The Michigan Daily-Friday, October 1, 1982-Page 3 Bomb threat shakes up Bursley An anonymous bomb threat in the Bursley cafeteria yesterday sent residents out into the streets while police and building officials checked the building. At about 4 p.m., cafeteria supervisors received a letter which said a bomb had been planted in the cafeteria. They evacuated the cafeteria and pulled the fire alarm to clear the rest of the dor- mitory. Residence staff members and two Ann Arbor police officers checked the building for almost an hour before sending out the all clear signal. "It was a thrilling experience," said resident Greg Dufour. "It got me away from studying." Most residents, however, found the scare annoying. "It was ridiculous," said resident Caroline Haines, "They (residence staff) did the right thing in getting everyone out. But who ever did it is a maniac." A few people even saw good things come from the scare. Said Lane Jones, "Oh well, it saved us from another Bursley dinner." _4, , fii4e N 4u4 e Yejdent and i4 A4 a~ii/ A~nle al luden4 4, iday Cc (/4&/I 1982 AP Photo A young Amerasian girl, daughter of an American who was stationed in Vietnam during the war, completes necessary forms so she can come to the U.S. Amerasian children U.S. bound 815 e9"?~Inialy, 4"N 45?62',. ~8109 HO CHI MINH CITY, Vietnam - Gary Tanous, who fought for more than two years to get his daughter out of Vietnam, tearfully took her in his arms yesterday and joined an airlift of 11 Vietnamese-American children bound for the United States. "I have never been happier in my life," said Tanous, tears streaming down his chees. The 42-year-old Van- couver, Wash. ,resident had not seen 15- year-old Jean Marie, his only child, for 14 years. TANOUS WAS the only father present for the Amerasian, children's airlift, which is sending 11 youngsters aged seven to 15 to relatives or sponsors in America. Nine Vietnamese relatives S are also on the airlift, which stopped over in Bangkok, Thailand, before con- tinuing to the United States. The Vietnamese government an- nounced it is ready to grant "im- mediate visas" to all Amerasian children and relatives who want to go to the United States, and said it is the responsibility of the United States tox take them. Yesterday's emigres were the largest group of offspring of GIs and civilians to leave for the United States since Ho Chi. Minh City - formerly Saigon fell to the communists in 1975. They were documented as U.S. citizens. Vietnam says 26 more such children and 21 relatives will be flown out Oct. 7 in the program coordinated with eight U.S. volunteer agencies. THE CHILDREN paraded proudly out of Ho Chi Minh City airport ter- minal and changed in Vietnamese, "Let's go to America," before boarding an Air France charter flight for Bangkok, the first leg of their journey to the land of their fathers. U.S. officials said privacy laws forbid the disclosure of the fathers' identities, but said the children would later be flown to Georgia, Texas, Washington, Arizona, Oregon, California and Washington, D.C. Most Amerasians are not eligible to emigrate automatically to the United States, although several hundred have left as refugee "boat people" or through a complicated U.N.- sponsored program. The United States has said 88 children, including the 11 who left yesterday on an Air France flight, are documented U.S. citizens and eligible to emigrate. RELATIVES leaving with the children included mothers, grandparen- ts and sisters and brothers. "Our records indicate there are 15,000 to 20,000 more Amerasians here," Vietnamese Foreign Ministry official Nguyen Phi Tuyen told repor- ters and delegates from U.S. humanitarian groups at the airport. "WE BELIEVE that almost all of them want to go because they are children of American blood." Only three of the children departing yesterday were fathered by American servicemen. The others are the children of American civilians who worked in Vietnam before the final U.S. withdrawal. -HAPPENIN-GS Highlight President and Mrs. Shapiro invite all students to an open house at the Shapiro residence, 815 S. University, from 3:30 to 5:30 p.m. Films Cinema II-Personal Best, 7 & 9:30 p.m., Angell. Ann Arbor Film Coop-The Man Who Fell To Earth, 7 & 9:30 p.m., MLB 4. Cinema Guild-Hair, 7 & 9:15 p.m., Lorch Hall. CFT-2001: A Space Odyssey, 5,7:30, & 10 p.m.,,Michigan Theatre. Alt. Act.-Raging Bull, 7 & 9 p.m., Nat. Sci. Performances Brass Ring-April Wine & The Look, 8 p.m., IMA Sports Arena. Canterbury Loft-"Bent," 8p.m., 332S. State. Ark-June Millington, 9p.m., 1421 Hill. Major Events-Joe Jackson in concert, 81p.m., Hill Aud. Speakers Transportation Studies-Thomas F.. Sparrow, "The Experiment of Sharing Mini Micro Cars by Several Households," 2-5 p.m., 2207 Art & Arch. Building. English Language & Lit.-William J. Fishman, "Tower Hamlets 1888: One Year in the Life of a Victorian Laboring Poor Borough," 3 p.m., E. Conf. Room, Rackham. South & Southeast Asian Studies-Evans Young, "Ethicity & Regional Development Cooperation: 'Chinese Capital' in the ASEAN Chambers of Commerce & Industry," 12-1 p.m., Commons Room, Lane Hall. Netherlands America Univ. League-Film & Disc., Philo Bregstein, "The Past that Lives," 8p.m., International Center. Guild House-Marc Mauer, "Prison Reform or Prison Abolition?" noon, 802 Monroe. Center for Chinese Studies-Zhang Jing Yi, "Trends in the Soviet- American Military Balance: The Chinese Perspective," 3 p.m., 210 Gunn Bldg. Meetings School of Natural Resources-Public hearings for review process, 7-9 p.m., Rackham Lee. Hall. Univ. Duplicate Bridge Club-7:15 p.m., League. Int'I'Student Fellowship-7 p.m., 4100 Nixon Rd. Ann Arbor Chinese Bible Class-English, Mandarin & Cantonese groups, 7:30, Univ. Reformed Church. Exhibit Museum-AstroFest 116, 7:30 p.m., MLB Aud. 3. Commission on Handicapper Concerns-Workshop on Community Ac- cessibility, 1-4 p.m., Ann Arbor City Fire Hall. Miscellaneous ae Kwon Do Club-Practice, 9-11 p.m., Martial Arts Rm., CCRB. Michigan Assoc. of Children's Agencies-Deadline for tickets to the Semi- Annual Legislative Breakfast, 8-10 p.m., Oct. 8, $7.50 per person, write to Jan Fisher 1125 Martin Place, Ann Arbor 48104. To submit items for the Happenings Column, send them in care of: Happenings, The Michigan Daily, 420 Maynard St., Ann Arbor, MI. 48109. NEW AGE TROUBADOURS IN CONCERT Kathi and Milenko matanovic from Findhorn, Scot- land and the Lorain Community Original, acoustic music ... ' State-of-the-art technology, developed and applied by our employees at 14 divisions and subsidiaries coast to coast, has made us a world leader in aerospace, defense, electronics, shipbuilding and other areas and has opened up many diverse opportunities for U.S. citizens with degrees in Electrical, Mechanical, Industrial and Computer Engineering and Computer Science/Math. GENERAL DYNAMICS WILL BE ON CAMPUS OCTOBER 13 & 14 Join the company with the state of the art in careers, and turn your own ideas into reality. See your placement office to arrange an appointment. Or send your resume to Sue Shike, Corporate College Relations Administrator, General Dynamics Corporation, DeptUM, Pierre Laclede Center, St. Louis, MO 63105.