q Page 14 - The Michigan Daily - Sunday ,Jur 10, 1984 Cause of b rocket failure mystifies NASA (Continued from Page 1) The two attached vehicles were in an orbit ranging from 93 miles to 759 miles above the Earth, NASA officials repor- ted. The intent was to place the satellite in a stationary orbit 22,300 miles high.~~ OFFICIALS SAID the rocket and satellite eventually would burn up from friction because of the low orbit, but ~ NASA could not estimate when. The failure occurred when the rocket was in contact with a tracking station on Ascension Island in the South Atlan- tic. It would take several days to fly the data tapes back from the island, NASA said. A review board has been set up to DOUG McMAHON/Dail study the failure. The International Telecom- munications Satellite Organization paid Y 'a Ssoo NASA $60 million to launch the satellite. Above, Nick Stamedianos cooks shish-kebob for Ya'ssoo, the 13th annual Greek festival in Ann Arbor. Ya'ssoo was held With 12,000 voice channels and two Thursday through yesterday by St. Nicholas Greek Orthodox Church. Children dance in traditional costume, below, at color television channels, it was to have Veterans' Arena yesterday. joined 15 other satellites currently ser- ving the 108-nation organization. "OBVIOUSLY, we're disappointed about the failure," said Allan Mc- Caskill, a representative of the inter- national organization. He said the organization had insured the launch for $102 million with a con- sortium of insurance companies. The organization paid a $10 million premium for the insurance. It was the 62nd launch of an Atlas- Centaur rocket, but the first for the new lengthened model. The body of the first- stage Atlas had been extended 81 inches allowing the booster to carry an ad- ditional 15 tons of fuel and to place an extra 500 pounds in orbit. The Atlas performed flawlessly during the 44 minutes it operated Saturday night. The Centaur separated successfully from the Atlas and the upper stage fired } as planned for 10 minutes, then shut down and coasted for seven minutes. During this coast period something went wrong. When it came time for the seven-minute refire of the Centaur rocket, the engine ignited but burned for only about four seconds before shut- ting down. At that point, NASA's launch control center reported the rocket and satellite were tumbling and there was no way to save them. DOUG McMAHON/Doily I I 40 0 Corruption trial of judge continues in Chicago CHICAGO (UPI) - The two-week trial of the first judge tried in the federal "Operation Greylord" in- vestigation has been a textbook course in fixes and "bagmen" - lingo described alleged corruption in the nation's largest court system. It has also been spiked with novel twists, including evidence against a fellow judge who has not even been charged in the case. For days, Cook County Associate Judge John Murphy sat at the defense table, scribbling notes as witnesses told a U.S. District Court jury about fixing court cases. Murphy, who is charged with briber- y in the undercover investigation of corruption, frequently shook his head back and forth, indicating he disagreed with the evidence against him. He appeared calm - for the first five days of his trial on mail fraud, extortion and racketeering charges for allegedly accepting $3,000 in payoffs between 1981 and 1983. But on the sixth day, Murphy took the witness stand in his own defense. By the seventh day, Murphy's Irish temper flared. And it grew worse as U.S. Attorney Dan Webb spent six hours over the two- day period grilling Murphy about secretely tape-recorded conversations that the government contends prove the judge was on the take. MSU students care for dorms EAST LANSING, Mich. (UPI) - Michigan State University students are leaving for home, and officials say they are leaving behind much less damage and litter than in the past. New rules and the promise of stiff sanctions have helped, according to James Wall, director of university housing programs. "We have removed the opportunity for students to get themselves into dif- ficulty," he said. "We let them know if they go wild in our halls, they'll pay for it." e