> ' .. .. _ e , :. .. _. - _ ,. .- .: . ,. 4 " . F4. ..44 4~ 4 4 44 4 4, it '60 TEDDY SP i rn ' 1 iii s Years of Edit ori(I Fr eE'd(,Im :Iai1Q RADIANT High-65T Low-Upper 40 °s See Today for details aCC4L CUAU6.P mi page II Vol. LXXXX, No. 3 t.nn Arbor, Michigan-Saturday, September 8, 1979 Free Issue Twelve Pages plus Supplement ADMINISTRATOR TO ASSUME POST IN CINCINNATI: 2r Murray By JUDY RAKOWSKY After weeks of receptions and good-byes, outgoing City Administrator Sylvester Murray consumed his last glass of punch and bestowed his final hugs and kisses yesterday at a City Hall gathering. Murray and his family are scheduled to depart today for Cin- cinnati where he will assume the city manager's post. On the wall of Council Chambers was a caricature of Murray in oversized shoes saying, "Every time I grow into my shoes, they find me a new, bigger pair .. GAZING AT THE drawing, acting Administrator Godfrey Collins remarked, "They'll be much bigger than that for me." He added that he plans to "share the load" of responsibilities and will not hesitate to delegate authority. Mayor Louis Belcher told the past and present city employees, officials, and politicians who gathered for the reception that he regrets losing Murray for professional and personal reasons. "But after losing Pete Rose, Cincinnati had to get someone," the mayor quipped. MURRAY THANKED the city workers gathered, bids city arewell adding that "The work you do I got the credit for." He. set realistic and sensible goals. then extended an invitation to everyone present to people want to be led, but it is th come down and visit Cincinnati. you lead which determines their r "I don't know the address yet, but give me six WHEN MURRAY was brought weeks and then stop in Cincinnati and just ask where Ann Arbor's financial situation Sy Murray lives." most. Murray said the city Despite the endless receptions of recent weeks, "operations" expert, someone Murray never lost his devotion to his duties. Thur- techniques of paving streets, oper sday night, at a farewell dinner given by the mayor sewage treatment plant efficiently and Council, Murray slipped out to attend contract The most regrettable occurr negotiations with police and firefighters. As he left, memory was the arbitrage inve he asked if someone would take his wife home if he 1977, in which the city nearly lost did not return in time. He did return before the dinner vestments which turned out to be i ended, however, and told the politicians he had been "I regretted not being on to booed out of the negotiating room. situation; after all, I was brought IN AN INTERVIEW after the reception, Murray man," he said. "I thought Iv commented for the first time on the political deman- bringing in top college people, but ds of his job. novative. . ." he added with a smi "You've got to be a politician in this job - a shrewd MURRAY CONSIDERS increas one. You have to play them (politics) so well that bursement for city police and. people don't attach politics to it," Murray said. University properties his greate Commenting on his formula for city management, 1970, the state forbade the Univ Murray said, "Always assume a leadership role and See MAYOR, Pa ' He said, "Most e manner in which esponse." t in six years ago, needed attention now needs an who knows the ating a landfill or a Y. ence in Murray's estment scandal of t $1.4 million on in- llegal. p of the financial here as a financial was covered after t they tried to be in- ile. sing the state reim- fire protection of st achievement. In ersity to pay those ge 3 MSA fund proposal pleases Johnson By SARA ANSPACH Now that the Michigan Student Assembly (MSA) president has proposed guidelines for allocating fun- ds to organizations, University Vice President for Student Services Henry Johnson said he "anticipates no problems" in allowing the assemblyto regain full control of its finances. At the assembly's first meeting of the semester on Tuesday, MSA President, Jim Alland is expected to present the proposal which calls for establishing an appeals process for student groups dissatisfied with their allocations. In addition, the proposal calls for half of the voting seats on MSA's Budget Priorities Committee - which recom- mends allocations to the full assembly - to be reserved for non-MSA mem- bers. LAST MAY, the University Board of Regents - concerned about MSA's handling of money during the year - gave Johnson the authority to monitor the assembly's funds, pending MSA's adoption of allocation guidelines accep- table to the administration. Alland said there is "absolutely nothing that is controversial" about the proposal. Although MSA will have input on revisions to the proposals, the president said he is "more than con- fident" that members agree with the in- tent of his guidelines. If MSA approves the proposal, student organizations unhappy with See JOHNSON, Page 12 " Federal District Judge Philip Pratt has ruled that Engineering Humanities Prof. Jonathan Marwil may not teach University classes while his $1.1 million suit against the University is pending. See story, Page 12. ,t * Sen. Edward Kennedy (D- Mass.) said yesterday that his family has approved his running for president in 1980, but that he is not a candidate "at this time." See story, Page 12. ~I. r Read the Today 46 column. Page 3 vi L , 'w dt 444.44.:4: v.44 4 :r44444r44 }. . . . . . . . . . . . . . :.4:. .~::..;; 4{ '"? .~4. ...}.4 ..J4 4.:!{,. ..t" i"/ . .: :}. 4,:{.{}Y::".:}"t4.vV":"{""t v::Y:}...." ::.~ : Daily Photo by LISAKLAUSNER FORMER ANN ARBOR City Administrator Sylvester Murray sits at the desk in City Hall he occupied for six years. Murray is leaving his post to assume the same position in Cincinnati. Carter wants Soviet troopS outt of Cuba From AP and UPI WASHINGTON-President Carter said yesterday the presence of Soviet combat troops in Cuba is a "very serious matter," but urged calm. He said the situation should be dealt with diplomatically. "This is a time for firm diplomacy, not panic and not exaggeration," Car- ter said, emphasizing the Russian troops do not have weapons "capable of attacking the United States." IN A STATEMENT he delivered per- sonally at the White House, Carter repeated the words of Secretary of State Cyrus Vance, who said, "We con- sider the presence of a Soviet combat brigade in Cuba to be a very serious matter ... this status quo is not accept- able." Also yesterday, Carter announced approval of a $33 billion deployment plan for the MX mobile missile force, saying it would do "the best job" of meeting a Soviet threat to current U.S. fixed-base missiles. Under the plan, 200 MX mobile missiles, each carrying 10 nuclear warheads, would be mounted on giant transporters and shuffled among some 4,600 blast-proof underground shelters built in racetrack-like patterns in some 40 Utah and Nevada valleys.' IT IS A variation of the "shell game" idea of, deterring a Soviet surprise at- tack by preventing the Russians from knowing where the missiles are at any See CARTER, Page 6 Photo by HOWARD WITT SYCOR EMPLOYEE RUTH SAMPLE said she would have trouble finding another job if she is among the 600 workers to be laid off within six months. The computer firm, which is Ann Arbor's largest private employer, is reducing its work force by 43 per cent because it is eliminating its manufacturing operations here. SYCOR EMPLOYEES WONDER WHO WILL GO: orkers awailayoffs Gunmen hijack jet, free passengers By HOWARD WITT Janet Teall almost cried when she walked into the cafeteria of Sycor, Inc. on Thursday. Sitting at tables, worrying about their futures were many of her co-workers and friends who will lose their jobs within months. Sycor, Inc., a local computer firm and Ann Arbor's largest private em- ployer, announced Tuesday that it would lay off 600 of its 1,400 employees within the next six months. For the hourly manufacturing plant workers, whose ranks will be greatly reduced by the layoffs, a game of employment "Russian Roulette" is just beginning. "THE COMPANY has left us in a very vague position," said one em- ployee who preferred not to be iden- tified, "but I think that just production workers (who are paid by the hour) will be laid off." An engineer, who said she was hesitant to talk because of the presence of security guards watching her answer questions outside the plant, disagreed about which employees would be laid off. "Probably more salaried workers will lose their jobs," she said. Teall, who said that she refused to be in- timidated by the security guards, wasn't sure what would happen: "They won't tell us who or when." Sycor's Minneapolis-based parent firm, Northern Telecom Systems Cor- poration (NTSC), has decided to con- vert the Ann Arbor manufacturing plant to a prototype production facility, with the resulting loss of 600 jobs. "IT'S SO COLD and unfeeling. Guys who've been here for years will be out. Whole families depend on these men for a living, and now they're going to call people into the office and tell them when they'll have to go," Teall said. "Everyone's going 'Oh, no, I'm going to be laid off in a week," said one three- year Sycor veteran. "Morale is so low that nobody's doing any work, everyone's just standing around talking," added another worker. Several employees commented that the company has been "very secretive" about the lay-offs, and as a result, rumors have been circulatinguaround the plant for months. In July, the Detroit News reported that NTSC of- ficials said Sycor would lay off 600-1,00 employees. But, "The company told the foremen a month ago to give us a pep talk not to worry about our jobs," said Ruth Sample, an assembly specialist who has been with Sycor for two years. ONE PLANT worker who started at Sycor several weeks ago said that when she was hired she was told the company would change to prototype production "in the distant future." A ship- ping/receiving specialist explained that he suspected "big changes" when the company constructed a 'new building. All doubt about the Sycor reorganization vanished last Tuesday when employees were "given notices saying only that the company will be re- arranged," according to Teall. Now, as company officials decided who will be laid-off, and as workers dread the summons to the plant office See WORKERS, Page 6 ROME (AP)-Gunmen seeking a missing Moslem leader hijacked an Italian jetliner yesterday with 186 per- sons aboard but later freed the passengers and departed for Iran with 11 crewmembers, authorities said. The Alitalia jetliner, seized by three Arab gunmen, left Rome early Satur- day for Iran after the hijackers. freed the last 36 passsengers, airline president Umberto Nordio reported. HE SAID THE crew members. remained aboard the plane under an agreement reached with the hijackers, who originally had demanded that they be flown to Cuba. The hijackers said they wanted to go to Havana to ask delegates attending a conference of non-aligned nations to help them press the search for a missing Moslem leader. The gunmen claim the leader, Imam Musa Sadr, has been held captive in Libya for more than a year. An airport official and one passenger said the hijackers were Kurdish nationalists, but a written statement delivered from the plane made no men- tion of the Kurdish cause. It demanded the release of Imam Musa Sadr, spiritual leader of Shiite Moslems in Lebanon. Most Iranians are Shiites, but the nation's Kurdish minority is predominantly Sunni Moslems. The Alitalia DC-8 jet, on a flight from Tehran, the Iranian capital, to Rome, was commandered by the commandos shortly after a scheduled stop in Beirut, Lebanon, the pilot reported. 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Local workers voice dissatisfaction, walk o jobs * WCC faculty strike * Bank workers stay out * AATA workers return By JULIE ENGEBRECHT As administrators and striking teachers at Washtenaw Community Vn1IP-OI (WfC) nrenare for their first DAVID POLLOCK, WCC assistant to the president for community relations, denied the union claim. "At this point, no one has dropped out By JULIE BROWN Twelve Huron Valley National Bank employees who walked off the job Tuesday are staying off the job deman- notified of the walk-out in advance, she said. BATUK SAID the bank management believed the letter presentation was By MITCH CANTOR Most of the 90 Ann Arbor Transit Authority (AATA) workers who stayed home yesterday to register their Ai rln ,4Y44.ithA ATA mnnpmn services by 60 to 70 per cent, according to Simonetta. Members of the employees' union, the Transportation Employees Union (TEU ), wouldn't readily acknowledge