FILM REGULATIONS NEEDED See Editorial Page lflfrA :4Iat WORSENING High-28 Low--22 See Today for. details Vol. LXXXIII, No. 119 Ann Arbor, Michigan-Thursday, February 22, 1973 Ten Cents Ten Pages rab jetliner downed by Israel . i , FYOU SEE NEWS HAPPENCAL7&6-DAY China trade expected Henry Kissinger has returned from his latest Asian tour, reportedly bearing an agreement to move U.S.-China relations forward. The general expectation, at least in Washington, is that a statement of a formal economic relationship between the two countries will be announced shortly.' The package is expected to include the establishment of trade missions in both coun- tries. Happenings .. . are lightweight, but fun. At 4:00 the International Cen- ter offers coffee, donuts and a chance to meet interesting people . .Project Outreach will be sponsoring a bucket drive today and tomorrow. All money collected will go to the Recreation Fund for the Maxey Boys Training School . . . Spaulding for Children, an adoption agency, is sponsoring a family-style spa- ghetti dinner today at 5 at the First Congregational Church in Chelsea . . . and tonight, the Wesley Foundation in the First United Methodist Church (Huron and State) is presenting a movie on the John Kennedy assassination at 7:30. Prison package entered LANSING-A package of bills which would allow prisoners to bargain collectively, vote by absentee ballot, and have sex with visiting spouses was introduced Tuesday in the state House of Representatives. Rep. Jackie Vaughn (D-Detroit), the sponsor of the prison package, hopes the bills will force prisons to "start treating inmates like human beings rather than animals." Priest in pinch MOUNT PLEASANT-Controversial priest Rev. Roger Duni- gan, a professor at Central Michigan University, will lose his post and the-support of his parishioners if he dares forsake his celibacy. Dunigan, who has announced plans to marry, wishes to continue his ministry. Last week, the bishop of Dunigan's dio- cese ordered the priest to leave the parish. And yesterday, pa- rishioners told Dunigan he has their full support-so long as he remains single. Berrigan blasts POWs PITTSBURGH - Rev. Philip Berrigan yesterday blasted America's homeward-bound POWs, calling them war criminals under "divine and human law." Berrigan also pledged that his antiwar activities would continue. "We still suffer from a war- dominated economy and a war budget, and it is still very much an issue throughout this country and the world," he said. Booze note CHICAGO - Five American and Danish psychiatrists say a study of adopted children who became alcoholics as adults sug- gests a tendency that the disease may be biologically inherited. They based their conclusion on a study of 133 adopted men, sepa- rated into two groups: Each man in the first group had at least one natural parent who had been diagnosed as alcoholic, Ho, ho, unph! DUBLIN, Calif. - In his idea of a joke, 220-pound Daniel Rivera of Oakland, Calif., attempted to slip down the chimney of a pizza parlor yesterday. Five hours later, three firemen managed to dislodge the rotund 28-year-old from the skinny chute and haul him to the roof. Rivers was booked for attempted burglary and released on $3,00 bond yesterday. Just a shot away ADELAIDE, Australia - A Rolling Stones concert was dis- rupted last night when 4,000 crazed, screaming fans tried to storm the stadium where the group was playing. During the hour-long riot which- ensued dozens of people, including four Aussie cops, were injured.Eighteen people were arrested, and damage was set in the thousands. On the inside . . .the Art Page introduces a new TV column entitled "Channels," written by Mike Harper and Ken Altshuler . . . A sad tale of love and loneliness by columnist Pete Hamill graces the Editorial Page . . . and the Sports Page tells us who invented the first football scoreboard. You'll never guess who's responsible. The weather picture More of the same, compadres. The skies should be fair to partly cloudy today with increasing cloudiness in the afternoon. The high temperature should climb no higher than 28 degrees. So much for outdoor activity. Tonight's low should be somewhere in the teens. TEL AVIV (Reuter)-A Libyan commercial airliner crashed into the storm- whipped Sinai Desert today after being intercepted and shot down by Israeli jets, leaving at least 74 people dead. An official announcement after an extraordinary cabinet meet- ing in Jerusalem last night said it had been established that the pilot of the Libyan Boeing had refused repeated orders to land. The Tri-Jet 727 had overflown s- Israelis attack 'Lebanion LEBANON (Reuter) - At least three large fires could be seen burning fiercely near the oil refinery town of Tri- poli early yesterday when Is- raeli forces returned from one of their heaviest land strikes on alleged Palestinian guer- rilla bases. The raids occurred more than 12 hours before a Libyan airliner crashed in the Sinai desert, killing about 70 people, after being inter- cepted by Israeli jets. In Nahr Al-Bared camp, eye- witnesses said, Palestinian man- dos put up a gallant fight when Israeli forces attacked two refugee camps. Refugees said the raiders landed from the sea tp attack this sprawl- ing camp on the Mediterranean coast and from helicopter the smaller Al-Beddawi camp, on higher ground to the south. It seemed obvious from offshore that the Palestinians and Lebanese had been taken completely by sur- prise by the large-scald operation in which the Israel's speedy French-built missile boats were used to take naval commandos and paratroops tothe target areas. The operation was the first major land, sea and air operation in two years-since a similar but smaller raid on the Sarafan area of south- ern Lebanon-and a senior Israeli officer told journalists that it was one of the most complicated since the 1967 Six-Day War. But as far as the correspondents could see, it went off like clock- work, despite the bright moon breaking through clouds and calm seas. The Israeli attack began at about 1 a.m. local time with an artillery barrage from two Israeli warships lying off the north Lebanese city of Tripoli. At about the same time, Israeli helicopters flew in from the seat to attack the two camps between Tripoli and the Syrian border. The Palestinian news agency (WAFA) said the Israeli troops ran into stiff resistance and had to be reinforced by about 350 men. The agency said guerrillas in the camps fought with machine-guns, hand grenades and in hand-to-hand combat, killing or wounding many of the invaders. The fighting must have been serious enough. Israel's official figures put their own casualties at eight wounded-two moderately and the rest lightly. They claim, however, that they killed dozens' of guerrillas. A senior officer told us the ob- jective of the operation was "to wipe out terrorist installations, to eliminate as many terrorists as possible and to bring back what- ever important evidence may be in the area." One commando, questioned by See ISRAEL, Page 10 a very sensitive military area and acted in a most suspicious manner, the announcement said. After its failure to heed all .broadcast warnings there was no alternative but to send up Israeli Air Force planes as a last resort. Egypt denied the Israelis made any attempt t6 contact the pilot. From Beirut came a report that the pilot of the airliner radioed for help and said: "We are finished. We have been hit by a rocket." The report came from a Beirut Airport spokesman who said a crew member of a Middle East Airlines aircraft, which had been flying behind the downed airliner, picked up the radio message. Israel announced its deep sor- row at the loss of life in the in- cident and Premier Golda Meir expressed regret. A sandstorm in the area may have driven the airliner off- course, observers said. The storm held up Israeli i-escue helicopters for more than two hours before they were able to take survivors to hospital. Thirteen people survived the crash but four died later. Tripoli radio reported one of the passengers was,$aleh Masoud Bousseir, a former Libyan for- eign minister and special ad- viser to President Muammar Kaddafi. The nine crew members com- prised four Frenchmen, a French stewardess, two Libyans and two Lebanese stewardesses. Earlier, an Israeli statement on the incident failed to make it clear whether the plane was forced down or shot down, and the situation was still confused hours later. The statement said when the aircraft did not comply to in- structions and to warning shots, it was intercepted by Israeli planes. The damaged aircraft landed within the Sinai area about 12 miles from the Suez Canal and crashed." Last night, the official an- nouncement: issued after the cab- inet meeting said it had been established that the Boeing pilot understood the Israeli signals but refused to obey. "The pilot of the Libyan plane observed the repeated warnings made in accordance with inter- national civil aviation practise. The Libyan plane's pilot even acknowledged that he had re- ceived repeated warnings and orders to land-but he refused to obey them," it said. However, the official Middle East News Agency broadcasting from Cairo denied the Israelis made any attempt to contact the pilot. The agency added Egypt would make a full record of the downing of the plane available to world associations investigating the in- cident. The plane deviated from its course because of a navigational See ISRAELI, Page 10 Jet downing pits Kadafi, Israelis Reuters News Analysis LONDON - The shooting down of a Libyan airlineer by, Israeli planes throws Libya's powerful leader, Col. Muammar Kadafi, into direct confrontation with Israel. Kadafi has been completely uncompromising in his anti-Israeli stance. But Libya is hundreds of miles from the front lines in the Israeli-Arab conflict. Now the question hanging over the Middle East is what action, if any, the Libyan leader will take to avenge the loss of the airliner and its 74 victims. With his country's oil riches to back him, Kadafi has helped the Palestinian effort very substantially. Last month, for instance, a man introduced in a German television program-as a leading member of the Al Fatah guerrilla organization said the colonel had been contributing AP Photo THIS IS A FILE photograph of a Libyan Boeing 727 jetliner of the type shot down by Israeli war- planes over the Sinai desert yesterday. By last night, early morning Middle East time, no photographs were available from the crash site where at last 70 passengers died when the plane made a forced landing. MORNING AFTER PILL: FDA approvesDE By AP and UI'I WASHINGTON-The Food and Drug Admin- istration (FDA) will approve the so-called "morning after" use of the controversial drug diethylstibestrol (DES), FDA Commissioner Charles Edwards said yesterday. The decision was made on the basis of a unanimous recommendation from an FDA Advisory Panel to change the drug's status from "experimental" to "emergency" accord- ing to Edwards. A labelling revision is under- way, Edwards said. (DES has been dispensed here under the auspices of the University Health Service. Use of the "morning after pill" at the Health Service has drawn fire from local women who charge the drug can cause cancer. Belita Cowan, local DES opponent and editor of Herself magazine charged yesterday that the FDA decision was a result of pressure from doctors and pharmaceutical companies. "DES is still a dangerous and experimental drug," Cowan said.) Edwards told the Senate yesterday that "there is no evidence for a significant risk" to -women under prescribed dosages. "However," he added, "because the possi- bility of a harmful effect on the fetus either from a pregnancy existing at the time of treatment, from a previous sexual exposure, or resulting from a patient failure during treatment, an early abortion induced by con- ventional means should be seriously considered even though an action of this kind on the fetus is not known to exist." - DES was banned as an animal feed additive last year because it causes cancer, and illegal residues remained in the liver of slaughtered beef cattle. some 30 million dollars a year to Black September, one of the most militant Arab groups. Last month, too, the Libyan pro- government newspaper Al Balagh said in Tripoli that Libya had "suc- ceeded in wrecking the relations between Israel and some African countries." Five African countries -Uganda, Chad, Congo, Niger and Mali-have broken off relations with Tel Aviv. But the devoutly Moslem leader has on occasion disagreed with other Arab leaders on the attitude to take toward the conflict with Israel. Last month, Colonel Kadafi de- - cided to withdraw Libyan volun-. teers from the Palestine resistan:e movement. The reason appeared to be a fundamental difference between Libya and other Arab states on a possible peace agreement wish Is- rael. Tripoli radio quoted the colonel as saying in a speech that the vol- unteers-the number was unspeci- fied - were being brought home because of the lack of "serious action" on the Palestinian front at that moment. They had been on the Palestinian front for little more than a year. The colonel made his position clear. There could be no question of working out a solution with 13- rael based on a modification of the frontiers, with Israel retaining any Arab territory. Nations react to tragedy By AP and Reuters Arab countries erupted in out- rage over the action by Israeli warpanes that forced a Libyan passenger jetliner to crash-land yesterday. The nonaligned group of coun- tries at the United Nations in New York issued a denunciation. U.N. Secretary-General Kurt Waldheim expressed his "shock and condo- lences" to Libya over the incident that resulted in at least 74 deaths, and his "regret a'nd concern" to Israel by way of their missions at the United Nations. At an unannounced 35-minute m e e t i n g, Dr. Abdel Meguid, Egypt's U.N. representative, also drew Waldheim's attention to a statement issued earlier in Cairo charging that four Israeli fighter aircraft opened fire on the plane without warning and in violation of all international regulations. The Cairo statement said that since the jetliner had been on a See WORLD, Page 10 SGC to hold hearing on rules for campus films Appeals court voids Harrison BAM strike assault conviction i i I, I. By PAUL TRAVIS jAn open hearing in the offices of the Student Government Coun- cil at 7:30 tonight will be the scene of a showdown in SGC's at- tempt to regulate campus film groups. The regulations proposed by SGC have run head-on into stiff oppo- sition from Friends of Newsreel, a local film group, which describes the proposed regulations as "an SGC power grab." SGC President Bill Jacobs, how- ever, maintains the new rules are needed to prevent film; distribu- tors and students from being de- ceived by unfair or fraudulent~ practices. "We need some way of checking where the student's mon- ey is going," Jacobs said. Under the new rules, student or- ganizations can show films only if theyare licensed by the Student Organizations Board (SOB). To obtain a film license a stud- ent organization would have to be registered for at least two months and submit a form listing the group's officers. State court approves union for 'U' interns By DAVID STOLL A new state Supreme Court ruling gives University Hospital interns and residents the right to bargain collectively as public employes. It appears doubtful, however, whether the University Michigan Interns-Residents Association, which won the decision, will move to take advantage of its new rights. The position of interns and residents at the hospital has improved to such an extent, according to association president Dr. Jay Harness, thtfra 1 ini5tn ba o upnnl tracts between the film distributorI and the organization within 30 days following the film showing, and -Turning in a form after each film showing detailing the number of persons attending and the amount of money received. These regulations are necessary, according to SGC officers, because film distributors have been com- plaining that campus groups cheat on attendance figures - the basis on which the distributors commis- sions are determined. Rich Glatzer, a board member of the Cinema Guild, a campus film group, said last night there is a "need for somebody to be respon- sible (for the film groups). Right now, nobody is." Glatzer said, however, he did not feel the proposed regulations would work. By REBECCA WARNER The Michigan Court of Appeals has reversed the controversial 1971 conviction of Trotter House head Thaddeus (T.R.) Harrison on charges of felonious assault on a police detective at a demonstration which took place during the Black Action Movement (BAM) strike in the spring of 1970. The four-judge panel released Tuesday an opin- ion which concurred with claims by Harrison' deMfense that Prnocutnr Thnna Shea acted im- prove he was innocent, rather than on the prose- cution to prove he was guilty," Leitson said. "I'm very happy the decision was reversed," Harrison remarked yesterday, "but I'm not cer- tain that it's all over yet." He stressed that the prosecutor has the option of re-trial. H-arrison, who is now a part-time law student. would have been ineligible for certification as a lawyer if the felony conviction had remained on his record. i Th.CnR w,,,u-,cmerhersre an- I Qe"' D'w' ""''t' "i~""' N "c " d that formal unionization may not come a out. pointed by SGC would grant li- censes with automatic review by The court ruling, which was handed dov SGC. There are no specific criteria legal battle which began several years agov set down for deciding whether to istration refused to bargain with the associate wn Tuesday, ends a long when the hospital admin- ion for higher wages. ... .. ..... ...... ...... .....