Thursday, January 30, 1975 THE MICHIGAN DAILY PQge Three TH..HGAAL Pg he AP Photo A TEAM OF demolition experts delicately rem ove a bomb from a government buildjag in Oak- land, California. Members of the leftist group, Weather Underground, claimed responi bility for the bomb. Demolition experts detonate ticking bomb in Oakland. PLO un By AP and Reuter The Palestine Liberation Or- ganization unveiled on Wednes- day a "correction center" where it said it holds 70 Pales- tinians disciplined by the or- ganization. It was the first eyewitness re- port of such a jail although the PLO has been claiming for some time that it is discipliningI dissident guerrillas by using itsI own courts and prisons. Ziad Abdel Fattah, an official of the PLO news agency Wafa, conducted newsmen on a tour of the prison, a converted two-I story villa in the farming vil- lage of Manoura, 10 miles out-; side Damascus. Abdel Fattah claimed the Manoura prison was only one of several PLO penal institutions. He said the 70 prisoners at Manoura were being held for various offenses "from drunkenness to spying for Israel." IN GENERAL, however, littleI is known about the fate of Arab hijackers and terrorists, many of whom have been freed from jails around the world by Pales- tinian gunmen. Some have been turned over to the PLO, but few are thought to be inprison. The Manoura prison was guarded by members of the PLO's internal police force armed with automatic weapons and pistols. Two prisoners introduced to the newsmen were identified as Chawkat Youssef and Youssef " Saleh Hassan. Abdel Fattah said they were members of a Cl THE MICHIGAN DAILY e Volume LXXXV, No. 100 Thursday, January 30, 1975 is edited and managed by students e at the University of Michigan. News phone 764-0562. Second class postage g paid at Ann Arbor, Michigan 48106. Published d a i 1 y Tuesday through Sunday morning during the Univer- :r sity year at 420 Maynard Street, Ann Arbor, Michigan 48104. Subscription rates: $10 by carrier (campus area); 0$11 local mail (Michigan and Ohio); S non-local mail (other states and e foreign). n Sumnmer session published Tues- day through Saturday morning. Subscription rates: $5.50 by carrier n(campus area); $6.00 local mail (Michigan and Ohio); $6.50 non. local mail (other states and foreign) five-man group captured in the Persian Gulf sheikhdom of Du-{ bai last September. ABDEL FATTAH said they were planning to hijack a Brit- ish jetliner at Dubai and holdI the passengers hostage for jail- ed Palestinian guerrillas in other countries, but were caught before they acted. The Palestinian spokesman said the five were sentenced to 7 to 15 years in prison under a PLO code drawn up in 1974. He said the code includes the death penalty for crimes like hijack- ing. In another development in the tense Middle East situation, President Anwar Sadat an- nounced yesterday that Egypt would buy French Mirage fight- er - bombers to build up its de- pleted air force, but he also said that for the first time in 26 years peace was now possi- ble in the Middle East. THE SITUATION in the Mid-I dle East remained explosive, he said, and to defuse it Israel would have to withdraw on all three fronts: Sinai, the Golan Heights and the west bank of the Jordan River. Egypt was ready to sign a peace agreement and accept Is- rael's right to live inside guar-I anteed borders, he said. President Sadat, who com- pleted two days of talks here with French President Valery! Giscard D'Estaing Tuesday, told a news conference before RACING BIG IN JAMAICA KINGSTON, Jamaica (P) - Horse racing is popular in Ja- maica. The best course in the country is at Caymanas Park, considered to be one of the most beautiful in the Carib- 'bean. It is located seven miles from Kingston and has racing most weekends through the year. leaving for home yesterday that France had agreed to sell Egypt its Mirage F-1 combat air- craft. T H E EGYPTIAN leader declined to specify how many of the supersonic French air- planes Egypt would buy, but said the number would be far less than the 120 estimated by some officials here as the max- imum needed to make up Egypt's losses during the Octo- ber, 1973 war. The Egyptian leader said in: response to a question that he agreed with the view of U. S. Secretary of State Henry Kis- singer that the Israeli and Egyptian positions on a peace settlement were reconcilable, but re-emphasized that Israel must be ready to achieve peace. iveils prison N A Series of Informal Talks/Discussions on MINI-COURSE 411 Succession Crises-East and West LECTURE BY GREY HODNETT, York University "AFTER BREZHNEV, WHO?- Succession in the Soviet Union" FRIDAY, Jan. 31-4:00 pOm. Room 200-LANE HALL For sign-up information, please contact the Center for Russian and East European Studies, 764-0351 BITEHNI OAKLAND, Calif. (I)-Helmeted demolition experts placed a ticking bomb in a metal tub, carried the device into the street, then set it off with an explosion yesterday that rocked the area around the federal building. "That's it! That's the big one!" police officers yelled after the blast. No one was injured. "IT WAS TICKING. When they moved it first, it stopped ticking. Then they moved it again, and it started again," said Charles Nixon, spokesman for the Alcohol, Tax and Firearms office here. The bomb, in an attache case, had been planted in the George Miller Federal Building here. The demolition men placed the bomb in the protective metal tub suspended by ropes. Then they gingerly carried the tub outside, removed the bomb, covered it with metal blankets, and set it off.i An estimated 10 to 15 pounds of explosives were packed in the attache case. THE LEFTIST, antiwar Weather Underground had claimed responsibility for pl inting th device on the seventh floor. Agents found the bomb ticking in The attach case above the false ceiling panels in a seventh floor Navy office. They had entered t'e building -scene of violent antiwar protests ii i the 1960; against the Armed Forces Inducti on Centei housed there-shortly after 6 a.m. An explosives-sniffing dog from the San Mate( County sheriff's office became agitat ed on th( seventh floor but could not pinpoint th a locatior of the bomb, Nixon said. RECENTRALIZATION as a Desirable Pattern of Socio-economic Evolution by PETER VAN DRESSER What patterns of settlement, resource-use and technology would best promote ecological adaptation by society? Can an organization of com- petent, self-provisioning communities and regionol groupings sustain them- selves primarily by skilled and conservative management of biotic pro- cesses and flow-energies, rather than by overdraft on fossil fuels and high-energy technics? Mr. Van Dresser, together with Florence Van Dresser at the first three sessions, will explore the answers to these questions. I It was found in a 728 which houses Agency. ceiling panel outs ide Room the Defense Ccntracting i; i r 1 Korean boats sunk on Mekong River I PHNOM PENH, Cambodia ({) -- Rebel Khmer Rouge gunners sank two fuel tankers and set another ablaze Wednesday as a 16-vessel convoy sought to run the Mekong River "shooting gal- lery" with supplies for the blockaded Cambodian capital of Phnom Penh, port authorities reported. The officials had no imme- diate casualty reports from the attacks. However, shipping sources said most of the crew- men from the sunken ships were rescued by Cambodian navy boats escorting the con- voy through the gantlet of fire from gunners entrenched on the river banks. TWO SOUTH K 0 R E A N tankers, the Boo Hoeung 7 and Han Soeung 2, were sunk by insurgent fire five miles up- river from Neak Luong naval base and 32 miles southeast of the capital, the sources said. The Vira 4, registered in Pana- ma and Hong Kong-owned, was' set on fire, the sources added.; The convoy of five freighters,I four fuel tankers and seven barges was the third and larg-' est to attempt the run to be- leaguered Phnom Penh since Khmer Rouge forces blocked the Mekong River lifeline a month ago. All roads into the capital have been cut for months, and the insurgents con- trol about 40 miles of the river banks beginning at a point 15 miles southeast of Phnom Penh. Growi hg Up Jewish in 20th Century Germany ANOTHER HILLEL WEEKEND RETREAT Friday, Fe b. 7-Sunday, Feb. 9 { at Camp Tamarak WITH RESOURCE Pf OPLE: DR. ALFRED JOSF 'E DR. ALFRED MEYER PROF. YEHUDAH REINHARZ DR. MAX KAPUSTIN COST $12.50 CALL 663-3336 SPON O! ED BY U. OF MICHIGAN AND MI CHIGAN STATE HILLEL'S " V ~AN ALL.NEWS' MUSICAL REVUE EAST QUAD AUD. &OOPM. ADVANETICKETSAM A P76H696 6-PM - A PEAtCHY CREAMY PRcADucTION DATE Tuesday, Jan. 28 Wednesday, Jan. 29 Thursday, Jan. 30 Wednesday, Feb. 5 Thursday, Feb. 6 Friday, Feb. 7 Sponsored and financially supported by Survival-Plus Seminar; College of Architecture and Urban Planning; Douglas and Margaret Crary; Office of Ethics and Religion; UAC Future Worlds: Pilot Program; Program in Engineering for Public Systems; Residential College; Science, Technology, and Future Societies Faculty Seminar. TIME 3:15-5:00 3:15-5:00 7:30-10:00 3:15-5:00 7:30-10:00 3:15-5:00 PLACE Rackham Amphitheatre Residential Coll. Ad. Rackham Amphitheatre 2104 Art & Arch. Bldt.(N.C.) Rackham Amphitheatre Residential Coll. Aud. t __ , i i WON" e Dr. Bop arid the Headliners featuring THE WCHITE RAVEN FP ~y V ______ 1 ' n'r"- y I THURY DAY, JAN. 30 DOORS OPEN 8:00 MEMBERSHIP CARD $2.50 public, $2.00 students It's our move now CHANCES ARE 5'I6E. LIBERTY SOPH SHOW UAC TRAVEL IUniversity Activities Center > is now accepting applications for Pee1975-1976 Senior Officer positonsZ resident* Coordinating Vice President v * Chief Financial Officer " Public Reirtions 9 Vice Preeslent WANTED: Students to maintain a c rea tive and It takes a special breed of cat... to work for Scott. All are carefully hand picked, with backgrounds as diverse as you'would expect to find in a company that encourages individuality and initiative. But they all share one thing in common. They demand excellence, of themselves and of SCOTT. For each of them, SCOTT has been a good place to grow. To explore new opportunities, divisions and functions. And to match their skills against new challenges. Our decentralized management system puts every employee right where he or she can learn and con- tribute the most . . right where decisions are made, problems solved and opportunities explored. It's not likely that any organization, large or small, will have everything you're looking for. But if the basics are there, an important deciding factor should be whether you'll have the opportunity to shape your own career in a way that suits your talents, interests and needs, as well as the organization's goals.