STUDENT SPACE See editorial page : '1 Lit 4mu atl WINDY High-60* Low -34* See Today for details . , Vol. LXXXVIII, No. 35 Ann Arbor, Michigan-Tuesday, October 18, 1977 Ten Cents Ten Pages Raid ends hijack; 86 hostages safe . . a BONN, West Germany (AP)-West German commandos stormed a hijacked Lufthansa jetliner at Somalia's Mogadishu airport; rescued all 86 hostages aboard and killed all' four hijackers, a goverment spokesman said early today. Spokesman Karl Boelling said one passenger was taken to a hospital "in a state of collapse" and -one German commando was injured. Other passengers were treated at the airport, but the extent of injuries was not known. The Germans attacked-less than two hours before the hijackers threatened to blow up the plane unless their demand were met. IN WASHINGTON, President Carter congratulated the' West German goverment for the "courage of their decision" in staging the assault. "All in all it seems to have gone off relatively well," the West German goverment spokesman said. German radio reported that crack anti-terror specialists of the paramilitary Federal Border Guard's special "GSG-9" unit had stormed the plane under a cover of darkness and freed all 86 hostages. GERMAN TELEVISION said the commandos used special grenades that lack shrapnel but explode with a blin- ding flash and immobilize a person for several seconds. The West German assault recalled the celebrated Entebbe raid when Israeli commandos rescued more than 100 hostages held aboard a hijacked Air France jetliner by pro-Palestinian terrorists on July 4, 1976. Two Americans-44-year -old Christine Maria Santiago of Santee, Calif., and her five-year-old son Leo were aboard the plane. Most of the other passengers were thought to be Germans. THE RAID came *only 90 minutes before a deadline of 3:30 a.m. today (8:30 p.m. Monday EDT) Set by the hijackers to blow up the plane was due to expire. EARLIER, Pope Paul VI, in an un- precedented move, offered himself as a hostage to obtain the release of the 86 See COMMANDOS, Page 7 Clericals file ULP against 'U' Daily Photo by BRAD BENJAMIN Hfiho, puma, away! Three-year-old Shani Horn sits delightedly atop a statuary puma in front of the Natural Science Museum and imagines herself galloping across the veldt. HOTEL OR HOT SPOT? Critics say Union wastes space By BRIAN BLANCHARD On April 25, 1919, J.G. Brandt sent a. wire from Lawrence, Kansas to Ann Arbor that read in part: "Have heard value of Michigan Union as Student Alumni Center, please wire at our ex- pense fa'ets about your building and its. use" for the University of Kansas. The following September came a let- ter from the chairman of the Commit- tee of the Purdue Union: "Have you any prints of your buildings, plans or tracings from which prints may be made?" THERE WERE MORE - from Wis- consin, Pennsylvania, Iowa, Illinois, California, all inquiring after an ex- ample of the superior 'club house' built by alumni, administrators and stu- dents: the Union. But the building that was once the standard by which universities across the country measured their gathering places has come under fire for failing to attract and serve students. One University official called it a "bus termfinal" because of its hotel at- mosphere. Student leaders have said the Union is run with "archaic policy" and that there is struggle going on be- tween administrators over control of the services. BUT THE FUTURE of the four-story edifice at the foot of South University may be decided this week when the Regents meet. They will be presented with various proposals for the use of space in University buildings, including the Union. The decisions made on Thur- sday and Friday will probably pass judgment one way or another on the 61- year-old buildings. At the time of its construction, the Union was a great deal larger than sim- ilar university buildings in other parts f the country. In 1916, the first Union was torn down after nine years of use. It had two dining rooms, a lounge, a game room, a kitchen, a billiard room, a reading room, a director's room, and a steward's apartment. The Union looms four stories high with a three-story tower on top. The side entrance on. the north approach was known as the "ladies entrance" un- til the 1950s, when women were finally allowed to stride through the front door under the tower. BUT J.G. BRANDT was probably not so interested in the square footage as the idea behind the building. In 1920, there were "Three Basic Principles of Union Activity," accord- ing to a message delivered by George Hurley, then General Secretary of the Union: 0 To increase student involvement in activities and "limit the possibility of leadership gravitating into the hands of a few." " "To, teach the great value of whole- some recreation and relaxation to mind and body through the judicious ad- ministration of our facilities." * A simple system of management. A year earlier, the General Commit- tee of the University Alumni also divid- ed the Union into three ideas: See WASTED, Page 7 . By SUE WARNER The Organizing Committee for Clericals (OCC) has filed an unfair labor practice (ULP) charge with the Michigan Employment Relations Commission (MERC) claiming the University has interfered with its right to organize' a clerical union on campus. The ULP charge stems from an in- cident in the Business Administra- tion Building last Tuesdaywhen OCC members attempted to meet for lunch with other clericals in ~a staff lounge to discuss union organizing. ACCORDING TO the 0CC Busi- ness Administration supervisor Kar- en Carrier ordered the group not to hold the meeting in the lounge because it had not obtained manage- ment's permission to use it. "We have had previous meetings in the-same lounge within the last three months," said OCC Chairperson Marianne Jensen. "Lounges are a free-access area for employes to discuss union business." IN ITS ULP charge, the OCC claims that the Public Employment Relations Act permits employes to discuss union affairs in non-work areas on non-work time. "This is a blatant example of the University's attempt. to squelch for- mation of a clerical union," said Jensen. "Time and time again, they have shown that they're out on a definite track of union-busting." However, University Attorney Wilt Liam Lemmer said yesterday that mos of the lounges are for specific purposes, "If the OCC had wanted to arrange to reserve one, there is plenty of opportunity to do so," he said. LEMMER HAD not seen the ULP charge and would not comment' on how the University will deal with it. The OCC is currently staging an or- ganizing drive to obtain clerical support for a new union. University clericals voted to disband their former union, United Auto Workers (UAW) local 2001 in August 1976. The organizing drive centers around collecting cards signed by University clericals authorizing a~ unionto bargain collectively for them. If the OCC can obtain signa- tures from one-third of the Univer- sity clericals it will be able to petition MERC for a union certification "This is a blatant exam ple of ihe inirersitys attempt to squelch it formation of a lerielt lunion." -Marianne .ensen election on campus. ACCORDING TO OCC Vice-Chair- person Mary Braun, the committee expects to petition MERC for an election this January. Jensen said she doesn't think the ULP charge will affect the organiz- ing drive. "The University's action is ob- viously a breach of our right to or ganiie," she said. "By standing tip and filing this charge we're telling clericals a union will stand up to the University." Jensen said that until last week, OCC members have met with little University interference. "They (the University) are begin- ning to realize how big our force really is and they're fighting it," Jensen said. Kellman relinquishes MSA ost By PAULINE TOOLE Michigan S t u d e n t Assembly (MSA) President F. Scott Kellman, resigned Sunday. night during a special MSA meeting because of concern over schoolwork and a desire to spend more time on other issues. "The student space issue [see related story on this page] iscoming up before the Regents; 'it demands a lot of time," said Kellman. "With the presidency and' working on that issue, I have no time. I can't adequately do both." f KELLMAN, WHO has been an MSA member for three years and MSA president for the past year, will remain a member of the govern- ing body. He would have vacated the presidency in any case after next month's elections. MSA member Jasper DiGuiseppe said he was surprised at Kellman's announcement. "It was something I expected eventually but didn't think would happen Sunday," he said. "We didn't know what the meeting would be about." See MSA, Page 10 ry c a p; C (' P Ke llma n'ailyPhoto'"byBADAMIN Insuladon tough to find i SACLJA' discusses 12.5% faculty raise By PAULINE TOOLE William Neenan, who painted a A faculty salary increase recom- dismal picture of faculty wages at nendation of 12.5 per cent from the the University. Neenan said an Committee on the Economic Status examination of past recommenda- f the Faculty (CESF) dominated the tions showed the'real income of facul- >roceedings of the Senate Advisory ty members was "eroding." .ommittee on University Affairs SACUA) yesterday. LAST YEAR, CEFS made a rec The CESF recommendation was ommendation for an 11.5 per .cent >resented by committee Chairman salary increase which the University administration approved. The Board of Regents also accepted the increase and included it in the budget submi- 2ted to the Michigan Legislature But the legislature returned an overall ine- crease in the University budget of 9.1 per cent - and the increased faculty pay amounted to a mere 5.4 per cent; "At other universities, I woul6ay that in the last 'two years faqulty salary increases were 7.2 to 7.6 per cent," said Neenan. "At the Univer- sity of Michigan, it was 5.4 per cent. In relation to this peer group, our position is eroding." SACUA member Prof. William Elving of the Chemistry Department added: "If the committee thought that 12.5 per cent was a reasonable increase, they should have doubled it. There is still the frustration that we're not getting anywhere." By DAN OBERDORFER Early this fall when Doug Schoettle set out to buy home insulation, he could purchase only half of what he wanted. Doug was fortunate. Ann Arbor is presently in the throes of a gripping shor- tage of home insulation that promises to extend through the end of the winter. Waiting lists of as long as 50 days plague retailers like Fingerle and. Washtenaw lumber companies, where insulation can be purchased for private installation. "WERE GETTING a truckload per week, about the same rate we took last year," says Colin Fingerle. "In- sulation began to get scarce, back in the middle of June or July. The problem is that the demand (for insulation) has doubled or more, while the supply hasn't." ALSO, SINCE July 22 of this year, the state of Michigan has taken some initiatives by setting minimum requirements for insulation in new buildings. Not only has the demand skyrocketed, but strikes hob- bling the Johns Manville and Cqrtainteed Corporations- giants in the world of insulation production-have cut into expected production increases. Owens-Corning Fiberglass Cp., the other king of the industry, cannot keep up with skyrocketing demand, ac- cording to company spokesman Stanley Collins. "HOMEOWNERS across the country are reinsulating at a record pace this year," he said. "Also, homebuilding is at. its highest rate since the building boom of the early 70's. We've been producing and shipping more insulation than we have at any time in our history."-