Saturday, May 26, 1973 THE SUMMER DAILY Page Three Astronauts fail in effort to repair Skylab solar panel HOUSTON (UPI) - Frustrated by ap- proaching darkness and tools ftat would not do the job, three space repairmen failed yesterday to free a jammed solar cell wing that could double the electrical supply to the power-short Skylab t space station. It was man's first attempt to perform repair work outside a flying spaceship. The astronauts told mission control the unsuccessful attempt made them "really feel bad." CHARLES "PETE" CONRAD, Joseph Kerwin and Paul Weitz set out to work on Skylab confident of success. When they linked up with the crippled space station in Earth orbit ses en and a half hours after blastoff from Cape Kennedy, they reported it looked like the job would be relatively easy. But as Weitz leaned mit the hatch of his Apollo command ship--swith Kerwin hang- ing onto his knees to keep him from float- ing off into space, and Conrad maneuver- ing the Apollo close alongside Skylab- they found the 30-tot long wing was Iio firmly jammed for them to unfold it. "OK, Houston," Conrad said after an hour of fruitless efi rt, most of it out of touch with ground tracking stations. "The pro')lem is the tools won't do the job. We're going to h-ie to gire it up." CONRAD RAN into i Lither prtlein almost iismeciateh as his Apollo, flyng into the night p'irtion of its orbit, refused to link up with an airlock at one end of Skylab. EIrlier, th crew hafd docked at this same airito:-k a ithwit ciffi it". ConraJ tried to d r i v e his command ship's nose intoath docking port three times without sacce- ,s, the backed off to tilk the siltiin o wer with nissioin control It the John:SpaceCentter' a Apprioval for the astronauts to make their solar wing repair attempt came two and a half hours after they cattg'ht up with Skylab in orbit 271 miles above the Pacific Ocein. "WE'LL JUST leave it to your call as iii how to get it dine'" c'ipstite comemimat- color Richard 'truly tild Conrad at 7:015 p.m. EDT. The astronauts blasted off from Cape Kennedy with a hastily prepared repair kit and caught up with the unmanned Skylab in Earth orbit after a seven hour and 40 minute chase that carried them five times around the globe. "Tally-ho, the Skylab!" Conrad shouted at 4:32 p.m. "We've got her ii the day- light at 1.5 miles." AT THAT DISTANCE, the 118-foot-long space station looked like a glowing golden Dutch windmill against the black space sky. Weitz trained a television camera on the craft, its four good solar cell wings spread in a huge cross like windmill arms and beamed live pictures back to Earth. Conrad maneuvered his Apollo around the house-size space station, inspecting it from every angle, for about an hour before See ASTRONAUTS, Page 9 AP Photo A SERVICE STATION in the oLs Angeles suburb of La Habra displays a sign showing local gas prices, while Bob Smith, a dealer in Costa Mesa, Calif., waits for lemonade buyers. Smith has been out of gas for five days and has sold $20 worth of lemonade. t / Dope note WASHINGTON - The Navy said yes- terday that 12 sailors, some of whom al- legedly used marijuana, have been trans- ferred from the crew that operates Pres- ident Nixon's yacht, Sequoia. Only two weeks ago 18 sailors and 28 Marines were transferred from assignment at Ca m p David, Nixon's retreat in the Maryland mountains, also for alleged marijuana use. The Navy called the enlisted men's dope consumption a potential security risk. Happenings . .. . . . this weekend are virtually nonexist- ent, with a number of movie classics brightening the evenings. Check the movie ads for specifics . . . Tuesday spokesper- sons for the local Adva ates for Medical Information will be televised on "NBC Reports", Channel 4, at 10 p.m. The group will discuss a local morning-after pill study in which the University Health Serv- ice gave more thant wION omen a dosage of diethylstelbestrol (DES) over 300,000 times the level called unfit for human consumption by the Food and Drug Ad- ministration. A2's Weather Cloady today with possible clearing by evening. The mid-latitude cyclone is ex- pected to move upstate by evening bring- ing us into the clear area behind the storm. Highs today 64 to 69 with lows tonight 51 to 56. Pig manure powers British inventor's auto TOTNES, England is'-Enthroned behind the wheel of his manure-mobile, British inventor Harold Bate can sniff haughtily at fuel shortages and the energy crisis. Wafted a T o n g at 78-miles-an-hosr on wings of brewed-up pig dung, he can even pronounce himself at one with the pure air people and the antismog crusaders. "THERE'S NO ODOR ait all, no carbon nonoxide fumes, no engine knock," Bate explained, flicking a da-shoard switch that in midflight converted his battered 1955 tillman from g a s o 1 i n e combustion to methane gas distilled from the leavings of the pig farm across the road. Since Bate put a pig in his tank, scient- ists, industrialists, and just ordinary mo- torists from around the world have de- scended on his 450-year-old Devon cottage hoping to harness the energy of the barn- yard. BATE SAYS THE idea for converting manure to motor fuel occurred to him during the Suez Crisis of 1956, when serv- ice stations were closing all over Britain. He remembered as a boy seeing the Lon- don buses in World War I powered by great bags of coal gas strapped to the roof. Bate claims some 5,000 motorists fro- Point Barrow, Alaska, to the mayor of nearby St. Ives have fitted his patented "autogas convert device" to their engines and sent away for his instructions tin how See DUNGMOBILE, Page 9 CRACKDOWN ON CRIME School frisk rule OK'd By MARILYN RILEY In the wake of two recent stabbings in the Ann Arbor public schools, the city Board of Education has approved a plan allowing school officials to search stu- dents and their lockers if there is "rea- sonable suspicion" the student possesses a weapon. The stop and frisk plan, which passed by a 5-2 vote at Wednesday's board meet- ing, combined recommendations by Trus- tee Cecil Warner and Acting Superinten- dent LeRoy Cappaert for reducing crime in the schools. THE ALTERNATE school for "dis- ruptive" students, which was proposed by Warner at last week's meeting, repre- sents long range action to be taken to curb crime. The board will not vote on the alternate school until July 1. Under the stop and frisk plan, school officials must first question any student if there is "reasonable suspicion" that the student possesses a weapon. If the official is not satisfied with the student's response, the official may ask hi to empty his pockets or open his locker. If no weapon is found and the of- ficial is still suspicious, the student must submit to a pat-down search or be renioved froti the school grounds. ACCORDING TO WARNER, students possessing weapons would be immediate- ly suspended, even if they were only car- rying a small pen knife. What constitutes reasonable suspicion has not been clearly defined, however. Ac- cording to Trustee Robert Conn, a phone tip saying there was a bomb in a locker, or a student running away from the scene of an assault with a weapon might be cause for search of a student's locker or his person. See SEARCH, Page 9