'Musician mutilates himself aboard jet PEKING (UPI) - A musician touring with the British rock duo Wham went berzerk aboard a Chinese airliner, stabbed himself in the stomach, and in- vaded the cockpit of the plane, sending it into a nosedive before he was sub- dued, it was reported yesterday. The musician, identified only as a Por- tuguese trumpeter in his early 30s named Oliveira, was under observation at a Peking hospital, Portuguese Am- bassador Antonio da Costa said. A BRITISH Embassy spokesman said the incident took place Monday on a scheduled flight from Peking to Can- ton. Wham members Andrew ridgeley and George Michael and other mem- bers of their entourage were not aboard the aircraft at the time. "The plane immediately returned to Peking and dropped off the man before continuing to Guangzhou (Canton)," the spokesman said. A spokesman for the state-run Civil Aviation Administration of China con- firmed that a jetliner bound for Canton had returned to Peking shortly after takeoff Monday but refused to discuss further details. Diplomats said passengers reported the Civil Aviation Administration of China (CAAC) jet liner plunged into a nosedive after the nan barged into the cockpit shortly after takeoff from Peking. The crew brought the aircraft under control after the man, a member of Wham's back-upband, was subdued by passengers and crewmembers. The British spokesman said Ridgeley, Michael, and their co- managers, Jazz Summers and Simon Napier-Bell, flew to Canton on a later flight., The Michigan Daily-Wednesday, April10, 1985- Page3 Ford, Carter meet with Soviets on arms control ATLANTA (UPI) - Former presidents Gerald Ford and Jimmy Carter and many of the nation's top foreign policy experts joined with a key Soviet delegation yesterday to open an international arms control conference. The five-day meeting at the Carter Center on the Emory University campus was called by Ford and Carter to seek to bridge the differences among atomic nations and a means to curb the arms race. AMBASSADOR Anatoly Dobrynin led the Soviet delegation. Also attending are representatives from China, Korea, Japan, France, Great Britian, and West Germany. Other participants include former Secretary of State Henry Kissinger, former Secretaries of, Defense James Schlesinger and Harold Brown; former Secretary of State Cyrus Vance, and former national security aides Zbigniew Brzezinski, McGeorge Edwin, and Brent Scowcroft. The sessions were closed to the press and public yesterday and today. No reason was given for closing the sessions, but several participants, including Kissinger and Dobrynin, have said diplomacy requires privacy. CARTER, who entered the White House promising open negotiations, was quickly convinced of the merits of private meetings between world leaders. He has said he wants the Carter Center to provide a place for such meetings. But the sessions tomorrow, Friday, and Saturday will be open and heavy media coverage is expected. The meeting is the third session hosted by the two former presidents' whq held a similar session at the University of Michigan last fall. Ford and Carter became close friends after Carter left of- fice, but during the 1976 presidential debates Carter offended Ford by attacking his foreign policy record. "As far as foreign policy goes," candidate Carter said, "Mr. Kissinger has been the president of this country. Mr. Ford has shown an absence of leadership and an absence of a grasp of what this country is and what it ought to be." That assessment angered Ford. "This was a cheap shot at Kissinger and me," he said. "Of course, I got Henry's advise on foreign policy, but I made the decisions myself." Vote! Daily Photo by STU WEIDENBACH LSA junior Cindy Streetman (left) and Janet Cardinell work at a voting table yesterday in the basement of the Union. Elections for the Michigan Student Assembly continue today at campus locations near you. Frye presents cash awards (continued from Page 1) t s s t t t s s i Z C S s .C t 0 h b h Students continue anti-apartheid protests (Continued from Page1) a leader of the Yale CIA OUT coalition, protesters have roused the people's yranny in South Africa. We have to said he hoped the rally today would opion," Jones said. start taking action, a moral stand," she produce a "well-informed, well- Countryman added, "Over the past said. planned network to follow CIA years there hiave been numerous "I THINK what's going on here shows recruiters from campus to campus, revelations about CIA policy. This ad- hat people are ready and willing to possibly having each campus draw on ded with the more aggressive recruit- ake a stand if only someone would take supporters from other schools to drive ment by the CIA have forced us to he initiative. The complaints by the recruiters off campus." respond. They seem to think that its students who have to take the tunnel to COUNTRYMAN said that although safe to come back after they were run get into the building are ludicrous," he representatives of only six schools were off campus in the '60s." said. going to Yale, he's heard of protests in BUT COUNTRYMAN rejected any Jones said the mood at the protest nearly 100 schools across the country. comparisons to protests of the 60s. was "festive," with several speakers - "The way I see it," said Countryman,c"Over the last four years I've been in ncluding Brooklyn assemblyman Al would be that we'll use contacts from school; I've definitely seen a growing Vann and U-2 lead singer Bono Van - PSN groups around the country to find awareness of the issues. am very coming on to lend their support. out where the action is taking place and suspicious about the idea that if we IN ANN ARBOR Barb Ransby, a fir- to work to have a national resistance suspicou bout ts ridea ta if e it-yar nivrsiy gaduae sudet ntwok se upnex yer."don't come back as rapidly as in the 60s, tyearUniversity rauate udet neor set up next yeara responsibility we should feel like we don't do anything and former chair of the Columbia Hesi tdnshv epniiiy anmr" "oalition for Free South Africa, called to "block violations of international law nymore. . . by the CIA like thf Winkelman agreed that "there's he protest "a turning point in studentby theCIA,ke the mining of more things going on since I've been in apposition to apartheid in the country." Nicaraguan harbors and the covert aid school. People say that we're becoming Rasysaid she is organizing efforts of the contras." mo eoesatbat theecsmen :"ord conservativ but ahthe sae here, including a speech by David Lee Winkelman, an LSA senior, time civil diobedience is on the rise." Ndaba, a.South African exile and a praised the plan for a national network, "It's.hr osyi hr' on ob member of the African National saying that when the protesters on as ard rosargeesagnoe Congress, Friday in the Rackham campus kicked the CIA off campus last a sustained resurgence, said Univer- )uilding. November," other. schools started sity associatepprofessoraofbsociology The University divested all but $4.7 doing the same thing. "We should be Alon Mors Mrrisdwh is thing ad million of the $47 million in stock they supportg each other s we know that "there's clearly a continuity in the tac- held in businesses doing business in we're not alone." A er& s .ar y ac i y ,-t,-a~ c l c T t the Law. Sound enticing? How about the way he sprinkles lessons on satire into his writing courses to sweeten up his students? Scanlan compiled a file fo films including Airplane, The Jerk, Caddyshack, Spinal Tap and Risky Business for all students in the Pilot -H1APPENI NGS- Highlight Erich Bloch, director of the National Science Foundation, is speaking today in Rackham Amphitheater in honor of the University's Institute of Science and Technology. Films Romance Language department-"I Was Born In Romania", "A Wedding In The Iza Valley", "Calusarii-An Ancient Romanian Dance", 7:30 p.m., lecture room 1, MLB. Hill St.-Play It Again, Sam, 7 p.m., Hill St. Performances School of Music-Early Music Ensemble, Edward Parmentier, conductor, 8 p.m., St. Thomas Church, Basically Beethovan, 8 p.m., Recital Hall, voice recital, Mary Jane Lasco, 8p.m., Rackham Assembly Hall. Ark-Hootenany,8 p.m., 637 S. Main. PTP-Cloud 9,8 p.m., Trueblood Theater, Frieze Bldg. Speakers Biology department-Beth Burnside, "Regulation of Photoreceptor Movement by CA+ + & Cylic AMP", noon, 5732 MED. Sci. II, Douglas R. Hostadter, "A Biologically Inspired Model for Artificial Intelligence Programs", 4 p.m., MLB 3. Chemistry department-Leonidas Kolaitis, "Determination of Mercury in Environmental & Biological Samples", 4 p.m., 1200 Chemistry Bldg.,-An- thony Chasser, "Anodic Synthesis", 4 p.m., 1300 Chemistry Bldg. Computing Center-Forrest Hartman "Computing for Poets, Part II", 3:30 p.m., 165 Business Adm. Bldg. Women in Science-Allison Kelly, "Girls into Science & Technology: An Attempt to Move Mountains", 4 p.m., Michigan League. English department-Richard Finneran, "Editing Yeats' Poetry" 4 p.m., W. Conference Room, Rackham. School of Education-Harold Stevenson, "Achievement of 5 Year Olds in 3 Cultures: Japan, Tawain, & the United States," 4 p.m., 1322 SEB. College of Engineering-George Pufug, "Simulation in Optimization", 4 p.m., 241 IOE Blgd. IATA-Robin Barlow, "Population Policy in Africa", 7 p.m., Hale Auditorium. Psychiatry department-Abraham Halpern, "The Misuse of Psychiatry", 10:30 a.m., CPH Auditorium. Russian & E. European Studies-Vera Dunham, "Moods of Soviet Patriotism", noon Lane Hall. Meetings Ann Arbor Support Group-5:30 p.m., 4318 Union. LSA Student Govt.-5:45 p.m., Union. Sci. Fict. Club-8:15 p.m., Michigan League. Dissertation Support Group-8:30 a.m.;3100 UCS. Black Student Union-7 p.m., Trotter House. Michigan Gay Undergraduates-9 p.m., Guild House. University Council-Meeting examining student code, 1:15 p.m., Union. Miscellaneous Lutheran Campus Ministry-Choir, 8 p.m., Lord of Christ Church, corner of Hill and Forest. Muslim Student Association-Lecture, noon, room D, Michigan League. CRLT - Workshop, Alfred Storey, "Speaking Skills," 7 p.m., 109 E. Madison. Near East & N. African Studies-Video, "Petrodollar Coast", noon, LanangeT.-h MLB Program in order to help them under- stand that they were attracted to par- ticular films specifically because of their satirical form and content. Reflecting on his nomination of Scanlan for the annual awards, Pilot Program Chairman David Schoem said program faculty "select people who really care about the students." OR CONSIDER Robert McCalla, a TA in the political science department who hauls a copy of The New York Times to each class and begins the period by asking his students: "So what's happening in the world today?" McCalla was one of two political science TAs honored yesterday. Melanie Manion, who teaches Introduc- tion to Comparative Politics and an up- per-division course called "China's Evolution under Communism," draws on her first-hand experiences as a student in China for extra spice. The Department of Political Science has four criteriawhich its TAs must meet, according to department chair- man John Kingdon. THE FIRST, he said, is thorough knowledge with classroom material. Second is dedication and readiness to spend time with students outside the classroom. Positive student reaction in course evaluations and personal com- mitment is a third criterion. Moreover. Kingdon said the TAs must have "evidence of pouring creative energy into their studies." Chairs of other departments echoed Kingdon's criteria for judging TAs. Together they narrowed down their choices for outstanding TAs of the year to 30 and submitted them to the Senate Advisory Committee on University Af- fairs for final selection. The selection panel had 10 days to sift though piles of teacher evaluations, nomination forms, and letters of achievement and recognition, according to Judy Nowack, executive assistant to SACUA. Carleen LePage, a TA in Romance languages, said she makes a special ef- fort to turn around students who are failing early in the semester. "What's the most frustrating," she said after the luncheon, "is that most students are there because the class is required or just need a C minus. But a couple, who you know will go far, make it all worthwhile." Other recipients of the awards were Jefford Vahlbush, German; Drew Western, psychology; Gary Garrison, communication; Robert Gensemer, biological sciences; and Paul Erb, comparative literature and Great Books. South Africa. The rest is being kept because of the companies provide jobs in the state and the stocks provide a basis for a lawsuit against the state fighting legislation mandating the divestments. , In New Haven, Conn. Matthew Coun- tryman, a junior in Politcal Science and A CIA spokesperson refused to com- ment. Countryman, Jones, and Winkelman all agreed that student activism is on the rise, attributing it to recent events. "Obviously the new, vieious, crack- down by the South African police on tics they're using and the goals." Morris pointed out that as in the 60s, today's students are doing "complicity research." He compared the way students protested universities' roles in the war effort of the 60s to the way students, now are protesting univer- sities' investments in South Africa. ONE" Staffing NOW for the 1985 Summer Season POSITIONS AVAILABLE FOR SUMMER COUNSELORS Who love children and have strong skills and ability to teach one or more of the following activities: ALL WATERSPORTS: Sailing " Waterskiing " WSI's ALL LANDSPORTS: Soccer * Basketball " Baseball " Lacrosse * GYMNASTICS * Track * Tennis * Woodworking " Archery " Arts & Crafts " Guitar " COMPUTER SCIENCE " Pioneering * Rope Course " Bicycling " Dramatics " General Counselors " Piano " Rocketry Minimum salary $1,000, room and board, laundry and travel allowances Full eight week season, Min. Age: 20 Interviews to be held on campus: Room 3200, Student Activities Bldg. Thursday, April 11th 9:30 - 4:30 You may write for more information to: / Gr PFACt CRG . __ F ::.:::: 1 O 4,y .A p0 IS RUSSIA OF EVIL? REALLY THE FORCE LETS FIND OUT! Dialogue With Soviet People On Volga Cruise CAMP WINADU FAft flAWe CAMP WINADU ean c e a