Thursday; July 9, 1976 THE MICHIGAN DAILY Page Three Israel defends Uganda raid UNITED NATIONS, N. Y. (P) - Israel prepared yesterday to defend before the Security Council its military rescue op- eration in Uganda and to provide what it said was evidence of Ugandan Presi- dent Idi Amin's cooperation with the air hijackers. "We believe the Ugandan government was part and parcel of this operation," Israeli Ambassador Chaim Herzog said in an interview on the NBC "Today Show." "IT IS quite clear they were accom- plices . . . We have a right and duty by international law to protect our citizens . . . as long as we do not overstay our welcome" or use excessive force, Her- zog added. A former hostage of the hijackers said in an interview yesterday that there is "no doubt whatever" that Ugandan Pres- ident Idi Amin was an accomplice in the hijacking. The Organization of African Unity (OAU) asked the council to take up the charge that Israel had committed aggression against Uganda, though some Africans had misgivings about defend- ing Amin. Many U. N. diplomats pri- vately expressed the feeling that Amin did cooperate with the hijackers during the week is Uganda. AN ISRAELI Foreign Ministry spokes- man in Jerusalem said Israel will pre- sent proof of Amin's complicity. Several of the hostages freed by the Israeli commando raid on Uganda's En- tebbe Airport Sunday said Ugandan sold- iers had fully cooperated with the Pal- estinian and German hijackers. An Is- raeli spokesman at the U. N. said his government was preparing testimony from the hostages and other sources. The ordeal began with the hijack of an Air France airbus over Greece on June 27. A total of 149 persons were re- leased over the next few days, and Is- rael freed more than 100 others - most- ly Israelis or other Jews - in its light- ning airport raid. Three hostages, one Israeli soldier, seven hijackers and 20 Ugandan soldiers died. ISRAELI defense officials earlier said Israel had evidence that the Ugandan leader may have known about the hi- jack plot in advance. Amin has loudly criticized both Israel and neighboring Kenya for the raid. He said Israel violated his country's sove- reignty and accused the Kenyan govern- ment of collaborating with the Israeli raiders before they landed in Uganda. The three Israeli planes stopped in Nairobi, Kenya, on the way home from Uganda, an dthere have been various reports that one or two planes stopped en route to the raid. Christians advance in Lebanon; Syrian artillery pounds refinery BEIRUT, Lebanon "' -Syrian artil- lery pounded Palestinian guerrillas and Lebanese leftist Moslems on two fronts yesterday, supporting a Christian ad- vance in the north and cutting fuel sup- plies in the south. The Palestinian guerrilla command said Syrian artillery blasted leftist forces on the northern edge of the Chris- tian enclave, some 40 miles north of Beirut, where Christians claimed ad- vances across a broad front. A SWEDISH JOURNALIST said Syrian guns shelled a refinery near Sidon in southern Lebanon, starting a fire. He said the artillery had opened fire Tues- day night, apparently to drive away tankers approaching to unload fuel. The refinery is not operating, but has 20,000 tons of gasoline in reserve tanks. The tanks are one of the last leftist .... - t A Enemy forces While engaged in war games in Ger- many, U. S. troops attacked and cap- tured a group of Boy Scouts on an over night camping trip. The Americans mis- took the sleeping lads for "aggressors" because the other sides in the war games were using dirty tricks. 1st Lt. Charles Fowler said the opposing forces had used such tricks as employing ag- ents with long hair and beards and his men thought the Scout camp was an- other ploy. The army decided the Boy. Scouts were guerrillas and launched an attack with helicopters sweeping in low and armed men rushing out of the woods as flares burst overhead. "When we entered the camp and s-aw screaming Scouts, we knew we had blundered," admitted Fowler. Happenings... - . . start at noon in the Pendelton Arts rm. of the Union with Tom Nicely, owner of the rare book shop "leaves of grass, speaking on collecting old and rare books . . . at 3 p.m. Students for Riegle are holding a mass meeting in the Kuenzel rm. of the Union. 0 Weather or not Expect partly sunny skies today, with a chance of rain before noon. The high will be near 80. It will be partly cloudy tonight with a 30-20 per cent chance of rain. Tomorrow will be mostly sunny. sources of fuel, without which their op- erations would be crippled. The reporter said the refinery appear- ed damaged yesterday morning after the shelling stopped, but it was not known whether fuel stocks had been destroyed. The Mediterranean Refining Co. plant is owned in part by the Mobil and Caltex oil companies. TIlE REFINERY shelling sent gas - line prices in Beirut soaring up to $5 a g-alon, when it could be found at all. t'aymnd Edde, a Christian politician who has allied himself with the leftists, " urged that an American tanker be hired to transport fuel to Beirut. He said Sy- rians would not have the courage to fire on a ship flying an American flag. The Palestine Liberation Organization (PLO) charged that Syrian forces at- tacked Palestinian refugee camps in northern Lebanon at dawn, causing heavy losses among civilians." PLO CHIEF Yasir Arafat ordered the headquarters of his Palestine Liberation Arm -y shifted from Damascus to Beirut. Observers saw the move as an attempt to free the PLO from Syrian influence. 'Te PLO asked the International Red Cross in Geneva, Switzerland, to pres- sure Syria to halt the fighting and pro- AP P1to tect the lives of Palestinian captives it holds. Hands across the water Daoud Barakat, the PLO's permanent President Ford greets Queen Elizabeth It of Great Britain upon her arrival at observer at the United Nations office in the White House yesterday. She is the ninth European monarch to make a See LEBANESE, Page 10 Bicentennial visit to the United States this year. WHEELER MAY VETO PLAN: CouncilO.K.'sh igh -rise for elderly By MIKE NORTON After months of partisan bickering, pressure-group blitzkrieg, and citizen outrage, the Ann Arbor City Council voted along party lines last night to al- low construction of a controversial sen- ior citizens high-rise at Briarwood Mall. However, Mayor Albert Wheeler in- formed Council members he intends to veto the site plan, according to Council- woman Liz Keogh (D-2nd Ward). THE BRIEF Council meeting opened with its usual public comments section -and, as usual, this was dominated by the proponents of the high-rise. Debate between Council members over the question was marked with hisses, boos, and scornful laughter from members of the audience who have come to be as- soliated with the controversy. Backers of the high-rise-some senior citizens' groups, representatives of the contractors and. developers, and labor leaders - have all pointed out that the project is to be federally funded, that the city needs housing desperately, and that another opportunity might never come. Tlhe major critics - among them the League of Women Voters, senior citi- zeus' groups, and the Washtenaw Coun- ty Council on the Aging - have decried the site's lack of support facilities such- as grocery and drug stores, its isola- tion, the traffic in the Iriarwood area, and the expected drain on city water and sewage facilities. NONE OF last night's arguments were new. But as the debate progressed it became obvious that each Council mern- her was intent on making a momentous stand of some kind. Freshman Council member Wendell Allen (R-1st Ward) began by listing the virtues of Ann Arbor's elder citizens and finished by saying, "I think that in the autumn of their lives we ought to give these folks a decent place to live." Wheeler attempted to answer Allen, but was interrupted so often by hecklers that he was forced to stop and admonish the audience "I ALLOWEDI yu to, speak without interrupting you," he said sternly, "and I expect the saime from yout." Retiring Mayor Pro Tem Robert henry (1-3rd Ward) mde his position obvinus; it would be a stand in fuivor of the high- rise otin solid, Republican grorunds. Se chided the Democratic minority for their objections to the project, saying that they were "trying to impose their con- cepts of gain on other people" and "en- tatitg in Big-Brotherism in iithe worst sEtsre of the word." "All right," said Idonry. "It's not the greatest housing project in the world. But it's a project." COUNCIL MEMBER Jamie Ken- See HIGIRISE, Page 10