Tuesday, J u ly 24, 1973 THE SUMMER DAILY Page Three Chavez pleads UFW cause By JACK KROST In a frequently emotional Hill Aud. ad- dress last night, United Farm Workers (UFW) director Cesar Chavez urged local citizens to participate in the union's boy- cott of A&P and Safeway stores. Speaking to a wildly enthusiastic crowd of more than 1500, Chavez expressed con- fidence that the boycott will ultimately be successful in forcing California- growers to recognize the UFW over the Teamsters. CHEVEZ ALSO CLAIMED, "The Team- sters is not the union the majority of farm workers want to represent them." He charged the Teamsters have used co- ercion and misinformation to gain mem- bers. The Teamsters have taken over a num- ber of recently expired contracts former- ly held by the UFW. Several more grow- ers are expected to sign with the Team- sters on Sunday. IfW members have charged the Teamsters with selling out f'rm workers for a pay-off. About the boycott, Chavez said that since the Teamsters have contracted to work for the California grape and lettuce growers for lower wages, "a boycott (on the supermarkets that carry Teamster- picked produce) is the only effective non- violent response available." "WE WON'T GET what we want until the market for grapes and lettuce is de- stroyed," he said, "A boycott doesn't have a life of its own," he warned. "It isn't successful un- til you people participate. A boycott isn't a television program or a newspaper ar- ticle, a boycott is people." To a large crowd, factions of which fre- quently stood up, waved UFW flags, and gave the special "Huegla handclap," Cha- vez asserted, "The growers say a boycott won't work a second time, but I say it witt." THE UNION LEADER charged that the Te-ismsters are not representative of the majority of farm workers. "If the grow- ers, the Teamsters, and their lackeys . . . would agree to free, secret-ballot elec- tions, the Farm Workers union would ov- erwhelmingly win." Ie cited surveys of the workers support- ing his conclusions which have already been taken by independent organizations. He said the UFW union members who are now picketing along fields in south- ern California where Teamsters are work- ing, "are the most committed union un- ion members in recent history," in con- trast to the Teamsters, who "often use coercion,-to get members." AS AN EXAMPLE of Teamster dishon- esty, Chavez cited an alleged Teamster trick of, misleading farmworkers to think that they are signing Social Security See CHAVEZ, Page S City officials review advice on sewage By GORDON ATCHESON of the local water treatment plant, which During a working session last night, City Council received reports from several municipal officials indicating Ann Arbor's -ter and 'sewage treatment facilities most be expauded in the near future. Acting City Admioistrator George Owers ssid the city is currently exploring several alternatives for expansion of the sewage teatmsnt plant. THE P1RESENT FACILITIES have coie under he-1vy fire as being critically insuf- ficient to handle local needs. On a number of occasions the plant was worked be- yond its capacity and as a result raw . waste was dumped into the Huron River. The city has begun talks with state of- ficials to determine the best solution to the problem. The city will also initiate discussions with county and township ex- perts at the end of the week, Owers said. The talks will focus on "four or five alternatives" to the present situation, in- cluding expansion of city facilities to serve outlying areas and possible development of a county-wide plant. OWERS POINTED OUT that to receive federal or state aid for improvement, the city must provide services to nearby com- munities, breaking traditional policy. Gen- erally the city has not given services such as sewage treatment to non-municipal lo- cations. Assistant to the Administrator Patrick Kenney then outlined plans for expansion processes the city's water supply. The system has been overtaxed since the sneser of 1971. A three ptmse pro- gram has been proposed to improve the sysems. ithe first phase, costing 52.25 mit- ion, tesweld raise capacity to a level meet- i curreel needs, CESAR CHAVEZ, leader and inspiring spirit of the United Farm Workers Union. (UFW), addressed a crowd of more than 1500 at Hill And. last night. Chavez told the rally audience that farm workers want to be represented by the UFW and are being sold out by the Teamsters Union. -Contest news Time is still on your side in the "Not Insane Watergate Contest." Entrants should tell us in 25 words or less who is their favorite Watergate conspirator and why. Prizes include a free subscription to the Daily, a blank cassette tape to do your own bugging and a free passport picture for quick exits from the country. Relatives of indicted conspirators are not eligible. Bring or mail you entries to the Daily before July 27. Happenings .. . . . . today are largely film-oriented . . the Ann Arbor Film Co-op will show My Fair Lady at 6:30 and 9:30 in Aud. A, Angell Hall . . . A-V Films will show "Year of The Communes" in Aud. 3, MLB at 7:00 . . . Shaw's Mrs. Warren's Profession can be seen at the Power Cen- ter at 8:00 . . . the U Woodwind Quintet will perform at 8:00 in the School of Music Recital Hall . . . a program entitled Cable Watch III can be seen at 8:00 on Public Access Channel "F" on local cable TV. A2's weather Today should see gradually increasing j cloudiness with afternoon highs in the mid- 80s. Chance of rain is only. 20 per cent. Hijacked airline down BEIRUT, Lebanon W) - A Japan Air Lines (JAL) jumbo jet hijacked four days ago landed this morning in Damascus with 141 persons aboard, an airline spokes- man said, The hijackers took the plane to Syria from the Persian Gulf sheikdom of Dubai, where it spent 70 hours parked'in the sweltering desert heat. BULLETIN Reports late last night said the hi- jacked airliner had taken off for another unknown destination. It was heading in the direction of Cyprus, airline officials said. THE FOUR AIR PIRATES were still in, control of the jetliner. A fifth hijacker, a woman, was killed earlier by a grenade blast. Sources said the JAL Boeing 747, which was hijacked Friday after taking off from Amsterdam, requested but was refused permission to land at Baghdad, Iraq. Airports in Bahrain, Kuwait and Abu Dhabi, all on the Persian Gulf, shut down TlE EX' ANSION wilt provide neces- spry water treatment fecilities until at Isst 1990, according to Kesney. Instituting the water and sewage treat- ment plant expansion may, however, cause large increases in the amount resi- dents must pay for these services. Pro- jected rate hikes'could total as much as 85 per cent of the current fees, according to Kenney. Just before last night's session, the coun- cil rtues committee met to discuss chan- ges in , council regulations proposed by Mayor James Stephenson last week. The committee reviewed two minor changes in the rules, while postponing work on the most significant alterations. THE CONTROVERSIAL changes would prohibit council members from using "profane or obscene language" during meetings and curtail audience reaction. Stephenson proposed that the audience be required to remain seated during pro- ceedings and to refain from "any kind of noise" except at the audience participa- tion sections of the agenda. r puts Syra American - at one point told the Rubai control tower: "From now on, we are to be known as the 'Mt. Carmel Martyrs."' MT. CARMEL is a rocky mountain ridge in northwest Israel extending north- west from the Plain of Jezreel to the Mediterranean port of Haifa. The, hijack- ers said in a message from the plane shortly after seizing it on Friday that their immediate aim was to liberate Haifa. Later yesterday, a guerrilla explained that the name they wanted to be called was "Mt. Carmel, Martyr Sada" and he said this was in honor of the Latin Ameri- can woman, named Peralta, who was kill- ed at the time of the hijacking Friday by the explosion of a grenade she was car- rying. Full-scale security precautions were or- dered at Tel Aviv's Lod International Air- port, the scene of a Japanese terrorist massacre 14 months ago. WH LE THE PLANE was on the ground . in Dubai, the control tower relayed to the hijackers a message authorities believed originated in West Germany telling the sky pirates to either kill those aboard im- mediately or release them. sa fely in in an apparent attempt to avoid receiv- ing the plane, Beirut sources said. And Saudi Arabia closed its air space. THE LANDING at Damascus was re- ported by the JAL office in Beirut, Leba- non. Syria is one of the Arab countries most sympathetic to the Palestinian guer- rilla cause. After the hijacking Friday, the plane flew southeast across Europe and was refused landing privileges at Beirut, Bas- ra- in Iraq and Bahrain before touching down at Dubai. Last night the four gunmen asked for charts of the Saudi Arabian Peninsula and points north, and then released a Japa- nese couple prior to taking off just after midnight - 4:07 p.m. EDT, THE COUPLE WAS identified as Yohit- sugu Kagebayaschi, 62, an adviser to Mainichi, one of Japan's leading news- papers, and his wife Sachiyo, 48. The passengers freed at Dubai were whisked away to a nearby hospital without being seen by the crowd assembled at the air terminal. The hijackers - identified as a Japa- nese, a European, an Arab and a Latin