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Show The Sail Lake Tribune, Tfcur-da- November ?tt, lSuJ y, A1- 5- Astronauts' Venture Farther From Safety in Second Moon Exploration Walk ("tin wed From Page Om which Conrad said was the smartest And although they marveled at every sight, every pebble, every rock, they softer titan they encountered anywhere up idea we cam up with. This work great." kept pushing themselves farther on. to that point -- Must be a young one, Their television camera had gone bad, They found a wealth of information Bean said. but it didnt matter anyway since they Just before that they had stopped at everywhere they stopped. Its really a shame, Houston," Con- were out of range even if it had been the Bench Crater, and exxzssed caunos said. We could work out here for working. Before they left. Conrad had rad O'er the amount erf rock they were coleight or nine hours." apologized. Tin sure sorry the television looked lecting. Everything important. continued to find the glass beads didnt work. Its a beautiful sight to see They At a crater called Head, their first in the craters they visited. Nearly Intrepid and Surveyor sitting here on this stop, 800 feet away from Intrepid, they every crane come to and look in you crater. you found lighter-colore- d soil beneath the see these glass beads, Bean said. Dead Moo Probe dark top layer. They dug trenches in It to Find Bedrock the contrast. photograph Surveyor, a dead U S. moon probe At Head Crater. Conrad showed some also found bedrock they couldn't that landed there 21. years ago, was one They concern. Houston." he called, -- youre dislodge with their tools. TV eomrrmm-canor-.s of the prune, but last, targets of the secto to budget our time. It looks have going were so fine erthlings could ond moonw a 1k of the day. like e could spend all our time here." hear the On the second excursion Conrad hit banging of the tools on die rock. -Bean added quickly. Thats whatr "It looks to me like theres something tie surface first, at 9.01 p.m., MST, bothering me. We could do that any place more than H, hours earlier than melted down in the bottom of a crater, on the moon. They had made a, map Conrad said. planned. Crewmate Alan L. Bean fol Vo ment they had installed- - It was reporting "Houston, on my mark Im gonna ro!F to scientists on earth that the moon had it. Hit, hit. Now: Its just rolling, roll,'" that roll, roll, still an atmosphere roughly rolling. Still rolling, still of earth. The scientists wanted to be sure then it stopped. slowly, rolling, very it was still working. The seismometer needles on earuv m Hear Me Running? moved with its bounce. It worked Conrad trotted atorg and asked, "Can well. Mission Control aked him to do the guy with the seismometer hear me again (or the geologists down on easSJ Conrad saw rocks that were a girgT?J running? he and Bean continued on like ashen gray. a couple of rockhounds and Mission Conale bottle green, and Bean saw some that a Their orders were to collect dirt trol told them their steps were thunder- loot'd like reddish granite, but he saidUlJ couldnt be. samples from six craters, the farthest ing on tb sound detector. "Man, Conrad said, have 1 got the 1.500 feet awav and to cut off pieces of When they reported in early, Mission Control aked, "How long did youJ equipment from Surveyor for return to grapefruit rock of all grapefruit rocks It was big. he said, and he warned to sleep? earth. know if he could roll it dow n the slope of Conrad replied Short but sweet They cut away their own television camera for return home and then set out a crater so that the seismometer could c reply. They huddled with Mission Con-- J trol, a.sked permission to start the second for the northwest, their first stop at the get r leading on its roll. Then he made sure he and Bean weie moonw alk as much as two hours early instruments they had installed earlier. and received a standing still, and he said. They checked a gas measuring experi lowed him 10 minutes later. Back cm tne exciting lunar surface again. Conrad began talking about the cables and devices below. They are constantly under foot, he said. At this sun angle, Conrad said, the moon dirt around Intrepid has a brownish tone, like a well - ploughed field. Elsewhere it was an expanse ef hght j 2 . d. Landing by Apollo 12 : Holds Great Hopes, Neil, Buzz Sayil Bulls-Ey- e Censorship Threatened, Says GOP Aide SPACE CENTER. HOUSTON (AP) The first man to make footprints on the moon predicted Wednesday's bulls-eylanding by Apollo 12 astronauts Charles Pete Conrad Jr. and Alan L. Bean will e WASHINGTON ( AP) - GOP National Chairman Rogers C. B. Morton charged former Vice President Hubert H. Humphrey Wednesday with courting those few members of the press who, for reasons of their own, make no attempt to be have flights. aspects in our futuie g Apollo 11 astronauts Neil A. ArmAldan Jr.t Bur strong and Edwin agreed that observations by Conrad an5 Bean while walking on the Ocean of Storms showed that, si lentiftcally. "fiom different places on the moon you'll see objective. The Republican leader was replying to Humphreys charge Monday that the Nixon Administration is engaged in a deliberate and calculated attempt to suppress dissent in the United States. different things." They accomplished even more things than what I expected, so I would assess their success on the surface as pretty high, said Armstrong, who on July 20, became the first man on the moon. Spoke at News Meet Reply to Agnew Humphrey said his statement was prompted by Vice President Spiro T. Agnews criticism of television commentators and of Saturday's demonstration in Washington against U.S. policy in h conversations Based on during Conrad and Bean's first excursion outside the Intrepid landing craft, Armstrong said Apollo 12 may bring back a more significant variety of rocks than Apollo 11. That's just a guess, he told a news conference. Aldrin joined Armstrong on the lunar surface while Apollo astronaut Micliael Collins took care of the command ship in moon orbit It was Aldrin who said descriptions by Conrad and Bean show that from different places on tiie moon explorers will see different things. moon-to-eart- Vietnam. Morton said this was a partisan political attack and that Humphrey either has misunderstood the Presidents efforts to bring us together or is trying to downgrade them. No member of the Presidents official family has suggested, implied, threatened or even hinted that any form of suppression or censorship should be Imposed, Morton said. Greater Freedom On the contr.ry, Mr. Agnw and others have sought to asure even greater freedom of expression by insisting that the public airways always be kept open to all sides of an issue. . Intrepid' color TV camera catches Lunar Module pilot Alaa L. Bean climbing down the ladder to I join fellow space traveler Pete Conrad on the moon. Camera went on the blink shortly after. Intrigued by Mounds Aldrin said he was particularly intri- gued by mounds about 4 feet high and 15 feet across which the Apollo 12 crew rt-ported seeing. Another thing that was interesting was a very tresh crater. Everything we aw- was rounded," Aldrin said. T.I - Of Cyclamates mf - A spokesman WASHINGTON (AP) for the Health, Education and Welfare Department said Wednesday night he would not be surprised if HEW aleetened products to lowed cyclarna SPACE CENTER, HOUSTON (UPH Tlie Apollo 12 schedule for Thursday (all times MST and subject to change : 3:47 a m. Charles Pete Conrad and Alan L Bean begin final meal on the. moon. 6 :47 am. Conrad and Bean put on their spacesuit helmets and gloves prior to firing the lunar lander's ascent engine. 7:23 am. Astronauts fire engine, climb away from Ocean of Storms to rejoin astronaut Richard F. Gordon in moon orbit . 10:37 a.m. Television from orbit, showing approach of lunar landing craft te-s- w Im holding in my hand . . Grapefruit size or any size was fine what stay on the market with only a medical with Mission Control. Tm standing still Houston," said Conwarning label The spokesman said Secretary Robert rad as he let his favorite rode tumble: HiL Hit Now! Its just rolling. Roll, H. Finch did not announce on Oct 18 an roll. Still rolling. ateolute ban on use of the widely used roll, His happiness sang across 240.000 artificial sweetener in soft drinks and miles of apace. foods, as has been widely interpreted. Its really a shame, Houston," be Instead, he said, Finch made it clear said. We could work out here for eight that the sweetener would still be availor nine hours. And Bean said, The able to those who used it for medical work fo no strain at all." reasons, such as for diabetes and obesiLoose ia a Toy Store ty. The whole time on the moon, Conrad It boils down to whether you are going to requiie a doctors prescription was the kid let loose in the toy store, the or a label advising it should be used only burglar with the key to the aunt, the the spokesman only boy on tire block with Joe Namath's upon medical advice, autographs said. tin my own mind, the enormity of the .. He was Pete Conrad, delighted to be problem would not require a doctor's an the moon. Whooo," lie shouted, picking up a prescription. It would be terribly, terriairJust like the rock. bly cumbers xie." - Co. reit Chase Al. in Flies the air. .The National Broadcasting up plane. potted Wednesday night that HEW is around- - Wild. Ill tell you. You know this expected to announce soon that soft sun. It really is just like somebodys got a superbright spotlight. drinks and foods containing the sweetenAnd be laughed. Never mind that noer could remain on the market with only a medical warning label. body oq earth knew what he was laughThe NBC report by Ron Neccert ing about because the television conked said although the move is supposed to out just after it showed Conrad and Bean lewd availd getting out of their lunar taxi. make eye It wa like radio of the 40s where you able only (o diabetics, it would be in to got caught up in the thing whether you everyone. reality available onr-sixth-- 11 :02 a.m. Landing craft docks with nose of command ship and moon walkers join Gordon inside. 1 :19 p.m. Empty landing craft jetti- - sc:ied. 2:47 p.m. Radio signal from earth' ' fires Intrepids engine, sending it into a dnve toward the moon. It hits at 5.15 I p.m. and the impart to registered on a moonquake meter the astronauts set up on the surface. ; Astronauts begin sleep 3:22 pm. period. ' famate-sweetene- knew what was happening or not Pete and Al were having: their adventure and you zipped along with them. You laughed when Pete laughed, even when nobody said anything funny. Mission Control, like an indulgent mother, urged them to start getting back to the spaceship. Put away the toys and come in, boys. Holy Christmas, were going to have to smoke them. Houston. says Conrad with a laugh and the reference was to hurrying up. But then his attention was caught by something else. "Look at this. Looks like a brilliant, be spanking fresh impact crater! exclaimed. Look at that little fellow! And then another Hey, Conrad shouted. I Just threw something, and it bounced up and must have gone 300 feet." The stuff discoveries are made of. Bean admonished: Hey. quit playing and get some work done." He Really Meaas II Die answer was a giggle. I could stay out here all day, and he sounded bke he meant it. Wont have any trouble sleeping tonight, Conrad said. "We suggest you go t a relaxed hustle. was Mission Control's reply. Mother was getting more Insistent for the moonw alk to end. ! , High Court Hears Plea lo Permit Church Taxes - The WASHINGTON (AP) considered Court Supreme it reWednesday a plea tit verse a practice as oM as the nation and expose churches and synagogues to real estate taxes. Edward J. Enins. Ainencan Civil Liberties Union lawyer, prevented the proposition tliat he said was so obvious it is that hard to expand upon tax exemption is an aid to religion banned by the First Amendment. lv for religious purposes unconstitutional, the great political i Only, power of the religious organid zations. Ennis said, has tax exemption in the face of the Firt Amendments command that Congress shall make no law respecting an establishment of religion. But J. Lee Rankin, corporation counsel of New York City, argued fo response that the tax exemption are recognition of the value of reli--g i o in sustaining this per-mite- that tax exemptions for all religious groups neutral" Leeps government in religious matters. Little Pamh Chunk it or generaL acroce-the-boar- contended d Should the states be required to tax the churches, he said, the little parish church" might have to fold and the government could he up to it ears in religion, deciding the values of church property and judging disputes between churches ani tax collectors. The justices followed the presentations closely, breaking in a dozen times with Pawrr country." Frederick for Legislatures, be said, have Speaking the power to decide which Walz, an almost recluse lawyer who owns a small lot r.a groups shall pay taxes, and questions. Chief Justice Warren E. Staten Lsland. N.Y.. the ttwre H no constitutional reawhite-hairecivil liberties son why churches should be Burger asked Ennis whether chan-tab'- e he was conendir.g tie First lawyer said "the piair. word, separated from othei of Bill are Amendment also forbids tax that words the ten the first organizations al-for church-rurf Rights make tax exempexemptions exempted. 11&. and tubeastirused former foe tions hospitals, orphanage Rankin, a property, Great Politic - d o n nd universities. No." Ennis replied. They are exempt by virtue of tiieir function" primarily secular rather than religious pursuits. schools ; Religiou Donation Burger suggested that a de- cision barring real estate exemptions might call into question the income tax allowances permitted for religious and charitable donations. The chief justice said he had great difficulty differentiating the chapel from the - a reference to teaching the fact the court in 1943 barred taxing religious activities themselves. But after listening to Rankins expressed concern about the potential effect on the little chapeL Burger asked: if it is a constitutional question how ran the court be concerned with the impart?1 See our versatile, suits in and sharkskins. Durable fabrics for business wear and subtle styling for dress-uNew shades for fall, handsome and vibrant $85 long-weari- tick-weav- es ng p. foreman & ci-are- x 142 fashion stores fow coast to coast custow alterations are free change accocvs ava'iae.e USE YOUR MASTER CHARGE OR BANKAMERICARD 4835 Highland OPEN MONDAY Dr., Cottonwood Mall - THURSDAY ,' Int jpid. Pete Chuckles, Bubbles, Sings, Laughs, Whistles Continued From Page One m Here s Timetable Of Astros Day HEW MavJ Allow Happy Lunar Lark limited Use g -27- 8-2651 - FRIDAY UNTIL 9 P.1. |