLEGE STUDENTS istry Bldg., 4 p.m. j Attention Students: If you need to or- der a transcript without grades for THURS., APRIL 13- Pia eie it 't United Airlines-Fly as stewardess summer and represent United back Returning to Chicago this summer ? Make the most of it at ' I ,,.=-, ". "-: f 1 I ROOSEVELT UNIVERSITY 4 ) T Programs especially designed for the student who wants to: work nights, study days-or-work days, study nights; take courses he couldn't work into his regular schedule; make up course work; or gain extra credits. Varied hours of course offerings and the easily acces- sible location of ROOSEVELT UNIVERSITY make it possible to take one or more courses during the one evening or 2 day summer sessions. More than 150 courses offered in these and other subjects: Art English Music Biology History Philosophy Business Languages Political Scl. Chemistry Literature Psychology Education Mathematics Sociology For further information write: 2 Day Sessionse OFFICE OF EDUCATIONAL INFORMATION June 26-Aug. 4 ROOSEVELT UNIVERSITYA essit.ns 430 So. Michigan Ave., Chicago, Illinois 60605 June 26-Aug. 24 -6 Name L Address City 9 State Ziq cityc Lfp,, ,q ORGANIZATION NOTICES USE OF THIS COLUMN FOR AN- NOUNCEMENTS is available to officially recognized and registered student or- ganizations only. Forms are available in Room 1011 SAB. Russian Circle, Russky Kruzhok, tea and Russian cnversation, Tues., April 11, 3-5 p.m., 3050 Frieze Bldg. * * * Hillel Foundation, Kosher Dining Club, 1429 Hill. Sabbath meals: Friday t 6:15 p.m., Saturday at noon. Call 663-4129 for reservations. " s * Scottish Country Dance Club, Danc- ing Wed., April 12, 8-10 p.m., Women's Athletic Bldg. Step instruction and practice, 8-8:30 p.m. only. * * * Joint Judiciary Council, Meeting, Wed., 7 p.m., April 12, 3540 SAB. * * * Deutscher Verein, Kaffeestunde, Wed., April 12, 3-5 p.m., 3050 Frieze Bldg. * * * Student Zionist Organization, Discus- sion on Sherut La'am-service to the people, a year program in Israel, with a member of the program, Tues., April 11, 8 f.m., 1429 Hill. And, when you told this beautiful Yankee c:oed that you could give her rmore for her used texts than Follett's could, what did she-say? Go soak your head. *0 u UNITED AIRLINES CAMPUS STEWARDESS REPRESENTATIVE INTERVIEWS, Interested in a unique position? Train this summer in Chicago and fly as a Mainliner Stewardess. Return to the Uni- versity of Michigan in the Fall and represent the world's largest airline on campus. If you have one or two years of college remaining and are single, between 20-26 years old (at least 20 years of age by mid-July for this particular job), between 5'2" and 5'9", weight Follett's pays you more cash for your used books You'll have to go far to find anyone who'll beat a Follett's book-buying bonanza. Others may have the best intentions, but it's simple mathematics - you can get more for your used texts from an organization which can afford to make less per book. That's us. We are part of a growing chain of stores who deal in volume, so sometimes we're almost just trading dollars. But, don't feel sorry for us; our loss is your gain. Right after your exams, cleanse yourself of your past. Bring in all those used textbooks and walk out with dollar bills. More than you'll get elsewhere. Come early for the crisp ones. We might suggest that you spend them here next year, if you're a storage problem? Protect and store your seasonal garments at Kwik 'n Kleen, Ann Arbor's Complete Clothing Care Center. After a professional eaoning.a nurIthes are math- Potentate, prince, or pauper-you'll appreciate our incomparable prices. I F