" Trouble - Continued from page 1 Their flight lasted 10 hours and 42 minutes, less than seven orbits. It was supposed to have gone 44 trips around the earth. Recovery was to have been made by the carrier Boxer in the Atlantic Saturday. It was a spaceflight that started off yesterday with flawless perfection to mark the 40th anniversary of the first liquid rocket firing. "NONE OF US KNOW exactly what happened." said Dr. Robert Gilruth, director of the Manned Spacecraft Center in Houston. Gemini 8 rolled and heaved out of control as it whirled around the globe at 17,200 miles an hour, putting astronauts Neil Armstrong and David Scott in jeopardy until they tamed its fury. But for the 7 hours and 2 minutes before the stunning failure, Gemini 8 was a textbook flight. Its performance was laying the groundwork for America's future Apollo flights to the moon and beyond. ARMSTRONG AND SCOTT blazed through a $5^{1/2}$ hour series of maneuvers that gave them a near perfect rendezvous with their orbiting Agena target satellite. Then, 35 minutes later, they nudged the nose of their capsule into a special opening in the Agena to achieve history's first linkup in space. But then, with the Agena still hooked to the two-seater, the trouble started. Gemini 8 was quickly ordered to make an emergency splashdown in the western Pacific Ocean. Problems have beset America's manned spaceflight program before, but somehow the troubles were corrected and the flights continued. With Gemini 8, the ever-present threat of an abort became a reality. IT LEFT A CLOUD OVER the launch of Gemini 9 astronauts Thomas Stafford and Eugene Cernan in an identical spacecraft and with an identical Agena target rocket. The shot had been set for the second week in May. Similar flights scheduled Geminis 10, 11 and 12, all similar rendezvous and docking flights to prepare for Apollo manned lunar landing missions, are set to follow this year to clear the way for the first three-man Apollo earth orbital launch either late this year or in early 1967. Considering Summer Courses? CALL COLLECT 344-1000 FOR A COPY OF OUR 1966 SUMMER SESSIONS CATALOG Sun., Mar. 20, '66 between 1-3 p.m. C.S.T. ONLY! 3 OPERATORS WILL BE ON DUTY TO ACCEPT CALLS we will accept long-distance calls, collect requesting our catalog. Just give your name, address, and ZIP code. Or, write for your catalog. Continued from page 1 MARQUETTE UNIVERSITY OFFICE OF ADMISSIONS 1131 West Wisconsin Ave. Milwaukee, Wis. 53233 Phone: 414-344-1000 Vox - Looking for a really great service station? Look for the Citgo sign at the corner of 8th and New Hampshire . . . the Fritz Co. offers you fast efficient service and those quality Citgo products. FRITZ CO. 8th & New Hampshire VI 3-4321 Open Thursday Until 8:30 p.m. - An elective pass-fail system which will allow a student to take courses outside his major area without jeopardizing his grade point average. This will be accomplished by giving the student either a passing or failing grade for a credit course outside his major. Downtown—Near Everything - Student priority in both the old student sections of the Memorial Stadium, and the new student sections now under construction. - A guarantee that student athletic ticket prices will be eliminated (except for administrative costs) as soon as the loan for the stadium expansion is repaid. - A University Regulations Commission, to be composed of equal numbers of students and faculty members, which will not be dominated by administrators. - Initiation of a plan allowing students to transfer athletic tickets to other students. Vox Populi platform Vox Populi believes that it is time for a new sense of responsibility in university policy determination, and that this voice must have a voice in University policy determination, and that this voice must be responsive to student needs and interests. Included in Vox Populi's efforts are effective representative student government should be the following specific goals: PREAMBLE STUDENT RIGHTS Vox Populi will continue its efforts to secure a stop week by working through the Calendar Committee, the registrar and the University Senate. University Regulations Commission. Vox Populi will work to establish a University Regulations Commission, to be composed of equal numbers of members. The commission will be dominated by administrators. This commission shall have clear authority to determine student regulations in non-academic areas. Authority for self-determination of women's regulations shall be delegated. A and environmental responsibility shall remain in the Disciplinary and Social committees. Vox Populi will work to secure a guarantee from the Athletic Corporation that all students have priority in the old student sections of Memorial Stadium as well as in the new section under construction. The new student athletic ticket prices will be eliminated (except the administrative fee) for the stadium expansion is repaid. Student Regulations. Vox Populi will work to eliminate injustices in education and clarify all student regulations to eliminate confusion. Second: require students to such as those attempting to restrict the student's use of private property. Third: guarantee the basic rights of students, including a legal counsel in any hearing, to ace one's accusers, to a transcribed record of any hearing, and to freedom from arrest. STOP WEEK STUDENT ATHLETIC SEATING Vox Populi will infiltrate legislation granting any KU student the right to transfer his athletic ticket to any other KU student, but not to anyone else PASS—FAIL SYSTEM BOARD OF STUDENT PERSONNEL Vox Populi will work to obtain an elective pass-fail system, whereby a student may take any one course per semester outside his major area on a course that is offered in his educational background without undue concern for his GPA. Vox Populi will establish an independent "civil service" agency for selecting appointees to most ASC Personnel would use an interviewing board with a rating system to select students most qualified for these post- However, appointments will continue to be made with the consent of the student body president and vice president and/or the ASC. Daily Kansan Thursday, March 17, 1966 Welcome To 5 NAISMITH HALL Model Rooms and Rental Office NOW OPEN The New Private Residence Hall for Men and Women Students 1800 Naismith Drive Features of this deluxe accommodation include - 20 delicious meals weekly in Naismith Dining Commons - Wall-to-wall carpeting in all suites - Private bath with tub-shower in all suites - Individual four-foot closet for each student - Private telephone in each room - Large desk-dresser with spacious study area and nine storage drawers for each student - Vanity dresser in each room - Central air-conditioning and heating controls in each suite - Large, comfortable lounge with TV on each floor - Spacious recreation room with table tennis and other recreational equipment - Complete vending machine service - Laundry room with washers, dryers, and ironing boards - Ample parking for residents and guests Come now to look and sign up for September Approved by Kansas University Allen Bros. & O'Hara, Memphis, Tenn.-Owners & Operators