Page 6-Wednesday, September 17, 1980-The Michigan Daily the ann arbor Film cooperative TON IGHT presents TONIGHT HIDE IN PLAIN SIGHT JAMES CAAN is director and star of this powerful film about a man whose child is kidnapped by the government. CAMPUS PREMIER 7&9 :1S MLB 3 Admission: $2 ITI WARNINGTHIS IS NOT ATRADITIONAL =COLLEGE ISSUE! THE MS.COLLEGE SPECIAL! *The FIRST "Ms" THINK TANK OF WOMEN SCHOLARS *YOUR CAMPUS *The College President as Rebel *Advice for New Students; j a tN FIREFIGHTERS SURROUND a National Airlines DC-14 at London's Heathrow aircraft as the plane heded down the runway. All 217 passengers were evacuated Airport yesterday. Flames broke out in the wheel housing of the Miami-bound with the aid of emergency chutes after thS crew brought the airliner to a halt. Fire halts Miami-bound DC-1O; all 217 on board escape safely COUNSELING SERVICES IS NOW OFFERING THE FOLLOWING COUNSELING GROUPS: SOCIAL SKILLS: This therapy group for men and women will focus on difficulties in initiating and maintaining interpersonal relationships. Such tech- niques as relaxation, assertiveness training and communication skill building will be used. WOMEN WITH WEIGHT PROBLEMS: This group combines discussion, insight, support and some behavior modification to help "women deal with weight problems. GENERAL THERAPY: Personal problems, particularly those that appear in interpersonal dilemmas, will be addressed in a coed setting. MINORITY ISSUES: This counseling-therapy group is designed for black men and women to deal with minority concerns such as self-concept, procrastina- tion, racism and coping with the realities of being a black student. THE SUPERWOMAN SYNDROME: This counseling group is designed for women in graduate programs who are facing the "I-have-to-do-it-all" dilemma. Areas of focus will be personal values exploration, family and societal mes- sages, life planning concerns, support systems and models for health living. FAMILY-CENTERED THERAPY: This is an in-depth therapy group for individuals who are concerned about family and relationship issues. Emphasis will be placed on examining connections between present life situations and relation- ships and the individual's experiences growing up in his/her family. PURPOSE, ANOMIE & SELF-DIRECTION-CONFLICTS BEING A STUDENT: This group will be directed at assisting students who are confused about academic/vocational/lifestyle goals. Men and women in undergraduate or graduate programs are welcome. FOR MORE INFORMATION, WALK IN AT 3100 MICHIGAN UNION OR CALL ANNE A T764-8312. LONDON (AP)-All 217 passengers aboard a smouldering National Airlines plane slid to safety down emergency chutes yesterday after flames sud- denly encircled the underside of the Miami-bound DC-10 jet on takeoff from London's Heathrow Air- port, officials said. Up to 12 people suffered minor in- juries in the incident. "We were building up a lot of speed, and then there was a loud roar," said Marjorie Lubbock, a teacher from Norwich, England. "I could see fire and smoke out of the window on my right. We must have stopped very quickly. The captain must have had a very quick mind." HER HUSBAND RONALD, also a teacher, added: "We owe the captain and the firemen our lives." Another . passenger, Neil Sutherland, a photographer for a London evening newspaper, said two of the plastic escape chutes failed to inflate. "People began to panic, and smoke was blowing everywhere," he said. "The flames were shooting up as high as the wings. Some passengers were injured coming down the chute." BUT AN AIRLINE spokesman here said the passengers remained "calm and cool.", He said the company was "not speculating" on the cause of the accident. In New York, Jim Arey, a spokesman for Pan American World Airways Inc., which merged with National earlier this year, said one tire blew out, creating heat and friction and causing several other tires to explode. That touched off what he described as a "small fire" fueled by rubber and fluids in the undercarriage but quickly extinguished by firemen. Most of the passengers were American and British SKYJACKING WILL EVOKE 'DRASTIC PENAL MEASURE Cuba gives warning t tourists, including several young children. The iden- tities of the injured were not immediately learned. OFFICIALS SAID National Airlines Flight 099 was half way down the runway when someone in the air- port control tower saw flames pouring from the plane's undercarriage. The captain was notified and immediately aborted the takeoff, bringing the plane to a halt 400 yars from the end of the runway. Arey said 11 people suffered minor friction burn' when they slid down the escape chutes. He said one other person was taken to a hospital for a possible fracture. Local police said three passengers were taken to a hospital with suspected broken limbs. Six others were taken to the airport's medical center and treated for minor friction burns, they said. hijackers help deter place to live, nor a job, if any of them )uld expect really wanted to work. Besides, the e clearest Cuban people unanimously oppose their :ood idea to return. U.S. officials, meanwhile, announced sman for new measures yesterday aimed at en- had three ding the continuing trickle of refugees attempted from Cuba. weeks, also The U.S. Coast.Guard, after stopping hat is good 13 Cuba-bound boats on Monday, said yld of the its blockade efforts had been increased. iow how to Fifteen cutters and nine Navy sue." minesweepers and patrol boats are now ticle rejec- on patrol in the Florida Straits, with a "reverse Navy and Coast Guard planes also d refugees flying. surveillance routes, said Rear ubans who Adm. Benedict Stabile, the Coast e President Guard's 7th District commander. Cinema II presents I- F Z Ivan The Terrible, Part I1 (Sergei Eisenstein, 1947) This second film' about .ihe Russian tyrant continues the story of the first Czar to unite Russia as he struggles with religious mania and horribly crushes a court plot against him. This was Eisenstein's last and most fantastical work. A chance "to see the world through the eyes of a genius." -Stanley Kauffmann. Music by Prokofiev. Russian, with subtitles. (90 min.) 7:00 and 9:00 ~I i Q. Mr. Rock And Roll (Charles Dubin, 1957) Alan Freed stars in this early film which sets out to prove that Rock and Roll is not the music of juvenile delinquents and degenerates, but of clean, wholesome kids as well. He is assisted by an all-star cast, including Little Richard, Chuck Berry, Frankie Lymon, Clyde McPhattercBrook Benton, and Lionel Hampton. (86 min.) 7:00 and 10:20 The Girl Can't Help It (Frank Tashlin, 1956) Frank Tashlin captures perfectly the raw energy of fifties rock-and-roll in this comedy about an alcoholic press agent whose association witha mobster and his aspiring singer/girlfriend (Jayne Mansfield) leads the way to laughs. Featured performances by Eddie Cochran, Little Richard, Fats Domino, The Platters, Gene Vincent, Eddie Fontaine, the Chuckles, and.more! (96 min.) 8:40 ONLY This weekend: PEPPERMINT SODA THE SEVEN SAMURAI Single features $2.00. Double features $3.00 SEASON PASSES AVAILABLE 4 . 4 a N F MIAMI (AP)-In a statement hailed by U.S. officials, the Castro gover- nment warned Cuban refugees yester- day that they made "a one-way trip" to the U.S. It said those who hijack planes to return home face "drastic penal measures" and could be extradited. "The scum have become disillusioned. Thousands have had bit- ter experiences in the Yankee paradise and now want to come back to Cuba," the Communist Party newspaper Granma said in a front-page article which was read over Radio Havana and monitored in Miami. Cuban authorities had previously said hijackers would be prosecuted, but yesterday's statement gave a stronger warning of "drastic penal measures" or "return to the United States to be judged in that country." It was the Cubans' closest step yet toward cooperation since the current spate of nine hijackings to Cuba-nearly all blamed on homesick refugees-began on Aug. 10. U.S. officials earlier had complained that Cuban authorities weren't providing information on the hijackers' fates, thus encouraging rumors among Cuban exiles here that hijackers were being released to their families. Secretary of State Edmund Muskie, in a statement issued in Washington, said the U.S. "welcomes the decision just announced by the Cuban gover- nment" and called it "a positive step" in combatting terrorism. FRED FERRAR, a Federal Aviation Administration spokesman in Washington, said his agency was "delighted" with the statement. Asked whether he expected it would hijackings, he said, "We wo it to. It's apparently the message yet that it is not a g hijack an airplane." Jim Ashlock, a spoke Eastern Airlines, which has hijackings and two < hijackings in the past six v reacted enthusiastically. "T news," he said 'when to statement. "They really kn get right to the heart of the is The Cuban newspaper ar ted U.S. efforts to organize airlift" for the dissatisfie among the some 123,000 C have come to the U.S. since Fidel Castro opened the por in late April. "IT IS NECESSARY to re those who abandon the fathe no return: they went on trip." the article said. "At none of them would have a OPENS rojo6 TOMORROW CS 8 pm C00 presents Canterbury Loft 332 SOUTH STATE ANN ARBOR, MICHIGAN 48104 313 665-0606 t of Mariel iterate that erland have a one-way this time, house or a -M w 19 dBreakfast 7 Dlays a Week Monday-Friday 7 a. rn. -11 a. m. Saturday 7:3 Sunday 9c 0 a.m.-11 a.m. a.m. -1p.m. " Racial tensions s tirring S n in Miss. JACKSON, Miss. (AP)-Blacks promised another protest march and threatened a boycott yesterday as ten- sion mounted over the reinstatement of a white police officer accused in the shooting death of a pregnant black woman. The Rev. Annia Collier, a black minister, warned Mayor Dale Danks that blacks would oppose his re-election because of the way the Aug. 29 shooting was handled. Collier and two other Black ministers held a news conference yesterday af- ternoon to criticize the return of officer Gary King to active duty. KING WAS REINSTATED Monday by Police Chief Ray Pope, who said in- vestigations by the police department and the district attorney indicated Kin had acted properly. Dorothy Brown, 30, was shot four times when she allegedly advanced on King and his partner with a pistol in her hand. Authorities said the officers were sent to the area after reports{ of a shooting. District Attorney Ed Peters said yesterday that statements about the shooting made hv the sister of the slain 300 S. Thayer 769-3042 Next to the Bell Tower Hotel HILL LOUNGE MALE GO-GO DANCERS EVERY THURSDAY 8-12 EROTIC ERIC AND EXCITEMENT ------DOWNSTAIRS AT THE HILL------ T HE ROID1HOUSE ROCK AND ROLL EVERY FRIDAY AND SATURDAY