Ir THE MICHIGAN DAILY _,_..r __ . _,.. _.. ,._ _ o e . President, Nation Honor Glenn ilot Calls Re-Entry Difficult, Spectacular Controls Friendship 7' Manually After Attitude System Malfunctions By The Associated Press CAPE CANAVERAL-Astronaut John H. Glenn, Jr. yesterday de- scribed his three-orbit flight to newsmen after President Jolin F. Kennedy awarded him a medal for his "unflinching courage" and "outstanding contribution to the advancement of human knowledge." A cheering crowd of perhaps 100,000 persons had earlier paid respects to Glenn as he rode in an open convertible along an 18-mile parade route. The first American to orbit the earth admitted that he had a few uneasy moments during a "spectacular" re-entry from space ''when he feared his capsule heat Army Adds To Strength Of STRAC WASHINGTON (P)-The Army is almost tripling the size of its "ready-alert" force, the Strategic Army Corps (STRAC) by expand- ing the organization from the present three divisions to eight. The object of the reorganiza- tion, an announcement yesterday said, is to provide a force big enough and flexible enough to cope with possible simultaneous troubles in widely separated areas of the world. To do this, the Army has orga- nized a second STRAC unit, one of them--the present unit-which is essentially an airborne corps, and the other an armored unit. The new corps, the Pentagon said, will be composed initially of the 49th armored, 32 infantry, 4th infantry and "second armored di- visions. The existing STRAC corps, un- der a realignment, will be com- posed of the 82nd and 101st air- borne divisions, and the 1st and 2nd infantry divisions. When two new regular Army divisions have completed train- ing and equipping, they will take over present National -Guard po- sitions, probably this summer. The creation of the new STRAC corps will expand the size of the quick reacting portion of the Ar- my, but it will not change the overall manpower strength of the ground forces. About 75,000 men will be moved over into STRAC under the pro- gram. STRAC keeps its units armed, equipped and ready to begin mov- ing out within a few hours after emergency orders are issued. For transportation, it depends on planes of the Air Force and the Military Air Transport System. Soviets May UseRoc i With Manned First StaE 13 Expect Delay At Con-Con By MARK BLUCHER It's unlikely that Michigan's constitutional convention w i l l meet its deadline. . The delegates had hoped to fin- ish framing the new state con- stitution by March 31, in order to place it on the November ballot. It now. appears that longer- than-expected floor debate will force the work to continue until sometime in May before the new document is ready. Through Eight Stages All proposals at con-con must go through eight stages before final approval: first reading before the convention, referral to and modification by one of the ten standing committees, second read- ing before the convention, discus- sion by the convention meeting in Committee of the Whole, third reading, vote by Committee of the Whole, referral to the Committee on Style and Drafting, and de- bate and final vote by the conven- tion., So far, only two standing com- mittee reports have gone through Committee of the Whole and to the style and drafting stage. Two of the Education Committee's three proposals have been voted upon by the Committee of the Whole. All other measures are in earlier stages of consideration. Bans Graduated Tax Among the measures the Com- mittee of the Whole has approved is one banning a graduated state income tax. Other tentatively ap- proved provisions would allow lo- cal communities to levy payroll taxes on both resident and non- residents, would pave the way for modified home rule by counties,1 and would abolish the present 15-e mill limit on taxation by local counties, townships and schoolt districts. Next on the con-con agenda,I the proposals from the committees on the Executive Branch, on Leg- islative Organization (apportion- ment), and on the judiciary will come before the Committee of the Whole. World News .R d Roundup By The Associated Press BANGKOK-Prime Minister Sa- rit Thanarat yesterday charged runits of Communist Chinese 96th Army have entered Laos to strengthen the pro-Communist Pathet Lao rebels battlingnroyal Laotian government forces for the provincial capital of Nam Tha. * * * CARACAS - President Romulo Betancourt said yesterday leftist students tried to seize the Mai- quetia International Airport near Caracas last month as a base for arms-carrying planes from Cuba. The students failed. * * * WASHINGTON -- The general activity of 100 Navy men who have been in an underground fall- out, shelter since last Saturday #appears to be slowing down," the Navy said yesterday. ** * NEW YORK-Despite a rally by savings-and-loans, the stock mar- ket declined yesterday. The Dow- Jones industrial average dropped 1.2 points to 370.6. shield might be burning up. Warning Light Fails An electronic warning light, not the heat shield, was later found to be faulty. He reported he was very pleased at his 4bility to function in weightlessness, especially his abil- ity to control his Friendship 7 space vehicle after a slight mal- function in the automatic attitude control system forced him to as- sume manual control for much of the journey. Glenn added that when it came to eating in space he recommended something solid, not cookies whose crumbs would go floating about and "you couldn't get them back without a butterfly net." Sees New Star Field On his first orbit, he noticed something that looked "like a completely new star field," and found that it was made up of par- ticles six to 10 feet apart, white and about the size of a pinhead. "I don't know what you can say about a day when you see four beautiful sunsets," Glenn said, and he couldn't ask for more than that his space flight might lead to American cooperation with Russia in the exploration of space. Flaming Metal I mperils Sip . CAPE CANAVERAL {)-Astro- naut John H. Glenn, Jr. told Pres- ident John F. Kennedy yesterday how "big, flaming chunks" of met- al from his spaceship's braking rocket package burned off and "came up past the window" at the most harrowing moment of his or- bital space flight. As Glenn explained, there were some indications that the heat shield of his Mercury capsule was breaking up. If that had happen- ed, he and the craft would have burned up during re-entry into the atmosphere. Glenn has been listed to testify next Tuesday before the House Science and Astronautics Commit- tee. WASHINGTON (M)-Some gov- ernment analysts believe the So- viet Union has developed a sys- tem of launching intercontinental' missiles, spaceships and satellites from manned rocketplanes. Such a system would have great military significance. The experts' conclusions were made public yesterday after hav- ing been kept secret for nine months. Their accuracy is not fully accepted by the government. According to a 160-page report prepared by intelligence analysts, there is good reason to believe that two manned rocketplanes at- tached to opposite sides of a pow- erful rocket engine have been used as the first stage in a number of Soviet space shots. Flown Back to Earth If the theory is correct, the Inonu Lauded By Parliament .ANKARA (P)-Premier Ismet In- onu received a standing ovation from Parliament yesterday fol- lowing collapse of an armed forces uprising against his government. It seemed appropriate acclaim for the one-time general who stub- bornly refused to give in to de- mands from mutinous army units that he step down and clear the way for a new military govern- ment in Turkey.' The Turkish high command, meanwhile, moved swiftly to heal breaches created between the armed forces in the short-lived uprising. About 70 reformist offi- cers who led the mutiny were quietly transferred to new assign- ments early yesterday. planes were freed from the large rocket near the fringes of spa and were flown back to earth their pilots. The second sta rocket then continued into spa boosting a third stage which eve tually completed the flight on own. The reported development cou have great significance in miss warfare, since the first-stageroc] etplanes could be recovered a used again in future firings. According to the report, t third stage used in various Russi tests involving rocketplanes cc sisted of dummy intercontinent missiles and space vehicles. It sa the rocketplane launching syste apparently was used in a series Soviet missile tests over the R cific early in 1960. Third Stage Recovery Another significant conclusi reached in the report concerns t recovery of third-stage space v, hicles. It indicated some Soviet spae ships are brought safely back earth through a re-entry syste combining the use of metallic a fabric parachutes, retro-rocke and telescopic wings which can thrust into the air to act as a dr or to guide the ship into a seri of "skip-glides" into the atmo phere. In the skip-glide process, t vehicle coasts down into the a mosphere, which slows its fligr then skips back into space befC gliding down again. The repo said glides of this sort can be co tinued for several days. "There are indications that t Soviets have developed a mul purpose, re-usable, winged carrie rocket as a vertical launch v hicle for spacecraft," the repc states. --AP Wirephoto ASTRONAUT HONORED-President John F. Kennedy pins the space agency's Distinguished Service Medal on astronaut John Glenn at a ceremony inCape Canaveral yesterday. In the center is Maj. Gen. Leighton Davis, commander of the Air Force Missile Test Center. Castro Gone; No Comment From Havana By The Associated Press HAVANA-Cuban Prime Minis- ter Fidel Castro has not been seen in public for 11 days. Castro, who was supposed to attend a recent public ceremony, reportedly did not show up, and officials who might know his whereabouts are refusing to an- swer questions. A rumor, whose origin cannot be traced, is that Castro might be in Moscow. However, neither Mos- cow nor Havana have in any way denied or confirmed this. There is also speculation that the Cuban government may now be in the hands of a collective Communist leadership which is restricting Castro's actions. Ob- servers noted that Castro read, rather than ad-libbed as he usual- ly does, his Feb. 5 "Declaration of Havana." Observers conclude that the speech might have been written by someone else. Ask State Display At World's Fair Rep. Gilbert Bursley (R-Ann Arbor) and Sen. John Stahlin (R- Belding) have introduced legisla- tion in both the House and the Senate that would provide for' Michigan's participation in the 1964-65 World's Fair at New York. The bills recommend that $150- 000 be appropriated from the gen- eral fund for preliminary planning for the Michigan exhibit. KENNEDY TOUR: Feingold Says Journey Illustrates, U.S. Concern By ROBERT SELWA Attorney General Robert F. Kennedy is a "dramatic exponent" of American concern for other countries, Prof. Eugene N. Feingold of the political science department, said yesterday. Prof. Feingold viewed the trip as cultivating an aura of good feeling. The trip will have a "tenuous, not massive" effect upon im- proving foreign relations, and it " probably will not sway many avowed neutralists and Commu- nists. Successful Trip The trip has been successful so far in its aim of solidifying friend- ships (according to Prof. Fein- gold) and this is its main pur- pose. "The trip is not intended to further Kennedy's own political career so much as it is meant to assure American pledges," he com- mented. Kennedy Pledges Aid Kennedy assured West Berliners yesterday that the United States will fly planes to the isolated half- city, keeping the air lanes open to the West, no matter what Soviet opposition develops.; Prof. Feingold discounted any. major effects the trip might have in the possible ascendency of Ken- nedy to the secretary of state or to the Presidency in 1968. Trips of this sort are a "very common thing" among top government of- fials, he added, and Kennedy is not .seeking to "form foreign poli- cy.", In Berlin, thousands of persons lined Kennedy's route. QCP I' CH~URCH~ S'4ABB1A'T H ON U' F : b , if _ .. . _.. DPECIAL WOOL SLACKS 7.,90 Superb savings on our smart, fully lined MEMORIAL CHRISTIAN CHURCH (Disciples of Christ) Hill and Toppon Streets Rev. Russell M. Fuller, Minister. 10:45 a.m. Morning Worship. 7:30 p.m. Open House, 802 Monroe. THE EVANGELICAL UNITED BRETHREN CHURCH Corner of Miller and Newport John G. Swank, Pastor Telephone NOrmandy 3-4061 Church;School 10:00 A.M. Morning Worship 11:00 A.M. CAMPUS CHAPEL Washtenaw at Forest The Reverend Leonard Verduin, Pastor Sponsored by the Christian Reformed Churches of Michigan 10:00 A.M. Worship Services 11:15 A.M. Coffee Hour 7:00 P.M. Vesper Worship Service THE CHURCH OF CHRIST 530 W. Stadium at Edgwood John G. Makin Phone NO 2-2756 10:00 A.M. Bible School. 11:00 A.M. Regular Worship. 6:30 P.M. Evening Worship. WEDNESDAY- 7:30 P.M. Bible Study. For Transportation call NO 2-2756. ST. MARY'S STUDENT CHAPEL William and Thompson Streets Rev. John F. Bradley, Chaplain Rev. John J. Fouser, Assistant RELIGIOUS SCHEDULE Sunday Masses: 8:00, 9:30, 11:00 a.m., 12:00 Noon and 12:30. Holyday Masses: 6:30, 7:00, 9:00 a.m., 12:00 Noon, 5:10 p.m. Weekday Mosses: 7:00, 8:00, 9:00 a.m. and 12:00 Noon. Novena Devotions: Mother of Perpetual Help, Wednesday evening, 7:30 p.m. Rosary and Litany: Daily at 5:10 p.m. ST. ANDREWS CHURCH and the EPISCOPAL STUDENT FOUNDATION 306 North Division Phone NO 2-4097 SUNDAY- 8:00 A.M. Holy Communion. 9:00 a.m. Holy Communion followed by breakfast at the Canterbury House. (Morning prayer on first Sunday of month.) 11:00 a.m. Morning prayer and sermon (Holy Communion on first Sunday of month.) 7:00 p.m. Evening Prayer. Rev. Franklin Bennett. TUESDAY- 7 -AAm Lu rtwn. ni BETHLEHEM EVANGELICAL REFORMED United Church of Christ 423 South Fourth-Ave. Rev. -Ernest Klaudt, Pastor 9:30 a.m. and 10:45 a.m. Morning Worship. 7:30 p.m. Evening Guild, 802 Monroe. CONGREGATIONAL CHURCH State and William Streets Dr. Fred E. Luchs, Minister Rev. Edgar Edwards, Student Minister Guild House at 524 Thompson Services 9:30 and 11:00 a.m. Sermon Topic: "Religion Helps Marriage." BibleuLecture: 10:20-10:40, Mrs. Fred E. Luchs. Church School, crib-12th grade, 9:30 and 11:00 a.m. Student Guild: 802 Monroe, telephone 2-5189. FIRST BAPTIST CHURCH AND BAPTIST STUDENT CENTER 512 and 502 E. Huron-NO 3-9376 Rev. James Middleton, Minister Rev. Paul Light, Campus Minister Mr. George Pickering, Intern Minister SUNDAY 9:45 a.m. Campus Discussion Class, Coffee Hour 11:00 a.m. Morning Worship 7:00-8:00 P.M. Open House, Campus Center. LUTHERAN STUDENT CENTER AND CHAPEL National Lutheran Council Hill Street at S. Forest Ave. Henry 0. Yoder,. Pastor Miss Anna M. Lee, Counselor Phone: NO 8-7622 SUNDAY 9:30 A.M. Worship Service 9:45 A.M. Bible Study 11:00 A.M. Worship Service and Communion. 7:00 P.M. "Christian Courtship and Mar- rioge"-Pastor Yoder, Speaker. THE FIRST PRESBYTERIAN CHURCH OF ANN ARBOR AND THE PRESBYTERIAN CAMPUS CENTER 1432 Washtenow NO 2-3580 Sunday Services: 9:00 and 10:30 Rev. Elmer Homrighausen, Dean of Princeton Theologi- cal Seminary. 11:50 Rev. Jack Borckardt. CAMPUS CENTER 10:30 A.M. Bible Study, "The Book of Acts," Campus Center. 6:30 P.M. Quest and Question at Campus Center. FIRST UNITARIAN CHURCH 1917 Washtenow at Berkshire Rev. Erwin Goede The sermon topic for Sunday, February 25, will be: The Thought of Albert Camus. Ill. "Between Despair and Hope." Adult Discussion Group at 10:00 Church School at'10:30. Church Service at 11:00. FIRST CHURCH OF CHRIST, SCIENTIST; 1833 Washtenow Ave. 11:00 a.m. Sunday Services. ; 8:00 p.m. Wednesday Services. 9:30 a.m. Sunday School (up to 20 years of age.) 11:00 a.m. Sunday School (for children 2 to 6 years of age.) A free reading room Is maintained at 306 East Liberty St. Hours are Monday through Sot. and holidays. Morwfay evening 7:00 to 9:00 urday, 10 a.m. to 5 p.m. except Sundoys UNIVERSITY LUTHERAN CHAPEL AND STUDENT CENTER (The Lutheran Church-Missouri Synod) 1511 Washtenaw Avenue Alfred T. Scheips, Pastor Thomas C. Park, Vicar Sunday at 9:45 and at 11:15: Worship Services, Sermon by the Pastor, "The Word-Imper- ishable Seed" (Communion3 in both serv- ices). Sunday at 9:45 and 11:15: Bible study groups. Sunday at 6:00: Gamma Delta, Lutheran Stu- dqnt Club, Supper-Program, "The Bible and Science/' the Rev. Dr, Paul Zimmerman, speaker. Tues. at 6:00: Married Couples Supper. Phone for reservations. Wed. at 10:00: Midweek Evening Devotion. Friday at 7:00: Chapel Choir. FIRST METHODIST CHURCH and WESLEY FOUNDATION State and Huron Streets, Tel. NO 8-6881 Dr. Hoover Rupert, Minister 1 Rev. Gene Ransom, Campus Minister NORTH SIDE PRESBYTERIAN CHURCH 2250 Fuller Road (Opposite V.A. Hospital) NOrmandy 3-2969 William S. Baker, Minister I Morning Worship 10:45 a.m. Church School and Child Care. l-wool classics.. -now aton unusuallylow price. Select from many beautiful styles and patterns in solids' and novelties. Dark or pastel colorings, 6-16 sues. 44 - i 9 a, MONDAY 9:00 P.M. Coffee and Concern, servatory. 9:00 and 11:'15 A.M. Morning Worsi "Christianity is in the Present Tense." S mon by Dr. Rupert. The Service is bro cast at 11:15 A.M. on station WOIA. 10:15 A.M. Seminar on World Understandi Cuba. Speaker, Mr. Hector Rodriquez. P Room. 7.00 P.M. Worship and Program: Workcor ing in Mexico. Speaker, The Rev. Willi Hutchinson, Wayne State University. WEDNESDAYS 7.00 lA-MAA Wv Commnn. Chae. folo 217 S. Ob- WEDNESDAY 4:15 P.M. Noise of Solemn Assemblies. Protes- tant Foundation, 536 Thompson. DOWNSTAIRS 1 i 1 I I