O'Neill sa Mondale m -change im' From AP and UPI can call it tha -House Speaker Thomas O'Neill said year to a cc yesterday that Walter Mondale, his Reagan and personal choice for the Democratic politics of di presidential nomination, un- won the non- derestimated Gary Hart and will be in tial primary "real serious trouble" if he doesn't win New Englan half of the primaries next week. days. O'Neill said Mondale will have to Both Hart t "change his image" if he wants to over- in the South take Hart, whom he called the front- John Glenn. runner. Mondale, IF MONDALE does poorly in the 11 his New Eni "Super Tuesday" primaries and sement yest caucuses next week, "then he's in real of civil righ serious trouble," O'Neill said. "He'll the rights re have to win, I'd say, at least half of SEEKING those primaries next week or he looks victory in s pretty sad then." Vermont's The speaker' comments came as test" prima Mondale accused Hart of being weak on the public st civil rights, and Hart, sounding more and Martin and more like a front-runner, turned his and father o aim away from Democratic rivals and The form accused President Reagan of trying to occasion t distract public attention from huge blemish on budget deficits and "catastrophic May 15, 197 failure" in foreign policy. bargo of Rh 'That is what is behind the school "I fought prayer debate," Hart said of an ad- and my opl ministration -campaign to pass reimpositic legislation allowing prayer in public declared." schools. difference "WE ARE going to be treated, if you most profot Contemporar By Ann Valdespino URING intermission, managers cleared the u stage and a white-haired gentleman in a tweed suit and a worn pair of "earth" shoes stepped into the rs iust tge at, for the remainder of this oncerted effort by Ronald this administration of the Istraction," said Hart, who -binding Vermont presiden- y on Tuesday for his third nd election triumph in eight and Mondale campaigned during the day, as did Sen. fighting to come back from gland reverses, won endor- erday from the first family its in Atlanta and attacked ecord of surging Gary Hart. G TO shake off Hart's third even days - a runaway in non-binding "beauty con- ary Tuesday, Mondale got ,upport of Coretta Scott King Luther King Sr., the wife of the late civil rights leader. ner vice president took the o charge that Hart had a his civil rights record - a 9, vote not to restore an em- odesian chrome. t to reimpose that embargo, ponent voted to prevent the on of that embargo," he There.'s a difference, a deep in our commitment to this Fund issue." The Michigan Daily - Thursday, March 8, 1984 - Page 7 Swiss police capture Air France hijacker GENEVA, Switzerland (UPI) - Swiss Police posing as caterers yester- day overpowered the hijacker of an Air France Boeing 737 bent on flying to Libya and freed unharmed all 61 passengers and crew aboard. Police identified the hijacker as Ali Chohra, 28, a resident of Darmstadt, near Frankfurt in West Germany. Swiss officials said he had an Algerian passport. THE HIJACKER forced the Frank- furt-to-Paris flight, with a crew of six and 62 mostly West German passengers, to land at Geneva's Coin- trin airport. Seven people were released soon after landing. He demanded the plane be refueled to fly to Libya but made no other deman- ds, police said. Officials in Geneva were baffled as to his motive. "There are no political overtones and no political explanation," said Justice and Police Minister Guy Fontanet of the Geneva state government, and the hijacker made no claim to belong to any political or religious group. POLICE SAID the man had no gun and was apparently armed only with a knife. He was carrying a backpack, and the pilot "not wanting to take any chan- ces" that it contained explosives, followed the hijacker's orders. After a request from Fontanet the hijacker released the six women passengers aboard the plane as well as one man with a bad heart soon after landing. The crew and the other 55 male -ssengers ramained in the aircraft. 'he hijacker asked for drinks and later for food. Swiss police, posing as caterers, overpoered the man about 4 hours after the plane landed in Geneva as he was sitting in the cockpit behind the pilot. 12th CONFERENCE on ETHICS, HUMANISM, AND MEDICINE sponsored by CEHM MARCH 10, 1984- 8:30 - 4:30 P.M. Thomas Francis Building, School of Public Health Pre-registration is mandatory STUDENTS $1 .00 1 session $5.00 2 sessions and lunch others, $6.00 and $10.00 respectively For more information, call 764-6263 Campaign trail President and Nancy Reagan wave to supporters at a GOP1 ner in New York Tuesday night. AP Photo1 fundraising din- y Directions celebrates Carter spotlight and proceeded to talk, in a very casual manner, about some of the most complex music writ- ten in this century. The man, composer Elliott Carter, came to Ann Arbor for a special celebration of his 75th birthday, which culminated in two consecutive concerts of his music. Carter expressed cordial wishes that the audience might enjoy his unconventional new music, along with some apologies for his earlier, more traditional works. "I don't know why I didn't supress this music, but it's part of my past and like the rest of us, I guess I'll just have to live with it," he said. In reference to Night Fantasies, a piece in his new style, Carter said he refined his music, excluding all thematic material and including only those things which were real and vivid. He described Fantasies as "the way your mind goes from one thing to another when you're lying awake at night." Guest artist Robert Conway captured this at- mosphere beautifully. Diabolically complex rhythms posed no problem for the young pianist; his agile fingers scurried across the keys, simulating those mysterious "things that go bump in the night." Con- way changed textures just as the mind wanders in a stream of consciousness; shifting from single notes to dreamy chords, to dissonant melodies accompanied by rich harmonies, all with lightning speed. Other guest soloists, baritone Stephen Morscheck, and mezzo-soprano Julia Pedigo, made Carter's Syringa a dramatic event. Scored for strings, winds, percussion, guitar and vibraphone, this piece was a simultaneous performance of two different texts. Morscheck sang powerful words, based on the dialogues of Plato, in ancient Greek. Their meaning forced him to use a voice so strong, at times it was almost a shout. Pedigo's more lyric setting employed poems in English by John Ashbery. Her dark con- tralto voice made each phrase sound velvety. Another interesting team of soloists, three per- cussionists, presented works from Carter's programmatic Pieces for Four Timpani. Mark Goodenberger, Lon Grabowski, and Brian Prechtl, performed with confidence and charisma. Contemporary Directions also did tremendous work in various small chamber combinations. Upper winds shone in Carter's Woodwind Quintet; flautist Jennifer Keeney generated rhythmic impetus, oboist Nancy Ambrose spun suave melodies and clarinetist Jane Carl performed impossibly syncopated phrases with beautiful shapes and creamy tones. Other members of CD exhibited great professionalism in the form of musical leadership. First trumpet, Bill Camp, played with authority in Carter's brass quintet Fantasy about Purcell's Fan- tasia upon one note, and harpsichordist Pamela Nash gave a laudable performance of her difficult part in Sonata. Made up of many small gestures that accen- tuate the quick decay of the harpsichord's sound, this piece kept flautist Leslie Bulbuk, oboist Martha Stokeley, and cellist Anna Richert, playing and listening to each other intently. Meanwhile, Nash created many different effects; attacking full chords quickly for great splashes of color, carefully striking resonant repeated notes, making numerous fussy registration changes ef- ficiently, and playing continous passagework that hummed and buzzed in a whirl of sound. Bravo CD! A fine performance is the best birthday present a composer could hope for. Triumph and tragedy - A e speculations. So starts Arthur Miller's in Miller 'S 'Vichy' >Jiy mairgi uurrs ICHY, France - 1942. Ten V Strangers find themselves thrown together in a detention room after being rounded-up by German police. No one knows the reason, but all have t f INDIVIDUAL THEATRES 3,j, A.e of Lberty 70-97OO $2.00 SHOWS BEFORE 6:00 P.M. DAILY 1:00 P.M. SHOWS MON. THRU FRI. ACADEMY AWARD NOM. INCL. BEST PICTURE SHIRLEY DEBRA JACK MacLAINE WINGER NICHOLSON (PG) THURS., FRI. 1:00, 7:00, 9:25 "HILARIOUS" N.Y. TIMES WOODY ALLEN'S BROADWAY DANNY ROSE (PG) THURS., FRI. 1:00, 7:20, 9:35 " one-act play Incident at Vichy. The drama, which opens Thursday at Bnai Brith Hillel Auditorium, has a predominantly Jewish, but socially eclectic .mixture of characters who tensely converse as they await their summons by the demonic Nazi in- terrogator (Tiff Crutchfield). Miller uses their nervous conversation to examine idealism and responsibility in society. As victims disappear into the office but do not re-emerge, an almost palpable tension builds.- The electrician, Bayard (David Kane), hides his apprehension with im- passioned, but faulty, socialist jargon, while Monceau (Aaron Gilbert), the ac- tor, uses a more eloquent but equally unrealistic optimism to distance him- self from his imminent fate. Leduc (Mark Kaplan) is a pschoanalyst who refuses to accept passivity, and attacks their weak arguments with bitter sar- casm. The only captive who is sure that he will gain release is Von Berg (Robert Csetri), the Austrian prince. He listens to the debate surrounding him, and, at first, interjects with naive optimism, but gradually exchanges it for a realization of the atrocities awaiting the victims. Forlorn, he cries, "What can ever save us?" At this point, the play takes a definite turn. After delivering the diagnosis, the drama constructs a cure. It is not found in the German Major (Chuck Husa), who agonizes over his unwilling role in the horror because he cannot meet Leduc's demand: "I want not your guilt but your responsibility." The answer comes instead from Von Berg, who deals with his own implication in the evil he opposes, then sacrifices himself to save a man who he had never seen before that morning. Miller's subtlety makes the ending a mixture of triumph and tragedy, and his heavy historical references make the story chilling and believeable. These qualities spurred Howard Taub- man of the New York Times to call it "a moving play, a searching play, one of the most important plays of our time." The production is being staged in con- junction with the 1984 Conference on the Holocaust, and is both produced and directed by University students. It runs two evenings only: Thursday March 8, and Sunday, March 11, both at 7:30 p.m. Tickets are available at Hillel, 663-3336, or at the door. SWENSON, CRAWFORD & PAINE Consultants to Multinational. firms seek qualified individuals with language and area expertise on foreign markets. Our clients prefer foreign nationals with advanced degrees from Amencan Univer- sites: Visa restnctiors might not apply to some of the available protects Part-time and full-time assignments available. Fee Paid. Send resume or request for application form to: Swenson, Crawford & Paine Dept: 8-33 P 0. Box A3629 Chicago. Illinois 60690 1985 GRAUATES! Sign up NOW for your senior yearbook portrait. Call the ENSIAN at 764-9425 or stop in at 420 Maynard St. (next to S.A.B.) to set up your ap- pointment. Portraits taken now through March 16. Evening sittings also available. EN1 SIAN11T ENSIAN I THE OFFICE OF MAJOR EVENTS PRESENTS RAMSEY CLARK FORMER U.S. ATTORNEY GENERAL Will Speak On "The 1964 Civil Rights Act: Twenty Years Later" - Tonight - THURSDAV MARCH 8.1984 . r - - -