BOYCOTT See editorial page £SIE flaiIg DUPLATION High-30 Low-25 See Today for details Vol. LXXXIX, No. 99 Ann Arbor, Michigan-Sunday, January 28, 1979 Ten Cents Eight Pages plus Supplement SEVERAL CONTACTED IN RECENT WEEKS Students are target of FBI questioning By LEONARD BERNSTEIN The Federal Bureau of Investigation (FBI) has increased its intelligence- gathering activities at the University in recent weeks, according to student sources. Tie students, who requested anonymity, said the FBI has contacted at least three University students - some of them foreign - in the weeks following political demonstrations on this campus and outside the home of the Shah of Iran's mother in Beverly Hills, California. THE STUDENTS confirmed that some of those contacted were connec- ted with a demonstration staged at the Rackham Building during a speech here by former Israeli Foreign'Minister Yigal Allon on December 17 of last year. But the sources said it is unclear if the FBI's actions are part of an in- vestigation into the Allon incident. They said the questions could be part of the government's response to an Iranian student demonstration in Beverly Hills, or the result of a general increase in in- telligence activity. "We don't have enough evidence to state conclusively at this point that, yes, this is because of the Allon in- cident" said MSA ,Vice-President Kate Rubin, who is working with a group of students attempting to halt the in- telligence activity. "Either way, we don't expect this to stop." ONE STUDENT explained the group knew only that "they (the FBI) have been much more active in the past mon- th than they have ever been." Ben Brewer, a spokesman for the FBI office in Detroit, said he could not comment on whether any investigation was being conducted at the University. The student sources refused to reveal the names or nationalities of those con- tacted because, they said, some of these students fearedretaliation against relatives in foreign countries. They also refused to identify the campus groups with which the students are connected because they fear that negative publicity might discourage University students from working with those organizations. ONE STUDENT ruled out the possibility that those contacted are in- telligence agents themselves. "The possibility 6f suspecting them of being foreign agents, and therefore giving the FBI reason to investigate them, is ridiculous," the student said. "They are doing absolutely nothing illegal. But still they are being contac- ted by the FBI. Their rights are being denied by this harassment," the student said. Some students said they were unsure how many people had been contacted. They explained that persons contacted are often afraid to tell anyone else they have been approached.. But one member of the group organized to fight the actions speculated that others had been ap-. proached. "My guess is that it's more than three peolile, but it's hard to substantiate," she said. A group of 15 people met Wednesday'. to plan strategy to fight the FBI's ac- tions. The group-whose spokespersons are-Rubin and Student Legal Services attorneys Molly Reno and Barbara Kessler-plans to publicize the in- telligence activity to discourage University members from cooperating with the FBI's efforts. . ONE STUDENT explained that students-especially foreign, studen- ts-are unaware they, can refuse to speak to federal investigators.' The student said a primary objective of the group will be to inform students they See STUDENTS, Page 2 Bakhtiar, 4. Khomeini to discuss Iran AP Photo Thousands of supporters of Ayatullah Ruhollah Khomeini march over the Shayad permit the religious leader to return to Iran. Arch in Tehran yesterday. The demonstrators are demanding that the government, TRIBUTES POUR IN:Y Rockefeller dies of heart attack By AP and Reuter TEHRAN, Iran - Prime Minister Shahpour Bakhtiar said yesterday he would fly to Paris within 48 hours to meet with Ayatullah Ruhollah Khomeini and "seek advice" from him on Iran's future. It was unclear whether Khomeini would receive Bakhtiar, whose resignation he has been deman- r ding. Aides to the ayatullah, who led the popular uprising that drove Shah Mohammad Reza Pahlavi from Iran, were jubilant when Bakhtiar's announ- cement was made: Later they appeared to have divided. Khomeini aides in Paris said no decision on whether to receive Bakhtiar would be made until today. BAKHTIAR'S surprise announ- cement came in a radio address last night, hours after hundreds of thousan- ds of Khomeini supporters marched in the streets demanding that Bakhtiar allow the ayatullah to return. Bakhtiar said, "As a patriotic Iranian, who considers himself as a small , member of the glorious movement and as a person ,wh believes in the leadership of the ayatulah ... I have decided to go to Paris within 48 hours to have the pleasure of meeting him and to seek advice on the future of the country." Dr. Ibrahim Yazdi, who has relayed most ,of the ayatullah's statements from Paris to Iran since Khomeini arrived in France from Iraq last Oct 6, said without qualification that Khomeini would meet with Bakhtiar, and that Khomeini had known in ad- vance Bakhtiar was coming. But Sadegh Ghothzadeh, another chief aide, later told reporters,. "It is evident that Mr. Bakhtiar will be received by the ayatullah Khomeini if he is coming to offer his resignation." Ghotbzadeh said any other motivation offered by Bakhtiar would be studied with care before Khomeini decided whether to receive him. Queried on the contradiction, Yazdi said the two aides were expressing "our own understanding" of the develop- ments, and added "it is very natural that two people may reach different conclusions." cMoEANWHILE, Bakhtiar still refused at least publicly, to say when he might open Iran's doors to Khomeini. He did say he expected any meeting with Khomeini to last no more, than three days. In Tehran, where at least 15 people were killed Friday in street battles between soldiers and the ayatullah's supporters, troops kept well in 'the background' today as. the marchers surged through the capital. Some of the See BAKHTIAR, Page 8 11 NEW YORK (AP) - A woman claiming to have nitroglycerin com- mandeered a United Airlines jumbo jet with 131 persons aboard last night: The plane landed at Kennedy International Airportand negotiations began, author- ties said., After about 2/2 hours of talks with the woman, 24 passengers - 18 adults and six. children - left the plane, a Port ,Authority official said. ALSO F A spokesman Irwin Goldstein said an FBI agent was on board the plane, and talking to the woman. About an hour after the plane landed at the sprawling airport, it was brought to a gate at the United terminal. The hijacker demanded that a telephone line be set up so she could talk directly with United officials, said a spokesman for the Port Authority of New York and New Jersey, which operates the air- port, Al Puttre, the Port Authority police See HIJACKER, Page 8 NEW YORK (UPI) - Nelson Rockefeller, one of the world's wealth- iest men who longed in vain for a presidential bid the Republican Party denied him, died of a heart attack Friday at the age of 70. The former vice president died late Friday night in his private office in a townhouse just off Fifth Avenue. A, FAMILY spokesman said the for- mer vice president and governor of 'New York had been found slumped over his desk in his 13 W. 54th St. office by a bodyguard. Police officers and paramedics tried unsuccessfully to revive Rockefeller GM, UAW divided in Flint negotiations By TOM MIRGA A United Auto Workers (UAW) of- ficial stated yesterday that 7,000 Chevrolet Truck Plant workers in Flint would shut down the factory's operations and man picket lines on Monday morning, unless negotiations between local union officials and General Motors management take a turn for the better very soon. Bob Evans, UAW Local 598 recording secretary, said a secret device installed in a superintendent's office 18 months ago speeded up assembly rates and resulted in more than 1,600 trucks being built with free labor. "THEY (GM) have admitted to 1,600 free jobs, but we think that figure represents only a drop in the bucket," the union official asserted. PROSPECTS FOR a speedy set- tlement are far from good., Evans claimed that offers coming from plant management have been very negative. "Up to this point, GM has ;been talking about compensation for a few hundred man-hours of work. We have been asking compensation for a few thousand," he said. Spokesmen for GM were not available for comment Saturday. The company's only reply to questions con- cerning the talks was that "negotiations were continuing without progress, but there is hope for a set- tlement." THE UNION issued a letter of intent to strike to GM last Monday at 10:45 a.m., exactly one week before the projected strike date. Negotiations have h en lnin nn htween the two before they took him to Lenox Hill Hospital., Rockefeller, one of the world's wealthiest men, had no previous history of heart trouble, said Dr. Ernest Esakof, a family physician. A PRIVATE interment service was scheduled for family members only at 11 a.m. tomorrow in the Rockefeller family cemetery at their Pocantico Hills, N.Y., estate in suburban West- chester County, after cremation. A memorial tribute for family, associates, close personal friends and national and international public of- ficials was set for Friday, Feb. 2, at 11 a.m. at Riverside Church in Manhat- tan, with the Rev. Dr. William Sloane Coffin presiding. TRIBUTES TO Rockefeller poured in Sunday " Police in Osaka, Japan critically injured a gunman as they freed the 25 hostages he held captive in a bank. See story, page 2. " The Michigan basketball team pulled out another victory at the buzzer yesterday, this time nip- ping Illinois 56-54. See story, page 7. * The Ann Arbor City Council will hold a special meeting to Chinese may attend 'U' by fall from around the world. In New York, Democratic Gov. Hugh Carey ordered. flags at state office buildings lowered to half-staff. . Carey also informed the family he planned a major state tribute and memorial service in Albany, N.Y., at a later date. From Camp David, President Carter said, "Nelson Rockefeller was born to privilege and accepted his privilege as an obligation to serve his state and nation." In Amman, Jordan, former President Gerald Ford said, "I have lost one of my closest friends." By DAN OBERDOFER, KEITH RICHBURG, and AMY SALTZMAN Special to The Daily, WASHINGTON-University political science professor Michel Oksenberg, now the national security council China advisor, said yesterday that more ex- change students from the People's Republic of China will be attending the University, perhaps as early as next. fall. Currently, there are only two studen- ts from mainland China attending the University. Okensberg, who is one of four top Carter advisors involved in the secret -n i *hnij* kI n'i vItr,,nal;ti Oksenberg said. Oksenberg also said that he plans to return to teaching in Ann Arbor this fall, for either graduate or un- dergraduate courses.y Oksenberg said making arrangemen- ts for the Teng trips has been "thrillihg and exhilarating, though also very taxing." One reporter said that during a recent interview in Oksenberg's of- fice, the China advisor's phone rang every 3D seconds. The joke now cir- culating in' Washington is that many state department officials are "knee deep in Teng." TENG BEGINS his eight day tour of the United States today and has srhedileda o mivatP mPetina with Officials here said privately that the United States will be trying to impress Teng with .this country's vitality,, and attempting to erase any Chinese notions that the U.S. is on the decIin as a world power. High administration offjcials expect a science and technology agreement to be signed between the countries in ceremonies Wednesday. Officials are also working for cultural and consular agreements. IN THE SCIENCE and technology agreements expected to be signed, China will be getting advanced western technology but not weapons or weapon component. Oksenberg said that it is too early to tell if this means China will