state/nation/world girl Spacecraft manager William Butterworth inspects the Galileo Probe before it enters a thermal vacuum chamber for testing at the Space Simulation Laboratory of Hughes' Space and Communications Group in El Segundo, Calif. Jupiter probe set for 1986 By LEE SIEGEL Associated Press Writer EL SEGUNDO, Calif. Hughes Aircraft Co. unveiled its new Jupi ter probe yesterday, a $133 million spacecraft destined to make the first trip into the stormy atmo sphere of the solar system's larg est planet: The unmanned probe, named Galileo for the astronomer who discovered in 1610 that Jupiter had moons, is designed to be launched from the space shuttle. It will have a rocket engine different from the ones which failed to boost two Hughes satellites into a proper orbit this week after launching from the space shuttle Challenger. "Building such a probe to go to the hostile atmosphere of Jupiter is quite a challenge, and we're extremely pleased it's com pleted," said Hughes spokesman Emery Wilson. "It's certainly a positive thing for us. We're very proud." Space agency officials tenta tively plan to launch the five-foot diameter probe from the shuttle Atlantis in May 1986. The probe will be connected to a Jupiter orbiter now being assembled at the Jet Propulsion Laboratory near Pasadena, Calif. The lab is managing the Galileo project. The Galileo probe and orbiter will separate about five months before they reach Jupiter, nearly 500 million miles from Earth. In August 1988, the probe is expected to enter the stormy atmosphere of the planet, which is 10 times the mission diameter of Earth. If the $864 million mission is successful, Galileo will be the first space probe ever to enter the atmosphere of any of the outer planets, said Pete Waller, a spokesman for the National Aero nautics and Space Administra tion's Ames Research Center at Mountain View, Calif. "What you'll see is like no other journey anybody's experienced," said Nick Vojvodich, NASA's dep uty project manager for the Gal ileo probe. After the mission is completed, "I think we will have learned more . . . than in all of recorded history and from all of the spacecraft that preceded us," he said. Cloud-covered Jupiter, the fifth planet from the sun, consists largely of hydrogen and helium the material from which scientists believe the sun, other stars and ' our solar system evolved. The 1973 and 1974 Pioneer 10 and 11 missions arid the 1979 Voyager 1 and 2 spacecraft flew by Jupiter and its moons, but did not enter the planet's atmosphere. The General Dynamics Centaur rocket that will launch the Galileo probe from the shuttle differs from the McDonnell Douglas rock ets which apparently misfired dur ing Challenger's current mission, resulting in the failure of two Hughes-built communications sa tellites to reach proper orbit. • But Waller called the Galileo launch "just as iffy because it will be the first interplanetary launch by d Centaur." Astronauts retrieve drifting equipment, prepare for Florida landing By HARRY F. ROSENTHAL Associated Press Writer CAPE CANAVERAL, Fla. - Bundled in their bulky suits, Challenger's exuberant spacewalk ers performed an impromptu rescue yesterday, snatching back a piece of equipment as it drifted toward the junkyard of space. They flew free and joyously, propelled by bursts of nitrogen gas from their backpacks. But the day was not without its disappointment the latest in a long series for this shuttle crew. The "wrist" on the shuttle's robot arm refused to respond to commands, canceling a docking re hearsal with a rotating object. "The view is simply spectacular and panoram ic," astronaut Bruce McCandless told President Reagan when he made his customary once-a mission call to the shuttle. "We believe that the maneuvering units, first time working unat tached, we're literally opening a new frontier of what man can do in space and we're paving the way for many operations on the coming space station." McCandless was showing restraint with his commander-in-chief. Earlier he had exulted: "Up, up in the bay." His partner, Robert Stewart, said, "Boy, it's awful pretty." Earlier pessimism that bad weather would again delay or cancel a first landing tomorrow at Florida's Kennedy Space Center turned to opti mism as an expected weather front stalled over Texas. "Right now it's looking real good for KSC," the astronauts were told. From mission control came applause when McCandless reached over the side of the space- Code blue: By MARCIA DUNN Associated Press Writer PITTSBURGH A retired clerk whose failing heart stopped more than 400 times within five days is leading an almost normal life after a rare operation, and said yester day he feels "wonderful." "I look at myself now and I feel much like I did before the problem ever occurred," George Derrick, 65, said in an interview after his daily 30-minute workout at his Pittsburgh home. "To say I'm a medical miracle ... it's the experience of other people who have told me this. It's only begun to sink in," said Derrick. His heart had been producing abnormal electrical impulses re sulting in rapid heartbeat, a disor der known as ventricular tachycardia. Doctors blamed the problem on a heart attack\ in 1982 which produced a tissue scar that disrupted the organ's electrical sys terh. In an unusual operation last Octo ber, surgeons pinpointed the trouble with an electrical monitor and te moved scar tissue. Doctors said Derrick's heart stopped an "extraordinarily unusu al" number of times, but they are confident he can lead a long, normal life. "I think this is a beautiful exam ple illustrating what can be done," said Dr. Robert C. Schlant, vice chairman of the American Heart All systems go .. . ship and, like a • child pulling at a balloon, re trieved a foot restraint that had broken loose and was floating away. He was on his safety line at the time. He had help from commander Vance Brand, who gently pulsed Challenger's, small steering rockets to move 30 feet closer to the restraint "just as he would do if he had to rescue a stranded astronaut in a. maneuvering unit," mission control said. McCandless, referring to an earlier flight crew's boast, said "'We deliver' um , have been the STS-5 crew motto, but we pick up also." McCandless clearly enjoyed the freedom of moving about in his flying machine. One mem orable view was of him, feet toward the Earth above, head down to the shuttle cargo bay, suspended in space. Commenting that it was easier the second time around, McCandless and Stewart quickly settled down to the real business of the day: testing techniques for grappling, repairing and refueling crippled satellites. Such an attempt will be made in April. The cancellation of the hookup with a large box rotating very slowly on the end of the robot arm was a disappointment, because it had been a major goal of the space walk. The astronauts substituted a metal pin on a work station box and repeatedly practiced floating toward the box and clamping a tube-like device on their jet-packs onto a docking pin. • The exercise went without a flaw. Earlier in the mission, two satellites deployed from the shuttle failed to reach proper orbit, and a balloon launched for a rendezvous maneuver Pittsburgh man miraculously survives repeated heart failure Association's Council on. Clinical Cardiology. Last Oct. 23, Derrick awoke "gib bering unintelligibly." "My wife thought I was having a bad dream," he recalled. Within seconds, Derrick went into a coma and was taken to Jefferson Center Hospital in suburban Jeffer son. Two days later, he was trans ferred to Pittsburgh's West Penn Hospital. More than 400 times during his five-day coma, Derrick's heart stopped beating and doctors applied defibrillator paddles, which pro duce an electrical jolt, to restore normal heartbeats. The paddles were used so often Derrick suffered second-degree chest burns where the instruments were applied. "I heard a lot of 'code blue' warn ings and every time I worried that it might be George's last moment alive," said his wife, Sandra, 32, who sat day and night at her hus band's bedside. After drugs failed to regulate Der ricks' heartbeat, surgeons decided to try a complicated, costly proce dure known as electrophysiology. Using an electronic monitor to track electrical signals from seve ral layers of tissues inside the heart, Drs. Barry Alpert and David B. Lerberg pinpoihted the site of the disturbance and peeled away the scar tissue, about the size of a silver The procedure has been used sparingly during the past five years George Derrick, who underwent rare surgery to correct a rapid heartbeat, poses with his wife, Sandra, and cardiologist Dr. Barry Alpert recently in Pittsburgh. by a handful of specialists, primari ly because of the difficulty in locat ing the damaged portion of the heart, Schlant said. The success rate has varied. "The prognoOs is sort of deter mined by the severity of the under lying coronary disease that caused the heart attack in the first place," Schlant said. Derrick was discharged from the The Daily Collegian Friday, Feb. 10, 1984 blew up. Yesterday's spacewalk, lasting 6 hours 17 min utes, was the last of the flight. The major tasks still facing the five-man crew is a space-to ground press conference early Friday morning and the landing. "Up, up in the bay," said McCandleis as he strapped on his jet-pack, discarded his lifeline and scooted around and above the shuttle cargo bay. He did somersaults with the Earth as a back drop, and rolled from side to side in a stately no rope aerial ballet. "Looks like you're having fun," said Jerry Ross in Mission Control. "Looks like some victo ry rolls up there this morning." "It's really performing nicely," McCandless said. And then, with regret in his voice: "I guess I got to get down to work and do the dockings." Stewart, meanwhile was working in the cargo bay, struggling with a foot restraint. "There's a veritable snowstorm out here," he said at one point. "Of course, the snow is falling up, relative to us." The snow reference is one that astronauts make often. Usually the cause is water being vented overboard, the droplets freezing. At one point McCandless told mission control "a little bit of ice crystal, spinning like a rock, coming about 90 rpm and not slowing down." The two astronauts went out 35 minutes early, so eager were they, and stayed out about an hour longer than the five hours they had planned. Misston Control had to . remind McCandless con stantly that his time in the jet-pack was running out. hospital in late November and has resumed much of his everyday ac tivity. He's even planning a three week seaside vacation in his house trailer this spr.ing. "I began to think of the nursery rhyme, 'All the king's horses and all the king's men couldn't put Humpty Dumpty together again.' I was real ly happy to be alive, and I wrote the nursery rhyme down," he said. Mellon index shows economic gain PITTSBURGH ( AP) The Pittsburgh area showed strong economic improvement in December, with gains in local stock prices, the money supply, housing permits and help-wanted adver tising, Mellon Bank reported yesterday. The bank's index of leading economic indicators provides "evi dence that the local economy will continue ,to recover in 1984," Mellon said. Average hours worked at Pittsburgh manufacturing plants in Decemker reached 40.8 for the first time since August 1981; the bank said. Meanwhile, help-wanted advertising reached its highest level since early 1982 and local stock prices were at an all-time high, up 63 percent from, their low of mid-1982. Computer components smuggled PHILADELPHIA ( AP) Six, men were indicted yesterday on charges of smuggling counterfeit Apple Computer components from Taiwan which officials said are the first in a nationwide campaign against the multi-million dollar pirate computer indus try. , Assisthnt U.S. Attorney Ed Zittlau said two separate indictments were returned following a 17-month investigation into smuggling operations in 1982 and 1983. He said the smugglers brought parts into the the Philadelphia area through a variety of routes to build copies of the Apple II personal computer. The investigation in Philadelphia is only part of a nationwide probe into the smuggling of counterfeit products, "Operation Trip ,Wire," coordinated by the Customs Service in Washington, D.C., investigator David Warren said, adding that more indictments are expected. Federal authorities seized 50 of the Assembled fakes after they were sold to undercover agents in March 1983 for $24,000, Zittlau said, adding that parts to build another 325 Apple II computers were also seized in subsequent raids. Charged in the indictments with conspiracy and smuggling were Alfonso Keh, 42, and Alberto Chua, both of King of Prussia; Daniel S. Ryan, 58, of Philadelphia; Joel Isadore, 29, of Cornwells Heights; Robert Ellis, 53, of Elkins Park, and his son, David Ellis, 26, of Bala Cynwyd. University 'raises money to pay bills NASHVILLE, Tenn. (AP) Fisk University, which owed about $900,000 to utilities and the Internal Revenue Service and had its heat cut off, has raised more than $1 million in a fund drive started in November, the school announced yesterday. One of the donors was President Reagan, who wrote a personal check for $l,OOO. The drive has raised $1,041,488 and has enabled the school to pay outstanding bills of $352,554 to the Nashville Gas Co., $305,000 to the IRS and $45,899 to Nashville Electric Service, said Fisk President Walter Leonard. The school also paid off a $26,900 bill to South Central Bell Telephone Co. and an $8,300 bill to Metro Water and Sewer Services. The university also spent $225,000 on emergency repairs. Last November, after the Nashville Gas Co. refused to resume heating services for the school until it paid at least $170,000 of its bill, Fisk's total debt was estimated at $2.8 million. Greyhound posts quarterly profits PHOENIX, Ariz. (AP) Greyhound Corp. said yesterday its profit for the fourth quarter rose 2.5 percent despite a 23.5 percent plunge in revenue due to a 47-day strike late in 1983 by Greyhound Lines employees. The strike cost the company "over $25 million of losses," said John W. Teets, chairman and chief executive, but he added that it had "a long-range positive impact, implicit in a new two-tier labor contract that allows us to become competitive again with other bus companies over the next three years." Greyhound said it had net income of $24.2 million, or 49 cents per common share, during the fourth quarter of 1983, compared with $23.6 mllion, or 54 cents per common share, in the final quarter of 1982. Fourth-quarter revenues in 1983 were $432 million, compared with $565 million for the corresponding period of 1982, the company said. Soviets, Americans set space record MOSCOW (AP) Three cosmonauts guided their spacecraft to a successful docking with the Salyut-7 space station yesterday to become the fifth crew to visit the Soviet Union's orbiting research complex. The official news agency Tass said the Soyuz T-10 docked with Salyut-7 at 5:43 p.m. (9:43 a.m. EST) —26 hours and 36 minutes after their liftoff Wednesday from the Baikonur cosmodrome in Soviet central Asia. Pilot Leonid Kizim, engineer Vladimir Solovyev and cardiologist Oleg Atkov restarted the space station's life support systems, removed their space suits and entered the orbiting laboratory, Tass said. There now are a record eight men in space the three Soviets and five Americans aboard the Challenger space shuttle. Blizzards kill 17 in Western Europe FRANKFURT, West Germany (AP) Fierce winds drove rain and snow across Western Europe yesterday, killing at least 17 people. Dozens of avalanches buried 12 people in the Alps, bliziards isolated thousands, and floodwaters rose in Holland, Belgium and West Germany. Scores of injuries were reported and the fatalities raised the death toll in this week's storms to 32. Hardest-hit were the alpine ranges in France, Austria and eastern Switzerland, swept by blizzards and high winds for a third day. Tens of thousands of people were stranded by the snow. Avalatiche warnings were in effect for most of the region. In the Austrian Tirol, avalanches killed at least seven people, including three children. Among the victims were an 11-year-old girl and her 12-year-old brother, who died when tons of slow destroyed part of a chalet as they slept. k :stock re p ort Busy trading Volume Shares ' extends slump- 148,428,490 NEW YORK (AP) The Issues Traded stock stock market limped lower in heavy trading yesterday, ex- Up tending its steep selloff, de- 525 spite a calming message to Wall Street from the chairman Unchanged of the Federal Reserve. 381 Analysts said some buyers emerged to hunt for bargains Down --_.:-----•_ • among badly battered stocks, 1,123 - - but that investors remained - apprehensive that the mar- • NYSE Index ket's slide has yet to run its 89.72 - 0.37 course. • Dow Jones Industrials The NYSE's composite in- cp 1,152.74 - 3.56 dex fell .37 to 89.72. THE BROTHERS AND SISTERS OF PHI MU DELTA warmly welcome our spring little sister pledges: Lisa Davis Sue Michini Janice Feinberg Deb Mercuro Erin Gilgalion Annette Mola Erin Gilroy Lori Piper Becky Helms Colleen Sherman Julie Tenney , and our newest brother initiates: Drink Benson Dan Callahan Dave Cerniglia Tim Colligon Bob Gilezo Rich Gordon * * **************** * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * *.* ******** * * * * * * * * The Lion's Guard Drill Team Good Luck at Valley Forge ****** * * * * * *-k*********** * * * * * * * * * * * * ******.* * * * * * * * E-Systems continues the tradition of the world's great problem solvers. ,Jeff Lowden Frank Ross Mike Ross Rich Siodic Mark Tod Steve Tripodi A New Team, . Guglielmo Marconi was able to see communications rev olutionized by his development of the first successful system of radio telegraphy—the wireless. His first experimental transmis sions were no more than a few feet. But, within a quarter of a century, he had advanced his system to the point that a radio message sent from England could be received in Australia. E-Systems scientists and engineers continue to expand the technology he began. Today, communications equipment designed and developed by E-Systems engineers is used extensively around the world for line-of-sight or satellite communi cations, digital communications and applications requiring micro- )lieeelli/a1902 /o*, Vt A New year processor-based teleprinters, tactical radios and microminia ture HF, VHF and UHF equipment In addition to communica tions, E-Systems engineers are solving many of the world's toughest problems in antennas, data acquisition, processing, storage and retrieval systems and other systems applications for intelligence and reconnaissance. Often, the developed systems are the first-of-a-kind. For a reprint of the Marconi illustration and information on ca reer opportunities with E-Systems GiNlielmo Marconi 1874-1937 in Texas, Florida, Indiana, Utah, and Virginia, write: Dr. Lloyd K. Lauderdale, Vice President Research and Engineering, E-Systems, Inc., Corporate Headquarters, P 0. Box 226030, Dallas, Texas 75266. r i E — SYSTEMS The problem solvers An equal opportunity employer MiE H. V The Daily Collegian Friday, Feb. 10, 1984 ~vV v V G~~~~VW ~KJ L UfM'v ~i