The Michigan Daily-- Saturday, September 24, 1983-- Page 3 Arab jetliner crashes killing all 112 aboard ABU DHABI (AP)-A Gulf Air jetliner crashed and burned in the rugged mountains of this desert sheikdom yesterday and airline officials said all 112 people aboard the plane were killed, including one American. The Boeing 737, en route from Karachi, Pakistan, to Dubai via Qatar on the Persian Gulf, lost contact with the Dubai airport 20 minutes before it was to have landed, airport sources said. THE JETLINER "suddenly lowered its altitude and vanished," said once source, who like the others requested anonymity. Another said the plane caught fire in the air. One Gulf Air official said the "airliner crashed due to an accident in midair." He refused to elaborate. The aircraft was still burning at sun- down when rescue teams reached the crash site 30 miles northeast of the air- port in Abu Dhabi, sources said. "ALL PASSENGERS and crew members perished in the fire, and rescue men have been extricating in- cinerated bodies from the wreckage," said a civil defense official who asked not to be identified. "Charred bodies. were moved to hospitals in the shiek- dom of Shardah and Dubai." Medical personnel returning from the crash site said bodies were scattered over an area about two-thirds of a mile across. The plane's tail section remained intact, but the rest of the air- craft, including its engines, was smashed into small pieces, they said. THE SEARCH for victims was suspended at nightfall, and would resume at sunup today, Gulf Air sour- ces said. Gulf Air officials said the passengers included 96 Pakistanis, seven Britons, one American and one Iranian. They said the pilot was Omani and the co- pilot Bahraini. Information on other crew members was not released immediatley, and Gulf Air said none of the victim's names would be available until today at the earliest. ONE AIRPORT source told reporters it "seems the plane ran into engine trouble shortly before landing," he said "contact with the plane, flight No. 771 from Karachi, was suddenly in- terrupted about 20 minutes before it was to have landed at 11':45 GMT, 7:45 a.m. EDT." A Karachi airport official, who declined to give his name, said the air- port's control tower recorded a distress signal from the plane at D:35 GMT 6:35 EDT. He did not elaborate. A team of technical experts led by Gulf Air executive director Ali al-Malki flew from Manama, Bahrain, to Abu Dhabi to investigate the crash. They suspended their investigation for the night without having found the plane's "black box," which contains a flight recorder and cockpit voice tapes that could provide clues to the crash, airline sources said. Abu Dhabi and Dubai are two of the seven sheikdoms that comprise the United Arab Emirates, a 12-year-old federation on the Persian Gulf. AP Photo hat are about to be sold. Follow the yellow brick road Three-year-old David Davis of Roanoke, Virginia sits amid a bevy of old street signs th 1 v ' I U.S., Soviets seek jet debris encounters. WAKKANAI, Japan (AP) - U.S. and Soviet ships launched mini-submarines north of the Soviet island of Moneron yesterday, pressing their hunt for the "black box" recording system of the downed South Korean jetliner. In Moscow, the U.S. Embassy complained to Soviet officials that Soviet ships had "interfered" with American vessels searching for the flight recorders, a senior U.S. official said. THE OFFICIAL, who spoke on condition he not be identified, said the complaint was made to a commit- tee set up under an agreement between the U.S. and Soviet navies that establishes protocol for maritime Maritime Safety Agency Rear Adm. Masayoshi Kato told a news conference in Wakkanai that the U.S. Navy's ocean tug Narragansett put a remote- controlled ocean floor search vessel overboard in the morning and that it was still submerged. He said the vessel was probing the sea bottom at a spot about 23 miles northwest of Moneron, where the plane is believed to have crashed Sept. 1 after being shot down by a Soviet interceptor. ALL 269 PEOPLE aboard the flight, including 61 Americans, perished. The U.S. Navy picked up pinging signals from the "black box" twice earlier this week, but the U.S. military in Tokyo said the flight data and cockpit voice recorders so far have not been found. About 30 minutes after the Americans started their undersea search, the Soviets launched two small subs. Kato said the Soviet fleet's rescue ship Georgi Kozumin dropped a mini-submarine, believed to be capable of holding three or four men, into waters about 19 miles north of Moneron. That vessel stayed submerged for 6% hours - what he called an usually long time. JAPANESE NAVY officers also saw the Soviet ocean surveyor Gidronaut launch another small sub that stayed down for about four hours, he said. ;, F 'U' joins nationwide effort to curb campus drinking (Continued from Page 1) to think a student should learn how to drink in a school of hard knocks. The person who's on his knees at four o'clock on Sunday morning praying to the porcelain gods certainly doesn't want to be there." COMMITTEE member Alan Levy agreed with Bratton. "(The) cuteness of the college drunk stereotype" must be eliminated, he said. "What gets missed are students who show up in academic counseling trying to get .out of classes because they got batzed too often and they can't handle the workload," Levy said. University Housing Director Robert Hughes, who formed the group, said task force members are especially con- cerned about the student attitude that all social events need to center around alcohol. "PEOPLE who choose not to drink should receive better treatment in society," said Bratton. In Couzens, for example, house councils are careful to promote parties without emphasizing alcohol, she said. The panel currently is working on recommendations to be submitted to the University's housing office. To help in the effort, the group has been studying awareness programs at other universities. GERARDO Gonzales, president of the national organization said "(The program) is focused on responsible decision-making about the use of It's dangerous for us to think a student should learn how to drink in a school of hard knocks. The person who's on his knees at four o'clock on Sunday morning praying to the orcelain gods certainly doesn't want to bet tere.' - Mandy Bratton task force chairwoman munity how to identify alcohol problems. Gonzales admitted it is sometimes difficult to get students to pay attentions to the issues. "It takes awhile to get over the perception of, 'we're here to party," he said. STUDENTS do realize the severity of alcohol (abuse) and are generally receptive to efforts to increase alcohol awareness, Gonzales said. William David Burns, chairman of an alcohol awareness committee at Rutgers University in New Brunswick, N.J.,°agreedthat it is important to in- volve students in policy-making and that policy and programs must be con- sistant. "If you want to teach people about consumption you shouldn't have your policies say one thing and your education something else," he said. "It is important to be careful when im- posing policies on students. "People resent having their lives con- trolled," Burns said. "When you talk about partying and alcohol you talk about encroaching on their time." But Burns also said the majority of students want to learn about alcohol problems. '-k c,.46., ak AP Photo The University of Florida started BACCHUS - Boost Alcohol Con- sciousness Concerning the Health of University Students - in 1976. There now are 110 chapters of the alcohol education and prevention organization in the United States and Canada. alcohol." Each student in the program is responsible for promoting alcohol workshopsat fraternities, sororities, and residence halls. They also produce literature on alcohol awareness and teach people in the university com- Race to victory Fritz Assmi, a 68-year-old blind man from West Germany, races toward his victory yesterday in the 100-meter dash at the World Master Athletic Competition in San Juan, Puerto Rico. Assmi is being guided through the course by his son, Robert Assmi. H A PPENINGS- Marines in Highlight Noon today marks the last chance for book lovers to browse through this year's American Association of University Women Book Sale in the main ballroom of the Michigan Union.The national event, which helps raise money for scholarships and fellowships' for women, begins at 9 a.m. today and features a raffle to give away two sets of the latest best-selling novels, in- cluding a set which has been autographed by the authors. Films Ann Arbor Film Coop - Blade Runner, 7 & 9:20 p.m., Aud. A, Angell. Cinema Guild - 48 Hours, 7,8:45 & 10:30 p.m., Lorch. Cinema H - Monty Python's Meaning of Life, 7 & 9 p.m., Nat. Sci Aud. Mediatrics - Body Heat, 7 & 9 p.m., MLB 4. Alternative Action - Monty Python and the Holy Grail, 7, 8:45 & 10:30 p.m., MLB 3. Performances Ark - Hedy West, 8 p.m., 1421 Hill. Performance Network - "Wisdom Amok," a play by Albert Innuato, 8 p.m., 408 W. Washington.-, His House Christian Fellowship - "Turn It Around Week" concert with John Elliott, 7:30 p.m., Michigan Theatre. The Brecht Company - "A Man's a Man," 8p.m., 701 E. University. Meetings Ann Arbor Go Club, 2 p.m., 1433 Mason. Tae Kwon Do Club - practice, 9 a.m., CCRB Martial Arts Rm. Miscellaneous Fairlane - fall nature walk; tours meet at the area's main entrance on Fairlane Drive at 9 a.m. SOS Community Crisis Center - volunteer interviews, call 485-3222 for ap- pointment. Lebanon hit with artillery (Continued from Page 1) reportedly to announce a cease-fire, but canceled the appearance abruptly when word arrived from Damascus of tough new Syrian conditions for a truce. ACCORDING to Western diplomats, the Syrians were demanding the com- plete exclusion of Gemayel's Washington-backed government from any future talks designed to bring peace between Lebanon's warring religious and political factions. News of the breakdown in cease-fire negotiations came as the Senate Foreign Relations Committee in Washington approved a plan that would allow President Reagan to keep the Marines in Lebanon another 18 months, despite Democratic protests that the United States might be sliding deeper into another Vietnam-style war. You've always dreamed of learninggtofly. This weekend, take the chance. You've always wanted to experience the thrill of flying - of feeling an airplane alive under your hands. To climb and soar. To take command over a seemingly complex array of dials and numbers and controls. Take it from us, the feeling is unbelieveable! We're the University of Michigan Flyers - the Michigan Flyers for short. And this week, we're making a special effort to get to know you. Plane on the Diag. Very early Thursday morning, we'll taxi one of our 3 Cessna 152 trainers all the way down State Street to the diag. Thursday and Friday, a club member will be there to answer your questions and schedule you for a "Discovery Flight" this weekend. Discovery Weekend. All day on Saturday and Sunday, September 24th and 25th (weather permitting), a club vehicle will be available to drive you from the front steps of the Michigan Union to the Flyer's office at the Ann Arbor Airport. There, for $20.00, you'll be treated to a Discovery Flight. A thirty-minute flight with you at the controls, sitting in the pilot's seat with one of our fully-qualified instructors at your side. When it's all over, you'll even get a pilot's logbook, with your Discovery Flight entered. Join us! Come see us on the diag and discover flying this weekend. You'll never be the same. The Michigan Flyers 994-6208 PO1ICe notes Wallet stolen Ann Arbor Police believe a man han- ding out pizza coupons in an apartment