Comrmand (Continued from Page 1) Ss fr hostages. OylllIa "If it would be of use, we would even odyssey to offer our persona for the liberation of Dubai, South the hostages," the 80-year-old Pontiff Mogadishu ye said in a telegram to Joseph Cardinal While the p Hoeffner of Cologne, head of the Ger- were reports man Episcopal Conference. ment had ser The West German goverment had let trained comm three earlier deadlinest pass without But the hijack any move to comply with the hijackers' Bonn govern demands-the release of 13 prisoners mandos had f from West German and Turkish jails When the p and $15 million. from Aden, th believed to THE HIJACKERS-two men and two Schumann, women- had seized the Lufthansa 737 recovered by jetliner Thursday on a flight from the ficials. Wasted space (Continued from Pare 1) * "A suitable accommodation, a BUT WITH 'home' when in Ann Arbor - essential- future appro y a college town - where hotel accom- and even som inodations will always be inadequate ing there isn' and poor."~ in the, Union - * "A suitable place of entertainment ation andre4 for the University's guests."-sinlendure * "A common meeting place - with sigle lunge elbow room - where all are mem- well met by ers h i ee hijacked d of Majorca to Frankfurt, THE HIJ) t on a five-day, 6,000-mil aced in con Rome, Cyprus, ri, German inc th Yemen and finally to Schleyer, esterday. Cologne six plane was in Cyprus, theree sthat the German gover- othtw nt a plane with specially similrear. miandos to Larnaca airport..TSheer kers flew off again, and the e ment later said the com- Little was lown home. cept that the lane arrived in Mogadishu and spoke it be body of a German pilot, identified hi o be Capt. Jeurgen various stop; was pushed off and atone time r" Samali soldiers and of- toganiradic organization. plane ACKERS apparently had eert with the kidnapers of dustrialist Hanns Martin who had been seized in weeks earlier. The deman- o groups of terrorists were no word on the fate of known of the hijackers, ex- two men gave Arab names n Arabic. The spokesman imself to negotiators at s as Harda Mahmoud, and eportedly said he. belonged l Palestinian guerrilla draws criticism [a decision on the Union's caching, student leaders ne administrators are say- t much "elbow room" left - that "wholesome recre- axation" are confined to a a pool hall, and a bowling he need for hotel space is commercial hotels else- nIIsulation2 runs sh rt in Ann. Arbor (Continued from Page 1) scarcity of fuels these days, and the rising costs of heating, it's.flagrant not to insulate," Lippincott said. Though-difficult, it's not impossible to find insulation for your home. Lippin- cott has been waiting a little over a month already and will wait three more weeks before one of his houses is fitted with airtight insulation. Others may not be so fortunate. A call to almost any of the area's insulation contractors or retailers elicits the same negative response. For those who failed to plan ahead, another cold, expensive, winter is knocking at the door. werei n the city; and L that the feared concept of "leadership gravitating into the hands of a few" is th'e embodiment of the Union's Board of Directors, in which seven faculty and alumni mem- bers outnumber the student delegation of three.,i An endless number of campus author- ities and groups have their fingers in the Union pie: the Union Board, which reports to the Regents; Vice President James Brinkerhoff's financial office; Vice President Henry Johnson's office for student services; the University's alumni association, the University Ac- tivities Center (UAC), which controls the theater group Musket, Eclipse Jazz, the sophomore show, Viewpoint Lec- tures, the Mediatrics film group, and others; Michigan Student Assembly (MSA), the University Club restaurant, the Union Station restaurant, the University Cellar, and numerous small- er student groups that pack the cram- ped offices on the Union's fourth floor. Once considered the model for carn- pus meeting-places, the Union has been called "a gentleman's club" instead of a "winters Diag," in the words of a current student leader. Critics of the Union point to the Uni- versity of Wisconsin's Memorial Union, where faculty and students congregate for long lunches in the Rathskeller and listen to local bands on weekend evenings.. Such establishments have preempted the Michigan Union as the prime exam- ple of a well-run, well-liked student meeting-place. --------- University physicians have perfor- med more than 455 kidney transplants since 1964. TUESDAY is... OKTOBERFEST BEER NIGHT featuring: Soft Pretzels or Bavarian Wurst af a Great Price! On South University The Michigan Daily-Tuesday, October 18, 1977-Page 7 Budget Toll Dialing: Get a 30% discount on your Long Distance study break. If you've found yourself making a lot of long distance calls to the folks or friends at home, Budget Toll Dialing is a service you might want to check out. 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