Page 2-Thursday, May 28, 1981-The Michigan Daily Jet crash on aircraft carrier Nimitz kills _14 4 From AP and UPI JACKSONVILLE, Fla. - A plane used to jam enemy communications landed "right of the center line" on the flight deck of the nuclear carrier Nimitz late Tuesday night, plowed into parked aircraft and ignited a fireball that killed 14 servicemen and injured 45 others, the Navy said. Damage was estimated at con- siderably more thais $100 million. Four aircraft were destroyed, five more suf- fered serious damage and 11 others light damage in a raging fire that followed the crash. The 92,000-ton Nimitz, carrying a crew of nearly 6,000 and with a capability of carrying 90 planes, was on a training mission 60 miles off the Florida coast east of Jacksonville when the crash occurred while pilots were practicing nighttime takeoffs and lan- dings. THIRTEEN OTHER aircraft in the air when the crash occurred at 11:51 p.m. EDT were unable to land and diverted to Charleston, S.C. Navy firemen fought the huge blaze for 70 minutes before extinguishing it with a chemical foam. Helicopters ferried 19 Navy doctors and medical aides from the Jackson- ville Naval Hospital to the carrier and 21 of the most seriously injured were taken to Jacksonville hospitals for treatment. THE NAVY withheld identification of the dead and injured pending notification of relatives. The dead included all three crewmen aboard the crashed plane, a Marine Corps EA-6B Prowler jet, which is used to jam enemy radar and radio signals. THE PROWLER is one of the A-6 family of bombers, electronic warfare planes and tanker aircraft. All A-6 air- craft were temporarily grounded briefly early in 1980 after seven crashes in three months killed 14 fliers in dif- ferent parts of the world. The Navy said it had not detected any "patterns, trends or discernible similarities" in the accidents. Naval of- ficials are investigating the latest crash and were not prepared to state a possible cause yesterday. The aircraft carrier Nimitz had returned to Norfolk a year ago Tuesday after a six-month deployment in the Mediterranean that stretched to nine months because of the seizure of hostages in Iran and the Soviet inter- vention in Afghanistan. It was from the deck of the Nimitz that eight helicop- ters took off in the abortive effort to rescue the 52 Americans held captive in Tehran. The Nimitz and its sister carrier, the Eisenhower, are the largest fighting ships in the world. Today Til death do we part B RITISH COLUMBIA'S government has an ombudsman to help its citizens cope with bureaucracy, but he wasn't able to help one couple who wanted an unusual wedding. They wanted to get married dressed as the Muppet characters Kermit the Frog and Miss Piggy. When a marriage commissioner refused to perform the ceremony for the strangely attired pair last year, Kermit and his betrothed complained to ombudsman Karl Friedmann. Friedmann, however, backed the commissioner. In his second report to the Legislature, Friedmann said that the marriage commissioner had refused because he felt he could not solemnize the occasion. "I con- cluded the marriage commissioner had not acted improperly in refusing to solemnize the marriage and I advised the betrothed to seek out another marriage commissioner in the vicinity who might be able to solemnize the union with good conscience," he said. Friedmann said the couple had been unable to find an authorized person willing to marry them in their muppet costumes. "They decided to get married i jeans," he said. Inflation on the rails If you're planning on -taking the Amtrak when you go home for the weekend, make sure you buy your ticket in the station, not in the train. Am- trak announced yesterday that, effective June 1, passengers who buy their tickets from the conducter will pay $3 more than those who buy their tickets at the station. In the past, passengers have paid only 50 cents more if they waited to pay the fare on the train. But, before you start organizing a boycott to protest the fare hike, you may as well wail until the Reagan ad- ministration and Congress decide on next year's Amtrak funding. If the President gets his way, federal funding will be cut so much that Amtrak ser- vice in Michigan will be axed entirely, solving the whole fee hike problem. t Todavs weather Partly cloudy skies today with an expected high in the low 70s. Q Happenings .. . FILMS CFT - Taxi Driver, 4,7 & 9p.m., Michigan Theater. CG - The Big Red One, 7:30-: 9:30 p.m., Lorch Hall. MISCELLANEOUS Chemistry - lecture, R. Rife Chambers, "Love Takes Time and So Does Amide Hydrolysis," 4 p.m., Chem Bldg., Rm. 1300. Ark - Mac Benford, banjo, 9 p.m., 1421 Hill. Campus Weight Watchers - Mtg., 5:30 p.m., League Project Rm. MHRI - Sem., Nancy Andreeasen, "Diagnosis and Classification of Depression," 3:45 p.m., 1057 MHRI. Sailing Club - Mtg., 7:45 p.m., 311 W. Engin. Med Center Bible Study - Mtg, 12:30 p.m., F2230 Mott Library. Robotics Reseach Circle - Eugene Bartel, "An Overview of Robotics Research at Carnegie-Mellon," 7p.m., Chrysler Ctr. Siddha - Intro. to Siddha Meditation, free class, 8 p.m., 902 Baldwin. The Michigan Daily Vol. XCI, No.16-S Thursday, May 28, 1981, The Michigan Daily is edited and managed by students at the University of Michigan. Published daily Tuesday through Sunday mornings during the University year at 420 Maynard Street, Ann Arbor, Michigan, 48109. Subscription rates:$12 September through April (2 semesters); $13 by mail outside Ann Arbor. Sumnier session published Tuesday through Saturday mornings. Subscription rates: $6.50 in Ann Arbor; $7 by mail outside Ann Arbor. Second class postage paid at Ann Arbor, Michigan. POSTMASTER: Send address changes to THE MICHIGAN DAILY, 420 Maynard Street, Ann Arbor, MI 48109. The Michigan Daily is a member of the Associated Press and subscribes to United Press International, Pacific News Service, Los Angeles Times Syndicate, and Field Newspaper Syndicate. News room: (313) 764-0552, 76-DAILY; Sports desk: 764-0562; Circulation: 764-0558; Classified advertising: 764-0557; Display advertising: 764-0554; Billing: 764-0550; Composing Room: 764-0556. Oil glut may stabilize summer gas prices NEW YORK (AP) - Summer's flood of motorists usually means price in- creases at the gasoline pumps. But am- ple gas supplies and Saudi Arabia' refusal to cut oil production should mean stable prices - and perhaps some price wars - this year, analysts say. The Organizatin of Petroleum Expor- ting Countries agreed this week in Geneva to freeze prices, and most of the OPEC members agreed to cut produc-_ tion by at least 10 percent because of high supplies of crude oil. However, Saudi Arabia refused to go along with the cuts and OPEC oil ministers said the cuts would not be enough to end the glut. TRADITIONALLY, increased demand for gasoline in the summer pushed up prices a penny or two a gallon. But that pattern was broken last year, and the oil industry is watching to see whether drivers will again take shorter trips or choose to leave their cars home. The situation varies by region. Isolated gasoline price wars have broken out in some Midwestern areas this year and more are possible, although gasoline station operators say their profit margins are at the lowest level in years and they have little room for price-cutting.- THE TIGHTEST supplies are on the WestCoast, partly becaise ofa firethat cut production at a Standard Oil Co. of" California refinery. Socal raised prices by a penny a gallon in the West yester- day, five days after it cut prices by two cents a gallon along the East Coast. While the gasoline market is weak, prices are still a lot higher than last year, thanks to previous OPEC price increases and to President Reagan's decision to lift domestic price controls ahead of schedule. The average national retail price of gasoline this month is $1.36 a gallon, up 10 percent from just over $1.23 last year. BUT THIS month's price is more than 1 cents below the March price, and Kenneth Haley, an economist for Socal, said there is little likelihood for an in- crease over the next several months. "I think prices will be pretty much where they are, if not a little lower," Haley said. "It could be the 1981 peak for gasoline prices has passed," agreed Robert LeVine, an analyst with the E.F. Hutton & Co. securities firm. CONSERVATION IS a major cause of the weakness in oil markets. Americans used six percent less gasoline in 1980 than in 1979. Through April, gasoline use was down one per- cent from the 1980 rate.yTie1981 figure was 11percent below thbe1978 peak. Editor-in-Chief ...........DAVID MEYER Managing Editor ....... NANCY BILYEAU Editorial Page Director ......CHRISTOPHER POTTER Special Supplement Editors ......STEVE HOOK, PAMELAKRAMER Arts Editor .............DENNIS HARVEY Sports Editor ......... MARK MIHANOVIC Executive Sports Editors MARK FISCHER BUDDY MOOREHOUSE NEWS STAFF: John Adam, Julie Barth, Andrew Chapman, Vicki Engel, Ann Marie ' Fanio, Pam Ficksinger, Len Fintor, Mark Gindin, Michal Hershkovitz, 5ae Inglis, Susan McCreight, Gregor Meyer, Jenny Miller, Annettestaron. Business Manager......RANDI CIGELNIK Display/Classified Manager................... LISA STONE BUSINESS STAFF: Aida Eisenstat, Cyn- thia Kalmus, Mary Ann Misiewicz, Nancy Thompson . SPORTS STAFFBarb Barker, Mark B Borowski, Joe Chapelle, Martha Crall, Jim Dworman, John Fitzpatrick, John Kerr, Ron Pollack. Jim Thdnmpson. PHOTO STAFF: Jackie Bell, Paul Engstrom ARTS STAFF: Mark Dighton, Fred Schill