Page Two THE MICHIGAN DAILY Tuesday, January 23, 1973 Poge Two THE MICHIGAN DAILY Tuesday, January 23, 1973 World's worst airplane crash kills By AP avid Reuters LAGOS, Nigeria - At least 180 people were reported dead in the world's worst air crash after a chartered airliner, bringing 202 Moslem pilgrims home from Mec- ca, crashed and caught fire yes- terday at Kano airport in northern Nigeria. Officials reported 30 survived,I all of them severely burned. This would make the crash the world's deadliest air disaster in- volving a single aircraft. One hun- dred seventy six persons died in the crash of a Soviet Aeroflot jet near Moscow last Oct. 13. The Boeing 707 of the Royal, Jordanian Airlines b u r s t into flames as it touched down at Kano's tiny airport, witnesses said.! The pilot was identified by a Royal Jordanian spokesman in Amman as Capt. John Waterman, an American whose wife and chil- dren live in Beirut, Lebanon. The spokesman said the airline had been informed that he and the seven other crew members were among the survivors. Waterman's wife, Elly, told a newsman in Beirut she had heard from aviation sources that the run- way collapsed at the point at which the aircraft touched down. The MichigantDaily, edited and man- aged by students at the University of Michigan. News phone: 764-0562. Second Class postage paid at Ann Arbor, Mich- igan 420 Maynard Street, Ann Arbor, Michigan 48104. Published daily Tues- day through Sunday morning Univer- sity year. Subscription rates: $10 by carrier (campus area); $11 local mail (in Mich. or Ohio); $13 non-local mail (other states and foreign). Summer Session published Tuesday through Saturday morning. Subscrip- tion rates: $5.50 by carrier (campus area); $6.50 local mail (in Mich. or Ohio); $7.50 non-local mail (other states and foreign). Use Daily Classifieds 180 Crowds at the airport arrival lounge screamed in horror as the roaring, blazing j e t careened across the runway, hurling wreck-! age, luggage and bodies in all directions. Hundreds of soldiers, policemen, voluntary workers and Red Cross personnel raced to the airport within minutes of the thunderous crash. Aviation experts flown from Lagos to the walled city of Kano started investigations on the cause: of the mid-morning crash. They were working on a number of theories, including possible poor visibility. The crash here was the 11th in little over a year in which 100 or more persons were killed in vari- ous parts of the world. - -- - -4 Wter Mkatthau ,' carl Burnett 4 "A COMEDY THAT WILL MAKE Y OU LAUGH & CRY, IT COULD BE THE BIG HIT OF THE NEW SEASON." -Detroit Free Press 5th HIT WEEK! PG "AN INTELLIGENT COMEDY WITH SOME OF THE CLEVEREST LINES IN YEARS.. THE SURPRISE COMEDY HIT OF THE YEAR." -A.A. News DIAL 662-6264 OPEN 12:45 Shows at 1, 3 5, 7, 9 P.M. A I Theatre * U * S i I SHE Sunday & Monday: Quarter Nights (BEER & WINE) Tuesday: 1/z Price Night Dancing Every Night from 8 p.m. to 2 a.m. «I AP Photo I do, I do Actress Jane Fonda and former Daily editor and activist Tom Hayden chat with friends following their free-form wedding ceremony yester- day in Los Angeles. VIETNAM PACE STEPS UP: S. Viets hurti heavy fghing HELL, UPSIDE DOWN " " Who will survive-in one one of the greatest escape adventures ever! 341 South Main 769-5960 i By AP, UPI and Reuters It was believed other SAIGON - North Vietnamese Vietnamese were trying to troops have inflicted heavy losses from the fighting that a on South Vietnamese forces in the military official called the1 South escape senior biggest had made their way back to gov- ernment lines with safe conduct passes apparently signed by local Viet Cong commanders. Michelin rubber plantation north- single bate i e igon region South Vietnamese commanders, singce Anatt wain tt ackn eglas west of Saigon, since An Loc was attacked last after a series of hastily called spring. It pitted the South Viet- meetings, rejected a Viet Cong Fighting has raged there for namese 5th Division against the ofrmd udyt edu- several days despite talk of an NrhVenamese th Divisionns h offer made Sunday to send un- early cease-fire in the capital, on North Vietnamese 7th Division, armed ambulance helicopters to ly 4 miles celebrated for laying ambushes. pick up 130 of the South Vietna- Meanwhile, some 50 South Viet- mese wounded. Senior officers The fighting in the French plan- nanmese soldiers wounded in the said the offer was a ploy to have tation appeared to have ebbed as Michelin plantation battle have air strikes in the area called off, of yesterday. But the communists been released from Communist- giving the enemy time to with- claimed two battalions of the controlled areas. draw or regroup. South Vietnamese 5th Division had been "wiped out" and three other South Vietnamese government Intelligence reports have re- battalions "heavily mauled" as field officers on the main roads cently shown a large enemy build- they moved up to reinforce the between here and the Cambodian up in the jungled regions north- paration for another offensive. It was in an effort to beat such a drive that the South Vietnamese launched their campaign. Elsewhere in Vietnam, fighting also stepped up. On the ever-vola- tile northern front of Quang Tri Province, South Vietnamese ma- rines and paratroopers killed 71 Communists but lost 24 of their own men with 85 wounded. 1 s a c c 41 Soon: "SOUNDER" !' U. S. and warplanes flew in the Central South Vietnamese dozens of missions Highlands against Communist units. South Vietnamese troops in the Mekong Delta were hit heavily and B52s rolled in with their heav- iest raids in the delta this year, spokesmen said. first two. border said some of the troops west of Saigon, apparently in pre- LSA, COFFEE HOUR 1 DAILY OFFICIAL BULLETIN O~tA+'Si~v' 7 ,...,.,>,?}>rSi r:^%ti' ":a,"> N9,.5":9...e':.. .. .:.{: . .. r.L:......................... ...........e: .::":":...... TUESDAY, JANUARY 23 & SACUA member, & S. H. Deming, DAY CALENDAR LSA jr & member of Univ. Rels. Ad- Religious Affairs & UAC: Stanley visory Comm.; call-in numbers 764-9210, Krippner, humanistic psychologist, 1764-1550, WUOM-FM, 91.7, 8 pm. "The Human Potential Movement be- Residential C o l e g e Astronomical hind the Iron Curtain," Faculty Film Festival: "Assignment: Shoot the Lounge, Union, 9 am; "Research on Al- Moon;" "Exploration of the Planets;" ternate States of Consciousness & the "Apollo 9," RC Aud., 9 pm. PractIt ot Medicine," Med. Amph., 6th Physics Seminar: J. Bechtel & P. level, U Hosp., noon; "Development of Franken, "Laser Induced Current Para-psychology In the U. S. & Rus- Pulses," P&A Colloq. Rm., 4 pm. sia," Rackham Amph., 3 pm.; "Crea- GENERAL NOTICES tivity & Altered States of Conscious- Physical Therapy Sophomores: All ness," W. Cont. Rm., 1ackham, 7 pm. second term sophomores wishing to Russian & East European Studies & concentrate in Physical Therapy who Chinese Studies Ctrs.: Boris Zanigen, have not submitted necessary form to prof., Inst. of Oriental Studies, Aca- the Curriculum should do so not demy of the USSR, "Sino-Soviet Rela- later than Feb. 5; form may be ob- tions: A Soviet Point of View," Com- tained by contacting Virginia Wilson mons Rm., basement, Lane Hall, noon. in office of Underclass Advising, 1213 Project Community Course: 3510 Angell Hall, or in Univ. Hosp. 764-7177. SAB, 1 pm. CAREER PLANNING & PLACEMENT LSA Coffee Hour: Mus. of Anthro, 3200 SAB 4018 Museums Bldg., 3 pm. Postdoctoral fellowships in England, Music School: Saxophone Quartet, Scotland & Ireland Universities, offer- SM Recital Hall, 8 pm. ed by Imperial Chemical Industries WUOM: "Symposium 73" live ques- Ltd., in many areas: physics, chem., tions & answers with Don Canham, erigrg., medical & biological sciences, athletic director, P. A. Franken, prof. beginning Oct. 1973. Deadline Feb. 6. Wednesday and Thursday, January 24 & 25 Department of Speech Communication and Theatre Student Laboratory Theatre in Cooperation of the Department of English PRESENTS TWO NEW PLAYS AN ORIGINAL AFFAIR by ALAN CROWE REVOLVING DOOR by JOHN VAN WAMBEKE ARENA THEATRE FRIEZE BUILDING Promptly at 4:10 or earlier if the theatre is filled ADMISSION FREE JLo in THIE AGBrA cxissr FRIDAY & SATURDAY, January 26 & 27 LYDIA MENDELSSOHN THEATRE f I I TUESDAY 3:00-4:30 January 23 NEW WORLD FILM CO-OP- PRESENTS MONTEREY POP I Tues. & Wed. Lightening 7:30 p.m. $1.50 Tickets at the Box Office Noon-6 p.m. or at Stanger's on State Street Museum of Anthropology 4018 Museums Building EVERYONE WELCOME ..vriii~:{i'. {- ... . ...'i'x.... ....~} :i +f:iiri'%:i:i: ; ..r.._..:.......w...y.*.'*.,.:..:5.:;ri>};:.x.-..... r.... ......:::.::..::vv....t. ........{n i:". f:4i: :Ny::yiiiy:.''.. :"i: SHOP THURSDAY AND FRIDAY UNTIL 9:00 P.M. tleayaiw entire stock Miss J Ski Jackets $20 and $24 tremendous savings while the slopes still await.. .nylon ski jackets in basic navy, red, blue, yellow and white. . . plus a sweep of fashion colors. .,. most with hidden hoods. Sizes S-M-L. 3i.'I 4 II JIMI HENDRIX burns and shatters his guitar, climaxing "Wild Thing," from "Monterey Pop," filtrecord of the 196? Monterey International Pop Festival, which Judith Christ calls "aesthetically and aurally stup- ning" A LSO Midwestern Premiere Tour OF WHAT! youve never seen i 1 David Bromberg? Avoid future social embarrassment . catch his concert tomorrow night, Power Center 8 p.m., with Terry Tate. $2.50 "R GA f JOHN HAWKES WILL READ WEDNESDAY, JAN. 24 AT 8:30 P.M. IN THE D ECIflEkiTI A i rnI I E I general admission Beat the Superstar Rush catch -featuring- Rava Shankar "RAGA is an extraordinary film, a mystical, stun- ning odyssey of a genius in another world. Director Howard Worth shows us the great sitarist Ravi Shankar, India, and the evolution of his music. RAGA fills the eyes, ears and mind with new ideas of beauty and life." -N.Y. Times 7:30 PMAUDf. IV Is DAVID BROMBERG before the rest of the world catches on . tomorrow 8 p.m. $2.50 night, Power Center, tickets. At the Union & at the door. . .