lIfak (Continued from Pag ing the most of terminal The Michigan Daily-Thursday, October 20, 1977-Page 7 ambftionl ;e 1) energy program, which I also agree is probably the most significant legislation before Congress this year. I share his anger and disappointment at tlhe inability of the Senate to resist the lobby of the energy producers. Some people said he was pretty intemperate last week when he was going after the Senate and the oil lobby. I think he was pretty controlled given the extent to which that is really a monumental problem that must be addressed and the extent to which the Senate caved in." BUT OTTERBACHER said he found Carter's foreign policy to be unpredic- table. "There have been instances where the Carter Administration has not acted consistently. The arms sale to Turkey this summer, when Congress was in recess, was absolutely inconsistent with the non-aggression treaties that we have, and that's also true of the way military aid has been used in Cyprus," he said. Otterbacher admits that he may draw the same sort of hot criticism on the issue of federal funding for abortion that Carter received earlier this year. "IF I WERE to vote on that issue tonight, I'm afraid I would have to vote against the use of tax money for abor- tions, and I assure you that is the most tortured decision that I have been up against in five-and-a-half years of politics. It is my belief that pre-natal life has -the right to constitutional protection.. "You have that terrible choice bet- ween infringing upon the rights to privacy and control of your own biology and the infringement on the essential right to life. It's worse when you get to the Medicaid funds because there there is so obviously an inequity based on raw economics. "If I agreed with the abortion policy in this country, then, of course, I would lead the fight for Medicaid funding, because it is absolutely unfair that women not be afforded the same sort of health protection, in truthfulness, sim- ply because they're poor." OTTERBACHER was asked how he would walk the fine line between the state's automotive employment in- terests'and his own beliefs on pollution and gas mileage standards and auto safety' Hart was a vigorous critic o.f the auto industry during his years in the 'Senate, while his successor, Donald Riegle, recently introduced an amendment to strip tetax on gas-guzzling cars from Carter's energy package. "I feel some of the initiatives we are going to take to conserve energy are not going to be well received, initially, by the automobile producers in the state. I think if you have to choose between the displeasure of the producers, in the in- stance of the tax on gas-guzzlers, and what you believe is the most rational J ust for the h ealth of it, Get moving, America! March 1-7. 1977 s National Physical Education and Sport Week PypsP Physical Education Public information American Atlianc 'for Health. Physical Education and Recreation 1201 16th St N W Washington. D C 20036 approach to our problems ten of 15 years from now, then you have to take the rational approach-even if they don't much like that. "I WOULDN'T have felt comfortable voting for that amendment." Otterbacher also called for a change in national priorities that affect em- ployment. "The resources upon which we rely for the production of durable goods in this country are diminishing. And to the extent that we are serious about em- ploying our people, that meansweiaie to shift away from resource-reliant jobs that generally involve the production of durable goods, towards the kind of,jobs that deal in human resources. "We have to look at a tax schedytc and decide where the capital intensive and labor intensive areas are, and shift the incentives away from those that aiIe capital intensive and resource-reliait, towards those that produce jobs aiid provide services." NOON LUNCH EON Homemade Soup 8 Sandwiches 50C Friday, Oct. 21st Showing off CBS Television documentary "The Church and the Multinationals" at GUILD HOUSE 602MONROE (corner of Oakland) Student wounded at Kent State recants story here 8 years later (Continued from Page 1) killers, they indicted the wounded. It's as if to say we attacked the National Guard bullets with our bodies. What twisted logic. "There's been a seven-year cover- up. We've had no justice at Kent State. I had a little bit of faith in the judicial systems in 1970," he said. ''I never would have believed that seven years later, justice still wouldn't have been done." Last year, the trustees of Kent State announced plans to build a gymnasium on the site of the shoot- ings. A group calling itself the May 4 Coalition was formed to stop con- struction. Canfora spoke of the Survivor of hijacked Ue .a ..3 plane tells FRANKFURT, West Germany (AP)' -A frightening story of a raving, Jew- hatihg hijack leader who threatened' continually to execute his hostages was told yesterday by the only adult American passenger held captive on a hijacked Lufthansa jetliner. Sobbing frequently, Christine San- tiago, 44, of Santee, Calif., told a news conference she feared for her own life throughout the 4/2-day ordeal and was terrified over the possible fate of her 5- year-old son, who was with her. SHE AND HER son were among 86 passengers of a hijacked Lufthansa jetliner freed in alightning"raid by German commandos at the Mogadishu airport in Somalia on Tuesday. The raid came 41/2 days after the plane was commandeered by four terrorists on a flight from Majorca to Frankfurt. Three of the hijackers were killed. Eighty freed hostages, including the Santiagos, returned to Frankfurt later Tuesday. Santiago broke down describing how the hijackers shot Capt. Juergen Schumann, the only hostage to die in the raid, and the special terror faced by Jewish hostages. She said Shumann begged for mercy on his knees, but the hijack leader "told him to shut up and shot him in cold blood. And he laughed. "THEN THEY dragged the body down the aisle and threw him in a closet. Then we lost hope and figured he would shoot us all. Nobody said a :word.'' As for the rescue, when German commandos stormed the plane and killed three of the four hijackers, San- -iago said, "I turned around in my seat. I saw the rear door open, and a man painted black leaped inside, screaming _Gt down' in German. "As soon as he spoke German I feltso happy." The commandos killed the three male hijackers and seriously wounded the woman. A NATIVE of Austria, Santiago and her son, Leo, one of six children, had been vacationing on the Spanish island of Majorca with her husband, Antonio. Swim. Just for the health of it. Get moving America Mrch 1-7. 1977t> Naionfl Physica Ezducationi and Sport Week Physical Education Public information Amerian Aane for Healh sc ua on dnd Receaion 61201 1th t N W Washington D C 20036 OPIAt HOUSE: SSaturday Sunday October 22 : her story She had boarded the Lufthansa 737 to make a visit to her mother in Saalfelden, Austria. Santiago, a heavy-set woman wearing a shawl and.accompanied by her son and husband, began crying sof- tly as she described the takeover of the plane. "About an hour after we left, a girl stood up with two hand grenades in her hands. Another man had a gun and went to the cockpit screaming in Arabic. There were two men and two girls," she said. She said two of the hijackers had played with one of her sons while waiting at the airport to board the plane. "As long as we didn't move, we were treated all right. Butevery second word he (the hijack leader) said was 'execute.' When he went into rages, it was terrible. He got these spells. When you disobeyed an order, it was very bad." details of the fight to move the gym. "WE MOVED to the hill and set up a tent city," he said. "Our slogan was we shall not be moved. We stayed 62 days." On July 12, those occupying the site were arrested. A total of 194 people were taken to jail, including the parents of Susan Schauer, one of those killed in 1970. Demonstrations against the con- struction of the gym continued throughout the summer. Altogether, 300 people were arrested. "WE COULD have stood outside the fence forever and given the peace sign," Canfora explained. "What we did stopped it. They wanted to pour concrete in July. We postponed it. "The first time we went under the fence. The second'time, we went over it. The third time, on September 24, we knocked it down. I'd be a fool to advocate that people come to Kent State and tear down the fence, but I've heard that by hook or by crook, the fence will come down." meimm mem mm -n imm m -m m ' The UM Black Graduate Alliance will ' hold a forum for all black grad & 1 I professional students at the U of M i . entitled; r..3 "H w To Survive I * at Michigan" " on FRIDAY, OCT. 21, from 4-6 in the East lecture room of the RACKHAM BUILDING. I I mm mmmm m 4 E 4 :, 9 4 4. $ .4 4 Q i Y 1.- rnnr nnnnnrinnr7rnlrn rnf7r] nt r 1717 rl7 rf r rl Goethe's Fairy Tale of the GREEN SNAKE and the BEAUTIFUL LILY Interpreted by PROF. BURLEY CHANNER German Department, UniversityMf Toledo Read by GERALD .JUHR SATURDAY, OCT. 22, 1977 Sponsored by the 7:30 P.M. Rudolf Steiner Institute Rudolf Steiner House of the 1923 Geddes Avenue Great Lakes Area Ann Arbor u n THE PUBLIC IS INVITE D NO ADMISSION CHARGE c OFFICE OF CAMPUS LIFE/* - * * * * * FRIDAY, OCTOBER 21-8 P.M. EASTERN MICHIGAN UNIVERSITY * BOWEN FIELD HOUSE TICKETS $8.50 -$7.50-Available at the McKinney Union, Aura Sound, oanzo Dog Records, Weorhouse Records, Hudsons. A BAMBOO Production BOB BAGERI'S presents * -U __ . U = . * The "Cool One" is On Campus! Cool Peppermint Schnapps x