The Michigan Daily - Friday, September 7, 1990 - Page 11 Levin, Schuette gear up for premier debate EAST LANSING (AP) - U.S. Senator Carl Levin and his Republi- can challenger, U.S. Representative Bill Schuette, spent yesterday get- ting ready for the first televised de- bate of their campaign. The debate was scheduled to be- gin at 9 p.m. at the WKAR-TV stu- dios and to be shown by public tele- vision stations across the state. Democrat Levin was cramming to make up for the four days he lost while making a fact-finding trip to Saudi Arabia over the Labor Day weekend. Meanwhile, Republican Schuette studied issuesand Levin's record in the morning, but took the afternoon off to give himself time to relax and think about debate strategy, said Dean Peterson, a spokesperson for the Schuette campaign. Levin campaign spokesperson Willie Blacklow said the two-term incumbent's strategy was being kept under wraps. Schuette's campaign manager, Douglas McAuliffe, said the conser- vative would go after Levin's record as a liberal, as he has done through- out his campaign. McAuliffe's comments indicated Schuette might go aggressively after 'The people watching this will see a dramatic contrast in the reasoning of two intelligent men who both have records...and the people will be able to judge who's been right and who's been wrong' -William McAuliffe Bill Schuette's Campaign Manager Levin, a member of the House Armed Services Committee, for some of his defense votes. He pointed out that druing his trip to the Middle East "Carl Levin was sitting there doing news conferences and interviews aboard the U.S.S. Wisconsin and he voted against spending money on that ship." Blacklow said Levin did vote to decommission the battleship in 1980 because it was too expensive and required too many personnel. McAuliffe said Schuette also would go after Levin for his stands on crime, drugs, taxes and the death penalty. "The people watching this will see a dramatic contrast in the reason- ing of two intelligent men who both have records, who both have been there in Washington and understand the minutia and the people will be able to judge who's been right and who's been wrong," he said. Schuette is giving up the tenth District seat he's held since 1984 to try to unseat Levin. Levin is seeking his third six-year term. KENNETH SMOLLER/Daily HoIe-y Cow!! This immense hole in front of the Dennison building will one day be filled with air conditioning equipment to cool some of the hottest buildings on campus including: Dennison, Dana, and East and West Engineering. Once completed, the hole will be refilled and covered with grass. ..."'b ........... ..4'+:}:;. ,v.:. :.....:.......... }....:?: ... v....... r....~wl...... ?....;...: ......................:.4:iviiv'?}inYM}" i:JF:rvLY. vi}.. ?":;3.x:?::....."..........:...r?::;r.............................+'att~k?..:'!};;u'-}?d;y ,aq~r~y ...tronauts into space;failed due to its third::attempt:toplumb-":delayed.too.long,:the.mission .rect h1 i4 will _....t ..................................................................._........._ ..___.____.._..._.._.._..................................................._ ._ .__':' Fa :......... ..... ............................................................................,.«.........__.... _............_......................... ......:G :'. . . ... . .. . . MM- - . 2 6...M....... . -.... ...... _-........ . W ss.:.:: ;:. ::::_. . ___.. 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[ cf: ............. .{; .. . .:. ... . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . ................... . ..........,..._.,..,...- .. ..L::. .' .... ........ :.. .._r..t :}titi;{:;::iF:{C}C }}:-'r?:C i:< : : Ci ii i: ii[ ? :-] };[: r :v : : :4: s7{:%:I i7: :<{i ?: }?}?C:%?;ice ........ .._.,.... __. problems likely caused by a fuel pump. This mission to launch Columbia has been delayed until mid-September. NASA Administrator Richard Truly said a new pump will be in- stalled this weekend. If that seems to correct the problem, a fourth launch attempt will be made to launch the shuttle with an astronomical obser- vatory early the week of Sept. 17. "It's not a 100 percent guarantee. But it's the one shot we have to get the Astro mission airborne" before Discovery's scheduled flight with the Ulysses satellite in October, Truly said. The unit is bolted in and can be replaced easily, said launch director Bob Sieck. Crews cannot enter the compartment until Friday because propellants remain aboard, prevent- ing a new pump from being installed on a mission to study some of the hottest objects in the universe with the $150 million Astro observatory. Thursday's early morning launch was scrubbed after hydrogen flooded into the rear compartment. Officials continued filling ing in the rear of the shuttle, where pipes range in diameter up to 17 inches. They are directly in front of the huge engines and are accessible through side doors. "We're not talking about a large leak. We're talking about an ex- '(The hydrogen leak) is a real booger to try to find and isolate' -Astronaut Robert Crippen wait until after Discovery's flight with Ulysses, a satellite being sent on a five-year journey to explore the sun's polar regions. Discovery must lift off between Oct. 5 to Oct. 23 to.. take advantage of the proper planet alignment. "Ulysses is our first priority and we will not compromise that," said William Lenoir, head of NASA's space flight program. Columbia's seven astronauts left* for their training base in Houston at dawn. In May, NASA's first attempt to launch Columbia for the Astro mis- sion ground to a halt at almost the same moment during fueling as more than a half-million gallons of liquid hydrogen and liquid oxygen were flowing into the tank Wednes- day. The earlier attempt, too, was de- layed by leaks in two places. 0 1 --, -OTTV R 'r .. I IiA'E;-,,a_ , I U X. sM ,P I 5I II inP- i1 d #,; M.a } .'j..': "- vvv: t.. r.1'r :':ti":S x.4...5. "":S. ": r:. Ah" :r4 : ^: }.: S .S .':...h':h'{ h.:1'":{ti :ti4fi:1 1.. b. A4. ...fi.. h"^. 'r..1 ' '.:1 .: ..... ' :: Columbia's massive external tank to pinpoint the source and narrowed their search to the shuttle's three re- circulation pumps. Each of the shuttle's three main engines has a pump. Officials were uncertain which one might be leak- tremely small leak" said Forrest McCartney, director of Kennedy Space Center. "It's very elusive and very frustrating." "It is a real booger to try to find and isolate," shuttle boss Robert Crippen said. SUBSCRIBE NOW AND SAVE!. htag eiue < , ..te to se a Jason .imerson B.A. Sociology, Earham College M.A. Sociology, University of Virginia Ph.D. Candidate, Sociology, University of Chicago "I don't know how anybody gets through college today without a Macintosh. Sometimes I have so many assignments that I barely have time for sleep.Yet my Macintosh allows me to get my work done on time- without making sacrifices. "Working on my dissertation and field studies means collecting an incredible amount of information. So jumping from one program to another with ease is imperative, as is quickly making A0 O a j- 3t With this special student offer! Every day the Chicago Tribune puts the world at your fingertips. 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