.hee's Suc Lessor Sets on Illegalities Army Fires Zeus Missile From 'Silo' Prof. Koch's Dismissal Debated Deadline SCIENTIST VON BRAUN: Life on Other Planets Called Probable NEW YORK ()-Dr. Wernher Von Braun, the space scientist, said yesterday it is "likely" that life exists in the universe outside the earth. He envisioned an eventual meet- ing of an earth astronaut with "another being in space." Von Braun used the word "likely" with deliberate purpose, he told a dinner of the Bureau of Advertising of the American Newspaper Publishers Assn. in a prepared address. "There Is good reason to assume, on purely scientific grounds and on evidence adduced by observa- tion, that life of some kind exists elsewhere in the universe," he said. "In my opinion that is an entirely logical assumption. s "I cannot believe that the Power which created life and order con- fined all sensible organisms to this comparatively tiny planet, "Our sun is one of 100 billion stars in our galaxy. Our galaxy is one of billions of galaxies popu- lating the universe. It would be the height of presumption to think that we are the only living things in that enormous immens- ity." Von Braun said it would be a significant milestone when the first American astronaut returns safely to earth from a flight through space. "But I suggest," he said, "that it will be an even more memorable occasion when the first American meets another being in space. We can hope the greeting will be 'hello, Earthman' and not 'Wel- come, Tovarishch'." Von Braun outlined a 10-year schedule the national aeronautics and space administration is pur- suing-a program that he said, "Should excite any American." The program: 1960-The first sub-orbital as- tronaut flight. 1961-Manned orbital flight and lunar impact of a scientific pay- loan. 1962-The first space probe measurements in the vicinity of Venus and/or Mars. 1963-4-A controlled landing on the moon and an orbiting astro- nomical and radio astronomy ob- servatory. 1964-Unmanned lunar circum- navigation and return to earth, unmanned reconnaissance of Mars or Venus. First launching of a three-stage Saturn rocket, the largest space transportation sys-. tem now in active development. 1965 through 1967-Initial phas-, es of the program leading to un- manned circumlunar flight and establishment of a permanent space station. Beyond 1970--Manned flight to the moon. Von Braun said it would be highly injurious to be required to justify the space program expense in terms of immediate economic benefits alone. He said any cash return must come in the wake of the achievement. e Miri~jan nDalt Second Front Page Friday, April 29, 1960 Pe 3 I U I. ENTER and WIN Michigan Union Creative Arts Festival PHOTO CONTEST Over $200 in prizes Students Hail Past Leader As 'Patriot' Acting President Restores Balance SEOUL, KOREA ()-Syngman Rhee faded into retirement yes- terday and his provisional succes- sor set a three-month deadline for his aides to rid the nation of "long accumulated illegalities, injustices and corruption." Political illegalities and deep popular suspicion of corruption sparked the demonstrations which forced the resignation of strong- man Rhee, founder of the Repub- lic and its first and only presi- dent. But yesterday he was hailed as a patriot by the very students whose Violent demonstrations top- pled his 12-year-old regime. A picture of patriarchal tragedy, he was cheered as he left the pres- idential palace with grief etched on his craggy countenance over the suicide pact death of his pro- tege, Lee Ki-Poong. Moved Swiftly Acting President Huh Chung, who has a reputation for rugged independence and political hon- esty, moved swiftly to set the na- tion on an even course. The 64-year-old provisional chief named six new ministers and planned to name two more to fill out a 12-man government. He told his ministers their supreme task is "to get rid completely of the long accumulated illegalities, injustices, corruption and other disorders in various departments of the administration." Huh said the cabinet should carry out reforms in close coop- eration with the legislative and judicial branches, "so that the current explosive feeling of the people can be transformed into voluntary and constructive patri- otism. Rapid Prosperity Huh's statement said the up- rising of the past two weeks "could provide, if its lessons are put into practice, the best circumstances which would promise the demo- cratic development of the nation and rapid prosperity for a free economy in this country." The acting president said irreg- ularities in political institutions made injustices possible in the past. National police influence in pol- itics and police brutalities were among factors which led to South Korea's explosion. Police coercion at the polls March 15, when Lee Ki-Poong was elected vice presi- dent over the opposition incumb- ent by an 8-1 margin, touched off the demonstrations. Apparently oriental-style atone- ment for his role in the violence led Lee into a suicide pact. His elder son shot his parents and his brother and then turned the gun on himself. WASHINGTON (A)-The army test fired a Nike Zeus anti-missile missile from an underground launching site yesterday. This raised the possibility that such weapons, designed to de- stroy enemy ballistic missiles, could be located far up in the Artic toward the top of the world. The first firing of the experi- mental missile from an under- ground position was carried out at the White Sands, N.M., missile range. Hurls Missile There the 450,000-pound thrust of the Zeus' main booster rocket hurled the missile aloft. The sec- ond stage engine and warhead of the test model were dummy de- vices, merely to simulate weight and shape. Maj. Gen. William W. Dick, dir- ector of special weapons for the army's research and development office, told newsmen the test was successful, meeting all objectives. The chief purpose, he said, was to prove that the Zeus could be launched from a deep, fortified hole as well as from surface launching pads. The launching "silo" used for yesterday's test was 60 feet deep, 9 feet square. Emplaced In Ice Dick was asked if there was any reason why such silos could not be emplaced in ice, such as the Greenland glacier, or in the froz- en soil of Arctic tundra. "I can see no reason why not," he answered. The air force is now building the first of three ballistic missile early warning systems near Thule, in northwest Greenland. These stations are intended to detect intercontinental missiles as they rise above the horizon from Soviet bases and as they go into traject- ory which would take them across the Artic toward North America. Counter - weapon sites in the Arctic could make possible the interception and destruction of ICBM's in areas far removed from the populated regions of the United States and Canada. Find Cities In Dead Sea AMMAN, JORDAN (A) - The long lost evil cities of Sodom and Gomorrah have been found by American divers on the bottom of the Dead Sea, a Baptist mis- sionary-explorer reported yester- day. In his disclosures to an inter- viewer, Dr. Ralph E. Baney of Kansas City, Mo., head of a four- member expedition, told also of finding extensive underwater rem- nants of Biblical civilization that flourished and languished 4,000 years ago. His evidence indicated that the cities of the once fertile plain were engulfed after a levee collapse in an earthquake and lay hidden for centuries until his divers found them in the heavily salt waters. Some of their levee works that held back the waters in ancient times might emerge to view through evaporation of the Dead Sea waters within a few years, he said. Deadline: May 2nd Pick up entry blank now at Michigan Union Student Offices ARCHIMC>S makes another great discovery... It's what's up front that counts ::4 .. S ' : .' .:': : If I , Yi: it. 3: ' ..\ I,5 * You can reproduce the experiment. It's easy as ?W. (Yes, you can do it in the bathtub.) Assuming that you have first visited your friendly tobac- conist, simply light your first Winston and smoke it. Reasoning backwards, flavor cannot come from the filter. Therefore, it's what's up front that counts: Winston's Filter-Blend. The tobaccos are selected for flavor and mildness, then specially processed for filter smoking. This extra step is the $999 Bears the shield of elegance -the styling of the master- p I