PAGE TWO Manger' Heads Toward Moon Crash PASADENA, Calif. (AP) The guided spacecraft is likened to It could, if there were a tiny crippled spacecraft Ranger 4 ishitting a bind on - the wing with error in calucuations4 curve be coasting toward a crash on the:a rifle. The Soviet Union hit thelhind the moon to burn out in moon's backside, or to a possible moon once. The United States hasithe earth's atmosphere. 1 BUENOS AIRES, Argentina fiery near miss and a fie end in the , CRAFT'S previous mopn shOts. failed to achieve its goal in sevenTHE ' (fil President Jose Maria Gui earth's atmosphere. MAIN battery;d o nullified all 5-election results - ' went dead Monday might because Calculations indicate a collision'of the last four months and Or- THE 7304 POUND silver and,:it was unable to tap Kolar powenidered federal appointees to take at 8:50 a.m. Eastern Standard gold interpl" netary voyager ha ' J et . control of Argentina's provinces Time tomorrow, about 64 hours: - • p r -- • voyager ha It is being tracked' by the these goals: 0 radio back photos ,i after blastoff from Cape Conover- propulsion labOratoryp antenna atYesterdaY• . i ,of thelnoonls surface; to measure • to measure lGoldsto . ne, Calif., via -ii tiny trawl HE ACTED by executive dg al, Fll., Monday, 'llunar radioctivity; muter in the capsule that was to cree, after resisting pressure from JET PROPULSION laboratory its radar teflection properties; be landed on the moon. , dtii i s military chiefs for more than scientists who created, and are to land instruments in a balsa-I . . i t three weeks. Generals in three tracking the craft said, however, wood ball 1-that would record i Trackers will follow its beep that it could barely, miss. - 'moonquakes and meteor inipacts.lbeep to the moon's teadingiedge,lprovinces forced his hand by tak- In this case, it would hook. Calculations in d i cat e thatlprojeet its course behfnd tharnooniing control of the provinces from around the moon's backside,. re-'Ranger 4 will skin the moon'slthen train the antenrul to the point,civilian governors. .turn toward earth and.incineratc.leading edge at a height of 900 where it should emgrge on the By annulling March 18 elections, ; itself Sunday night like a giant miles and curve in to crash on the trailing edge. If it fails to emerge,:he erased the victories of Peron meteor. - ,hidden backside. „they will know it hii. lists who had elected five gover-' : Ranger 4 was launched beauti fully by an Atlas-Agena B boost er combination. Two hours after launch scientists determined that alimer, supposed to goVern many of its functions, had failed. !THIS IN EFFECT renders use less its electronic brain. Unable :to act on or rt_spond to commands from earth, unable to lock on to the sun and stabilize itself, it simply tumbles end over end out of control toward the'lmoon. . Disappointed scientists found cause for cheer in the guidance. 'flitting the moon. with an un- 'K' Expresses Desire For Summit Conference NEW YORK (AP)—An Ameri can publisher who talked with So viet Premier Khrushchev for nearly three hours in a private Kremlin interview kist week said last night the Communist leader wants a second summit confer ence with President Kennedy. Khrushchev said he now agrees with the American. President they should meet again only if the en -counter can have positive results. The Soviet premier made the statement lo Gardner Cowles, president and editor of Look Magazine and president of the Des Moines Register and Tribune Co. New Co legeDiner; bciiNntown•SepAieentiliilMOvjes KRAPP'S LAST TAPE. 8:00, SHAW Stalemate Persists in Geneva GENEVA (PP) The Soviet Un-; ion rejected again yesterday; American ,and British demand& for an inspection system to safe-) guard a treaty. to ban nucleafi weapon's -teias. Soviet Delegate Semyon K. Tsarapkin 'told U.S. Ambassador Arthur H. Dean and British Min ister of State Joseph B. Godber the negotiations for a test-ban agreement i would come to an in glorious end if the Western pow ers maintained their control de mands. .; NEITHER TSARAPKIN nor the two Western delegates referred to Ili@ forthcoming U.S. atmospheric test series'. in the Pacific. Tsarap 'kin's boss; Deputy Foreign-Minis- * NILE FOUTE * PLAZA TONITE.' & THURS. ) TpESDAY WELD BACHELOR FLAT e-Cinemas...opt & faint! / with Richard Brywier TiBECKE THE.! MAN DESTi Y Fri. Sat THE DAILY COLLEGIAN, UNIVERSITY PARK, PENNSYLVANIA CEN TER S T Tenn Stat., A Players. E. APRIL -MA( ter Valerian A. Zori*, threatened last week to lead at Soviet bloc' ',walkout if the American -tests Itook place as scheduled. Tsarapkin turned down a West-1 ;ern proposal that ,Some of the ;eight nonaligned cotintries, at the 1 17,-nation disarmament confer knee be invited to take part in the .!deadlocked negotiations. THE NEGOTIATI;DNS are con ;ducted in a subcommittee' of the I three nuclear powetis. At a full session of the confer ence earlier, - Zorin , Virtually• re jected a new American plan for total disarmament. He described it as• "a deadly thr(tat for peace loving states," designed to under mine the Soviet Elloc's defense capacity. Dean and Godber wanted the CAMP MESACOSA Corinth, New York needs a female Assistant Instructor in riding Salar!pf dependent on experience Further intormation available from Office of Student Aid, 218 Willard Guido Nullifies Election Results Of Past .4 Months middle group Countries to clarify a vaguely defined compromise proposal they introduced eight days ago to break the deadlock on test ban controls. Several of the middle -group countries hoped the compromise might lead to an agreement and thus head off the American tests at the last mo ment. •• THE NEUTRALISTS formula does not explicitly call for com pulsory on-site inspection. The Western powers' accepted the formula only on condition that it be widened to include such in spections. This the Soviet Union rejected —thus removing the last possi bility that President Kennddy would call off the. Pacific test series. • WEDNESDAY. APRIL 25, 1962 in Argentina nOrs and supported four more suc cessful candidates for governor. The decree also wiped outi the results of the elections of Dec 17, Jan. 14 and Feb. 25 in which oth er parties scored in pFpvincial and municipal contests. . 'HIS DECREE didinot* mention, however, - the national congres sional elections March 18 in which Peronists won 47 seats it;t. the Chamber of Deputies. !Only Monday :night, a spokes man for the president had denied that the chief executive had de cided upon federal intervention. i THE PRESIDENT'S dkree in tervening in the provinces was declare 4 effective as of Monday. IBy his decree; Guido declared his right to replace not only lgov ernors; but also judges and police officials arid to. knock out, the pOwer of the provincial legisla tures. Feature Begins 2:05-A:45-7:05-9:15 PROVOCATIVE ART ERTERTAMMENT i.l„. As 1-,14q.,,-.11 17..4 r. r 1 r• • ' 0 i l l Metro - Moyer ; 1 PAUL NRNMAN ,... GERALDINE PAGE , - - WAD 0. r 4 PLO fr i 4 / 4 . ' .•- .7 ' I t •'; al ' ..W‘'''' , SHIRIIY KNIGHT'ECI EGO VERN coquAscon . 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