Page 2-Sunday, November 15, 1981-The Michigan Daily Gosi fdn tulle t1WAOI/ al [loe, 850 American troops jump in military test deb - S 6 -..Z- -Z - 111Z Z ZZ L , in 4i - f - \ r " / "' , U'/ i-e I>> r ' : Imp. CAIRO WEST AIR BASE, Egypt (AP) - More than 800 paratroopers dropped into the Western Desert on Saturday, beginning the biggest test of America's Rapid Deployment Force. One jumper broke his hip, three suf- fered less serious injuries and a 2%-ton truck crumpled when its chute failed. The windless, clear blue sky was filled with olive drab parachutes as 850 Americans, 10 Egyptians, and their equipment - including trucks, howit- zers and mortars-were drop- ped from 18 C-141 and six C-130 tran- sport planes. LESS THAN six minutes elapsed before the first platform of equipment was dropped and the last soldier hit the sand. Each carried a 60-pound pack and an M-16 rifle. The operation began about a minute ahead of schedule. The semi-official newspaper Al- Ahram said in its Sunday edition that two AWACS radar planes took part in the exercises. U.S. military officials said yesterday afternoon they had no information on the AWACS in- volvement, but an American military spokesman had said earlier in the week that use of the aircraft was being con- sidered. Fifty-seven platforms of heavy equipment were dropped from the planes at an altitude of 1,500 feet. The troopers were dropped from about 800 feet. ONE U.S. MAJOR broke his hip when he landed. The lesser injuries included a sprained ankle and a pulled back Poetry Reading with Charlotte Nekola and Judith Kerman MONDAY, NOV. 16 8:00 P.M. ADMISSION FREE GUILD HOUSE 802 Monroe (662-5189) muscle, officials said. The injured were not identified. The parachute of one equipment plat- form failed to open, and a 5,000 pound, eight-wheeled vehicle crumpled when it crashed into the desert, officials said. They said the mishaps were fewer than expected. The officials also said a Special For- ces team parachuted into the Zone Saturday night from an altitude of 10,000 feet. They refused to say how many men took part in the jump. THE MOCK assault on the war games field of this Egyptian air base 18 miles west of Cairo was part of the Bright Star '82, the month-long test that involves 4,000 Americans in Egypt and 2,000 in exercises in Sudan, Somalia and Oman. Six of the C-141s carried troops of the 82nd Airborne Division 14 hours non- stop from Pope Air Force Base, N.D., and the rest of the planes flew from four undisclosed sites in Europe. The troops that came by way of Europe had four hours' rest at bases there before linking up with the others over the Mediterranean and heading to Cairo West. A-10 Thunderbolt jetfighters flew mock sorties over the field before, during and after the operation, in which the 82nd linked up with the 24th Mechanized Division of Fort Stewart, Ga., which reached Egypt last week by ship and plane, and secured the mock target. g> A Nov. 19-22 Tickets at PTP in C LJsiC Opera hh Mendelssohn Theatre Mich. League 764-0450 AMATEUR & COMMERCIAL PHOTO DUPLICATE SLIDES TO MATCH YOUR ORIGINALS OR COLOR CORRECTED WHEN REQUESTED Number of Number of Duplicates per Original Originals 1-2 3-5 6-9 10-24 25 1-5 $.55 .51 .48 .42 6-24 .55 .48 .42 .33 25-49 .55 .42 .33 .28 50-99 .45 .38 .28 .21 100or More .38 .33 .21 .18 Numbering and Collating .03 each. Appropriate Boxes Sup Entraying .01 each Plus Tray. STORE AT .LAB &STORE ATSTORE 1315 S. UNIVERSITY 3120 PACKARD 691 S. MA 994-0433 973-0770 663-6r FINISHING 2 DAY SERVICE or More .33 .28 .21 .18__ .15 plied. President roams the wilds for turkeys PEARSALL, Texas (UPI)- President Reagan donned a well-worn camouflage outfit and armed himself with a shotgun yesterday to hunt wild turkeys on a dusty Texas hill country ranch. Although the president said, "I've never gone turkey hunting," his chan- ces for success were good since the sprawling ranch is populated with bet- ween 700 and 800 turkeys. THE SMILING president piled into a red jeep caked with dust and spoke with reporters briefly. Retired investment banker J.O. Win- ston was the president's host at the 500- acre spread in rugged, mesquite- covered hills about 90 miles west of San Antonio. Reagan was outfitted with a 12-gauge shotgun and a non-resident hunting permit as he set out on the trip in balmy, autumn weather accompanied by White House aides James Baker and Michael Deaver and a Secret Service agent in the open jeep. THE PRESIDENT was to hide in a hunting blind made from a pile of scrub brush to await his shot at a passing turkey. Winston said Reagan's chances were good because "there's a world of turkey here now." But, apparently referring to other hunters in the area, the rancher said Reagan's success also could depend on "how little company he has." INBRIEF Compiled from Associated Press and United Press International reports IRA kills Parliament member at teenage dance BELFAST, Northern Ireland- Three masked Irish Republican Army guerrillas shoved past 60 horrified teen-agers at a dance yesterday and fatally shot the Rev. Robert Bradford, a hardline Protestant member of the British Parliament. The gunmen also killed a caretaker at the door as they fled. Witnesses told police two of the killers wore Halloween masks and the third had a white handkerchief over his face in the attack at the Finaghy Community Center on the outskirts of Belfast. All three wore workmen's coveralls, witnesses said. Screaming and crying youngsters scrambled for cover under tables, and one hurled a chair at the fleeing gunmen, who fired six bullets into Bradford and three into the caretaker. None of the youths was-hurt, but witnesses said some were taken to nearby homes and treated for shock. Police accused the guerrillas of trying to provoke "virtual civil war," and British Prime Minister Margaret Thatcher vowed "to cleanse our country of the evil of terrorism.' Dying child gets transplant PITTSBURGH- Surgeons yesterday transplanted a liver into a 2-year-old girl dying of cancer, hours after a heartrending plea from her parents and a race halfway across the country with the donated organ. The child, Lauren Toohey of Kinnelon, N.J., was listed as "critical" in an intensive care unit at Children's Hospital, where she underwent the 8% hour transplant operation. The liver donor was a 4-year-old girl from Wisconsin who died in an ac- cident Friday. Her parents agreed to donate the organ in the hope that Lauren's life might be saved. Doctors said that without the transplant, the child would have only 3 to 6 months to live. Labor breaking flying boycott CLEVELAND - Several labor leaders, citing recent shifts in union policies on the air traffic controllers' strike, are breaking an unofficial boycott and flying again on union business. The United Steelworkers of America, United Auto Workers and .Com- munications Workers of America are among major unions that have quietly ended prohibitions against air travel instituted shortly after 13,000 members of the Professional Air Traffic Controllers struck illegally Aug. 3. Joseph Murphy, vice president of the Service Employees International Union in Cleveland, said he broke the informal boycott after putting 20,000 miles on his car. "I was just killing myself trying to cover five states," he said. AFL-CIO president Lane Kirkland, however, denied his union softened its recommendation to members to fly only when necessary. Polish government bows to avert dairy strike Warsaw, Poland - Dairy workers yesterday abruptly cancelled a planned strike that would have cut off Poland's supply of milk and eggs. The gover- nment gave in to the demands of the workers and rebuffed hardliners, defending negotiations with Solidarity as the only alternative to bloodshed. "What can you do with such as mad idea as a milkman strike?" Gen. Wolciech Jaruzelski, the ;premier and. Communist Party. leader, whose government bowed to the dairymakers renegade unions demands for more pay to avert the threatened Nov. 23 strike. In a new, indirect warning, the Soviet Union hinted Poland would risk its independence if it abandoned socialism. The warning was contained in let- ters from Soviet citizens printed in the Communist Party newspaper Prav- da. 4f1! M~ihigjan 1 atlj Vol. XCII, No. 58 Sunday, November 15, 1981 The Michigan Daily is edited and managed by students at The Univer- sity of Michigan. Published daily Tuesday through Sunday mornings during the University year at 420 Maynard Street, Ann Arbor, Michigan, 49109. Sub- scription rates: $12 September through April (2 semesters); $13 by mail out- side Ann Arbor. Summer session published Tuesday through Saturday mor- nings. Subscription rates: $6.50 in Ann Arbor; $7 by mail outside Ann Arbor. Second class postage paid at Ann Arbor, Michigan. POSTMASTER: Send address changes to THE MICHIGAN DAILY, 420 Maynard Street, Ann Ar- bor, MI 48109. The Michigan Daily is a member of the Associated Press and subscribes to United Press International, Pacific News Service, Los Angeles Times Syndicate and Field Newspapers Syndicate. 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