SATURDAY, MARCH 15, 19t> THE CAROLINA 1018
Astronauts
Enjoy Rest,
Take Photos
HOUSTON ,The Apollo 9
astronaut* cruised through a
restful Sunday in orbit,
pictures, sighting navigation
landmarks and Observing the
mdoBS of Jupiter.
Col. James A. McDivitt and
Col. David R. Scott of the Air
Force and Russell L.
Schweickart, a civilian, reported
that they and their spacecraft
were in good shape during the
seventh day of their planned 10-
day mission. The splashdown is
set for Thursday morning.
As they crossed over the
United States, the astronauU
snapped a series of ex
perimental photographs of the
Sal ton Sea in California. New
Mexico and Texas, the Gulf of
Mexico and the Mississippi
River Vslley.
rrom these photographs,
taken with a cluster of four
cameras set for exposures of the
same scene with different film
and different filters, scientists
hope to determine how well they
can detect crop conditions,
water pollution, forest blight,
soil moisture and mineral
deposits.
On Landmarks
To practice navigation techni
ques future astronauts will use
while circling the moon, Scott
fixed the sights of his sextant on
specified landmarks around the
Earth.
The astronaut reported no'
trouble locating Pun t a
Yayahmko, on the west coast of
Mexico; Dimit Island off Corpus
Christi, Tex., and the tip of Yala
Peninsula in Spanish Sahara on
the west coast of Africa. Clouds
interfered with sightings of Cape
Fear, N. C.i a fourth
landmark.
As soon as Soctt located the
exact point in the sextant
crosshairs, he pressed a button,
feeding the information to the
onboard guidance computer.
Each point was reckoned tyice,
from a different angle.
High Mark
Is Given
To Nixon
By over 2 to 1, the American
people are giving President
Nixon, relatively high marks
h " handled hi«
firlt six weeks in office.
Specifically, 57 per cent give
him a positive overall job
rating, which is close to the 61
per cent mark the public ex
pected of him before he took
office. The 23 per cent who
rate him negatively is
somewhat below the 30 per
cent who anticipated be might
not make good as President.
However, a relatively high 20
per cent still are withholding
judgment about Nixon.
The President has made a
highly favorable personal im
pact, especially through his
press conferences. This survey
was taken during Nixon's re
cent trip to Western Europe,
and during that time public
approval of his "handling rela
tions with European allies"
and his "approach to world
problems" was also running at
better than 2 to 1.
However, it is clear that he
has begun to inherit from his
predecessor some of the
doubts and impatience of the
public in seeking quick and
ready solutions to such issues
as settling the war in Viet
nam, reestablishing law and
order at home, handling the
racial question, taxes and
spending, and controlling the
cost of living. On all of these
latter points, Nixon currently,
receives positive marks
less than a majority.
Post-Riot
Integration
Views Eyed
DETROIT -An Inten
sive, social and psychological
study of post-riot Detroit has
found the vast majority of
blacks favor full integration, but
only a quarter of the whites
would accept most forma of
Integrated life.
However, the study noted, the
greatest danger comes from the
small minority of extremists of
both races.
"These are the intensely
angry and profoundly frightened
men, both black and white, who
will attempt to move us toward
more violence and a paranoid
restructuring of all race rela
tions in the city," the study
said.
Supervised by Dr. Elliott
Luby, associate director of the
Lafayette Clinic in Detroit, the
atudy found that 89 per cent of
the blacks interviewed wanted
full integration. Only 26 per
cent of the whites showed
lntegrationist attitudes.
About 85 per cent of the
whites fell in the middle,
favoring something short of full
integration. About 9 per cent of
the blacks were in that
category.
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