Page 2-Thursday, September 30, 1982-The Michigan Daily MSU's Mackey goes to China EAST LANSING (UPI) - Michigan State University President Cecil Mackey is on a three-week tour of China, which school officials hope will result in a greater exchange of resear- ch information and other academic knowledge. Mackey, accompanied by Asian studies director Warren Cohen, will meet with senior officials of the Chinese education, agriculture, science and social science agencies. He also will meet with the presidents of five universities which have ex- change agreements with MSU. Mackey's trip is sponsored by the Chinese Ministry of Education. Subscribe to The Michigan Daily HUNGRY FOR EUROPE BUT NO MONEY? NORTH AMERICA'S MOST POPULAR "SUMMER-IN- EUROPE-FOR-COLLEGE- STUDENTS" PROGRAM SEEKS CAMPUS PUBLICITY REPRESENTATIVE Excellent salary for app. 5 hrs. of work per week and/or chance to quickly earn part or all of Summer Europe Trip in 1983. If interested, please write immediately to: Trudi Fanale, 802 W. Oregon, Urbana, IL 61801. IN BRIEF Complied from Associated Press and United Press International reports Soviet jet crashes, 77 aboard LUXEMBOURG- A Soviet airliner carrying 77 people veered off the run- way, plunged into a stand of trees and exploded in flames just after landing at Luxembourg airport last night. Police and fire officials said 12 people were killed and 65 injured, while airport officials put the number of dead at 53. The survivors, some of them burned severely, were taken to five hospitals in the city and to a burn center in Metz, France, about 37 miles to the south. Airport officials said the aircraft, an Ilyushin 62 of the Soviet airline Aeroflot, landed in good weather, and appeared to have made a proper lan- ding until it suddenly turned to the right and skidded about 1,000 yards. It shot over a small pond and plunged into some woods, knocking down trees for about 100 yards before it came to a halt at the end of a small valley, according to airport officials and television reports. Several explosions followed and the plane caught fire. About 40 people, including six crew members, apparently got out of the burning plane on their own, Luxembourg's RTL television said. Some made it to a farmhouse not far from where the plane came to rest, while others fainted as they ran, the report added. Terrorists bomb Spanish cities Terrorist bombers struck in 11 major cities across Spain and dynamited a West German train carrying U.S. Army supplies yesterday. Attacks also were reported in Italy and France. In Bonn, a West German governmnet security report warned new attacks were expected against American targets by the Red Army Faction and other left-wing bands. Spanish police said a shadowy urban guerrilla group set off 15 crude home- made bombs outside banks, tax offices and other public buildings in Madrid and 10 other Spanish cities, causing damage but no casualties. Interior Minister Juan Jose Roson blamed the attacks on RAPO, a terrorist outfit known by its Spanish acronym for the Oct. 1 Anti-Fascist Revolutionary Groups. He linked the attacks with the Oct. 28 general elec- tions. Judge thwarts death penalty DETROIT- A federal judge yesterday rejected a plea by advocates of the death penalty to order the question on the November election ballot, killing the issue for this year. U.S. District Judge ThomasThornton said he did not have jurisdiction in the case. "There will not be any further court challenges," said Michael Kenny, chief spokesman for L. Brooks Patterson, Oakland County prosecutor and Republican attorney general candidate who generated the petition drive. Kenny said the 6th Circuit Court of Appeals in Cincinnati, where an appeal could befiled, is a "liberal bench" and unlikely to become involved after three courts already have ruled unfavorably. Kenny noted the effort is "running out of time" with the election barely a month away. Derailed chemical-filled train explodes again, 3,200 evacuate LIVINGSTON, La.- A third explosion rattled 43 derailed railroad cars in a deserted Louisiana town yesterday, forcing 200 more people to join 3,000 others driven from their homes by raging flames and plumes of toxic gas. Crews in protective suits and air masks discovered toxic ground and stream contamination a half-mile away from the blazing chemical tank cars. A black haze darkened the sky as far as 10 miles away. The 101-car Illinois Central Gulf freight train derailed early Tuesday and rocked the area as tankloads of oil and chemicals burst into balls of flame, state police said. Attempts to douse the cars were stopped when officials discovered a tank car filled with sodium metals in the middle of the burning, smoky wreckage. Water and sodium combined create a violent, fiery explosion. Firefighters plan to let the blaze burn itself out, which would take about five days, Gov. Dave Treen said. A tank car carrying tetraethyl lead, a gasoline additive, burst into flames Tuesdayand a third car loaded with vinyl chloride exploded yesterday, sen- ding metal flying through the air. House bill to award grants to combat drunk driving WASHINGTON--- The House acted to counter what one member called "a tragic epidemic" and passed legislation yesterday offering rewards to states that crack down on drunken drivers. The bill marks the first congressional effort to establish a strong national effort to combat drunk driving. "More Americans have died in drunk driving crashes in the last two years than during the entire Vietnam War," said Rep. James Howard (D-N.J.), a co-sponsor of the measure with Michael Barnes, (D-Md.) Howard and Barnes said drunken driving was responsible for killing more than 25,000 people and maiming 650,000 others last year alone. The House passed the measure on a voice vote and the Senate is expected to act on the same measure today. The legislation would establish a three-year, $125 million grant program to encourage states to set up strict, coordinated drunken-driver control programs. The bill would set aside $25 million in fiscal 1983 from the Highway Trust Fund and $50 million each of the following two years. o 101 I mpany Chip C° potato StxdeiO bor, of of Biessil-dents Fo 111 JSi & a 11 U 1D o a r .e i taoQotba l~- cl -rosebe ef j g W Tyje Idea ay vicel-, ie0u Wve ar e ot ar ep f aXW ,e IO a coeof a f o a ga.T ;e , s. ,edO est Obe Hicbigan BaflU Vol.'XCIII, No. 19 Thursday, September 30, 1982 The Michigan Daily is edited and managed by students at The University of Michigan. Published daily Tuesday through Sunday mornings during the University year at 420 Maynard Street, Ann Arbor, Michigan, 48109. Sub- scription rates: $13 September through April (2 semesters); $14 by mail out- side Ann Arbor. Summer session published Tuesday through S tursay-mor= nings. Subscription rates: $7.50 in Ann Arbor; $8 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. 4 The Michigan Daily is a member of the Associated Press and subscribes to United Press International, Pacific News Service, Los Angeles Times Syn- dicate and Field Enterprises Newspaper Syndicate. News room (313) 764-0552, 76-DAILY. Sports desk, 764-0562; Circulation, 764-0558; Classified Advertising, 764-0554; Billing, 764-0550. 01 Editor-in-chief ........ Managing Editor ...... . News Editor ........... . Student Affairs Editor ... University Editor ........ . Opinion Page Editors .... 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