The daily collegian. (University Park, Pa.) 1940-current, May 04, 1962, Image 3

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    FRIDAY. MAY 4. 1962
Astronauts Solve Riddle
WASHINGTON (Jf) —Two path-jbring him back to the Soviet'pitch, roll and yaw.
finders ofithe cosmos, astronautjUnion. ; j Titov gave a dramatic account
John H. Glenn Jr., and cosmo-! “I believe, and I think - C01.,0f his 17 orbits of the earth lastr
naut Gherman S. Titov, put their Glann is of the same opinion,” he Aug. 6. He reported that the boost-,
heads together yesterday and may j said •‘that they resulted fromljer which put his Vostock 1 1 into
have solved a mystery—the fa-jfuel. being ejected. 'orbit was a multistage one pow-j
mous spacej firefjtls. ' ; "THIS WILL HAVE to be ered. by six liquid-fuel engines.:
After thletr talk. Titov by the next astronaut” He also reported that he could*
to a big international space meet-1 Q le d n ' w ' as not , using retro or,control his, capsule manually. i
ing they believed the liny lumi-j other rockets at the time he saw*, Ir his talk. Glenn predicted that;
nous specks they saw were prob-i the mysterious phenomena but at,the United States would perfect
ably caused by fuel ejected from man y i times durin 2 the flight he .techniques whereby an astronaut,
the rocket or 'space ship - !saw fuel' from hydrogen peroxide in flight could change orbit and.
BOTH HAD rejected another'^ ets ’used t 0 ccntr<d bis ship’sfmove in other, directions,
suggested explanatiorwthat the
specks were the results of paint;
peeling from their capsules. Glenn:
saw the fireflies, four times as the,
sun rose In the path of his Friend
ship 7. . j
As for Titov, *‘l observed them! . . ,
as soon as I entered orbit" he' 'WASHINGTON .t/P)A Soviet'responsible for it. Some Soviet
told the'jWprld Committee on, ’scholar has advanced the theory.experts who recently explored the
Space Research. He also saw them. that the world’s first nuclear ex-l Tunguska region still hold with
when his jretro-rockets fired to plosion occurred in 1908, or 37>the comet theory.
—l II- :— years before' the invention of the Rejecting’ those views, Zigel’
• L 'atomic bomb. jconcliides the blast was nuclear
Algeria Terror Wave F. Yu. Zigel’, a Moscow lecturer; >n. nature and originated either
AncwamJ u<>*ik Carra I 'on scientific subjects, says there!from a space -ship from another
nnswerra wun rorce , i is no other logical Explanation for’planet— m*mUoned only as a re
‘ ALGIERS, Algeria (JP) In the mighty blast that devastated, mote possibility—or from ' some
the wake df the[ Secret Army Or- [ the Tunguska swamp forest in; ver y extraordinary, still unfamil
ganization’s worst terror wave, Siberia’on June 30, 1908. • J * ar but natural heavenly body.
the French government prohysed* An area lamer than New York!,
last night a crackdown on Euro- - 1
peart extremists seeking to block V!? ■
bS a chaSs dePendenCe 400milS ™ounT "It
Christian, Fouchet, French high The event has long been & mys-jj
rcommissioder to Algeria, said he ! tery to scientists, but roost au-|
has given ' rigorous antiterrorism 'tborities have assumed that a very
directives to the military. large r meteorite or a comet, was
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THE DAILY COLLEGIAN, UNIVERSITY PARK.
featuring
Larry
men ccr
Car Wash
This Saturday,
May 5
9:30 ’til 4:00
Behind
Wesley Foundation
and Methodist Church
SPONSORED BY
SIGMA THETA EPSILON
Elg
'ENNSYLVANIA
Columbia Dean Hits
Integration Methods
WASHINGTON CAP)—Dr. John' Fischer, superintendent of
Fischer said yesterday it is wrong,schools during desegregation in
to transfer pupils across town Baltimore, Md, spoke at a two
merely to insure racially inte- day conference on school descgre
■grated schools. gation problems sponsored by the
Fischer, dean of Teachers Col- Federal Civd Rl « htl Commission,
jlege, Columbia University, said "The most offensive part of the
inter-racial contacts are desirable, engineered approach is the as
jbut “I am disturbed- about the sumption that any group can be
[growing pressure to locate schools, improved if members of another
draw district lines, and organize race are inlroduced into it," he
curricula in order to achieve a said.
ned patlWn ° f K * club were short of ten
enrollment. ; o rs. Fischcr sai(j it j m .
"DECISIONS ABOUT school proved “by recruiting three good
organizatipn based entirely or tenors, but the point of origin of
primarily on, racial criteria seem their grandfathers or the color of
'to me to violate the -principle of their hair ace' scarcely relevant
[nondiscrimination,” he said. criteria." ■
\ 9 ‘
COUNSELORS WANTED
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i For fino Now York State coed camp
( skilled jn the following:
Tennis—^-male. Lake Sports—male <£ female.
Golf—male. Archery—female,
I Fencing—male & female. Ham Radio—male,
Tumbling—male & female,
Baton-Twirling—female,
Science-Photography—male,
Boxing-W i estling—male '*
1 4
Interviews on campus
Contact Office of Student Aid
May 4—7-10 P.M. May 5—9 A.M.-I P.M.
May
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PAGE THREE
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