The Michigan Daily-Friday, August 8, 1980-:-Page 9 PLUNGES INTO ATLANTIC 300 FEET SHORT OF RUNWAY Romanian jetliner crashes From AP and UPI NOUAKCHOTT, Mauritania -A Romanian Tarom jetliner carrying 172 persons crashed on landing' yesterday at Nouadhibou in Mauritania, plunging in- to the Atlantic only 300 yards short of the airport runway, officials said. Casualty reports conflicted. Radio Mauritania reported that by evening, two bodies had been recovered and 15 persons rescued with 151 persons still listed as missing. THE U.S. EMBASSY in Nouakchott said first reports indicated there were "only 20 to 40 sur- vivors." But the official Romanian news agency Agerpres said in Bucharest that only one person was killed in the crash and that all others, including Teen cheerleaders routines, smiles at "several injured," had been rescued by Romanian shipe anchored in the harbor. A staff member of the official Mauritanian news agency reached by telephone said the rest "are in good health." He said the accident was being in- vestigated and he had no immediate explanation for the remarkably low casualty toll.- Some passengers were picked up from the sea by boats and others managed to swim ashore, an official of the French airline UTA in Mauritania said. THE AIRLINER of Tarom, the Romanian national line, was carrying 18 crew members and 154 Romanian men due to relieve crews aboard fishing vessels in the Atlantic, Mauritanian authorities said. The jetliner, a Soviet-made three-engined Tupolev 154, plunged into the sea on approach to the airport at Nouadhibou, Mauritania's principal port, with no sign that the pilot had made a distress signal, accor- ding to preliminary reports from the: official Mauritanian news agency. For unexplained reasons, the plane dipped to the right on approach and went into the sea, according to a UTA official. A Mauritanian navy vessel and two trawlers rushed to the scene, arriving before the plane had completely broken up and while two-thirds of the fuselage was intact above water, he said. The injured - including the pilot, who was reported in grave condition - were admitted to the clinic of the National Industry and Mining Company in Nouadhibou, the official said, and some would return to Romania today on UTA plane. learn camp (Continued from Page 3) confessed Karen, a high school cheerleader in an ugly maize and pur- ple outfit. Her face was long and she wasn't bouncing. "Fourth out of eight teams. That's terrible. "You know why we didn't win? We didn't smile enough. Our mounts were perfect, but we-didn't smi-ile." She put her hands on her maize and purple hips and smi-iled a very good imitation grimace of one of the winning teams. She also uncorsciously wiggled her breasts and moved her hips in- a tit- tilating ishion that suggested perhaps the winning team's smiles weren't totally responsible for its success. Sexy movements are stressed almost as much as smiles. "Swing -those hips girls! Move them in a circle, I want them to swing!" barked a former cheerleader to approximately 70 eager teen-agers outside of Angell Hall during one practice session. AND DURING the final performance those routines with the most alluring swings and the most split-crotch kicks won the heaviest applause. The regimented routines where the girls marched like soldiers and shot off cap guns or performed other un-ladylike ac- ts were given only perfunctory han- dclaps and received raised eyebrows from the audience. The stereotype of the cheerleader as the dream screw of every red-blooded American male does not bother these teenage cheerleaders. They- say they don't think that description is very true- to-life, although a junior high-schooler named Jeanie admitted that cheerleading is "kind of like flirting." The consensus among several cheerleaders resting between sessions is that while cheerleading isn't as cool as it was say, twenty-five years ago, it is still a pretty cool thing to do in high school. THE CHEERLEADING associations are non-profit organizations that spon- sor thousands of camps across the country. They provide counselors to teach everything a cheerleader needs to know - pep skits, beginning gym- nastics, partner stunts, jumps, pompon routines, giant pyramids, crowd sociology, and spirit-boosting ideas. The cheerleaders pay room and board to the University and in turn South Quad provides them with room and board and evening activities, in- cluding scavenger hunts and dances with some of the male athletes staying in the dorm for athletic camps. The cheerleading associations provided style shows at night so squads can geta glimpse of the latest fashions in cheerleading apparel. A cheerleader who especially liked the style show confided to a friend that everyone, just everyone, at camp wore their hair in braids. "I think it has something to do with Bo Derek," she concluded. The Ann Arbor Film Cooper tive Presents at MLB $1.50 FRIDAY, AUGUST 8 SORCEROR (WILLIAM FRIEDKIN, 1977) 7 a 9-MLB 3 A suspensenfulatiofmsen in he sIeamy South American jungle. Four strangers trapped in a primi- tie onvolunteer for a suicidal jab: drivinga cargoafnitrogyerine across*200miles "fild terrain. By the director of The Exorcist and The French Connecatio.arring tOY SCHEIDER, BRUNO CREMERc FRANCISCO ABAL and RAMON BIERI. Tomorrow: Three Stooges 1 and 11; and Little Rascals Shorts at MLB. iV Manchu Disguise Kit #47 -s 0.I !hSellers. - - -r. r - I trnlysuget o SA ,S N 12:50, :50, 5:00, 7:00, 9:00 Sat, Sun $1.50 tl100 (or copocity) i i f >t it's R-Z-D-Fil INDIVIDUAL. THEA TRES 5th A ve. at Liberty 7 6 1-9 7 00"A M S E P C . catch 'Maria Braun." -Andrew Sarris, Village Voice "AN EPIC COMEDY AND A ROMANTIC BALLAD. 'THE MARRIAGE OF MARIA BRAUN' REMINDS US OF THE STILL IMMENSE POSSIBILITIES OF MOVIES MADE BY MASTERS." -Vincent Canby, New York Times "Fassbinder's 'Blue Angel"' -Bernard Drew, Gannett Newspapers "Hanna Schygulla is an improbable cross between Dietrich and Harlow...she raises screen acting to a new level of sexual knowingness." -Dicd Denby, New York Magain 9;neirnerT"ssbidz "THE MARRIAGE OF C7IARIA'BRAUk FRIDAY 7:25 & 9:30 SAT, SUN 1:00, 3:05, 5:20, 7:25, 9:30 SAT, SUN $1.50 til 1:30 ON THE WATERFRONT TONIGHT 7:30 & 9:30 MARLON BRANDO, EVA MARIE SAINT, LEE J. COBB, KARL MAL- DEN, ROD STEIGER star in a powerful drama about labor union corruption on the docks of New Jersey. "You're a cheap, dirty, stinking, lousy bum, and I'm glad what I done to ya." Saturday: RICH KIDS Sunday: Fellini's NIGHT OF CABIRIA GtOLDA&DAUD CINEMA GUILD (Forget CRISP at CG) .t