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The Cincinnati Enquirer from Cincinnati, Ohio • 1
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The Cincinnati Enquirer from Cincinnati, Ohio • 1

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Cincinnati, Ohio
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1
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IRER THE CINCINNATI 129TH YEAR NO. 42 FINAL EDITION WEDNESDAY MORNING, MAY 21, 1969 PRICE 10 CENTS Court Bars'UC Students i Descent Oroa Insertion po) Separation From Disrupting Action 1 50,000 ft. above mm landing site radiui Earth W- 194 Naut. ml. Apolune I I i v.

Phasing 1 Most of the demonstrators were white, believed to be members of the Students for a Democratic Society (SDS). Ronald Temple, assistant dean of men, estimated that 75 of the 100 blacks assembled were not 'students. Police assembled 26 cruisers and three paddy wagons in Burnet Woods but did not enter the campus. An agreement was made several months ago that under such conditions UC would try to handle its own problems. Former Cincinnati police lieutenant Paul Steuer, now head of the University of Cincinnati security police, said there were no arrests Total damage was estimated at $200 Dean of Students William Nester.

The university's board of trustees decided to ask for the restraining order, William McClain, city solicitor and the university's legal representative, filed the petition. McClain said a hearing on the order will be held no later than Friday. The university will seek a permanent order. Thomas Crush, assistant city solicitor, said It still will be up to the university to de-List of demands, other stories, Page 10. cide if city police are needed on the campus.

They were not called Tuesday. HE SAID that if arrests are made under the order, the charge will be for contempt of court. The legal precedent for the move was established at Columbia University, he said. There are some 21,000 enrolled the number of persons involved in the disruption which began at 11:30 a. m.

ranged from 50 to 900. The 18 demands presented to Langsam by the UBA dealt with appointment of more black faculty members and addition of black made because his force never saw anyone breaking the law. There are 1590 blacks enrolled at UC. Membership In UBA is unknown. UBA last year presented requests to Langsam, some of which were honored, but there were no incidents.

SDS WAS revived in the last two or three months after an organization attempt at UC flopped two years ago. SDS is not an approved campus organization. The presentation of demands went awry from plans made Monday, Temple stated. The UBA was to have had a delegation approach Langsam. But when a crowd assembled Tuesday on the administration building steps, someone in the group suggested that everybody move inside to see Langsam.

The president was called out of a faculty meeting in the Tange-man University Center. He arrived in the administration lobby at 1:20 p. m. and talked with the group for five minutes about the demands. He was given 24 hours to reply.

A member of the crowd asked that classes be closed while demands were being studied. Langsam refused. Then students and non-students proceeded to disrupt classes in nearby McMicken Hall and other buildings. The University of Cincinnati1 Tuesday obtained a temporary restraining order barring all its students from interrupting its educational program. The order was granted late Tuesday night by Common Pleas Judge Ralph B.

Kohnen. The University asked for the order following a raucous mid-afternoon march by black and white demonstrators through several university buildings. NAMED SPECIFICALLY in the order were members of the Students for Democratic Society, United Black Association and "all enrolled students of the University of Cincinnati." Earlier president Walter C. Lang-sam had met with members of the UBA for more than two hours over a list of 18 demands they had made of the school. He said he would respond to the demands next Tuesday and that the university would tolerate no further disruptions of classwork.

The demonstrators, students and nonstudents, had tramped through several university buildings for an hour cheering, smashing a few windows and hurling some desks out of classroom windows. Three students and a newspaper photographer were injured slightly. He's On The Spot A University of Cincinnati representative was scheduled to appear Tuesday night before an Ohio house subcommittee investigating campus disruptions. State Rep. Norman Murdock (R.

Cincinnati), chairman of the subcommittee said in Columbus that he was notified by UC that it would not be able to send a spokesman. LM descent engine Jp CSM remains at 60 Naut. ml. orbit at full throttle through phasing 1 Insertion 9.9 Naut mi. Ci-fconcenfrc Sequence Jnfiafon (CS,) -Enquirer (Ran Cochran) Phots UBA's Demands Roll From Bullhorn While Some SDS Members Stand By rally at UC Administration Building led to march through classrooms X.

Con stant differential height (CDH) Terminal phase initiation mi Constant Differential Height and Terminal Phase (CDH) Rendezvous and Apollo 10 Nearing Moon Orbit stationkeep Flight controllers assured the astronauts that their aim was so good that no further mid-course corrections, using the main rocket, seemed to be necessary. Apollo 10's primary mission is to circle the Moon 31 times in two and a half days. On Thursday Stafford and Cernan are to fly the detachable lunar landing craft down to within nine miles of the Moon's surface in a test of its ability to maneuver in the vicinity of the intended landing site for the Apollo 11 astronauts in July. ONCE BEHIND the Moon, out of radio contact from Earth, an onboard computer is to command the firing of the Apollo's main rocket at 4:35 p. m.

The rocket would slow down the vehicle so that it drops into lunar orbit, instead of whipping on around the Moon and heading back to Earth. This so-called "free-return trajectory" is the astronauts' insurance policy, should the rocket fail to fire. But the rocket already has been ignited twice during the flight and performed smoothly. New York Times Service HOUSTON Apollo 10 homed in on the Moon Tuesday night, drawing near the point where lunar gravity would begin pulling the space ship in for ts planned orbit this afternoon. While the three astronauts slept, their craft would escape the sphere of Earth's dominating gravity and come under the Moon's primary influence.

This was predicted to occur at a distance of 38,900 miles from the Moon and 219,000 miles from Earth. Then Apollo 10, which has been slowing down since it set out on its moonward course Sunday, should gather speed from the lunar pull and swing behind the Moon. Col. Thomas P. Stafford of the Air Force, Comdr.

John W. Young and Comdr. Eugene A. Cernan of the Navy are scheduled to send color television shots of their approach to the Moon, beginning at 1:08 p. EDT today.

They transmitted two telecasts Tuesday. IM Jeffson to Ascent Propulsion System Depletion Burn Top Of News 'Ethics' Of Fortas Deal The Weather Sunny and a little cooler today, with little chance for rain. High expected today, 76; low, 56. Increasing cloudiness and warmer Thursday. Details, Map on Page 5 Draw Censure By ABA 90deg.E.

K-r 1 Iff LM Burn to depletion 60-70 deg. E. LMCSM separation Page Page Editorials 6 18-19 Graham 4F Horoscope 11F Horse Sense 17F 24-27 Jumble 3F 31-48 People 2 ...7 Society 15 ...30 Sports TV-Radio 8 Weikel 10 ...31 Word Game .14 Action Line Amuse Bridge Brumfield Business Classified Columnists Comics Crossword Dear Abby Deaths CSM Command service module 1 SC Spacecraft Less of signal Acquisition of signal International NORTH VIETNAM says it will not Identify the U. S. prisoners it holds so long as Americans fight in the country.

Page 3. National A WASHINGTON official says there is evidence that revolutionary student groups are financed by outside sources. Page 3. Special THE BENGALS will open their 1969 season with three straight "fair weather" games. Page 21.

City-County THE UBA, its demands, the injured and a dialogue from the UC campus were part of Tuesday's story. Page 10. GREATER Cincinnati Area Chamber of Commerce backed a proposed Sunday liquor sales bill in an Ohio legislative committee hearing Tuesday. Page 11. i CM Command module IS LM -Lunar module in WASHINGTON The American Bar Association's Ethics Committee said Tuesday the relationship of former Supreme Court Justice Abe Fortas with financier Louis E.

Wolfson and his family foundation was "clearly contrary" to the canons of judicial ethics. "It is our opinion that the conduct of Mr. Fortas, while a Supreme Court justice, described in his statement of the facts, was clearly contrary to the canons of judicial ethics, even if he did not and never intended to intercede or take part in any legal, administrative or Judicial matters affecting Mr. wolfson," the committee said. At the same time, the committee said its opinion which it described as Informal is limited to ethical considerations and should not be construed as a Judgment on "the lawfulness of actions" involved.

FORTAS RESIGNED from the high court last week amid the furor surrounding disclosure he had ac cepted and then returned 11 months later a $20,000 fee from the Wolfson family foundation. Wolfson is serving a year's prison sentence for Federal securities law violation. Fortas accepted the fee while Wolfson was under government investigation and returned it after the financier's indictment. Middletown Ups Its Income Tax Middletown Bureau Special MIDDLETOWN, Ohio Voters in a special election here Tuesday approved an increase in the city's income tax from the current 1 to a new V2 rate. With 8402 of the city's 18,582 eligible voters going to the polls, the increase received a 61.45 majority, with an unofficial tally of 5159 in favor, 3236 opposed.

The new rate will bring in an estimated $280,000 additional for the remainder of 1969 and $918,000 in 1970. Food, Women's Section Pages 13-14, 16-17, 1-26F Local and Area News Pages 10-11 Come Downtown Tomorrow's Downtown Day, so check into the Downtown Day Section in this morning's Enquirer, line up the bargains you want to grab onto, and go to bed early tonight so you can get downtown in a hurry tomorrow. You're bound to find something you want at' a greatly reduced price I Drawings from Aviation Week Space Technology Magazine THIS IS the flight profile of Apollo 10, a precursor to the manned lunar landing. The drawings show the critical phase of the eight-day flight. On Thursday, the command and service module will orbit the moon at 60 nautical miles while the lunar module, carrying two astro-, nauts, will descend to within 50,000 feet of the lunar surface in a maneuver described as the riskiest yet in man's reach into space.

The sequence is From Top to Bottom..

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