FOURTH WARD See Editorial Page £ LIE iE~ai1I SPIFFY High- T 25ys Low-6° See Today for details Vol. LXXXVIII, No. 117 Ann Arbor, Michigan-Sunday, February 19, 1978 Ten Cents 10 Pages Plus Supplement 'Palestinian' assassins lost over South Yemen . LARNACA, Cyprus (AP) - Two as- sassins gunned down prominent Egyp- tian editor Youssef el Sabae>i yesterday and then flew from this Mediterranean island aboard a Cypriot jetliner with 11 male hostages and a plane crew of four. But country after country refused the craft permission to land and with its fuel apparently exhausted early Sun- day the fate of the plane was unknown. THE TWIN-ENGINED jet had flown toward South Yemen. A Cypriot gover- nment official said early Sunday that South Yemen authorities "have closed the airport (in Aden, South Yemen) and refused to let the plane land." "It only has half an hour left of fuel," the official said at 4:15 a.m. Sunday, local time (9:15 p.m. EST). Aden radio, in a brief broadcast monitored tin Cyprus, said, "The Foreign Ministry continues to refuse to permit any such plane to land."' But it did not say where the craft might be. Cypriot authorities earlier had vowed not to allow the terrorists safe passage off this Mediterranean island unless they freed all the hostages. One freed hostage, George Batal of Lebanon, said the terrorists told their captives, "Everybody who went to Israel with Sadat will die, including Sadat." Sebaei, board chairman and editor-in chief of the Cairo daily Al Ahram, ac- See ASSASSINS, Page 10 Carter may choose to take over mines WASHINGTON (AP) - The United Mine Workers union s Bargaining Council rejected a revised industry con- tract proposal yesterday and Labor Secretary Ray Marshall said the Carter administration "will take appropriate action in the immediate future" to deal with the effects of the 75-day coal strike. Marshall, who has been conducting almost nonstop negotiations for two days in an attempt to end the strike, confirmed a temporary federal take- over of the coal mines is an option the administration is considering. A TEMPORARY takeover of the mines, which would be unprecedented, was one of three options presented to the president by Labor Secretary Ray Marshall for use in the event negotiations fail, according to admini- stration sources. Although no details were given, under a takeover the government presumably would set wages and benefits high enough to get miners back to' work while negotiations proceeded. A takeover of the mines would re- quire congressional legislation, the sources said, adding that to be effec- tive, congressional action would have to come quickly. THE OPTION paper also listed bind- ing arbitration to settle the dispute and invoking the strike-stopping provisions of the Taft-Hartley Act, which calls for an 80-day "cooling off" period. Binding arbitration also would require congres- sional action. A temporary government takeover was listed as "a very serious option," by one source. "We're not playing games," he said. Marshall said the industry proposal "certainly seemed to be" the coal oper- ators final offer when she was negoti- ating with them. "AS OF NOW it looks like it's not possible for us to have a negotiated set- tlement, " Marshall said. No time was set for resumption of negotiations. Bargaining council action is necessary before a contract is sub- mitted for rank-and-file ratification. One union source who asked not to be'. identified charged the industry with "a double cross." THERE HAD BEEN signs of; progress in the negotiations Friday as the Carter administration let it bey known a temporary federal seizure of: the mines was "a very serious option": See TAKEOVER, Page 10 MSA tests charter in Wednesday vote AP Photo A Pennsylvania state trooper stands guard outside.the Pennelec power plant in Shawville, Pa. Scores of troopers were there to control about 400 UMW pickets, while the power company was bringing in non-union coal. GARDNER ACKLEY PROFESSES: Carter' By DONNA DEBRODT Former chairman of the President's Council of Economic Advisors- Gardner Ackley has good news for President Carter; not only will a modified form of his tax proposal pass Congress in time for 1978 tax returns, but the economy is in far better shape than most people think.. Ackley, currently an economics professor at the University, said in art interview Tuesday, "Congress will act reasonably promptly on the proposal .. . even if the bill is enacted retroactively it will still mean tax cuts for the last quarter of this year." Carter's tax proposal, intended to boost the economy, includes several controversial tax reforms along with the $25 billion dollar tax cut. Thee reforms are designed to limit tax shelters and deductions for the wealthy. CRITICS HAVE claimed the bill budgeti would not provide the expected stimula- tion of the economy, and the reforms could delay the bill's passage. But Ackley, who engineered tax cut programs under both the Kennedy and Johnson administrations, believes that "A tax-cut is one of the best ways to stimulate the economy." Furthermore, he does not see the re- forms as being a problem in holding up the bill's passage, "some of the reforms have about a fifty-fifty chance of get- ting through. Congress will throw out some of the reforms that are unpopular with the big, powerful groups, the net reduction in taxes will go up to about $30 billion, and Carter will take it." ACKLEY also predicted that the con- troversial "businessman's lunch" reform - that would cut entertainment expense deductions for businesses in half - would not go through, because of vill be ratified' By MARK PARRENT University students will be asked to decide the fate of two proposed amen- dments to the All-Campus constitution Wednesday. The amendments concern reorganization of election structure of MSA and a provision for the direct elec- tion of MSA president and vice- president. Constitutional amendments require two-thirds approval from students voting. Any University student with a validated ID card may vote in the elec- tion. The first proposed amendment would alter the composition of the Michigan Student Assembly, while the other would provide for a directly elected MSA president and vice-president. MSA is presently comprised of .18 at- large representatives and a representa- tive appointed from each of the 'U's 17 schools and colleges. The appointed members are chosen by their school's government. The proposed structure calls for students of each school to elect their own representatives, the number from each school depending on the number of students enrolled. A school would get one representative for each 1,150 students enrolled. Schools with less than 575 students would be en- titled to one representative, but the rep- resentative would have only one-half vote on the Assembly. A SIMILAR change was approved by students in the last MSA election, but, Central Student Judiciary ruled the amendment unconstitutional. John. Gibson, MSA representative and author 4t "'It (direct electon) helps to egiminate needless factioonal- ism," saidI John Gibson, re- ferring to e fjorts by presidenu- tial aspirant s to obtain sup portx .frot Assentblyti men hers." of the plans, believes the parts to which CSJ objects have been corrected. MSA student general counsel Jasper DiGiuseppe asked CSJ for an advisory opinion before students vote on the proposed amendments, but he said CSJ declined to review the plan. It is therefore feasible CSJ could again throw out the plan even if studen- See MSA, Page 2 "pressure from both the restaurant business and business in general." The proposed reforms "are fairly modest - some of these are throw- aways, although they are all things that Carter, and I, would like to see passed." Ackley, who served on the Council of Economic Advisors from 1962 to 1968, is optimistic about the economy as a whole. In spite of the slumping stock market which has characterized Carter's first year in office, Ackley points out, "The stock market is not the economy - it measures a particular segment of the economy which affects few people directly." "On the whole, the economy is moving steadily upward, a situation we have been in since the recession trough of 1975. Unemployment is down, real income per capita is increasing; overall the economy is fairly healthy," he said. The' HRP: Thriving in Ypsilanti McIntyre asks Dems to back Carter budget By KEITH RICHBURG Jimmy Carter's acting budget director James McIntyre came to Detroit yesterday to sell the President's economic package to the economic advisory council to State Democrats. Speaking before a group of economists, 'businesspersons and Democratic politicos, including three University Regents, McIntyre defended the Carter economic package and praised the 1979 fiscal budget he helped to prepare.' "THE PRESIDENT'S recently an- nounced economic package will keep us prosperous, bring more fairness to our tax system and help us trim inflation," McIntyre said. "The President's economic package is sound, sensible, Sunday " Indiana beats Michigan, 71-59. Read all about it on Page 9. " When Oliver Lake and Julius Hemphill get into jazz, they get into jazz. Arts has the story on 5. " American imperialism isn't about to die-but it may change with the Panama Canal Treaties. It's all on the editorial page, Page 4. and strong. The program deserves your support and we will fight to get it enac- ted." McIntyre called the President's proposed 1979 budget "an integral part" of that economic package, and he responded to criticisms the Carter budget is merely a reflection of the previous Gerald Ford budget. "The ink on that budget was hardly dry when it was criticized as smacking of Republicanism," McIntyre said. "It was rapped for lacking new initiatives and new direction. To all that I answer in just one word: baloney!" McINTYRE INSTEAD called the budget"honest." "There are no gimmicks, no false hopes, no proposals that can't be realized. Look back at budgets of previous administrations and you'll see what I man." McIntyre, a member of the President's "Georgia Mafia" and heir to Carter insider Bert Lance's post has See CARTER, Page 2 By JUDY RAKOWSKY The Human Rights Party (HRP) is alive and well and living in that hotbed of political activism - Ypsilanti? As incongruous as it may sound, it is true. The Ann Arbor THRP succeeded to the ill effects of political infighting and lack of public support and died a quiet death some two years ago. BUT THE Ypsilanti branch of the party has weathered the conservative trend of recent years, and has estab- lished itself as a significant force in Yp- silanti city politics. Eric Jackson and Harold Baize foun- ded the Ypsilanti HRP in the early seventies. They were soon joined by Dave Nicholson. All three are now city councilmen, but the roots of their political careers originate in riots and protests of the sixties when each was active in the anti-war movement. Councilman Jackson, who is the most outspoken of the trio, says, "The goals of the Human Rights Party were to restructure the entire economy, eliminate sexism and racism, and strive for a classless society. It's a more libertarian variant of socialism, moving toward an egalitarian society," he explained. BUT HOW CAN such radical thought thrive in town with a redneck reputa- See THE, Page 7 Doily Photo by ANDY FREEBERG Eric Jackson, Dave Nicholson and Harold Baize like getting together to reminisce about their younger political years over a glass or two of brew. Fourth.Ward prepares forp rimary forms, tapping dissatisfaction in the community about city services to get out the vote. "MOST OF THE people I've talked to are unhappy with the quality of the services they are By JULIE ROVNER With time running out on what is probably the quietest primary season the city hasever seen, the tan wn t~ihlinnen, idatpc in Ann Arbor's fouirth what he's been doing all along-going from door to door and giving out his campaign literature which stresses the need for better city services. "I JUST DON'T know what's going to happen measuring tool, but we couldn't afford a Gallup poll." McIntire's opponent, CPA and former Wolverine star fullback David Robert Fisher, is