TURKEY AWARDS See the editorial page r~i ian :3IiI DARK MEAT See Today for details i%iety'Years 4of Edioril lFreedom. Vol. LXXXX, No. 66 Ann Arbor, Michigan-Wednesday, November 21, 1979 Ten Cents Eight Pages Protesters call for extradition of Shah By JULIE SELBST In one of the largest demonstrations on campus so far this year, nearly 80 people called yesterday for the ex- tradition of the deposed Shah of Iran and an end to the harassment of Iranian students. Anti-deportation sentiment appeared to run thick among the approximately 250 spectators who gathered. They shouted such slogans as "Nuke Iran," and "Hell no; he won't go," in response to the demonstration. THE DIAG demonstration was organized by an ad hoc committee angered by death threats allegedly received by some Iranian students. There are roughly 250 Iranian students on campus. None were present at the rally. LSA senior Bob Warren of the Young Socialist Alliance, one of the groups organizing yesterday's noon demon- stration, said, "It's as if Hitler had come here for asylum," referring to the shah. "Iran has sovereignty on this issue." Warren also said he knew of at least one Iranian student who has received a threat on his life. "We have to remember that these are innocent people coming here for an education. When you hear 'Hiroshima, Nagasaki, Tehran,' that's brutal. That's sick," Warren continued. LSA JUNIOR Ted Kanakis, who bur- ned an effigy of the Ayatollah Khomeini in a demonstration last week, said, "I'm not against non-harassment. I'm against deporting the shah. We're sub- Fleet. sails as Iran crisis intensifies WASHINGTON (AP) - The Pen- tagon ordered the 81,000-ton aircraft carrier Kitty Hawk to sail from the Philippines to the Indian Ocean last night after the Carter administration raised the possibility of U.S. military action against Iran. Defense spokesman Thomas Ross refused to comment on the orders to the Kitty Hawk. Other Pentagon sources, however, said the huge warship, which carries about 85 planes, would leave the U.S. naval base at Subic Bay in the Philippines with an escort of five war- ships. SOURCES EMPHASIZED that there had been no orders from the White House for any military action, although the White House raised this possibility yesterday for the first time in the deepening crisis that began Nov. 4 when 62 Americans were taken hostage at the U.S. Embassy in Tehran. The White House statement came af- ter Ayatollah Khomeini said the 49 Americans still held hostage might be tried as spies. Khomeini,, addressing his nation on radio and television, called upon millions of Iranians to demonstrate today against American "im- perialism." BEFORE HE SPOKE, the militants released six more black men and four more women from the embassy. State Daily Photo by PAUL ENGSTROM ANN ARBOR POLICE break up a conflict between a demonstrator advocat- ing extradition of the Shah and an onlooker during a demonstrator on the Diag yesterday afternoon. Department officials said all 13 hostages freed so far might be home for Thanksgiving. Immediately after Khomeini spoke, thousands of people climbed to their rooftops and the capital rang with the cry "Allah Akbar (God is great). " The religious leader's remarks last night appeared to take a tougher stand than his statement Sunday that the militants had found evidence U.S. diplomats were spying on Iran from.the embassy "and a certain number of spies .. . should be, according to our laws, tried and punished." IRANIAN NATIONAL television See CARRIER, Page 2 IGunmen hold Saudi mdosque, hostages RIYADH, Saudi Arabia (AP)-Gun- men stormed the Grand Mosque in Mecca, which shelters Islam's holiest shrine, yesterday and seized a number of hostages, the official Saudi' news agency reported. The Saudi authoritis took all necessary measures to bring the situation under control and protect the lives of the hostages, the agency said, adding that the attackers carried "a quantity" of arms and ammunition. The agency did not identify the in- vaders. It said they sneaked into the mosque court yard during dawn prayers yesterday. SOURCES AT THE Arab summit conference in Tunis, capital of Tunisia, said earlier Tuesday 100 armed men were involved in the raid, and a Kuwait newspaper said 90 hostages were taken. The sources said the invaders of the Great Mosque in the Saudi holy city were members of the Shiite Moslem sect-a minority in Saudi Arabia-of ,; See GUNMEN, Page 2 ELIZABETH MONTAGNE, Terri Ted- ford, and Lillian Johnson, three women held hostage in the U.S. Embassy in Tehran, Iran step from a military plane in Germany yesterday. mitting to international blackmail if we do. As for what the shah did, it's totally outrageous." Kanakis expressed the fear that the United States would lose international influence if it sends the shah back to Iran as a result of terrorist demands. Demonstrator Jim Delcamp of the Alchemist magazine, expressed a dif- See PROTESTORS, Page 2 OPPONENTS SQUARE OFF: Nuclear power defended, attacked By JOYCE FRIEDEN and JOHN GOYER In an atmosphere reminiscent of the traditional American town meeting, about 100 people last night heard debate on the safety and economics of nuclear power from a four-member panel composed of two nuclear engineers from the Bechtel Power Corp. and two area anti-nuclear ac- tivists. The anti-nuclear activists, Mary Sin- clair and Arthur Schwartz of the Great Lakes' Energy Alliance held up the examples of the Three Mile Island, Fermi I and Brown's Ferry nuclear mishaps as reasons to prohibit nuclear power. Chief Bechtel nuclear engineer Jene Vance said, however, that the nuclear power issue was a front for a larger conflict between two groups: one for technology in general, and "the other Iraq to Arab i Punish Israel opposed.% THE DISCUSSION, sponsored by the University Office of Ethics' and Religion, drew an audience evenly divided between pro- and anti-nuclear stances, with few undecided on the question. "I didn't come to have my mind changed. What I came for is to better understand the other side, so I know what I'm up against," said Jim Murphy who is opposed to nuclear power. "Unfortunately, it (the nuclear power issue) is being identified as a pro- or an- ti-nuclear issue, and I hear nothing about the fundamental issues at stake," said Vance, adding that there is a "smear campaign" directed at the nuclear power industry. "WE ARE threatened by an abuse of the democratic process where people are trying to accomplish goals that they are not stating," he said. countries: with oil leaders. He said the Arab states have effective economic weapons, "among which I mention oil," and the time had come for a special summit on the economic strategy of the Arab states. Iraq's earlier calls for an Arab economic summit have been blocked by opposition from other league members including Saudi Arabia, the richest Arab country. FIFTEEN OF the league's 21 mem- bers were represented by their highest- ranking leaders at the formal opening of the summit conference, which adourned after speechesdby Hussein and the host leader, President Habib See IRAQ, Page 2 But, according to Sinclair, anti- nuclear activists want to preserve the -technoloy of today and "don't want it threatened by technology that's poorly devised and poorly executed." Panel member Judy Grady, a Bechtel engineer, focused her discussion on the need for nuclear power in the future. She predicted a 20 per cent increase in the nation's work force in the next decade which will require increases in energy availability to ensure a healthy American economy. She said affluent Americans could withstand the lowered standard of living she claimed would result without increased nuclear power. But, she said, 40 per cent of the country's population could not economically survive a failure to devleop nuclear power. She also said that for much of the world, an energy shortage would mean star- vation. Sinclari countered saying, "There is a great push in this country by the nuclear power industry to convince people that nuclear power is indispen- dible." She said that nuclear energy supplies only one sixty-fourth of the nation's energy. Schwartz, a University mathematics instructor said, "I believe among other problems, nuclear power is creating a world we wouldn't want to live in. Thee are some very frightening aspects to nuclear power," Schwartz said nuclear weapons proliferation would be a direct result of the spread of nuclear power technology. Dayan expresses optimism on Palestinian autonomy talks during WMU speech From AP and Reuter TUNIS, Tunisia-Iraq asked Arab countries to use their "very effective weapon"-oil-to punish Israel and its allies, but moderates moved to block any oil embargo at the Arab League summit conference that opened yester- day. Iraq's President Saddam Hussein, speaking as chairman by rotation, also signaled support for the continued presence of Palestinian commandos in turbulent southern Lebanon. "THOSE WHO support Zionist aggression must understand that their interests are not safe in our region so long as they continue that support," Hussein told the assembled Arab By MICHAEL ARKUSHI Special to the Daily KALAMAZOO - Former Israeli Foreign Minister Moshe Dayan-who resigned last month in frustration over Palestinian autonomy talks-expressed optimism last night that those talks would produce a solution by next May. Dayan, on a tour to seven U.S. cities, said although the talks had been proceeding slowly for the last two months, moderate Palestinians on the West, Bank in the Gaza strip "will soon realize that negotiating for autonomy is the only practical solution in the Mideast. "THEY (PALESTINIANS) have two alternatives. One is to continue to live under the Israeli administration. The other is to be their own leader. I think they'll choose the later," he said. The May 1980 goal was set during the Camp David accords. Dayan's optimism, sounded before an estimated crowd of 2,500 atWestern Michigan University's Miller Auditorium, seemed to contrast significantly with the frustration he ex- pressed when he resigned last month. He apparently quit because he op- posed the Begin government's negotiating stance in the autonomy talks. AND WHILE confidently predicting that the Begin government is flexible enough to produce a settlement, Dayan said his government is eager to get out of the occupied territory. "We will not interfere with their lives. We will let them run their own future. We don't want to make them come under our sovereignity," he said. At each expression of optimism, the 64-year-old war hero stressed the Israeli government demand sufficient security in exchange for any agreement reached. He said he believed a solid ac- cord can give both' Palestinians fair representation, and enable the Jewish state to live in secure boundaries. BUT EVEN AS he spoke, ap- proximately 100 Palestinian demon- strators marched outside, calling Dayan a "murderer" and proclaiming. the right of the Palestinians to have their own state. In a leaflet distributed by the Organization of Arab Students it said, "Moshe Dayan is a first class represen- tative of Zionism where he participated in many of the killings and the establishment of Zionist settlement upon a demolishing and deterioration of the Palestinian people. Inside the auditorium however, the remarks of pro-Palestinian supporters was toned down considerably, although some occasionally interrupted the for- mer general. IN AN EARLIER news conference, See DAYAN, Page 2 Davart1i . optimisgtic'abouIt talks I ., .vuo .. i i AR1.4 6IlA k v o brOa 4Qe G e s ee your inquiry in the November 16 issue concerning the stolen phone booths in front of the Michigan Union, we sympathize with and understand your justifiable outrage. Yet we felt that the booths could be put to better use on my ship. It was unfortunate that we had to rip them off, but the need was real for new transporters on the Enterprise." The letter is signed by two illustrious members of the Enterprise crew, Capt. James T. Kirk and Chief Science Officer Spock. No word from Scotty, Bones or Lieutenant Uhura, but they probably share the sentiments of their fearless leaders. Jr tr"t-rt In a 1 tr, n ', n ra a'n Ivy League snootiness. As McFarlane explains it, Baxter is a tuition-free university that, despite various curricula, awards just one degree - 101.6. The school's founder was Horace Schmedlott, who used his $4.3 billion recession- proof diamond fortune to create the university in 1913. Faculty members at the school are selected in much the same way as baseball players eligible for the free-agent draft. No word yet on the prowess of Baxter's football team, but the school does have a jogging pig squad. McFarlane said he read about an experiment at UCLA on the effects of jogging, with the scientist using pigs to test his theories.. Thn ion~nr-,..--ac r--ma ; it annr;nri t to nvp Ra p Thanksgiving vacation. We'll resume publication next Tuesday, after everyone returns, stuffed with t urkey and cranberry sauce. Have a great one, and don't work too hard! On the inside Sports has the final AP and UPI football poll results . .. Peoplemania, a look at the famous and in- famous, Page 5 m.. The Daily's annual turkey awards, on the editorial page. H i It I