AWACS foe sees no vote WASHINGTON (UPI) - Sen. Alan Cranston (D-Calif.) counting 53 senators in his camp, predicted yester- day opponents of the sale of AWAC- S radar planes to Saudi Arabia will score a "narow victory" over President Reagan. Cranston assistant Democratic 0 leader in the Senate, pointed to the overwhelming 301-111 House vote against the sale last Wednesday and the 9-8 resection by the Senate Foreign Relations Committee on Thursday. "I EXPECT we will repeat that narrow victory when the issue comes up for a vote on the Senate floor," said Cranston, who is considered one of the Senate's best vote-counters. "We will end up with more than 53 votes" when the conclusive tally on the $8.5 billion military hardware package taken in about 10 days, he predicted. Cranston, a leading foe of the deal, said he counts 53 senators committed to vote against or "strongly leaning in that direction." In remarks prepared for delivery to the American Jewish Congress in Dallas, he said another 40 senators favor or are leaning toward ~the sale. The Michigan Doily-Sunday, October 18, 1981-Pagel CaiHyrsioto by KIM HILL MICHIGAN WIDE receiver Anthony Carter stretches for an overthrown pass yesterday during the Wolverines 9-7 loss to the Iowa Hawkeyes. *IRA car bombing maims -British chief of Marines Join Nes afl News Staff LONDON (AP) - The Irish Republican Army struck in London for the second time in a week yesterday with a car bombing that maimed the com- 'mandant of the British marines, Lt. Gen. Sir Steuart Bringle, a former commando leader in Northern Ireland. The blast ripped the roof off his car and sent the hood flying over a house. Pringle, 53, was rushed to King's College Hospital, where surgeons am- putated his right leg below the knee. Doctors said they hoped to save his left leg, which also was torn. The general's dog also was in the car, but escaped unharmed. IN NORTHERN Ireland, a stolen car booby-trapped with a bomb exploded in the parking lot of a golf course, slightly injuring one man, police said. No group immediately claimed responsibility for that explosion. . The outlawed IRA claimed respon- sibility for the Pringle car bombing in a statement issued to news organizations by its publicity bureau in Dublin, Ireland. Scotland Yard had warned of the possibility of a new IRA bombing cam- paign after the group's nail-bomb at- tack last Saturday on a busload of Irish Guards in London. Two people were killed and 37 others injured in that at- tack.' _ "EVERYONE SHOULD be careful, not just those whose virtue of their positions may be attacked," Prime Minister Margaret Thatcher said "yesterday after learning of the Pringle car-bombing. "This will help break the -threat and catch the perpetrators of these dreadful crimes." Pringle's red Volkswagen Passat ex- ploded as he drove off with his pet '-il' O 0 Labrador retriever from his home in West Dulwich, a middle-class residen- tial area of south 'London, a Scotland Yard official said. The impact of the explosion sent Pringle's car crashing into a parked car. The roof of the Volkswagen was torn off and its windows were blown out. 'The whole front of the car was in pieces," said Clifford Collins, who operates a nearby furniture store. TIVERTcfUSICALc8OCIETY presen ts Not& a special concert in collaboration with the School of Music MUSICOF ALBERTO GINASTERA F4 (N :3C3 r.- U- CD i, r Anthony di Bonaventura Auora Natola-Ginastera k. ,,A 0 f Marilyn Mason, Leslie Guinn, Faculty guest artist Faculty guest artist Contemporary Directions Ensemble Carl St. Clair, conductor University Symphony Orchestra Gustav Meier, conductor Variazioni e Toccata sopra "Aurora lucis rutilat," Op. 52(1980) Serenata on Neruda's "Love Poems," Op. 42(1973) Concerto No. 1 for Piano and Orchestra, Op. 28(1961) TUESDAY OCT.20 AT 8:00 .k ... m U *U -_ "i '' I ;i