The Michigan Daily-Saturday, August 16, 1980-Page 11 Search team apparently finds lost Titanic at 12,000 feet ir ndog days of summter A comfortable canine rides an innertube in a creek near Chambersburg, Pennsyvlania yesterday. The dog was floating with its owner, both of whom were trying to escape the dogged heat of mid-August. Carter's record issue o 1980 race-Reagan (Continuedfrom Page3) South, trying to explain why he's a make Reagan the central issue of the Southerner running on a Ted Kennedy campaign-and Richard Moe, Mondale's platform," Atwater said. "If he doesn't chief of staff, said yesterday, "this is come home and explain how he's let the going to be a very heated campaign." economy get into total chaos and why AFTER CARTER'S Thursday night we are now considered a second-class acceptance speech, top Reagan aides nation, he's not going to go over here." ridiculed the president's strategy as a Reagan hopes to deflect Carter's at- smokescreen designed to deflect atten- tacks on his proposals by stressing tion from Carter's record in office. what he considers Carter's dismal rec- "It's kind of unfortunate when a ords, Atwater said. president has) to make the public not Reagan has not yet commented on look at his record," said Edwin Meese, Carter's speech. He described Ken- Reagan's chief of staff. nedy's address as well prepared, well Meese said of Carter's allegation that written, but demagogic. Reagan's tax cut proposal would "Teddy Kennedy accused me of benefit only the rich: "It's not a stealing Democratic statements on program for the rich. It's a program for unemployment," Reagan said. "But it the middle class." wasn't me who made people unem- LEE ATWATER, Reagan's Southern ployed." political director, predicted Carter Today, Reagan will re-emerge to see would run "an unprecedented negative off his running mate, George Bush, on a campaign," but he said it would fail, nine-day tour of China and Japan. Rea- even on the president's home turf. gan leaves Sunday for a campaign tour "Carter will be on the defensive in the of the East and Midwest. his studying goC you down? w x Join the Business Staff at the Positions available in: Circulation, Finance, Classified, Display and Layout To apply-Stop in at the Daily office 420 Maynard St.--next to the S.A.B. NEW YORK (AP)-Sonar equipment picked up the outline of what is believed to be the lost Titanic, 380 miles off the Newfoundland coast and near where the luxury liner sank 68 years ago in the worst peacetime marine disaster, the expedition leader said yesterday. "We think we've got the Titanic," Mike Harris, leader of the $1 million expedition, told the Associated Press from the research vessel, H.J.W. Fay. "WE WON'T BE SURE until we send the television cameras down, but the sonar shows it's the right length, right width, and right height of the Titanic," Harris said. The sonar sighting, using sonar gear mounted on a towed sled submerged in the Atlantic, located what appeared to be a ship's outline 12,000 feet down at latitude 41.46 north and longitude 50.14 west, Harris said. "This is not too far from the historic site where the ship went down," said Harris, a documentary film maker from Tampa, Fla. ' , THE OCEAN LINER, proclaimed unsinkable, hit an iceberg on its maiden voyage and went down with 1,517 people on April 15, 1912. More than 700 passengers, most of them women and children, made it to safety.. The 882-5-foot Titanic displaced 46,328 tons. The world's largest liner today, the Queen Elizabeth II, is 963 feet and displaces 66,852 tons. Although the site of the sinking has been generally known, the vast depths in that part of the North Atlantic had prevented searchers from finding the Titanic. HARRIS SAID THE Fay hoped to drop television and still cameras for a closer look today. But Harris said the searchers would have to delay that inspection if forecasts of poor weather hold up. The mission has been plagued by bad weather. Equipment was lost and damaged last weekend as the ship was buffeted in 12-foot-high swells. THE FAY, A 180-foot chartered vessel with a crew of 38, including 23 scientists, left Port Everglades, Fla., July 17. Jack Grimm, a Texas oilman, put up $1 million to finance the search. He previously bankrolled unsuccessful hunts for Noah's Ark and the Loch Ness monster. If the Titanic is pinpointed, Grimm hopes to send a research submarine to the site next year to penetrate the hull and retrieve parts of the ship with remote-control equipment. "Full Line of BSckpackin A Camping Equipment" Back-Tlo-School lnftation Busters! Navy Entire Line ALL WOOL SLEEPING PEA COATS BAGS SALE $43.98 Reg. $54.98 - 20% Off Entire Line Entire Line Fall & Winter FRAME PACKS SWEATERS 20% Off 15% Off LEVI'S $12.99 BELL BOTTOMS Reg. $19.98 201 E. Washington at Fourth-994-3572 VMS Monday thru Saturday: 9-6 SALE IN EFFECT THRU SATURDAY, 8/16