Page Two THE MICHIGAN DAILY Saturday, December 12, 1 V 14 Page T THE MICHIGAN DAILY Saturday, December 12, 1914 ' W1 If you can spend some time, even a few hours, with someone who needs a hand, not a handout, call your local Volunta Action Center. Or write toX"Vo unteer" Washingior..D.C..20013.1 The National Center for Voluntary Action. advertisig contributed for th publi good 1 10 11 11111J 11_ 1 A FSCME CREWMEN CARR, POGUE, GIBSON: Daily Of"fiial Bulletin ammmnara mm m negotiationsISkylab crew shocks public with I I 7' NEW YORK (Reuter)-It's not' ness episode. little enthusiasm or humour in hit sn g i#the scientific achievement of the I fairness, their performance their conversations with ground Ii it g third Skylab crew that has has improved a lot in recent weeks. control. (continued from Page 1) , periodically jolted a bored public-I but their blunders. But the mission got off to an A SCIENCE WRITER for the At Conth s nefrstAFC E In contrast to the super-human unlucky start for the three men, United States Information Service contract expiration date some three performance of the two previous Skipper Lt. Col. Gerald Carr and (USIS), Frank Froelich, admitted years ago, negotiations proved un- teams who triumphed over unfore- crewmen It E William Pogue recently: "Disturbing to Mission successful and the University was seen troubles and frustrations, the and physicist Edward Gibson. And Control officials has been the be- forced to suffer the unpleasant con- present crew have shown them- they made it worse. haviour of the crew. The astronauts sqces o a the dayestrikeselves to be all too human. . . . have been prone to error and sequences of a three day strike, SOON AFTER they had docked1 poor dispositions. Their sleep before an agreement could be THEY HAVE largely ruined one' their Apollo capsule with the space periods have been longer on the reached. experiment, thrown wrong switches, station, Pogue became ill and average than those of the earlier fallen behind in their schedule, coughed up some vomit. The crew crews. By the second day of the strik slept too long, been moody, and- decided to keep quiet about it, al- food service in many of the dorms most disheartening to ground con- though safety regulations require "They have voiced an unusual was discontinued. trollers-tried to cover up a sick- that such episodes be reported number of complaints about their immediately. workload . . . and at times they Then Pogue ran into some more have been moody and tempera- bad luck. He failed to put the mental in conversations with Mis- proper filters on special cameras sion Control. Experts at Mission used to photograph the earth. This Control are seeking the cause of r slip may well have ruined most these reactions," Froelich said. of the film shot during nine out of In addition, the astronauts in- 18 runs to survey the earth's sur- sisted on sticking to the book. They face. were reluctant to work on their There were numerous other mi-' rest-days and insisted that their nor mistakes. Switches that were 90-minute exercise periods not be never turned on, tasks that never interrupted. Flight directors finally got completed. The morale of the were forced to cut down their work- men seemed low. They showed' ing hours. D'S __ - ------7 DOCTORS, WHO had been de- lighted at the performance of the earlier crews, became privately concerned about the attitude of the Carr crew and their difficulty in adjusting to life-in-space. Pogue explained in a frank ex- change with the ground: "When' we're pressed bodily from one point of the spacecraft to another with no time even for mental preparation . . . there's no way we can do a professional job.- I don't' like being put in an incredible position where I'm taking some- body's expensive equipment and' thrashng about with it and trying to act like a one-armed paper hanger." Carr referred to the dynamo- pace of the earlier crews. "I thought we made it plain to people that we did not plan on that kind of pace. You've got to go for en- durance ... if you keep charging along you lose track of what you're doing." Saturday, ho:LJanuary 1 DAYiCALENDAR Aunders DA 1 ) iu U ii S Musc Scool L.Hill, soprano, SM Recital Hall, 4:30 pm. Hockey: Michigan vs. North Dakota, THE CANDID discussion cleared Yost Field House, 7:30 pm. the air and the men's morale im- Music School: K. J. Kim, soprano, SM provd. Wen te wokloa wasRecital Hall,. 8:00 pm. proved. When the workload was CAREER PLANNING & PLACEMENT eased, the men's performance 3200 SAB. 764-7456 perked up even more. Recruiting on Campus: Jan. 17: Oak Ridge Nat'l Lab. for Ph D's; Jan. 21: The men face the challenge of Bell System & 'Univ.of Toledo, College spending some 85 days in space, of Bus. Ad.; Jan. 23: Xerox Corp, & nearly a month longer than any U. of M. Dearborn, Sge. of Mgt.:1Jan. other human being. The pressure chester, Personnel Dept.; Jan. 25: The on them is an unknown quantity Procter & Gamble Co. & First Nat'l and their performance will be sub- Bank of Chicago. I . SUMMER PLACEMEN'T SERVICE ject to detailed analysis for some 3200 SAB, 763-4117 time. Henry Ford Museum, Dearborn Vil- lage, MI, openings for guides, deadline Also this is the first time in space for applies. Jan. 18. Also present open- for all three men. ings for food service attendants, ticket cashiers, groundsbelpers. Comparisons with the two pre- York Excavation Trustees, England. vious crews are unfair. The two Free board and lodging for anyone will- earlier commanders, both space- ingto work at least three weeks on dig. expriece orthe sum me r. De-. flight veterans, were forceful, tails & applies. available. energetic men. Carr's treatment is 3M Co., St. Paul, Minn. Openings for muteter and we never made a udents having completed junior year quieteran wenvrmd anyI in any of the following fields: chemis- secret of the fact that he intended try, physics, chemical, mechanical & elect. engineering. to set a slower pace. Also, the Deadline for Applying for Summer high dramas of the two earlier Civil Service Fed. Exam: Jan. 25, for Feb. 9 and 23 exam. Details and applies. missions were difficult to' follow. 'avail. White House reveals leak of national security information Sunday, January 13 WCBN-FM 89.5 will broadcast live An Ann Arbor Sun Benefit with CJ Q AND THE VIPERS The show will be broadcast from the Primo Showbar starting around 1 1 p.m. COFFEE HOUSE ISRAELI FOOD- H UMUS-FALAFAL-PETAH AND ENTERTAINMENT- ELLEN KATZ-guitar & song JAMIE GIBSON-piano & song MICHAEL CASHER-classical guitar Sat. eve. 8:30, Jan. 13, 1974 at HILLEL-1429 Hill ADMISSION 75c (Continued from Page 1) said yesterday's news stories were based on fragmentary accounts of the int idnt_ admitted he was responsible for publication of the Pentagon Papers by the New York Times. ministration still considers it in- appropriate for public disclosure of the matter, but said "it may be that at a later time the facts can Theite Hosedd os The White House said news a c- LI at 10LatI The White House did not say counts relating to the Joint hsbe made public without deteriment what happened to the employe who of Staff and the National Security to the national interest." made the leaks,, but informedou tf ncilNtinl eurt sourcestsaid he was immediately Council,which advises Nixon on The White House added that at dismissed when his activities were foreign policy, "touch on a matter Nixon's direction, information re- uncovered by the so-called White peripheral to a national security garding the news leaks disclosed House plumbers. issue which was found to involve yesterday has been provided on a pdeliberate leaks to the media of confidential basis to the armed THE PLUMBERS were a secret extremely sensitive information of services committees of the Senate group set up by President Nixon to interest to other nations." and House, the Senate Watergate stop leaks of top secret government Nixon, in refusing to discuss ac- Committee and the government's information. The group was set up i tivities of the plumbers group, has special Watergate prosecutor. following publication of the Penta- several times referred to a national The Senate Watergate Committee gon Papers, detailing how the security issue too sensitive to dis- and the special prosecutor have United States became involved in cuss publicly. been probing the activities of the the Vietnam War. One of the ' plumbers as part of their investiga- plumbers was Daniel Ellsberg, who THE WHITE HOUSE said the ad- tion of alleged illegal activities be- -NOTICE- South University Pinball Alley Closed Visit Now Location ARCADE 5 Just around corner At 618 CHURCH OPEN 12 NOON Minimum age 17 fore and during the 1972 presiden- tial election campaign. THE PLUMBERS were respon- sible for the break-in of the office of Ellsberg's psychiatrist while Ellsberg was on trial in Los Angeles on charges connected with his leaking of the Pentagon Papers. After the break-in was disclosed, the judge dismissed all charges against Ellsberg. I ARTHUR MILLER, TOM, HAYDEN and THOMAS E. DEWEY have one thing in common .. . ..they all started out at ZZI 5f'rizzn 3Dai1y JOIN THE DAILY EDITORIAL STAFF MASS MEETING WA1ednesday, ian. 16 7:30 P.M. 420 MAYNARD E I t I i I i LORD LIGHT t ( LUTHERAN ) S" H Nt Hill d ~~801 S. FORESTatHl{ 668-7622 Worship Service: Sunday, 10:30 a.m. $ .... CANTERBURY YOUSE HOUSE COURSES IN CHRISTIAN FORMATION (EPISCOPAL) WINTER 1974 218 N. DIVISION FUNDAMENTALS OF THE LUTHERAN FAITH Leader: Pastor Don Zill. Time and Dates: 10:30 a.m. eight Satur- 665-0606 day mornings beginning March 2. PLACE: Lord of Light Lutheran Church BIBLICAL STUDY Holy Eucharist at Noon Leader: Pastor Don Zill. Time and Dates: 9:00 a.m. Sunday morn- in St. Andrew's Church ings beginning January 6th. PLACE: Lord of Light Lutheran Church THE CHANGING FOCUS IN CATHOLIC THEOLOGY Leaders: Fr. Bill Gavin, S.J.; Sr. Connie Smedinghoff. Time and Dates: 7:30-9:00 p.m. eight Wednesday evenings beginning Jan-r uary 23. / PLACE: The Newman Center, St. Mary's Student Chapel INTRODUCTION TO THE GOSPELS Leader: Fr. Bill Gavin, S.J. Time and Dates: 4:00 p.m. five Tues- days beginning January 22. PLACE: The Newman Center, St. Mary's Student Chapel FUNDAMENTALS OF ROMAN CATHOLICISM-PART II Leaders: Fr. Charles Irvin, Sr. Connie Smedinghoff. Time and (ROMAN CATHOLIC) Dates: 7:30-9:00 p.m. nine Monday evenings beginning January 14 PLACE: The Newman Center,'St. Mary's Student Chapel 331 THOMPSON at William THE NARROW RIDGE Leader: Chaplin Andrew Foster. Time and Dates: Call 665-0606. 663-0557 PLACE: Canterbury House MARRIAGE ENCOUNTER PROGRAM Sunda Masses : 7:45 9:00, Leaders: Fr. Bob Livingston, 663-0557 Dom and Del Bitondo, 971-4637 10:30, 12:00, 5:00 Sam and Mary Allen, 663-3039 John and Liz Reidy, 763-2272 Dates: February 15-17, May 17-19 PLACE: Siena Heights College, Adrian, Michigan PREPARING FOR MARRIAGE 1. Marriage Preparation Seminar Contact Fr. Livingston, 663-0557 2. Engaged Encounter Weekend Contact Fr. Livingston, 663-0557 UNIVERSITY OF MICHIGAN MINI-COURSE NO. 310 - CONTEMPORARY CHRISTIAN ETHICSlWESLEY FOUNDATION Leaders: Fr. Bob LivinEston, M.A., S.T.L St. Mary's Student Chapel, Rev. Bartlett Beavin.'B.S., S.T.B.,.Wesley Foundation . Timeand , I. rrr % Ar< e'Ti IneT Read and Use Daily Classifieds Ii m