Missing seamen presumed dead government Tuesday gave up hope of finding alive I0 seamen beheved Page 8 Connecticut Daily Campus Wednesday, September 22, 1976 The World In Brief Dutch still confident of prince THE HAGUE. Netherlands (UPI)- Thousands of Dutch subjects wildly cheered Prince Bernhard Tuesday in his first public appearance since he was offically accused of "dishonorable" dealings in the Lockheed scandal. “Bernhard. Bernhard," the crowds shouted as a royal coach bearing the prince and Queen Jiliana rolled slowly from the downtown palace to the parliament building. Inside. the Queen asked the nation in her annual “Speech of the Throne" to look to the future instead of dwelling on the mistakes of the past. Her husband sat next to her. looking drawn and tired. - Beirut fighting rages throughctty BEIRUT. Lebanon (UPI)- Christian and Moslem gunmen fought house-to-house battles along Beirut's no-man's-land Tuesday. forcing authorities to move the inaugural site of President-elect Elias Sarkis outside the capital. Diplomatic sources said Syria was planning a new invasion of Lebanon. The two sides battled with tanks. rockets. mortars and machine guns the entire length of the shell-battered "green line" biseeting the city. with the worst fighting in the southern suburbs. rightist and leftist reports said. Cosmonauts prepare for return MOSCOW (UP|)- Two Soviet cosmonauts finished the main task of their six-day space mission Tuesday and said they had to pack and prepare for “a tense day" Wednesday. when they apparently will return to earth. Soviet television Tuesday night showed Soyuz 22 commander Col. Valery Bykovsky and flight engineer Vladimir Aksenov examining photographic gear they have been using to take pictures of large portions of the Soviet Union and East Germany. (‘heery and relaxed. the two men displayed several large. empty film cascttes for their East German camera. Then Bykovsky signed off. saying: “Now we are finished and have to pack and prepare for tomorrow. We will have an early start- it will be a tense day and we must be prepared." LONDON (UPI) —- The British trapped in a sunken Soviet plane examined Experts say jet heavy, slow By MARIANNA OHE TOKYO (UPl)- Preliminary dismantling of the Soviet Union's most advanced fighter plane, flown to Japan by a Soviet air force defector, has shown the MlG25 is heavier and probably slower to accelerate than expect- ed, military sources said Tues- day. Discovery that the plane is made mostly of relatively heavy alloy steel rather than titanium or other lightweight metals was the first information to come from what Western sources believe will be an “intelligence windfall.” Weaponry and electronic equip- ment aboard the craft were expected to give U.S. and Japan- ese experts dismantling the plane many clues about the overall state of Soviet military technology, a U.S. source said. The plane is expected to be returned to the Soviets following the examination. which has been the subject of several Russian protests to the Japanese. Some experts have theorized that if the electronic computing in the MlG's weapon aiming, radar and electronic counter-measures systems is relatively crude, it would be indicative of the quality of all Russian weapons systems. We're n 9:30‘-S730 Such a discovery would mean the Russian arms buildup was an attempt to compensate in num- bers for technical capibility and was not as great a threat to the U.S. as thought. Members of the examining team have reportedly found much of the MIG 25 is made of heavy but heat-resistant steel alloys rather than the light-weight ti- tanium used for the American supersonic reconnaissance plane SR-71. They said the MIG’s heavy weight is compensated for by its powerful engines. Japanese experts speculated the Soviet fighter has a slow acceleration rate because of its heavy weight and as a result comsumes relatively more fuel. The plane that Soviet air force Lt. Viktor I. Belenko flew to northern Japan in a bid for U.S. asylum is being dismantled in a makeshift shelter at Hakodate airport by 11 American and 69 Japanese ex- perts. The initial work, centering on disarming several self-destruct devices attached to electronic equipment, reportedly will take longer than anticipated, Japanese defense agency officials said. After preliminary dismantling, the MIG is to be transported to Japan's Hyakuri Air Self-Defense Force. base near Tokyo for further examination. Wed. John Wayne. Thurs. THE FILM SOCIETY presents Sept. 22 at 7:30 PM in Physics 38: Western I : 3:10 to Yuma (Produced by David Heilwt .1. UConn Prof. of Dramatic Arts) and 1lohn.F0rd’s The Sear h r with Sept. 23 at 7:30 PM in Physics 36: Western I12’ James Stewart in Bend 9f the River and Arthur Kennedy in The Naked Dawn. FRIDAY Sept. 24 at 8 and 9:45 PM in VDM: “It's still the same old story, a fight for love and glory.“ Paramount PICIUVQI prcunts "‘lDll_AY IIW AGAIIN. SA/N'"’ 1oeMucoIov' APnuv-oontPuctun minesweeper. raising the proba- ble death toll in a North Sea war games collision to I2. "There is now possibility of finding any of the Admission $1 or by no further I H; ., _ _ _ , oasvnnzaotsavuuoo-a¢con'n-run.-mu-e Membership Card. mango» uouwoauo-«broom-wono'WI'WO'°"°I'I missing men alive." a Defense Ministry spokesman said. “'l'he_v must be presumed dead." The 360-ton minesweeper Fit- tleton collided with the 2.h3()-ton frigate Mermaid and capsi/.ed Montlay 80 miles off the Dutch coast The hodies(n't“«>saHors were later recovered. Five British and six Dutch divers found the ntinesweeper I02 feet un(ler water. They repor- ted they tapped the hull but got no response. ~tlEIllS N.Y. am: DELI ' RESTAURANT East Brook Mall. Mansfield 423-E460 Mon Thurs 9:30 9 00 l>rn..‘sI Sat. 9 30 1000 NOW OPEN SUNDAYS 9:30-9:00 Hmirs ATTENTION! ALL JEWISH STUDENTS AND FACULTY come! and bring your friends, too! A simple blood test will determine if vou are a carrier of TAY-SACHS DISEASE, the dread disease of JEWISH children. place Univ. Health Service date Wednesday, SEPTEMBER 29, 1976 time 4:00 pm — 8:00 pm FREE sponsored by Greater Htfd. Ta_v—Sachs Disease Assoc. of Conn. lnc. P.0. Box 505. Bloomfield. Ct. 06002 (203) 2425-1653 yfiniilnfin and his-"annuals on PROESSING CENTER IBM COPYING PROFESSIONAL TYPING LOWEST PRICES AND HIGHEST QUALITY IN TOWN 1232 STORRS RD. ,, STORRS UNIVERSITY PLAZA 487-0081