Fri ,.Bane 20,19-75- THE MICfHIGAN DAILY P cge Three I Friday, Juite 20, 19-75 THE MICHIGAN DAILY Page Three Israeli party plans to keep Golan TEL AVIV (IP) - Prime Minister Yitz- ing of Labor party farmers. however, said that it was a "word map" by Rabin, Foreign Minister Yigal A hak Rabin and his Labor party have de- Israel will retain a presence in strate- or set of policies, not an actual chart Defense Minister Shimon Peres and fined Israel's permanent borders-includ- gic Sharm el Sheikh at the southern end with frontiers drawn on paper. ers, together with executives of the ing annexation of the Golan Heights and of the Sinai Peninsula but is prepared to bor alignment. the Gaza Strip - in a peace plan for negotiate the region's final sovereignty IN PEACE negotiations, he said, there The'principles of the plan were negotiations with the Arabs, the secre- with Egypt, he said. This indicated that could be give and take about exact loca- lined by Rabin himself and other m tary - general of the party said yester- Rabin's party was willing to return the tions, and concessions could be made day. rest of the vast Sinai Desert and its oil- over a few kilometers "even on the Go- said A Syrian leader said in London that fields to Egypt. Ian Heights -- but it is clear that we his government is determined to regain will not go down from the whole Golan." Rabin and the party had refry the Golan Heights in any Middle East THE PARTY peace plan was tanta- Everything in the peace plan had been from drawing specific lines on ai settlement. There was no immediate mount to official Israeli policy since the made public frequently in the past, Har- he said, because these "could Sta comment from Egypt. Labor alignment dominates the coalition mor said. He said most points were es- the way of a peace settlement. Allon, oth- e La- out- ninis- rmor wined map, nd in THE PLAN makes the Golan Heights and the Gaza Strip - captured from Syria and Egypt, respectively, in the 1967 war - permanent parts of the state of Israel, said party chief Meir Zarmi. It establishes the Jordan River as Is- rael's final security border but leaves the sovereignty of occupied west Jordan open to negotiations, Zarmi told a meet- government. But any peace agreement with the Arabs would need approval in parliament where Labor does not hold a majority. Zarmi said the plan was the "clear, final map" which critics here and abroad have called on the' government to pro- duce, showing the borders that Israel wants in a peace settlement. Labor party spokesman Zvi Harmor, tablished planks in the party platform, but the "word map" put the principles together in final, definite form. Harmor said the plan was put together in three meetings before Rabin left for talks in Washington with President Ford and Secretary of State Henry Kissinger last week. HE SAID the meetings were attended HE SAID the plan made no mention of Jerusalemi because the Arab half of the Holy City already had been annexed and was a permanent part of Israel. But Jordan could be given sovereignty over Moslem holy places in Jerusalem according to established Labor policy, and the Vatican could control Christian holy sites, the party spokesman said. Washington protesters remember Rosenbergs By GORDON ATCHESON Special To The Day WASHINGTON - 22 years ago yesterday Julias and Ethel Rosenberg were executed in Sing Sing Prison after being con- victed of conspiring to give the Soviet Union secret information about the atomic bomb. . The celebrated case was a headline grabber then - at the height of the "red scare" era- and the attention didn't die' with the Rosenbergs. MANY people, including the Rosenberg's sons, Robert and Michael Meeropol, believed the couple was unfairly convicted in a trial they claim turned out to be a sham. Consequently they want the entire case reopened and are pressing the FBI and the Justice Dept. to release classified. ma- terials on the affair. To dramatize their campaign, about 50 members of the Nation- al Committee to Reopen the Rosenberg Case yesterday pick. eted the front of the Justice Dept. building here. CARRYING signs that read "End the McCarthy era" and 'T'he FBI's 20-year-old Water- gate - The Rosenberg Case -- open / the secret files," they passed out leaflets to hundreds of sightseers waiting to tour the FBI, which is housed in the Justice building. Many of the tourists curtly refused the literature as they stood in a blistering noonday sun sipping soda and munching over-priced hot dogs. "They (the Rosenbergs) got what they deserved," a man from Kentucky said. "I'm just sorry the government took so long in giving it to them." BUT the demonstrators re- mained undaunted. See WASHINGTON, Page 7 AATA budgets more TEL RAN services . AP Photo Comic relief Betty Ford is escorted by director and actor Woody Allen and Diane Keaton, his co-star in "Love and Death." They attended the benefit performance of the Martha Graham Dance Company with Rudolf Nureyev and Dame Margot Ronteyn at the Uris Theater in New York last night. By BILL PERRY The Ann Arbor Transporta- tion Authority (AATA) Board has adopted a proposed $3.5 million operating budget for the 1975-76 fiscal year. After the board's unanimous approval of the budget, AATA "Chairman William Drake said it meant that "fiscal year 1975-76 will be the first year of full TELTRAN implementation." Drake called the TELTRAN system a "hybrid." Under the 25 cent-per-ride system, a com- plete network of neighborhood Dial-a-Ride services would pro- vide door-to-door transportation within each neighborhood, and would also act as a "feeder" system for the city's regular ex- press trunk lines. Drake pre- dicted the city would get a com- plete network of the small Dial- a-Ride vans by Thanksgiving. THE COMPLETE TELTRAN system will be the result of more than two years of slow progress towards the improve- ment of public transportation in the city. Since April 1973, when voters approved an annual 2.5 mills (about $1.6 million) to sup- port an improved transportation system, there have been num- erous delays in getting the pro- gram on the road, "The problem is, simply, de- livery of equipment," Drake said. He explained it can take anywhere from six to nine months for the AATA to get the- equipment it orders. He also pointed out that an additional 10-30 days is often required for acceptance tests. Public support for the pro- gram hasn't been entirely unani- mous. Charles Chadwick, a resi- dent of the southeast side, at- tended the Wednesday meeting and voiced disapproval over the way the TELTRAN system was being implemented in his neigh- borhood. A L T H 0 U G H he sup- ported the Dial-a-Ride concept, he said he did not want to rely on it exclusively to get to the regular express-bus lines. He considered the Dial-a-Ride sys- tem too time-consuming to be used on a routine basis. In response to those com- plaints, AATA Executive Direc- tor Karl Guenther pointed out the greatest increase in rider- ship over the year has been in the Dial-a-Ride system and not in the main trunk lines, indicat- See DIAL, Page 7 SCHOOL BOARD SEES FUND CRISIS 2nd milage By JEFF RISTINE The Ann Arbor school board, faced with the specter of heavy budget cuts, may return to the voters this fall with a millage increase request similar to one defeated two weeks ago. While another election could be arranged as soon as late August or early September, many school board members believe the question of a tax hike should wait until economic conditions improve and other factors more favorable for a millage approval begin to take effect. BOARD PRESIDENT Clarence Dukes yester- day called a fall millage increase proposal "a definite possibility," adding, "I'd rather go for- that than not at all." Dukes, who finished first in the June 9 school board election, said "it would seem a little bit foolhardy" to pose the millage proposition this summer. He noted that much of the University community and public school system staff is away from the city during the summer-persons who could generally be expected to back such in- creases. "How would we reach those people?" Dukes asked. "And also, what's changed? Unless the economy changes, I would say 'why go back?' " bdpossible, THE VOTING public, Dukes added, might think the board was "precipitous or arrogant" if pre- sented with another millage request so quickly. Although city voters approved two millage renewal requests this month by better than 2-1 margins, they turned down the 1.5 mill increase proposal by less than 800 votes. The additional levy on property taxes would have brought in approximately $1.3 million year until 1979. "THE NEED still exists," emphasized board trustee Cecil Warner. He interpreted the senti- ment of the board at their special executive ses- sion Wednesday night, however, as negative to- ward the idea of a summer ballot issue. Warner, who was head of the school district's millage campaign this year, favors a September ballot issue-when "parents are always reminded how nice it is to have schools." The economic atmosphere in September is also favorable, according to Warner, because taxpay- ers are not yet into the costly Christmas season or their year-end tax bills. BUT HE acknowledged that "going in fall is harder than going in spring," because fewer opportunities exist to speak directly to the voters, See SCHOOL, Page 1o