- I TENANTS' BILLS See Editorial Page Yl r e Sfra DaiI1 SEASONABLE High-SO Low-20 See Today for details Latest Deadline in the State Vol. LXXXVI, No. 77 - Ann Arbor, Michigan-Saturday, December 6, 1975 10 Cents Eig m g ht Pages 4llegations fly in L T'' ! t h r " R R IrVW SEE MOS HOn CALL WDOY Y Trony rent strike Hurry, hurry, hurry Hold everything. The minute you finish scour- ing our magnificent publication, grab your wallet (and it might be wise to put on a coat) and hustle on down to the nearest T-shirt store. Tomorrow is the Big Day when the First Ever and Greatest of All Michigan Daily T-Shirt Design Contest win- ner will be published in all its splendor (and in iron-on ink). Be the height of fashion on campus. Amaza the crowds in Miami this Christmas. You can't, you shant, you won't be disappointed. And if you miss this golden opportunity, you can't say we didn't warn you.! Volunteers needed Student volunteers are needed to aid the U's Disabled Students Services in compiling a study on the accessibility of campus buildings for persons using wheelchairs. The volunteers will evaluate building entrances, doorways and elevators to pro- duce a national directory for these students. This directory will enable students to compare colleges and universities in terms of accessibility. Volun- teers will be helping DSS meet a January 1 dead- line for a Higher Education Accessibility Project mandated by the U.S. Bureau of Education for the Handicapped. Interested students should contact DSS, 4119 Michigan Union or 763-3000 for further information from 9-5, Monday through Wednesday. Happenings... ... today start in Detroit. The Michigan Coalition to Stop S-1 is holding a demonstration at 1 p.m. at Kennedy Square to protest against the Criminal Justice Codification and Reform Act of 1975 also known as S-1 ... the Baha's Community of Ann Arbor is holding a conference called "Women: A Key to the Future of Humanity" from 1 to 5 p.m. in the Briarwood Community Rm. A in the south- east wing of the mall ... UAC children's theatre presents "Free to Be ... You and Me" at 7:30 at the Arena Theatre in the Frieze Bldg. Satur- day and Sunday matinees are sold out ... "Blithe Spirit" will be presented at Community High School by the Community High School Aud. at 8 p.m. Admission is $1 for students and $2 for adults ... The Dance and Music department pre- sents a multi-art dance concert at 8 p.m. at Schoerling Aud. Admission is $1.50 ... also at 8 p.m. is "Godspell" at Mendelssohn ... and the Ann Arbor Classical Guitar Society presents "Duo Rococo" - a flute and guitar concert at True- blood Aud. at 8:30. Admission is $3.00 ... And by the way, Playboy's Miss December, Nancy Libran- dy (she's at least 100 proof) will get into the ins and outs of sex on Saturday Graffiti at 5 p.m. on WCBN. Bare essentials of anthro Prof. Sally Slocum's intro anthropology courses at the University of Montana bares all. It's none of those dull skulls or carbon dating for her stu- dents. Slocum centers her attention around the navel-teaching wide-eyed students the intricacies of the stripping trade. Her field work is extensive since she claims to have worked her way through the University of California at Berkeley as one of the take-it-all-off crowd (kind of makes you won- der how Professor Goldschmidt got through school, doesn't it?). She attended the annual meeting of the American Anthropology Association in San Francisco to present a paper entitled "Strippers and Their Customers: Interaction at the Bar," where she presented, among other things, a scath- ing criticism of patrons of her former trade. "Most strippers, Slocum said, "feel any man who wants to watch a strip show for whatever reason must have something wrong with him ... he is a stupid sucker who is dumb enough to pay too much money for bid drinks to see a show that a real man would stay away from." Take that, Wilbur Mills. More bare essentials Sally Slocum may think stripping is worthy of academic attention, but the New York State Liquor Authority (SLA) has had it with "rampant nudity." So it outlawed topless waitresses and totally nude dancers in establishments serving alcoholic bev- erages. The new ruling came as a response to blatant advertising practices on the part of 40 or 50 bars in the New York metropolitan area. The law also stipulates that topless dancers swing a respectable six feet from the crowd. On the inside ... . . . another Doc Kralik special wings its way into your home as one of Edit page's finest ex- amines the Karen Quinlan case . . . Arts page offers a review of "Godspell" by Andrew Zerman. e On the outside .. . By JAY LEVIN The Ann Arbor Tenants Union (AATA) yes- terday charged Trony Associates' owner with harassing tenants who are withholding Decem- ber's rent in support of a strike against the management company. Trony's new owner, Dewey Black, who has renamed the company Sunshine Management, said he has done nothing to violate the terms of his tenants' leases. ALMOST HALF OF SUNRISE'S 120 units have paid their December rents into an AATU escrow fund, expected to total $10,000 for the month. The AATU-organized strike against Sunrise was announced two weeks ago in protest of what some tenants call inadequate maintenance and security. Seven striking tenants and AATU members yesterday picketed Sunshine's headquarters on H1off a lb UN hits Israel on Lebanon attacks UNITED NATIONS, N.Y. (A) -A proposed resolution blasting Israel for "premeditated air attacks against Lebanon, and .7 warning of stronger action if the raids persist was submitted to the Security Council yesterday. U.S. Ambassador D a n i e l Moynihan called it one-sided and said the United States would support only a measure that con- demns "all acts of violence in the Middle, East." AT THE same time, the less influential General Assembly voted 84-17 with 27 abstentions to ask all countries to desist from military or economic aid to Israel as long as it "con- tinues to occupy Arab territories and deny the inalienable" na- tional rights of the Palestinians. Rosa Parks (c The United States and Israel launched thei were among those voting against the presidentc the measure, and Israeli Am- bassador Chaim Herzog said his ASIAN government would not be bound by "this one-sided discrimina- tory attempt of those who sabo- tage the move towards peace in Bi the Middle East." Packard. BLACK LAST WEEK sent notices to quit to most of the striking tenants, according to the AATU. However, the AATU said a court order is needed to evict a tenant and if the rent is then paid the tenant cannot be evicted. Black last night refused to talk with a Daily reporter until a typed question and answer sheet, signed by both he and the reporter, were sub- mitted. DESPITE THE NOTICES, Black said, "I don't intend to evict anyone because I expect my rents will be paid." The University director of off-campus hous- ing, Peter Schoch, termed the AATU-Sunrise affair a "mess." Meanwhile, two Sunshine tenants on Oakland, who had not informed Black of their intentions to strike, received a notice to quit on December 2, one day after their rent was due, according to AATU organizer Peter Bergold. BERGOID SAID THE TERMS of the stand- ard University lease used by Sunrise include a five-day grace period during which tenants can pay their rent before a late fee is as- sessed. Bergold termed the notice to quit sent to the Oakland tenants an "act of harassment," because "they never informed Sunshine they were supporting the strike." Although Schoch said that practice "violates the spirit of the lease," he said it is not "neces- sarily illegal." "Trony's action was hasty," he added. SCHOCH SAID HIS OFFICE is prepared to be "helpful" if needed. He finds both sides at fault. "I do fault Black considerably for some of his past practices," commented Schoch. He re- burie d fused to divulge the specifics of Black's alleged actions. Larry Cooperman, an AATU organizer claim- ed yesterday, "Black refused to speak to us (AATU) as an agent of the tenants." He said Sunrise's owner is not acting in good faith. AATU ORGANIZER JODI WOLENS said the Stewards Council, composed of representatives from every Sunrise building, agreed Thursday night not to talk to Black until he recognizes the tenant's union as a bargaining team. Black said that any conversations with the tenants union are "unofficial" and added, "It appears to me any problems that may arise under the lease shall be submitted to the Uni- versity Mediation Service for an attempt at a resolution of any problems as per the accords of the lease." In a telephone interview Thursday, Black See RENT, Page 8 in N.J. Fpermitted' to search landfill DETROIT (M -- Authori- ties believe the body of for- mer Teamsters President James Hoffa may be buried in a Jersey City, N. J. land- fill closed for the past six years, two ' sources have confirmed. One of the sources, a law enforcement official, said yesterday: "It's Hoffa's body they believe is buried at Moscato's Dump." A SEARCH warrant was is- sued Tuesday b U. S. Magis- trate William Hunt of Newark, indicating the FBI wanted to search the trash dump for the body of Armand Faugno, a re- puted underworld soldier who has been missing for about a year. "The Faugno angle was a smokescreen,"-said the second source, a non-law enforcement source who is intimately fa- miliar with activities of the Teamsters Union. "Law en- forcement officials think there's a good possibility Hoffa is there in the dump. It's logical. It makes sense." The law enforcement source said the U. S. Organized Crime Strike Force in Newark sought the search warrant for Faugno because "They had a better chance of obtaining a search warrant for Faugno than for Hoffa. Faugno is from the East Coast." According to sources, Faugno was known to frequent night spots in the area around the Jersey City landfill. THE SOURCE close to the Teamsters Union said that "the government has turned some- See HOFFA, Page 8 AP Photo Rosa Parks honored enter), whose refusal to give up her bus seat modern civil rights movement, is honored at of the Montgomery Improvement Association, to a white man 20 years ago sparked the Montgomery bus boycott and ceremonies in Montgomery, Ala. yesterday. She receives applause from Ms. Johnnie Carr and U.S. Rep. Walter Fauntroy of Washington D.C. GUNMEN HOLD DUTCH HOSTAGES: rzst rips U.S. committed to " F Asian peace-Ford JAKARTA, Indonesia (P) - Declaring that the United States regards itself as a Pacific nation, President Ford said yesterday "we are firmly committed to peace and security in Southeast Asia and throughout Asia." Speaking at a state banquet given by Indo- ,.: / l> nesan President Suharto in the glittering Free- dom Palace, Ford said, "We see our own pros- perity and progress linked with the cast pop- ulations, the dynamic economies, the abun- dant resources and the rich cultures of this great region. F! "NO AREA of the world is more importantf to us than Asia." A high-spirited crowd estimated by police6 at 100,000 - waving American and Indonesian- flags - lined the road from Jakarta airportF into town to welcome Ford on arrival from Peking. It was in sharp contrast to the almost total absence of , interested spectators in the Ford See FORD, Page 8 November unemployment ri reported lowest in six Mont] " I ijacked BEILEN, Holland (Reuter)- A mystery explosion last night rocked the hijacked train in which, a group of Asian gunmen are holding 35 passengers hos- tage, and one gunman and a male passenger were injured. A police spokesman said two members of the gang from the South Moluccas, an island chain in Indonesia, lowered the injured men to the ground through an open door in the train and called for ambulances to take them to the hospital. HE SAID the gunman was ser- iously injured. The injured man and his five companions had held the train since Tuesday, killing three hos- tages and holding another 35as captives. n the Indonesian con- sulate in Amsterdam another five South Moluccans are hold- ing 15 adults and four children hostage. Seven other children have been released and it is expected the remaining four will be freed soon.,- BOTH GROUPS of South Mo- luccans are demanding inde- pendence for their island home- land, which has been part of Indonesia since 1950 when Indo- nesia received indepedence from the Netherlands. The spokesman for the train IS incident said the wife of the in- s jured passenger, who has head injuries, was later taken off the train suffering from shock and workers taken to a hospital. train He said two other passengers still on the train were slightly injured and were being treated by a doctor, who was one of the hostages. THE TWO gunmen who car- ried out the injured returned to the carriage immediately after- wards. Security officials theor- ized that explosives carried by the gunmen could have been in- volved in the blast. At the consulate in Amster- dam, the five gunmen there twice yesterday brought a blind- folded youth with a noose around his neck onto the balcony of the See HIJACKED, Page 8 AATA, bus drivers continue bargaining By TIM SCHICK The Ann Arbor Transportation Authority (AATA) and the Transportation Employes Union (TEU) bargaining teams con- tinued negotiations yesterday in an attempt to avert- a strike that loomed when city bus drivers Thursday rejected a new contract offer. Both sides prepared last night for a weekend of marathon bargaining. The city's 150 bus drivers, represented by the TEU, say they will go on strike if a settlement is not reached by 7 a.m. Sunday when the current contract expires. A STRIKE would affect the city's entire bus service, which serves about 9,000 people daily, and includes the dial-a-ride pro- gram. But the AATA plans to staff as many buses as possible with si1rer-isory personnel. Mike Berla, AATA Chairman, said, "There has been move- From Wire Service Reports WASHINGTON - After a one-month increase, the nation's unemployment rate dropped from 2 £h toR.A np~'r et ofthe i ,hr fnrn4 nvp Nniem- Adult males, teenagers and full-time benefited most from the decline. Despite the drop in joblessness, the to tal num-