: 'l Air ihnr 4ir atl CAUTION ON IRAN See Editorial Page EFFUSIVE High-18 Low-5 See Today for details Vol. LXXXIX, No. 87 Ann Arbor, Michigan-Sunday, January 14, 1979 Ten Cents Ten Pages Ten Cents Ten Pages Israelis thwart Palestinian terrorists TEL AVIV, Israel (AP) - Israeli soldiers killed three Palestinian terrorists who raided a guest house in the northern city of Maalot yesterday. An Israeli woman fell to her death from a third-story window while trying to escape, police said. Many of the 230 visitors at the guest, house scrambled down knotted sheets to safety. MAALOT POLICE said the Palestinian plan to take hostages was thwarted when a soldier on routine patrol became suspicious, dashed to the second floor and killed one of the terrorists. The other two raiders were slain by Israeli troops in a separate gunfight at the guest house. Five Israelis were injured, none seriously. "It was over in a few moments," said a policeman. The three Palestinians, armed with grenades, rifles and explosives, entered the government-run house six miles south of the Lebanese border at 7 a.m. and took a family of three hostage while most of the weekend guests were sleeping, police said. The dead woman was identified as Miriam Alfasi, 30, of Beersheba, who slipped while climbing down an im- provised escape rope. Police initially reported she jumped in a bid to escape. "WE HEARD noises, and we heard it was terrorists, and I said, 'No, it can't be,' " said Mazal Azari, a guest who suffered three broken ribs in her escape. "We looked out the window and See TERRORISTS, Page 7 Shah chooses new council before TEiRAN, Iran (AP) - Shah Mohammad Reza Pahlavi picked a regency council yesterday to represent him when he leaves Iran on a tem- porary "vacation," a highly placed palace official said. The shah has been urged to leave the country temporarily to give Prime Minister Shahpour Bakhtiar's new civilian government time to pacify the anti-shah violence that has raged in Iran for more than a year and brought the oil-rich nation to the brink of economic chaos. Other highly placed sources said the shah had moved to avert a military coup last week by telling his generals he would rather leave the country than have them stage a takeover that would prolong bloodshed in Iran. Under the constitution, a regency council must be formed before the shah can leave the country. The council must include the new prime minister, the presidents of both houses of Parliament, the chief justice of the trip. Supreme Court and "four knowledgeable persons well versed in the affairs of state." The Tehran newspaper Kayhan' reported that the four included armed forces chief of staff Gen. Abags Gharabaghi, president of the National Iranian Oil Co.;Abdullah Entezam, and° two former Cabinet ministers-Saysd Jalal Tehrani and Mohammad. Varasteh. More anti-shah protests were repor- ted across Iran yesterday, with the largest in the capital. Iranian state radio said 40,000 per-. sons demonstrated against the shah in the streets near Tehran University, but that no one was hurt. Tehran University reopened yesterday along with five other colleges in the capital. The schools, which include a teachers' college and a technical institute, had been shut down since last June because they were centers of anti-shah' agitation. See SHAH, Page 7 AP Photo An Iranian guard on a street in downtown Tehran decorated the muzzle of his gun with carnations yesterday. Students marching through the city from Tehran University handed out the flowers to soldiers. The students demonstrated peacefully, returning from an opening ceremony of the university, which had been closed for six months. OFFICIALS BLAST TITLE IX: Canham supports NCAA stance Twenty resign to protest A bzug firing WASHINGTON (AP) - Half of the 40-member White House advisory committee on women resigned yester- day in protest over President Carter's ' firing of former Rep. Bella Abzug as the group's co-leader. Abzug and 20 other panelists charged that she was being made ". . . a scapegoat in an effort to suppress our independence" as an advisory commit- ,,, tee. - By STEVE HOOK With Wire Reports University Athletic Director Don Canham said yesterday that he suppor- tas a-resolution drafted by the National Collegiate Athletic Association (NCAA) which blasts the federal Title IX guidelines. But Canham split from the consensus of the nation's collegiate athletic of- ficials by advocating a separate division for big-time football powers. THE TITLE IX issue dominated the annual NCAA convention last week in San Francisco. Athletic officials claim that a strict interpretation of the guidelines, which call for equal funding for men's and women's sports, could ultimately destroy college athletics. "I think the interpretation is a disaster," Canham said, citing the tough stance on Title IX taken so far by, the Department of Health, Education, and Welfare. The NCAA resolution on Title IX states that "any government standard or administrative enforcement method which would require the government to monitor and dictate in detail the finan- cial operations of the nation's colleges and universities with respect to athletics" will be opposed by the athletic officials. Calling the financial obligations resulting from the guidelines "excessive and unreasonable," the NCAA urged its .members to voice their objections to their representatives in Congress. Proposals drafted by the College Football Association (CFA), an af- filiation of major collegiate football powers which has spent four years promoting a separate division for large schools, were consistently voted down. The smaller schools outnumbered the major powers at the convention. "It's the same old story," remarked one CFA official. The little guys are still telling the big guys how things are going to be." "But that doesn't seem so important with Title IX hanging over our heads," he added. Canham said he supports the separation of large and small schools in athletics because "you have small schools voting on policies which affect large schools." The delegates also voted at the con- vention to oppose red-shirting, which takes freshmen off the playing field but keeps them on the practice field, thus allowing them to participate in the sport for five years. "You're prolonging a kid's education," said Canham. "Four years is enough for anybody." The NCAA also voted in favor of the elimination of the "three-visit rule" in recruiting, which allows a scout to visit a prospect just three times. Canham supports "keeping it down to three, because this will prevent hounding of an individual." In other issues discussed at the con- vention: * The majority of the delegates urged that tougher academic requirements' for incoming athletes be dropped. Canham stated that.he is "obviously" in favor of the less stringent requirements. * Exclusive dormitories for football and basketball players were discouraged. "We couldn't possibly do that," said Canham. " Delegates rejected a proposal that scholarships for all sports except foot- ball and basketball be based on need. Canham said he does not agree with the measure, which was introduced by other Big Ten officials. The athletic officials also defeated a move to add assistant football coaches to each team. "We're satisfied," said Canham. THEY 54D HER ouster late Friday stemmed primarily from the commit- tee's strong criticism of Carter's anti- inflation program and its release of a statement critical of the President in advance of its meeting with Carter at the White House. "This is the sin committed by this committee. This is the sin committed by the chair of this committee," Abzug, the outspoken, longtime feminist leader, declared at a news conference here. The committee had claimed in its statement that the wage and price policy will be particularly harmful to women because many women already are at the bottom of the economic lad- der. AFTER THE resignations yesterday, the White House issued a statement urging tht panel's members to "con- tinue to serve" and to work with Carter because he considers them "individuals for whom he has great respect ... and confidence." Although not referring to Abzug by ,name, the White House statement said that Carter believes new leadership on the panel is necessary to create "a harmonious working relationship" between it and the administration. Abzug was informed of her dismissal Abzug at a meeting late Friday with presiden- tial advisers Hamilton Jordan and Robert Lipshutz. The word came only a matter of moments after Abzug had told reporters she felt the committee's hour-long meeting with Carter had gone well. AT THE NEWS conference yester- day, Abzug and more than half a dozen other committee members protested her ouster, but stopped short of saying the controversy might seriously affect Carter's expected re-election bid in 1980. 1 "If he gives his all for approval of the Equal Rights Amendment, it's going to be very difficult not to be for him," one resigning committee member said. She asked not to be identified publicly. Co-chairwoman Carmen Delgao Votaw, who announced her resignation shortly after Abzug was fired, said all but five of the committee members were surveyed by mid-day yesterday and resignations were received from 20, including herself. Canham Cambodians battle continuing invasion BANGKOK, Thailand (AP) - Rem- nants of the shattered Cambodian army fought rear-guard battles yesterday against a Vietnamese invasion force in northwestern Cambodia, Western sour- ces reported. Some retreating Cam- bodian units reportedly fled to the mountains to organize for an expected guerrilla war against the new Phnom Penh regime. The sources said the northwestern city of Siem Reap and possibly the nearby ancient temples of Angkor were captured by a mechanized Vietnamese infantry division backed- by tanks and air strikes. ONE VIETNAMESE regiment was reported to be attacking Battambang, Sunday * Actor John Wayne is making a "remarkable' recovery after surgery Friday that removed his cancerous stomach. See story, Page 2. Cambodia's second largest city and an airfield site, from the northwest, and another column was closing in from the southwest. Sisophon, a third key Vietnamese- held town in the area, is only about 340 miles from the border where Thai for- ces were on full alert, the sources said. The Chinese news agency Hsinhua, monitored in Tokyo, said Senior Deputy Premier Teng Hsiao-ping wanted closer relations with Thailand. "WE NOW HAVE good relations with Thailand, but closer cooperation is necessary in the light of Vietnamese aggression in Kampuchea," Hsinhua quoted Teng as saying. Kampuchea is another name for Cambodia. Sources said some of the defeated Cambodian troops were withdrawing southward to the rugged 6,500-foot Car- damom and Elephant mountain ranges of the southwest that have been the home of several rebel movements. They are near the coast and afford the best supply routes should China, backer of the defeated government, fulfill its promise of limited military aid for the ousted regime. The new pro-Vietnam Peoples Reonutionnrv Cnunoil in Phnnm DPnh "Here comes another Michigan winter," is perhaps what this disillusioned student is groaning to himself as he gazes out of a window in the Undergraduate Library yesterday. Old Man Win- ter had been taking it relatively easy until yesterday when he .A< dumped over four inches of snow and freezing rain on the city. 0a * Michigan cagersd drop their 1