A DRY MISSISSIPPI See Page 4 Y A& 4tj t r4 t an A& :43 a t ty STAID See Today for details Latest Deadline in the State Vol. LXXXV1I, No. 3 Ann Arbor, Michigan-Saturday, September 11, 1976 Free Issue Ten Pages plus Supplement V f10JSEE NEv [AP CALL yDAIY 'U' vs. GEOs University and Graduate Employes Organiza- tion (GEO) bargainers briefed state-appointed mediator Thomas Badoud yesterday on some of the thornier issues still to be resolved in the bog- ged - down contract talks. GEO President Doug Moran said the union was "encouraged by the mediator's attitude and capabilities." University chief bargainer John Forsyth agreed, saying that Badoud "caught on fast." Bargaining willresume Tuesday at 10 a.m. in closed session, as per Badoud's wishes. Both GEO and the University had originally requested open bargaining sessions. t Happenings ... kare topped of course by the Wolverines football opener against the Badgers of Wiscon- sin. Kickoff time is 1:30 ... Applications are be- ing accepted today through Thursday for Project Outreach interns to work on a fulltime, 13-hour work/study project called "Adolescents in Stress Situations." If you're intereste4, call 764-9279... The Revolutionary Student Brigade is presenting "Bright Red Star, a film from the People's Re- public of China, at 8 p.m. on the third floor of the Michigan League. Jail for John U.S. District Judge Gerhard Gesell refused yesterday to set aside an order requiring former White House aide John Ehrlichman to begin a 20-month prison sentence next week. On Tues- day, Gesell ordered Ehrlichman, now living in New Mexico, to report to the federal prison at Safford, Ariz. to serve his sentence. Ehrlichman's lawyers said he should be allowed to remain free, at least until the Supreme Court decides if it will hear the appeal to his conviction. In 1974, he was found guilty, of approving a burglary by govern- ment operatives at the office of Dr. Lewis Field- ing, a psychiatrist who treated Dr. Daniel Ells- berg of Pentagon Papers fame. A A sour note The Food and Drug Administration is apparent- ly taking its sweet time in deciding whether the sugar substitute saccharin can be linked to can- cer in humans. A General Accounting Office (GAO) report released on Thursday by Sen. Gaylord Nel- son (D-Wis.) said that the FDA in 1972 issued an interim regulation covering use of saccharin after questions were raised about its safety. What is even more disturbing is that the question isn't expected to be answered for another two years. The GAO recommended that the FDA "re-evalu- ate the justification for saccharin's continued use pending the resolution of the safety questions." Saccharin is used mainly in diet soft drinks and foods. Japan deluged Southwest Japan, deluged by nearly 24 inches of rain in 48 hours, yesterday reported at least 12 dead, 125,000 homes inundated,and the full force of a typhoon still threatening. Weather fore- casters said Typhoon Fran, with center winds of about 100 miles per hour, could be expected to reach southwestern Japan this morning with an- other 12 inches~ of rain. Police said that air, sea and land traffic, including railroad service, was disrupted in Kyushu and neighboring Shikoku Is- land, as well as the western portion of Honshu, Japan's central island. On the inside.. . Sports staffer Andy . Glazer previews today's opening football game against Wisconsin . . . And on Arts Page, Debra Gale writes about the Uni- versity Museum of Art exhibition. On the outside . . It should be a pleasant first football Saturday, with partly cloudy skies and a high temperature near 70. Tomorrow should be even warmer, with a high of almost 80. Fordvis By JENNIFER MILLER University of Michigan Students for President Ford, the organization claiming sponsorship of the Presi- dent's scheduled September 15 visit here, became an officially recognized student group just four days ago, it was learned yesterday. At the same time Jan Barbieri, of the White House Press Office, which claimed no knowledge of the student group, said she was told by White House Press Secretary Ron Nessen "about a week ago" that Ford would be coming to Ann Arbor next week. FRANK URSIMORO, staff assistant to the President and a member of the White House advance group currently in the city, confirmed last night that the visit was in fact planned several weeks in advance of the formation of the student group. A university official said Thursday that because of Hi jac krs i t: Who's the political nature of the President's visit, University President Robben Fleming felt the visit should be sponsored by a student group. But, Ursimoro added, Ford would have come to the campus regardless of student sponsorship. "FORD COULD have come just on Fleming's invi- tation," said Ursimoro. "The student group had noth- ing to do with Fleming." Ursimoro added that the group was formed to en- courage students to participate and become involved in the campaign, and because the rental fee for Cris- ler Arena (where Ford is scheduled to speak Wednes- day evening) is $1,000 cheaper than the regular $1,500 fee if rented by a student group. Although C. C. Leslie, president of University of Michigan Students for President Ford, claimed that the spon the group has a membership of between 30 and 40 persons, she refused to mention any names as of last night. Leslie, who operates her organization out of her dorm room at Martha Cook Hall, said the idea for the group occurred to her in mid-August. URSIMORO said, however, that "C. C. formed the group (when) we realized that we wanted a student group," which was Tuesday. It was also reported yesterday that the President's visit may last longer than originally anticipated. It had been previously disclosed that the President would not land in Ann Arbor until shortly before his 7 p.m. speech at Crisler Arena. But a published report yesterday said the President might engage in some "student activities" prior to his address. Neither Uni- versity officials or Ursimoro would confirm the report. 1- - sor? . "Ford could come just on ing's invitation. student group nothing to do Fleming." It a v e Flem- The I (1 (1 with -Ford aide Frartk U ;rsimoro se ze Iew T From Wire Service Reports GANDER, Newfoundland - Crotian nationalists hijacked a New York-to-Chicago jetliner last night and gave police di- rections to a bomb planted in the heart of New York City. The bomb exploded when ex- perts tried to disarm it, kill- ing one policeman and injur- three. One of the hijackers was re- portedly wired with explosives. THE HIJACKERS forced the Trans World Airlines Boeing 727 to land and refuel in Mon- treal, Canada and then - amid reports that their ultimate des- tination was London - divert- ed the plane to Gander, New- foundland, where it landed shortly after midnight. A spokesperson for the Ca- nadian Transport Department said the hijackers "apparent destination" was Yugoslavia. In Washington, a Federal Avia- tion Administration spokesper- son said the hijackers' next stop, for refueling, would be Iceland. The hijackers identified themselves as "Fighters for Free Croatia", a Yugoslav independence group. They warned a bomb would ex- plode "somewhere in the United States" unless an eight - page communique was printed by five major newspapers. In New York, police acted on the hijackers instructions and discovered a pressure cooker, supposedly containing explo- sives, in a coin locker at Grand Central Station. A TWA spokesperson said OrKO !t 11er there was no indication that any passengers aboard the jet were injured. But the pilot, in a con- versation with the tower at Mon- treal's Mirabel Airport, said of the hijackers: "These guys are hair - trigger." T H E SPOKESPERSON said TWA was flying a larger plane ahead of the hijacked air- craft to serve as a navigational aid, since the smaller 727 lack- ed equipment needed to cross the Atlantic. The range of the hijacked jet was estimated at 1,600 miles. The flight from Montreal to Gander is 1,200 miles. Authori- ties speculated that the jet would refuel there, then con- tinue to London. THE FBI in New York said the locker which contained the pressure cooker also held a communique which the hijack- ers demanded be transmitted to the American people. The hijackers ordered that their eight-page letter be print- ed in full in The New York Times, The Washington Post, The Chicago Tribune and the In- ternational Herald - Tribune of See NEW YORK, Page 5 AP Photo Mayor Albert Wheeler chucks a slow, soft one. Pots and media play ball' By MIKE NORTON It's not often one gets a chance to see those feuding Democrats and Republicans of City Council playing on the same team, for- getting their political differences in the face of a common enemy. But that's exactly what happened last night at Veterans Memorial Park when Ann Arbor city officials played their First An- nual Benefit Softball Match against members of the local news media. NOT THAT IT DID THEM much good, of course. The game, which began at 7:30 and ran for nearly two hours, was held to raise mon- ey for the city Parks and Recreation Depart- ment's Handicapped Fitness Program. It drew a crowd of fifty-odd persons, most of them fam- ilies or friends of City Council members who did not hide their sympathies. Despite the hostile crowd, however (not to mention incredible misfortune and a mud- sluggish start) the media team walked away from the field with a 20-15 victory. EVEN BEFORE THE GAME began, the newspeople were having bad times. As twi- See POLITICOS: Page 5 Aircoliion claims 176 By AP and Reuter A British airliner and a chartered Yugoslav jet collided head- on high over Yugoslavia yesterday killing all 176 persons aboard in the worst collision in aviation history. A West German airline pilot who saw the crash said the two planes had exploded and that the British plane, a British Air- ways three-jet Trident, lost a wing as both crafts tumbled out of control. A. YUGOSLAV woman working on her farm was killed when struck by falling debris, according to reports from the scene. "It was a frontal collision in midair," a spokesman for British Airways (BA) said. He reported the British plane, flight 476, was enroute to Istanbul from London with 63 persons on board, including either one or two Americans. He said the passenger list would not be re- leased until this morning pending notification of next of kin. THE YUGOSLAV plane, a DC-9, was carrying 108 passengers and a crew of five on a flight from the Adriatic resort of Split to Cologne, West Germany, the Yugoslav airline Inex-Adria said. Index-Adria said all but one of the passengers, a Yugoslav, were West German. The BA spokesperson said the planes were in an aerial cross- roads 15 miles northeast of Zagreb when they collided, and the crossroads sector was controlled by Zagreb's airport tower. "Details are obviously not clear," he said, "but I can think of no reason why either aircraft should have been changing height. That suggests a horizontal rather than a vertical collision. In this case, the British and Yugoslav planes would be coming from op- posite directions." THERE WAS NO immediate explanation for the crash or why the two planes were flying at the same altitude. International regulations say all aircraft flying above 29,000 feet must be sepa- rated vertically by at least 2,000 feet. An airport spokesperson in Cologne said he had been told by counter personnel handling the flight that the Yugoslav aircraft had been diverted to Zagreb because of an unspecified technical fault. The spokesman said he had been told the information had come from Grimex, a Frankfurt-based firm which represents the Inex-Adria airline. A Grimax spokesperson later denied that the plane had en- See JETLINER, Page 5 China moves on without Mao By APl and Reuter PEKING - China mourned Mao Tse-tung yesterday with dignity and discipline. Daily life appeared to go on as usual, despite the uncertain political repercussions of Mao's death Thursday at the age of 82. THE PEOPLE of Peking wore black armbands and white paper flowers of mourning as they shuffled through almost silent streets. Above, workmen fixed black shrouds to giant portraits of Mao. His body is to lie in state in the Great Hall of the People for eight days of official mourning, which begin today and end when the entire nation of 800 million stands for three minutes' silence on September 18. Meetings were held at Peking factories and work places today, apparently so that instructions could be issued. DIPLOMATS said that at a time of political tension-Mao left no designated heir - the authorities were obviously an- xious that grief at his passing should not lead to disorder. OUTSIDE the Great Hall to- day, small groups filed by the Chinese Martyr's Monument and a few wreaths were laid at the foot of the granite pillar. The mourners were restrain- ed, compared with the vast, tearful crowd there when Pre- mier Chou En-lai died last January. Mao's death came amid a bitter radical campaign against right wing "capitalist roaders" and at a time when the Com- munist hierarchy is depleted by death and purges. THE DECISION on who will succeed him as Chairman con- fronts a divided leadership and a politburo standing committee that has dwindled within a year from eight to four members. Western analysts here have three favorites for the succes- sion: Premier Hua Kuo-feng, p a r t y vice-chairman Wang Hung-wen and vice premier Chang Chun-chiao. As the most senior state and party figure, the burly, crewcut Hua is now the most powerful man in China. He is seen as a centrist. See CHINA, Page 5 Clerical fiscal future vague Stpock trades pediatrics -N for vice-presidential politics Dr. Benjamin Spock was in town this week, but he wasn't plugging his revered guides for child and baby care. He was running for vice- president. Spock, still highly active at 73, is the num- ber two candidate on the People's Party ticket headed by Margaret Wright, a 53-year-old black Los Angeles woman. In 1972 the retired doc- tor and professor was the presidential candi- ed my family by becoming a Democrat in 1928. I would still be a Democrat, a liberal Demo- crat, if it hadn't been for the war in Vietnam. I joined the National Committee for a Sane Nuclear Policy in 1962 as I became convinced that unless we had a Test Ban Treaty, more and more children around the world would die of cancer and leukemia. So I joined 'Sane' and two years later 1 was asked by (then Presi- .may- -, - By ELAINEtFLETCHER Members of the now-defunct clericals union are anxiously waiting to see how well they will weather the University's poor financial outlook in the aftermath of their local's dis- solution. Last month, following months of internal union unrest, cleri- cals on the University's three campuses narrowly approved a bid to "decertify" Local 2001 of the United Auto Workers (UAW). The move left the Uni- versity free to reinstitute its own system of hirings, firings, how big the University raises are," said Debby Morehead, former local president. The University has already announced plans to institute a system of "merit" pay raises, based on a yearly evaluation of the clerical's performance by his or her supervisor. The aver- age salary increase is expect- ed to round out to about five per cent annually. "IF IT TURNS out that the average raise is five per cent (for one year) then the possi- bilities are very good (for form- ing a new local union)", More- them," Jensen added. "The uni- versity will once again have total control of hiring and fir- ing. We will have no grievance procedure. All non-union 'labor use a complaint procedure which is totally University con- trolled." JENSEN, WHO IS also affili- ated with the local faction Cleri- cals for a Democratic Union, (CDU), says she is not waiting to see the University salary offers before beginning another drive for unionization. "Our hope is to move ahead and to start organizing all over again," 0