The Michigan Daily-Tuesday, August1, 1978-Page 7 French controller slowdown jams LONDON (AP) - Hundreds of thousands of travelers jammed European airports yesterday as a slowdown by French air traffic con- trollers and a flood of American and Canadian passengers fighting for stan- dby seats across the Atlantic threw air travel facilities into chaos. British authorities said only 16 flights an hour were being allowed through French airspace, a fraction of the nor- mal traffic. France lies in the heart of Western Europe and some of the most heavily traveled air routes cross Fren- ch territory. "THIS CHAOS is threatening air transport as a reliable and serious trade," said Hans Erik Christensen, station manager at Denmark's Billund Airport, as flights continued to pile up after the third straight weekend of slowdown by the French controllers. Aage Riis Johansen, president of the Danish Air Controllers' Association, defended his French colleagues, saying, "This is first of all a matter of safety in the air." He said that in Fran- ce there are too few air controllers to handlle the traffic with "rather outdated equipment." The French controllers union meets tomorrow to decide what future action to take. They are demanding moder- nized equipment and more personnel, which they claim are essential for passenger safety, as well as an im- proved pay structure. THOUSANDS OF Americans and Canadians swelled queues at airports and ticket offices in Britain, pitching camp for waits of up to eight days for cut-rate standby seats home. With longer and longer waits, the cut-price crowd was getting more organized and less rancorous, since, after all, they had expected to take their chances and wait in lines. But for Britons with a precious week or 10 days to spend on some sunny beach it was a different story - and as if in mockery, Monday's gray skies sprayed cold rain on England all day. "It started off as a joke, but the novelty has long since worn off," said Sheilagh McLaughlin, 18, reclining on the terminal floor at Manchester Air- port in England where she had been waiting since Saturday morning for a flight to Majorca. MORE THAN\ 3,000 would-be travelers slept there Sunday night, and when hundreds more arrived yester- day, one official said: "There are very few spaces left in, the terminal for anyone to squeeze into." At the other end, 70 airplanes were stacked up at Palma de Majorca air- airports port and were departing at one an hour rather than the customary 500 a day. Iberia Airlines cancelled 48 flights out of Spain yesterday, stranding thousan- ds for a third consecutive day. "This weekend has been the worst we have even seen," said a spokesman for Britain's Civil Aviation Authority, fearing a "snowball effect" would make things worse if the French action continued. AIRLINE PASSENGERS WAIT behind police lines at Paris' Orly Airport yesterday as a slowdown by French air traffic controllers entered its third week. Passenger flights across western Europe ave been delayed by the strike. Rhodesians end Mozambique raids SALISBURY, Rhodesia (AP) - Rhodesian military forces yesterday ended two days of cross-border raids in- to Mozambique against 10 black nationalist guerrilla bases that had been "effectively neutralized," the military command reported. A brief communique issued after 36 hours of silence said, "A total of 10 terrorist bases have been effectively neutralized. As a result of these self- defense operations against these terrorist bases the intended disruptive effects have been achieved. Security forces suffered one minor casualty." IT DID NOT specifically say infantry units had crossed the frontier, although the initial announcement Sunday said security forces were launching operations "against selected terrorist bases in Mozambique." In Maputo, the capital of Mozam- bique, a government spokesperson said "There was no incursion by Rhodesian ground forces," and the attacks were carried out by fighter-bombers. He said 12 persons were killed and 110 wounded in Manica Province and a school there. was destroyed. No casualty figures were given for other areas attacked. The Rhodesian communique made no mention of guerrilla casualties. This was in contrast to the last raid acknowledged by the government in November 1977, when it said at least Receive The Daily! Subscribe--74-Q55$ 1,200 guerrillas were killed and vast quantities of weapons and ammunition were destroyed. THE SPOKESPERSON in Maputo said Mozambican forces "fought off at- tacks launched against the provinces of Manica and Tete by the air force of the illegal Rhodesia regime." He said the Manica town of Goldola was bombed by French-made "Mirage fighter-bombers supplied to the rebel regime" by white-ruled South Africa. Rhodesians watching the warplanes streak overhead during the raids said they saw aging Vampire and Hunter jet fighters but none of the more modern French-made Mirages. MILITARY reference books say the Rhodesian air force includes two squadrons of Hunters and Vampires, but make no mention of Mirages. Observers here said the subdued tone of the Rhodesian communique might reflect an awareness of international opposition to strikes into the neigh- boring black-ruled countries where the guerrillas are based. They said the at- tacks also might not have been as suc- cessful as planned. These were the first cross-border raids since Rhodesian Prime Minister Ian Smith's white-minority ad- ministration established a new bi-racial government with an agreement March 3that set up a ruling executive Council of Smith and three black moderate leaders. Rhodesia had announced the latest raids in a terse communique Sunday and then made no further comment un- til it reported that the raids were "suc- cessfully completed." 1:30-3:30-5:30-7:30-9:45 BURT REYNOLDS., "THE E~q0, RJ The Ann Arbor Film Cooperae presents at AUD A TUESDAY, AUGUST 1 JOHNNY GUITAR (Nicholas Ray, 1953) 7only-AUD A This baroque western is the story of a soloon keeper (JOAN CRAWFORD) and the hostile reception wic a EwnCivsDe a R E staind cTElicateY bEer ambivalent re-encounter with a former lover. WithbMERCEDES McCAMRRiDGEand STERLING HAYDEN. RUN HOME SLOW (Tim Sullivan, 1963) 9 only-AUD A Anott-boot, psychological western about four frightened peopleb ound together- torn opor, by their own V it ! A special treat for all Frank Zoppo tooftics since the soundtrock is Zoppos first recorded work. Fronk's old English teocher, Don Cerveris, wrote the screenplay. Strring MERCEDES Mc- CAMBRIDGEond LINDASCOTT. Aonceinolifetime opportunity. Tomorrow: Culpepper Cattle Co. & Once Upon A Time In The West ADMISSION FREE