SUNDAY DAILY See Editorial Page Y LW 4p 4Iaijj FALLING High-60 Low-35 Colder, partly cloudy, small chance of rain Vol. LXXXI, No. 10 Ann Arbor, Michigan - Sunday, September 13, 1970 Ten Cents Eight Pages Students start group0to back auto workers With the deadline for an auto strike less than 60 hours away, a group of students met yesterday to discuss methods of sup- porting the auto workers. The purpose of the group, which calls itself the Students to Support Auto Workers, is to "provide political and material support for the workers if they go on strike," accord- ing to Frank Shoichet, a spokesman for the group. In addition, Shoichet said, the organiza- tion "should raise in the mind of the com- munity the question of corporate control of the United States and take action along these lines." The group is recognized by Student Gov- ernment Council as a student organization and has its office'in the Student Activities N Bldg. According to SGC Executive Vice Presi- dent Jerry De Grieck, part of the group's funds will come from SGC, with the rest coming from a fund-raising campaign. One of the major activities planned by the !group is to bring a General Motors job recruiter to a public forum later this month. Another project is extensive research into. auto company involvement in the defense industry, with a view toward finding a way to stop it' : The group' also plans to distribute the in- formation through leaflet drives and meetings. The next meeting is scheduled for Tuesday at '7:30 p.m. in the SAB. Shoichet says the organization will try to set up contacts with the United Auto Workers (UAW). and sympathizers in other parts of the State. Meanwhile, negotiations for the UAW and the auto companies remain. far apart. The union has said that it will strike eitl'er GM or Chrysler, or both, if new con- tracts are not reached by midnight Mon- day, when the current three-year pacts expire. The two firms were picked as targets Sept. 2, the day after the companies made their first. offer. In amended offers made Thursday by Chrysler and Friday by GM, the average hourly wage was increased by 38 cents in the first year of the contract and by 13 cents in each of the last two years. The UAW announced they were lowering their wage demands for the first year of the new contract. Woodcock said the union was asking in- creases which would raise the average hourly wage from $4.02 to $4.65 in the first yea' of a three-year contract. That demand is down from the original wage demand calling for about a $1 -an hour average increase in the first year.~ Earlier yesterday, UAW President Leonard Woodcock met with his top bargainers from each of the Big Three firms to discuss the situation.3 -Daily-Denny Gainer HANK BRYANT. a member of the Black Economic Development League, discusses his organization's demands with members of the governing board of Congregation Beth Israel in the synagogue's office last night. Welfare groups rear ,accord with Beth Isre Guerri llas leaders co Forty hostages still held captive L . in 'special hotel' By Trie Associated Press The blasts that demolished three captive airliners in the Jordan desert provoked dis- sension in Arab ranks last night, as the central command of the guerrilla groups condemned the action. Forty hostages remained the captives of the Marxist guerrillas who emptied the three aircraft yesterday afternoon and set off ex- plosives which reduced $25 million worth of property to a pile of scrap. The action drew condemnation from the central committee for the 10 major guerrilla groups, which said it had called for release of all hostages, but the Popular Front for the Liberation of Palestine (PFLP)-prime mover behind the hijackings-was unco- operative. It warned of a strong stand against any further action that "harms the security of the revolution and turns it away from its true battle against Israel." A television broadcast inBeirut said the PFLP's membership in the committee had been suspended. While most of the 280 held hostage as of Friday night were freed, officials in Jordan and elsewhere expr'essed concern about 35 men and five Israeli girls who, according to a guerrilla spokesman, were retained at an undisclosed hiding place to reinforce de- mands for release for seven Arab commandos held in Europe. A fourth plane, worth $25 million, had been blown up at Cairo at the start of his- tory's worst week of air piracy. The con- certed actions by hijackers led the United States to start 'putting armed guards on some international flights. A spokesman for the PFLP stated cate- gorically no lives were lost in the Jordan explosions of a Trans World Airlines 707, a ONE 0] Swissair DC-8 and a VC-10 of British Over- in the J seas Airways Corp. (below) But he added, "This was the first step of our warning following the delay of the three P C Western governments to concede to ourem. terms." The front's original terms were that Bri- tain, Switzerland and West Germany had to release the Arab commandos in their cus- tody or the planes would be blown up with passengers still aboard. The Marxist guerrillas issued a new com- munique yesterday stating that about 40 By hija Israeli, British, Swiss, West German and dreds of American passengers-35 men and five Is- guerrillas raeli girls-were being detained as hostages. to disrupt Some would be held "for investigation," peacemaki the statement said, and theirs would be con- I sidered hostages "against our militants held It rema in these colonial lands." actually v It was unclear what the'front wanted the Arab peac United States to do. No member of the Arab in bad tr commando groups is known to be detained This is in this country. dicssi The guerrillas started releasing women Minister and children from the planes early yester- meet in W day and they were brought into Amman At leas aboard camouflaged army trucks. is the qu Except for men among the 40 hostages tions can who were taken to an undisclosed site, the which wo male passengers arrived in the Jordanian for it to t capital in a convoy of trucks. more abil One of them, Karl Werder of New York Palestinia City, said the remaining men were rounded Mrs. M up and held aboard the Swissair jet until 15 Washingtc minutes before explosions ripped the gleam- Israel's a ing airliners apart. violations "They had placed explosives, all kinds of arranged See GUERRILLAS, Page 8 effect Aug blast ndemn planes; action By CARLA RAPOPORT A three-day sit-in at the Congregation Beth Israel by two local welfare groups ended last night after the synagogue's gov- erning board recognized the groups' de- mands as legitimate and pledged their sup- port to the organizations. In the support statement, the b o a r d said it would discontinue its efforts to ob- tain a restraining order barring members of the Black Economic Development League (BEDL) and the Washtenaw County Wel- fare Organization (WRO) from t h e congregation's property. Such a restraining order is presently be- ing sought by other local churches, and a hearing on the case will resume Monday. In recent weeks, BEDL and WRO repre- sentatives have conducted sit-ins at many of these religious institutions to press for: -Immediate sums of money to provide school clothing for welfare recipients; -Authority to spend the monies at their determination; and -Recognition of BEDL and WRO as the legitimate, agents of the county's "p o o r, black and disenfranchised." While Beth Israel's statement did not pledge financial support to the groups, it did set up an open meeting for Sept. 20 when members of BEDL and WRO could make an "appeal to the congregation and any other interested members of the Jewish community." On Friday night, the Ann Arbor Society of Friends pledged an immediate $1,500 to the organizations following a meeting be- tween its congregation and the welfare groups. At the same time, it acknowledged the groups as "the legitimate" agents in the county "speaking and dramatizing the needs of the poor." The society also offered their building for a place where the welfare groups may "meet, talk and work in the immediate future." The Ann Arbor Unitarian Church recently pledged $10,000 to the groups. The core of BEDL and WRO's movement for monetary reparations from churches is the Black Manifesto, a document issued by several black leaders in April, 1969. The Manifesto seeks to link the nation's churches to the capitalist system, which, it says, has exploited "our minds, our bodies, our labor." ------------------- - -Associated Press F THE PLANES captured by Arab guerrillas, a VC-14 owned by BOAC, stands Jordanian desert (above) moments before it was blown up by the guerrillas f. 'ace talks jeopordized b id east ailin'~e hijckig Lloyd, Mosher-Jordan coed corridors draw praise from male, female occupants By The Associated Press News Analysis icking airlines and holding hun- passengers hostage, Palestinian have demonstrated 'their power t the politics and the policy of ing in the Middle East. ins to be seen whether they can wreck the U.S.-sponsored Israeli- e negotiations, which are already ouble for other reasons. certain to be a major topic of Sfor President Nixon and Prime Golda Meir of' Israel when they ashington this week. t as important in the long run estion of whether, the negotia- bring about a peace settlement uld be tolerable for Israel. And be tolerable, the Arab must show ity to influence or control the n guerrillas. eir's prime concern in coming to on in the next few days is with ccusations of military standstill by Egypt since the cease-f i r e by the United States went into . 8. By LINDA DREEBEN "This hall is so friendly, that if you close your door, people think you're being anti- social," says Morse Kalt, '73. describing the life at one of the two coed corridors in the University's residence halls. Kalt lives on the sixth floor of Alice Lloyd Hall, which, along with the second floor at Mosher-Jordan Hall, has been authorized by the Regents to house both male and female residents on an experimental basis. . Those involved in the experiment seem excited and enthusiastic while others are curious about how it will turn out. The coed corridor at Lloyd is actually an experiment within an experiment because the Pilot Program-a special academic pro- ject-is housed at the dorm. Because of the dorm's experimental nature, the students who live there seem to create an easy-going, innovative, atmosphere which is reflected on the coed corridor. The sixth floor is noisy, in part because all of the doors are open. The open doors aid the tourists-"gawkers," as they are called-who walk down the hall peering into rooms. And, although no one is, sure what relationship will be established between the students, most believe that the lack of privacy will cause the relationship to be well thought out. "Because of the lack of privacy you wouldn't want to get into an uncomfortable situation," says one sixth floor resident. "And you have to live next door to each other for the rest of the year," he adds. The residents of the sixth floor believe their corridor isthe most open and natural, with nothing forced or put on. "It's not a girls pajama party," says Leslie Grommet, '74. "When girls are together they're silly. We're silly together on this floor, but it's a different kind of silly." As a sophomore transfer student put it, "Take our openness. The other day a guy on the floor propositioned a girl living here, and she told him that she was sorry, but she doesn't sleep with friends." At Mosher- Jordan, the coed corridor is now in its second semester. Last semester's experience was not typi- cal because the students living on the floor had worked together to establish the floor and were already a tight knit group. As- whole building co-ed by corridor, but feels that the university should offer 3 dif- ferent types of living-coed floors, coed dorms, and single-sex dorms. The students living on the floor now are very positive about the idea. Joe Ricci, a sophomore who moved from West Quad says that so far "it has been a totally dif- ferent experience. You're sheltered in West Quad, living with 300 horny guys," he says, indicating his pleasure with the coed cor- ridor. The Israelis have called into question Egypt's good faith. and by implication they have questioned the motives of the Soviet Union as Egypt's chief arms supplier. Again U.S. officials realize the central is- sue for the Israeli government is whether any peace agreement that grew out of a violated cease-fire would itself be depend- able. A month ago the admittedly slender pros- pects for an Arab-Israeli settlement con- tributed nevertheless to the most hopeful Middle East mood that Washington and other Western capitals have experienced in more than three years. Now the actions of the hijackers and Is- rael's buildup of cease-fire violation charges against Egypt have chapged the mood of hope to one of deep, uncertainty and in- vested the whole outlook with a new sense of peril. The Palestinian commando groups de- clared their opposition to the U.S. peace plan immediately after it was accepted by Egypt and Jordan last month. It is widely agreed here that the central purpose of the guerrillas has been to try to undermine the cease-fire and create polit- ical pressue which would work against the success of the peace negotiations. They blew up one plane at the Cairo air port as a gesture against Egyptian President Gamal Abdel Nasser's involvement in the peace efforts. They operated in Beirut with- out regard to the concern of the Lebanese government over hijackings. They demon- strated in Jordan the inability of the gov- ernment of King Hussein to rule his own territory. While the widespread hijacking terrorism evidently was not anticipated by the Nixon administration, both the United States and the Soviet Union are known to have felt for months that the Palestinian commando or- ganizations, including Al Fatah and the Popular Front for the Liberation of Pales- tine, which pulled off the hijackings, con- stituted a growing threat to the possibility of achieving stability in the Middle East. EMU paper in, new dispute By JONATHAN MILLER The president of Eastern Michigan University and the EMU student newspaper, the Eastern Echo, have become involved in a dispute over a set of guidelines which the president has laid down for the paper. In a memo to the editors of the Echo, EMU President Harold Sponberg specified several conditions which the paper must meet if they are to be permitted to publish three issues per week, instead of two per week. The memo states that the advertising rate in the Echo must remain higher than the comparable rate in the Ypsilanti Press and the Ann Arbor News. In addition, the Echo can increase its amount of advertising and the number of pages it prints per week only with the permission of the EMU vice president for student affairs. Otherwise, it will not receive a subsidy from the university. However, permission was given for increasing the amount of pages during special events "such as homecoming." Ron Musial, editor of the Echo, feels that the restrictions placed on the Echo will be beneficial to the Panax Corp., which owns the Ypsilanti Press and other newspaper and radio stations throughout the state. If the expected expansion of EMU to 50,000 students within the next ten years is completed, the largest source of newspaper readers in Ypsilanti would be students. Sponberg was unavailable for comment on the Echo case. His secretary said that she did not know when the president would be available for an interview. She suggested calling EMU's News Bureau. Ralph Chapman, head of the News Bureau, said that his knowledge of the case was based solely on information that he had read in the Detroit Free Press and suggested calling Ralph Gilden, EMU's former acting vice president for student af- fairs. Gilden said that he was nn Inn-ar acting vie nresident and - ---- - i