- , The Michigan Daily-Tuesday, October 4, 1977-Page 3 Bangladesh air force . YO SEE NL S AN CALLrDNLY Strange bedfellows #1 The Saudis want to tow it, the Americans want to study it, the Australians drink'it and the French want to explore it. Clearly the time for an International Conference on the Utilization of Icebergs has come. Debate on those issues began yesterday at the Conference's first session, but the paticicpants picked an odd site for their icy sum- mit-Ames, Iowa, one of the most landlocked cities on the continent. Strange bedfellows#2 And you thought only Legionnaires and iceberg fanciers had national conventions. Well, it turns out that socialist leagues do too-the Young Workrs Liberation League, for example. YWLL will hold its annual convention this weekend in New York City, it won't be in the dead of night behind an abandoned cigar warhouse. In fact, it will be held in the ballroom of that venerable old capitalist institution, the Statler Hilton Hotel. Happenings .. .... Joyce Simonson will flaunt her flute on the second floor of the Union at noon in a Pendleton Rm. "Music at Mid-day" performance. God- frey Uzoigwe will speak on "Nigeria: Problems of Development" at the International Center, 603 E. Madison, at noon ... Richard Gewain, chief fire protection engineer of the American Iron and Steel Institute, will speak on "Fire Proofing and Structural Steel" in the Art and Architecture Building's auditorium at 3:30 ... Bernice Eiduson of UCLA speaks on "Child Developmnt in Alternative Family Styles" in the Ed School's Schorling Auditorium at 4 p.m.... her competition at 4 p.m. is provided by Hans Ziegler of Switzerland's Institute for Mechanik, speaking at 206 West Engine.. . and also by a 4 p.m. speech on "Second Steps Toward a Universal Language", given ib 3201 Angell by John Myhill of SUNY Buffalo.. . and, rounding out the 4 p.m. field, Malcolm Parks of Oxford University will speak on "The Production of Early Chaucer Manuscripts" in the Cook Room of the Law Quad.., the Consumer Program of PIRGIM will meet in room 4106 of the Union at 7 p.m. . . . Hillel, 1429 Hill, will celebrate Simchat Torah at 7 p.m. . .. three sociology films-La Vita, Cor- poration, and The Inheritance-will be screened in MLB Auditorium 4 at 4 p.m. and in MLB Lec. Rm. 1 at 7:30 ... Michael Harper will give a poetry reading in the Pendleton Room of the Union at 4:10. . . MSA will meet on the Union's third floor at 7:30... a speaker from the American Friends Service Committee will discuss "Sharing Global Resources" in the fabled Blue Carpet Lounge of Alice Lloyd at 7:30 ... there will be a free showing of.Kurasowa's The Bad Sleep Well in the Old Architecture Auditorium at 8:00.. . Maria Meirelles continues her odyssey of Beethoven piano sonatas on the ivories of Rackham Auditorium at 8. . . space freaks can get off on moonwalk and The Race for Space, both to be shown at 8 in MLB Auditorium 3. and the Energy Conservation folks remind you all of a mini-course in said subject-=call 763-0178 for details: On the outside Fall fell this weekend with a determined thud, but today at least will be clear and sunny with light winds and a high of 61. Tonight the mer- cury will dip to 43, but tomorrow shoud be even warmer than today. revolt fail DACCA, Bangladesh (AP) - At least 86 members of the Bangladesh armed forces were killed during Sunday's abortive uprising, informed sources said yesterday. *Among those killed were 11 "sen- iormost" air force officers, ranging in rank from group captain to flying officer, the unofficial sources said. There was no independent confirma- tion of the report. THE PRESIDENT and chief mar- tial law administrator, Maj. Gen. Ziaur Rahman, was apparently a target of the predawn uprising but was never in danger during the 2% hours of sporadic automatic weapons fire in three parts of Dacca. Another target was Air Vice Mar- shal A. G. Mahmud, the govern- ment's chief negotiator during a 4 -day airport siege with five Japan- ese Red Army terrorists holding a jijacked Japan Air Lines jetliner at Dacca airport. Mahmud was in the control tower when a shootout erupted outside the airport among dissident soldiers within the traditionally faction- ridden Bangladesh armed forces. MAHMUD, however, escaped injury and later; kept in touch. with the hijack negotiations from an undis- closed position inside a secured area away from the airport. Sources said last night that some 60 military personnel had been accused for their part in the uprising and were now being held in Dacca central jail. Court-martial proceedings against them were expected to begin within a day or two, the sources said. GEN. RAHMAN met with top military brass yesterday to assess Daily Official Bulletin TUESDAY, OCTOBER 4, 1977 Day Calendar PhysicsAstronomy: M. Bretz, Highlights-Inter- national Quantum.Crystal Conf. Fort Collins, Co., discussing: a) Spin polarized hydrogen, b) 2D Solid films c) a new solid phase of hydrogen at very low temperatures and ortho-concentrations, 2038 Ran- dall Lab., G. Burbidge, U. of Calif., San Diego, "Ab- sorption Lines in Quassars", 807 Dennison, 4 p.m. 86 dead the situation, sources said. ZOn Sunday, he had addressed the nation and assured Bangladesh's 80 million people that army forces loyal to his 23-month-old martial law government were in complete control of Dacca, the airport and the Bangladesh countryside. Officials said last night that the entire country was quiet and once again firmly under the control of Rahman, who is popularly known as "General Zia." YESTERDAY afternoon, Zia as- sured the heads of government ministries that they should not be concerned by what he termed the army's "internal matter" and that they should go about the serious business of developing the impover- ished six-year-old nation that was formerly the east wing of Pakistan, sources said. Zia reportedly will brief the domes- tic press today about the planned court-martial proceedings, sources added. The shooting was concentrated against air force officers 'at the airport and at an, adjacent air force mess, sources said. The air force, like the army, has long been divided by political and familial factions. The most superfi- cial reason for Sunday's upheaval within the air force was a long-smol- dering pay dispute among air force personnel, who traditionally have Home-made Soups. Beef Barley, Clam, Chowder, etc. Home-made Chill Vegetable Tempuro (served after 2 pm) Hamburger Steak Dinner Fresh Sauteed Vegetables with Brown Rice Baked Flounder Dinner Delicious Korean Bar-b-q Beef (But-ko-gee) on Kaiser Roll Fried Fresh Bean Sprouts Kim)Chee i st TUESDAY-FRIDAY 8-7 - WSATURDAY 9.7 OSUNDAY 10-7 at - MONDAY 8-3 7Lo9220 i tt , L'il Abner. CELEBRATION MIME THEATRE PRESENTS THE CELEBRATION TRIO IN retiring Nov. 13 TRUEBLOOD SUNDAY, OC '1PINOCCHIo", on original adoptatiof of the classic italian folktale dectdby TONY MONTANARO AUD. U-M Campus, State & Huron T. 9 2:00 & 7:30 p.m. NEW YORK-Al Capp has decided to call it quits. So L'il Abner, Capps sitirical comic strip tlat began in 1934 and grew to be an American institution, will appear for the last time Nov. 13, a Sunday. The comic strip's last dailyrun will be Nov. 5. Set in Dogpatch, U.S.A., "a yokel's paradise where everybody loafs and eats turnips and pork chops," the car- toon strip currently appears in about 400 newspapers around the world. In its heyday, it ran in about 900 newspapers, according to Robert Reed, president of the Chicago Tribune-New York News Syndicate. Capp, 68, who lives in Cambridge, Mass., was not immediately available for comment about his impending retirement. His art style was copied by many car- toonists through the years." TICKETS: 1.50 children, 2.50 adults Advanced Sales at Logos BENEFIT CLONLARA SCHOOL the ann arbor fl cooperat$ve TONIGHTI Tuesday, October 4 THE ROCKY HORROR PICTURE SHOW (Jim Sherman, 1975) 7 & 9-NAT. SCI. BLDG. A young couple stumbles into a castle inhabited by weirdos from the planet Transylvania. They meet Dr. Frank N. Furter, a Frankenstein in rhinestone heels, and his muscular transvestite blond monster whose bizarre appetites are assuaged by first seducing the girl, then conquering the boy. A combo mad professor-beach party orgy film mixed up with today's sexual permis- siveness, TIM CURRY, SANDRA SARANDON. ADMISSION $1 been given an interior status to the v-Av army. 1313 So. University " * THE UNIVERSITY OF MICHIGAN 0 " PROFESSIONALTHEATRE PROGRAM * 9" GUETATS SERIES 197778 1 IN THE POWER CENTER FOR THE PERFORMING ARTS PETER SHAFFER's compelling expert- The Bard's timeless drama and perhaps his Pence and thrilling psychological detective most widely discussed and debated. Ham story of electrifying power The play boldly let's character, his madness, the dilemma explores the psyche. power passion and into which circumstances have thrust him worship -- universal themes that aftect our have each come in for microscopic prob " ~lives prooundlyin Directed by NAFE KATTER. Directed by RICHARD BURGWIN Guest Arti;tin-Residence Featuring ROBERT SEVRA, Guest * Featuring WILLIAM C LEACH Atist-inResidenceas "Claudus0 Guest Artist-i-Residence " Wed.- Sat Oct 12-15. 8pm, Sun Oct 16. 2 pm only. * E UUSby WILLIA M SHA KE SPEA RE SEWed - Sat Nov. 30 - Dec 3 8pm * Sun Dec 4.2 pm only " 0 * 0*- W HE GHEAE by HOWARD SACKLER M L " ~~Wed - Sat March 1-4. 8 p m:" *Sun March 5 2 pm only Dietdby RICHARD BURGWIN" " ~Featuring JAMES H. HAWTHORNE by DYLAN THOMAS Guest Artist-in-Residence Wed- Sat April 19-22 8 pm Sun Apri 23. 2 pm only " " An epic drama. based on the tumultuous career of Jack Johnson who in 1908 be Directed by CLARIBEL BAIRD." " ~~carne the first Black heavyweight champIcn Guest Artist-in-Residence " ~of the world it transcends bot, history and Featuring MAUREEN ANDERMAN & myth to reveal -- with excitement sweep GEORGE PENTECOST, " ~a eloqenc e Ince ages of Black suc cess inwduls Guest Artistsn-Residence " ~~~In sometimes lyncal sometimes soarng"' " and sometimes very earthy prose and verse and song. this most controversial and ex- traordinary poet of the mid-century takes us on a 'midright-to-midnight prowl " of a " 1 ~smug and ingrown Welsh f shng village ' " ~and into the intimate lives of its inhabitantS THE MICHIGAN DAILY Volume LXXXVIII. No. 23 Tuesday, October 4, 1977 is edited and managed by students at the University of Michigan. News phone 764-0562. Second class postage is paid at Ann Arbor, Michigan 48109. Published daily Tuesday through Sunday morning during the University year at 420 Maynard Street, Ann Arbor, Michigan 48109. Subscription rates: $12 September through April (2 semesters); $13 by mail outside Ann Arbor. Summer session published Tuesday through Satur- day morning. Subscription rates: $6.50 in Ann Arbor; $7.50 by mail outside Ann Arbor. I ; c 1 ic U ff3.3n I M rive