Saturday, June 4, 1977 THE MICHIGAN DAILY Page Five Moluccans pick mediators ASSEN, The Netherlands (') - Dutch officials and South Moluccan extremists chose a Moluccan doctor and the widow of a guerrilla leader yesterday to help end the 11-day twin sieges in northern Holland. Toos Faber of the Justice Ministry said Dr. Hassan Tan and Chris Suomokil, who help- ed negotiate an end to a Mo- luccan train hijacking in 1975, would begin formal contacts to- day with the seven to 10 gun- men holding at least 55 host- ages on a train near Assen. ANOTHER F OURof of the Asian militants were holding three teachers and a principal at a village school in Bovensmidle, about 10 miles south of the train. Last week they released 105 children and a teacher from the school after about half of them developed stomach pains. The leader of the two terror- ist groups was believed to be on the train, officials said. Four terrorists emerged from the train briefly yesterday and planted a Moluccan flag - ver- tical stripes of red, green, white and blue - on the front of the engine.% ASKED what restrictions had been placed on the mediators, Faber replied, "They are al- lowed in their contacts to see in what way they could be of any assistance in ending this case." Premier Joop den Uyl told reporters in The Hague, the na- tional capital, that the situa- tion in the north remained c: n ti a t3 b c c e s t r s I d p f" a 13 Turks to choose between East and West at polls :serious" and that the govern- nent considered the hostages the "first concern." He said the government had already turned its attention to the siege's effect on relations between the Dutch and the 'ountry's 40,000 South Moluc- can immigrants. He did not elaborate. EARLIER this week, the South Moluccans, who grabbed the hostages in coordinated raids May 23, rejected two, pos- ible mediators offered by the Dutch. The Dutch then turned down two the terrorists pro- posed. Agreement on the mediators followed a meeting in The Hague between Dutch officials and a delegation of Moluccans in The Netherlands. The terrorists are seeking in- Photographic Group Seven June 1--30 opening reception: June 1, 7-9 Saturday 12-5 NQGR FIRST FLO00R MICHIGAN UNION dependence from Indonesia for their Pacific island homeland in the former Dutch East Indies. COUMOKIL'S husband was the first president of the Mo- luccans' exile government here and was executed by the Indo- nesians for guerrilla activity in 1966, officials said. Tan is a former minister of social and youth affairs in the exile gov- ernment. The terrorists announced af- TONIGHT!_r ALL STUDENT SEATS RESERVED AT $2.00 A very humorous and touching evening. AIR CONDITIONED Lydia Mendelssohn Theater June 2, 3, 4-8 pm A Thousand Clowns BOX OFFICE 763-1085 ter taking the hostages that they would not deal with media- tors and warned "if they should nevertheless appear, the dead will start to fall." But three days ago, they asked for third- party help in ending the siege. The terrorists have dropped previous demands that some of the hostages and 21 South Mo- liccans jailed in The Nether- lands for previous terrorist ac- tivity he flown with them out of the country. ANKARA, Turkey MA)- In elections tomorrow, Turkish voters will determine if their strategically situated country will take a turn to the left - with closer ties to the neigh- boring Soviet Union - or re- main in the hands of a pro- Western conservative coalition. The race pits former Premier Bulent Ecevit, the "hero" of the 1974 Cyprus invasion and an advocate of Scandinavian - style social democracy, and Suley- man Demirel, whose conserva- tive Justice party heads a loose four-party coalition. ECEVIT HOLDS a wide edge in press polls and his Repub- lican People's party is the only one given a chance to win a majority in the 450-seat Na- tional Assembly. It presently has 190 seats, while Demirel's coalition has 222. Turkey's next premier will have to make decisions that will vitally affect United States and European security, and the Balkans area. Domestically, he will be faced with runaway 25 per cent inflation, 13 per cent unemployment and low foreign reserves of around $65 million - enough to cover only two months of the country's needs, according to local economists. Although foreign policy has not loomed as an election is- sue, Turkey's new government must decide whether it will in- definitely close the two dozen U. S. intelligence gathering bases shut down in 1975 over an arms embargo dispute with Washington over the Turkish in- vasion of Cyprus. He must also decide if Turkey's 500,000-man armed forces will remain an ac- tive part of the North Atlantic Treaty Organization - NATO - or drift toward greater ties with the Soviet Union and na- tions which, like Turkey, are predominately Moslem. T U R K E Y guards NATO's eastern flank and controls the Dardanelles, the Turkish strait that links the Black Sea and the Mediterranean, and pro- vides the Soviet Union its only southern sea outlet. The two year old Demirel government has been unable to make progress with Greece, its neighbor across the Aegean Sea, in negotiations on air space rights, continental shelf rights and the Cyprus dispute. It is reconsidering its associate membership in the European Common Market. Although eight parties seek ballots of about 20 million Turks of voting age, only Demirel or Ecevit is given a chance for the premiership. sui twem5 INGMAR BERGMAN'S 1972 C iE Four women undergo an inclusive examination which probes and dissects their lives-exposing all their passions, anxieties, frus- trations and insecurities. Bergman confronts the depths of the feminine psyche with amazing sensitivity and uses color in a symbollically expressive way. Starring Harriet Anderson, Liv Ull- man, Ingrid Thulin and Karen Sywan. 1 1 SUNDAY FREE SHOWING THINGS TO COME (1936 Science-Fiction) at 8 CINEMA GUILD TONIGHT AT 7:30 & 9:30 OLD ARCH, Admission AUD. $1.25 1975 JOSEPH LOSEY THE ROMANTIC ENGLISH WOMAN I Michael Caine stars as a bourgeois pulp writer whose imagination pushes his discontented wife (Glenda Jackson) and their gigolo house guest (Helmut Berger) together, thus providing material for his most recent novel. Screenplay by Tom Stoppard. CINEMA .1 TONIGHT AT ANGELL HALL-Aud. "A" 7:30 & 9:30 Admo. $1.25