TheMichigan Daily - Friday, September 17, 1993 - T Space Shuttle astronauts prepare for Hubble repairs CAPE CANAVERAL, Fla.(AP) - Two astronauts acting as Hubble Space Telescope mechanics twisted bolts and tried out a swivel work platform yester- day in NASA's final spacewalk before the real repair job in December. Crewmembers Carl Walz and James Newman testedapower ratchet and five other Hubble tools during their seven- hour spacewalk. Before going back in- side the shuttle Discovery, they held up asign with a picture of the ace of spades and the words: "Ace HSTTool Testers." The flight director for the Hubble repair mission, Milt Heflin, said the spacewalk was "a confidence builder, a day that I consider adding to our mar- gins for success." The first-time spacewalkers spent most of their outing working along the edge of Discovery's payload bay. At times, they dangled overboard as the shuttle whizzed around the world, their tethered tools floating around them. Walz and Newman zipped through their steps, evaluating each tool and task and comparing it to their water tank training on Earth. They gave lots of As, but some Cs and even Ds, too. Walz had trouble using the battery: powered ratchet to tighten and untighten bolts with his feet unrestrained. "Your body just goes whipping around," he said. The only problem came at the end when the door on a portable tool box jammed. It took both men a half-hour to close it; by then, their planned six-hour walk had stretched to seven hours. It was NASA's third and final spacewalk to prepare for Hubble re- pairs. A record five and possibly seven spacewalks are planned for the 11- day telescope repair mission, mak- ing it the most daunting and ambi- tious shuttle flight to date. Fourspace- walkers will take turns going out in teams of two to install corrective lenses and new solar panels, gyro- scopes, camera, computer memory board and more. The five-member crew has one job remaining: retrieving an ultra- violet telescope released from Dis- covery on Monday. Discovery will swing by Sunday and get the US.. and German-sponsored spacecraft. Although astronomers requested another day in orbit for the telescope to gather extradata, shuttle managers decided to bring Discovery home on Tuesday after nine days. AP Photo Astronaut James Newman cleans up the payload bay of the shuttle Discovery after a seven-hour spacewalk yesterday. Florida residents protest deadly reputation MIAMI (AP) - Michael Harvey was shot dead by an unknown killer on a dark street the weekend between the two highly publicized slayings of for- eign tourists in Florida. Harvey's stepfather didn't appear on Oprah. His mother wasn't invited to the governor's mansion. No European newspaper wrote an indignant head- line. Local reporters never even men- tioned him. No reward was offered. Harvey took a bullet in the chest late the night of Sept. 11. He died in the center of Pierce Street, among neat, single-family homes in the Black, middle-class Miami suburb of Rich- mond Heights. "We were advised by a passerby that a body was lying in a pool of blood," Metro-Dade police spokesper- son Lizette Williams said after leafing through reports to find the case. "We have no subject information, no clue as to the motive. We have no suspect." In Florida, many more Michael Harveys die than do foreign tourists. Last year, Linda Harless - a statis- tician at the Florida Department of Law Enforcement- said the state recorded 1,191 murders. Only 22 of the victims were non-residents. In 1991,when 1,276 people were killed, 30 came from out- side Florida. In 1990, 29 of that year's 1,387 murder victims were non-Florid- ians. Such imbalance in the numbers and resultant media attention also caught the eye of New York Tunes columnist Russell Baker, who wrote in editions of the paper published the day Harvey would die: "It's a sign of the American decline that eight tourists murdered in Florida capture national headlines when the thousands and thousands of Americans routinely murdered cause such little splash. It reverses the old joke about American narcissism('Two Americans Injured as Asia Earthquake Kills 200,000'). When it comes to murder, it's now Americans who don't matter." Yesterday, Harvey's stepfather, tele- phone company employee James Latham, buried his stepson after a fu- neral serviceatCovenantBaptistChurch in Florida City. Earlier, ashe repaired hurricane dam- age to windows at his home - where Harvey also lived - Latham said he didn't want to talk about his stepson's murder or provide any details about his life. It pains Harvey's mother too much, he added. He said he can understand why the killings of German and British visitors get more attention. "I've lived in Miami since 1963. I know how itworks,"Latham said. "This country isn't geared toward human be- ings. It's geared toward only one thing: m-o-n-e-y." Lisa Hardeman's stepson and daugh- ter-in-law were murdered in 1981 in Palm Beach County. Now she's a coun- selor for Dade County's victims ser- vices unit. It's unfair to say families in unpublicized cases begrudge the atten- tion given the tourist murders, she said. "Some people feel very resentful that their case is not treated with the same media attention as a police killing or a tourist," she conceded. "But there are those who don't want any public- ity." Most, she said, are in shock. While grieving for their loved one, they are forced to deal with police, prosecutors, courts and attorneys. "I wish they wouldn'tshow the blood in the road. I wish they wouldn't show the body covered with a blanket - can you imagine how the family of victim feels seeing that on TV?" she asked. Such thoughts are freshly stirred; last week, news outlets around the world showed the blanket-shrouded body of Uwe-Wilhelm Rakebrandlying in the road beside the driver's door of his battered rental car. St u de nt } t Y Alumni Iou ncil Mass Meetings 7:00 PM Monday, September 20th Tuesday, September 21st Alumni Center (between Health Service and MLB) 763-9755 0e a part of: Parents Weekend-Walking Tours Siblings Weekend-Shadow Program ....and much more!!! x 9 a M A } t l 3 CLASSIFIED ADS E GUITAR LESSONS 769-5704 Teacher with Viennese training and Masters Degree in guitar has openings. Credit avail. GUITARIST/SONGWRITER seeking musicians or established band to work/create/ Etc original sounds. Brig at 764-1073. HERB DAVID GUITAR STUDIO. 302 E. Liberty. 665-8001. Repairs authorized by Gibson, Guild, Martin, Yamaha, Alverez. Tune up specials. Not just guitars. THE CHAMELEON'S DISH needs a bas- sist & a drummer. Call Charlie at 761-3158. TKETS WANTED PENN STATE Football tickets. Top $$ Paid. Craig: 313 390-5755 during business hours or leave message after. WANTED: 2 TIX: Mich. vs. Iowa. Top dollar. Call collect (312) 548-5716. U OF M FOOTBALL TICKET. Games 3- 7. Call Sue at 741-7146. MUST SELL 1 WAY PLANE TICKET Newark-Det. 9/27. Best offer. Leslie 741- 1344. 2 ONE WAY TICKETS. Det. to Philadel- phia and Philly to Det. 9/24 & 9/26. $50 per ticket. Call 665-8732 leave message. - 1 WAY AIR TICKET Detroit to W. Palm Beach $110/neg. Leaving Sept 28. 971-2663. PROBLEM PREGNANCY HELP Let us help you choose Life. 769-7283. THE UNDERGRADUATE LIBRARY IS OPEN!! During construction, the UGL will be open Monday-Friday 8 a.m.-12 midnight, Saturday 10 a.m.-12 midnight, Sunday 12 noon-12 midnight. Beginning September 26 open 8 a.m.-5 a.m. 7 days a week. *( p sierra Club The HURON VALLEY GROUP Invites you to the Welcome Newcomers Meeting ATTENTION: Michigan Men's Basketball student managers meeting. Sept. 22nd. 7 p.m. at Chrysler Arena. . .. ... ... ... ... . :.... .. . ::.:.:.:.:. . :.... .. ... ARTISTIC HIDEAWAY! Own room in 2 bdrm. apt. Clean, nice cmplex- Plymouth/ Brdwy area. $295/mo. incl. heat. 665-1792. ROOM AVAIL. in lavish 3 bdrm. HOUSE. 2 floors/2 bath/free Idry. 15 min. from campus, Grad pref. 663-1565 $300-350/mo. SEEKING HOUSEMATE to live in Walnut St. house for semester or year. Single room on ground floor including loft $290/month + utilities. Neg. Also includes 7 cool housemates.NCall 994-6542. WALK TO MED-CENTER or North Campus. 2-bdrms. avail. in 3 bdrm. hse. $300/mo. Call Dale at 677-0240 or 998- 2570. PLAY ULTIMATE FRISBEE. Mitchell field Mon. eves. For info email Rob Burridge. burridge@engin.umich.edu 761- 9542. 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