Thursday, September 20, 1973 I HE MIt,.NIbAN URILY wage 1Ihree Thursday, September 20, 1973 il-IL MILt-1l(~AN UAILY Hussein releases guerilas Amnesty seen as deal for ending Jordon, isolation BEIRUT (Reuter) - Jordan yesterday released the bulk of its political prisoners - mostly Pales- tinian commandos - under a sweeping amnesty which has been generally welcomed in the Arab world. Despite a cool reception from the Palestine resistance movement it- self - which declared it would not be deceived by King Hussein's ges- ture - the amnesty has been seen by Arab commentators as an im- portant step in a new campaign to rebuild Arab unity. The king himself personally supervised the release Tuesday) night of the first prisoners, includ- ing Mohammed Daud Odeh ("Abu Daud"), the controversial Fatah . leader. The remainder of the detainees -754 in all, according to official Jordanian sources - were being freed yesterday from the seven scattered prisons where they have been held. Most of them have been in de- tention since the Jordanian army closed down the guerrillas bases in heavy fighting during 1970 and 1971. Relatives milled around and danced outside Mahatta Central Prison in Amman to see the first of them freed. Early yesterday morning, con- voys began bringing out other de-I tainees from the desert prison camp of Al-Jafr. Two ,other Fedayeen leaders were among the first released: Sa- leh Raafat of the popular Demo- cratic Front for the Liberation of Palestine (PDFLP) and HamdiI Matar of the Popular Front for the Liberation of Palestine (PFLP). There was no immediate official Arab comment on the amnesty, but newspaper editorialists agreed that the motive for King Hussein's de- cision lay in the talks he had in Cairo last week with the presi- dents of Egypt and Syria, rather than in any new spirit of friend- ship for the Fedayeen. Commentators said the amnesty was clearly part of a deal to bring Jordan back into the Arab camp after a period of isolation in pro- test against Amman's treatment of the commandos. Most of them saw the amnesty as the king's major concession in the deal, in exchange. for the re- sumption of diplomatic relations by Egypt, announced last week, and with Syria, expected shortly. Some reports said the king must have received assurances from Egypt and Syria that they would restrain the commandos from con- tinuing to attack Jordan. They noted that the Syrians have al- ready closed down an anti-Jordan guerrilla radio station. The only reaction so far by the commandos has been the comment Tuesday night by the Palestine news agency: "We will not be de- ceived ... once again we say that the system of oppression in Am- man will not be changed." Daily Official Bulletin Thursday, September 20 DAY CALENDAR Engineering Dept.: Slide lecture on improving efficiency in the library, Transportation Lib., 3rd fl., UGLI, 10 am. Mental Health Res. Inst.: J. Diamond, McMaster Univ., "The Control of Nerve Territory By AXoplasmic Fastors," MH- RI Rm., 1057, 3:45 pm. Grad. Sch. of Business Administra- tion: J. Duesenberry, "Can We Control Inflation?" Hale Aud., 4 p.m. Nuclear Seminar: H. Griffin, "Report on the 3rd Internat'i Symposium on the Physics & Chemistry of Fission," P-A Colloquium Rm., 4 pm. Speech - Communication Dept.: R. Forston, "Intercultural Nonverbal Com- mnunication: Latin American, Black, & White American," Rackham, W. Conf. Rmi,. 7 pm." Michigan Women in Science: Work- shop on career & family, Rackham As- sembly Hall, 4th fl., 8 pm. Chemistry Lecture: A. Bader, Al- drich Chem. Co., "The Chemistry of Art," 1210 Chem. Bldg., 8 pm. GENERAL NOTICES ATTENTION STUDENTS: Sept. 21, 5:00 p.m. is the last date for the Fall Term' when the Registrar's Office will: a. Accept the Student 100 per cent Withdrawal Notice for refund pur- poses. (Excluding a $50.00 disenrollment fee.) b. Allow refund for the student who reduces hours of course credit. Oct. 19, 5:00 p.m. is last date for the Fall Term when Registrar's Office will allow refund for a 50 per cent With- drawal. Nixon wage veto upheld by House WASHINGTON (YP) - The House has upheld Nixon's veto of a bill increasing the minimum wage to $2.20 an hour and extending cov- erage to 7 million new workers, in- cluding household maids. The 259-164 vote yesterday was 23 votes short of the two-thirds ma- jority needed to override its veto. It gave Nixon a perfect six-for-six batting average in vetoes sustained this year. The White House issued a state- ment saying President Nixon was gratified by the House action. The statement continued: "It is now up the Congress to replace the vetoed bill this year with a new bill which will bring the minimum wage in line with the increased cost of living while doing so in a way that helps to check inflation and that protects jobs for low-in- come workers." Nixon vetoed the bill on grounds it would increase unemployment and add to inflationary pressures. The bill would have hiked the minimum wage from $1.60 an hour to $2 this year and $2.20 next year. Nixon's reasons were called "a mockery" by Majority Leader Thomas O'Neill Jr. (D-Mass.) who said workers at the $2.20 level would barely be able to sustain life. Rep.tCarl Perkins (D-Ky.) said more than half the states provide welfare payments higher than the proposed minimum wage. A determined lobbying effort by organized labor was unable to cut deeply enough into the conserva- tive opposition to produce a two- thirds majority. Fifty - one Republicans sided against the administration and vo- ted to override. But 29 Democrats offset the loss, joining with 135 Re-' publicans to give Nixon a com- fortablemargin. M The vote, which wiped out a three-year effort in Congress to in- crease the minimum wage, last raised in 1966, left the future of the legislation in doubt. Nixon and most Republicans who took part on the debate said they! would support a more moderate bill and urged the Democrats on the Education and Labor Commit- tee to bring one out promptly. Microscopes... STUDENT, MEDICAL & PROFESSIONAL Lowest Discount Prices University Optics, Inc. 761]-0430 J o rsc I 1,4 &',lvct*J l _ dtx oi (I1i AP Photo CARL GUSTAF officially becomes King of Sweden as Minister of Justice Lennart Geljer administers the oath yesterday. King Gustaf, 27, succeeds his grandfather King Gustaf VI Adolf, who died Saturday. Sweden hals new king; natinalarties clash AN EVENING OF MIME c STOCKHOLM (Reuter) - King political crisis for years, after the Carl XVI Gustaf, the World's ruling socialist and opposition par- youngest monarch took the throne ties dead-heated in parliament in of Sweden yesterday as the Social Democrats, the party which has ruled the nation for 41 years, faced a probable deadlock in parliament after Sunday's general election. The nation took time off from vote counting to watch as the 27- year-old king, a stocky, boyish fi- gure in his admiral's uniform and ermine robe, briefly took the throne in the palace's marble hall. Like his grandfather King Gus- tav Adolf, who died Saturday aged 90, the King dispensed with a for-, mal coronation. He told Sweden's eight million people that his reign would reflect the needs of his na- tion's contemporary society. The King came to the throne with his country locked in its biggest the elections. For many in Sweden, the younig; king's accession ceremony was a symbol of unity in the midst ofl change and a welcome relief fromi party politics. As the last votes were beingf counted yesterday officials said a deadlock of 175 seats each for theI socialist and opposition blocs was now virtually certain. But political experts predicted that if the deadheat were confirm- ed the opposition would demand+ the government's resignation when+ its present term of office expires at the end of the year. The Social Democrats lost seven seats in Sunday's poll and their support from the Swedish elector- ate has now fallen from over 50 per cent in 1968 to 33.7 per cent. Prime Minister Olaf Palme is hoping to stay in power with the help of the Communists, whose 19 seats put the depleted Social Dem- ocrat group on level terms with the combined Center, Conserva- tive and Liberal parties. The 46-year-old prime minister has so far rejected anysuggestion of quitting and agreeing to new elections in the spring. For further information call 764-0450 from 10 a.m. to 5 p.m. Mon.-Fri. Tickets available Mendelssohn Tht. Box Office & Fishbowl "---------------mm m m -m ---------m i--- "r r i--------- i----m ir--- m----- MAIL ORDER FORM AN EVENING OF MIME with C. W. METCALF (Please Print) NAME ADDRESS_ No. tickets Price ea. TOTAL Total amount enclosed Lm a THE MICHIGAN DAILY Volume LXXXIV, No. 13 Thursday, September 20, 1973 is editedand managed by students at the University of Michigan. News phone1 764-0562. Second class postage paid at Ann Arbor, Michigan 48106. Published daily Tuesday through Sunday morning during the University year at 420 May- nard Street, Ann Arbor, Michigan 48104. Subscription rates: $10 by carrier (cam- pus area); $11 local mail (Michigan and Ohio); $12 non-local mail (other states and foreign). Summer session published Tuesday through Saturday morning. 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