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Show 0 nywuy m "iy A-- Rocket Perfected . For Teachers , Too , N.Y . Rules or Space By MYRAM BORDERS JACKASS FLATS, NEV. Space probes to the KUPI) fringe of the solar system Jnoved to within one step of ; Scientific reality Thursday as ests of an experimental for a nuclear rocket were Completed successfully. S Scientists said the next step jrould be development of a nuclear rocket to carry as far as the planet .Pluto, journey to Mars or act s shuttle service for moon en-,gi- instru--Jmen- ' ts .Colonists. In .the late 1970s, the planets 2111 be lined up in such a way Hhat a rocket from earth could breach pluto, 3.7 billion miles rom the sun in about 11 years. Without this alignment, 2he journey would take 40 ALBANY (AP) Male students arent the only ones who can wear long hair in New York State schools, the states top education official says. So can their teachers. Acting Education Commissioner Ewald B. Nyquist ruled Thursday that John Collins, 33, who taught retarded children in a district south of Albany, should not have been suspended last May because school officials disapproved of his long hair and mustache. The officials claimed that teachers could not teach good grooming by example to their students if they themselves did not conform to community standards. Nyquist observed there were no allegations that C o11i ns appearance had interefered with his work. .ears. Unfolds THE LAST STEP The experimental nuclear ;jrngine, which operated at fixable power for 63.6 minutes ;Iduring a series of 12 tests that Cbegan Dec. 4, 1968, is the last I --step toward development of a 'Slight qualified engine with j75,000 pounds of thrust. Scientists said that data ifrom Thursdays test would e analyzed before a decision ;vill be made on whether runs- of the experimental Engine will be scheduled. Steam and flames shot several hundred feet into the !jwindless, desert sky as the vnuclear rocket engine system md its components were testbed for seven minutes at power. 2 The intricate countdown for Lrihe 13th test began more than before the firing ; height this remote area of the ; Theory Of Moon V fur-tth- er inter-Jjnedia- te hnn rnNevada desert. j -- V urani ctor, urn-fuel- May Not Bing Continued froiu First Page affected in Joliet and the five suburbs. One Illinois city already was hit by a strike. Teachers in Granite City walked out Wednesday, which was to have been opening day for students. The dispute is over salaries. In La Salle, 111., the Tuesday opening of school was delayed by a strike by 80 of 110 teachers at LaSalle-Per15,000 u Town High School. Agreement was reached Wednesday and schools weie to open today. At issue was the expiration date of the teachers contract A union representing 100 of 200 teachers at two campuses Town High of Waukegan School rejected Thursday the board of educations latest wage offer. School is scheduled to open next Wednesday. Indiana has two school strikes under way. Although classes dont start officially in most schools until Sept. 2, the walkout has affected preschool workshops. In HUGE WAVES a graphite rea- The engine is built around August 29, 1969 Hammond, the dispute, delaying the opening of school football practice. Coaches were later allowed to start practice, with the understanding that they were on strike. The 200 teachers of the Lake Central School Corp., in the John area Schererville-S- t south of Gary set up picket lines Thursday because the school board refused to establish a group contract. In Michigan, 171 of the 500 school states more than districts were without contracts late Thursday. Affected are 666,000 students and 28,000 teachers. Issues in question include wages, class size, binding arbitration and an agency shop concept. Som schools are to open Tuesday, others Wednesday. C. William Kahl, state school superintendent in Wisconsin, said four school districts were without contracts. CaftiHlKfl Teachers Association went on strike and set up pidsts Aug. 15 In a salary 4,200-memb- SAN DIEGO (UPI) -Impacting meteorites, striking the forming surface of the moon with incredible force, may have formed instant mountains creating frozen tidal waves as high as the Himalayas. W. G. Van Dorn, a Universiscientist ty of California whose specialty is oceanography and tidal waves, said Thursday the formation of mountains on the moon was similar to generation of tidal waves here on earth. -- y DESERET NEWS, Friday, School Bells Long Hair Okay ' mw Reduced thru ffiOMKEWB U ALWAYS FIRST QUALITY ( Van Dorn, a researcher at UC San Diego, said pictures of the moon indicate five which heated liquid '.hydrogen to more than 3,600 degrees for thrust. At full 'power, the engine systems Jenergy exceeds the output of iloover Dam. The Nerva which means .nuclear engine for rocket vehicle applications is part of con-centr- ic mountain ranges around the Mare Orientale that look like huge waves caused by the impact of giant meteorites striking the moon with energies of one billion megatons. Van Dorn reached these Rover, the deep space program initiated 14 years conclusion in Ms research of -Jby the United States to follow tidal waves wMch prompted the belief that giant maria or dry seas on the moon BILLION MORE $1 were created by the impactbillion So more far than $1 I meteorites. ing Thas been spent in research According to the Van Dorn, billion would S1 another Ijand needed to put the engine: tthe great waves created. by the traveled across -- into space. Scientists predict the impacts crust of the moon at rocky dec-jja'jit willlif be ready within a the speeds of 400 miles an hour. Hurry in and Save! 'be de Congress provides Jnoney. 2 Experts have said that the rocket could become jlthe workhorse of space. It -jwould be used to shuttle -supplies back and forth to e Imoon colonists and er as a deep space manned or voyager unmanned. I The nuclear rocket would be launched into space as die J --upper stage of a Saturn V. The rockets capability to up and shut down quick-jU- y qould enable it to make guidance maneuvers during a flight and then glide for -long periods of time. Scientists said, for example, round trip to jthat during anuclear the engine Iwould be required to operate one hour at the most. lfor .eft Some experts have Associated tlie nuclear rocket Ijprogram with what scientists a grand tour. man-mad- tart t I '-- '-- call GRAND TOUR I Earlier this month a panel lof scientists urged NASA to 'undertake a grand tour of the J --outermost planets. , The shock waves accompanying the giant impacts would have been strong enough alone to have broken the legs of a man standing on the opposite side of the moors, he said. Van Horn said that the Meteorite Icarus, which came within 2,400,000 miles of earth last year, has a diameter of about 10 miles and travels at 34 miles a second. If this meteorite had struck the earth, it would have created a crater the size of Mare Orientale on the moon, a crater 100 miles across that collapsed to form mountain rings that solidified, or froze, within an hour after impact. The San Diego scientist implied in his theory of explosion - generated waves that the moons internal makeup is not too different irom that of the earth except for the lack of heavy core. iron-nick- el FOWLER GAS J The grand tour of Jupiter, Uranus, Neptune and jrpluto is economically and te hnically feasiable, said a J --panel of 23 scientists in a published by the space .science board of the National of Scientists. In the years 1976 to 1979 the planets will be lined up in 6uch a way that the gravity of 'one planet could be used like slingshot to spin a space jrprcbe onto the next planet. jjhe favorable positions of the 'plants will not occur again 'Juntil the year 2155. IT'S BUY A HOME WATER HEATER Fully Automatic M tE7 Vk N n SIZES Gal. 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