f RE LIGIONI See editorial page : 'I .e Ninety Years of Editorial Freedom 1 IaiI CLODeIY See Today for details Val. XC, No. 95 Ann Arbor, Michigan-Saturday, January 26, 1980 Ten Cents Ten Pages r y Gunmen killed in +S. African bank Iranians vote for president, turnout high SILVERTON, South Africa (AP)- Police acting under a "no mercy" policy stormed a suburban bank yesterday and killed three black gun- men who took 25 hostages in a bold at- tempt to gain freedom for political prisoners. A 19-year-old woman hostage was killed and 17 hostages and four policemen were wounded in the gun battle and by the expolosion of a grenade thrown by one of the black militants, hospital officials said.. SOUTH AFRICA Broadcasting Corp. announced two women hostages were killed, but hospital officials confirmed the death of only one. It was the first time black nationalists have. seized hostages in an attempt to free jailed black leaders in this white-ruled country. Police Minister Louis Le Grange said heavily armed police charged into the bank on the ground floor of a three- story building, after the gunmen began shooting the hostages. But one of the hostages, P.S.J. Bierman, said it seemed as if the blacks and police began shogting at the same time. LE GRANGE STATED the "no mer- cy" policy, telling reporters after the bloody shootout: "Let this action of the police be a warning and an example to all. terrorists who have thoughts of aggression against innocent people and the state. We will take harsh action and no mercy will be shown to them." He said senior police officials had negotiated with the gunmen during the afternoon-long siege, but "their demands were never even considered." Le Grange said when there were reports the gunmen were shooting the hostages, "there was no stopping the police, who stormed in and shot and klled the terrorists." He did not e aborate on his statement that the gunmen had started shooting their cap- tives. THE GUN BATTLE lasted about two minutes, punctuated by the grenade explosion that rocked the building. Police sources said the black nationalists were members of the ban- ned African National Congress and among the prisoners they wanted freed was Nelson Mandela, a 61-year-old lawyer considered by many to be the founder of South Africa's black nationalist movement. The gunmen reportedly were deman- ding 'that Mandela and some other prisoners be freed and transportation be provided for themselves and the prisoners to black-ruled Angola. From The Associated Press Torn by internal dissent and warned against foreign "plots," Iranians voted yesterday for a new president, one who U.S. officials hope will change the tone of the U.S.-Iranian showdown over the , embassy hostage crisis. Ailing revolutionary leader Ayatollah . * lRuhollah Khomeini remained under treatment for heart troublat a Tehran hospital. His office issued a statement describing the voting as "enthusiastic" across most of the country, Tehran Radio reported. BUT THE government broadcasts, monitored in London, also reported that balloting did not take place in at least two cities in Kurdistan, where anti- Khomeini Kurdish leaders called for a boycott of Iran's first-ever presidential AP Photo election. Ayatollah Mohammed Kazem Shariat-Madari, i key Khomeini rival, apparently also was boycotting the balloting. The official Iranian news agency said he had not voted by mid- day. In another development, it was repor- ted that a firing squad executed two alleged members of a radical Islamic group convicted in the assassination of two close Khomeini associates. THE PRE-ELECTION favorites: among the eight official presidential candidates were Culture and Education Minister Hassan Habibi and Finance Minister Abolhassan Bani-Sadr. Foreign Minister Sadegh Ghotbzadeh was also a candidate. About 20 million Iranians were eligible to vote. Definitive election See IRANIANS, Page 2 IRANIAN WOMEN accept ballots for the nation's first presidential elec- tion while a policeman stands by. Large turnouts were reported in the voting. Armed Black Muslim hijaeker surrenders ALLEGED MISUSE OF FUNDS: MSU Trt By BONNIE JURAN Michael Smydra, a member of the *Michigan State University Board of Trustees, resigned his post Thursday in the face of possible board action again- st him concerning his alledged misuse of administrative funds. Smydra said yesterday that the con- troversy which -ld to his resignation, arose when the board'learned of his side trips to Rice ' University and a Galveston Medical school while he was attending a conference on Governing Conf rence exami n es sexual harassment BY KEVIN TOTTIS Donna, a sales correspondent, was first harrassed by a co-worker one day when she was on the phone with a client. He walked in front of her. stared down at her breasts and began licking his-mouth. That was only the beginning. A sales manager asked her out but she refused. After that he continued to complain about her work. When the abuse con- tinued, Donna complained to her. superiors. Her complaints . were ignored. The recurrent abuse even- tually forced Donna to quit her job. THIS IS ONE example of sexual harrassment that was cited yesterday at a day-long conference at the Michigan Leagues Called 'Planning. Programs on Sexual Harrassment," the conference was sponsored by the University and Wayne State Univer- sity's Institute of Labor and Industrial Rclations. Approximately 65 women and five men attended the conference that focused on two areas - providing background information on sexual harrassment and training people to plan programs to deal with the See CONFERENCE, Page 7. tstee quil Boards in Dallas. He denied claims that the board disapproved of his spending over $200 without authorization. ACCORDING TO Smydra, 31, any ac- tion taken against him by the board would have been rooted in the fact that "we don't always see eye to eye. The last three years have been filled with tension and stress because I disagree with them philosophically." As an example, Smydra said he believes in dealing with problems at MSU in a direct manner. He said he would not hesitate to go to a professor's office to talk to him or her personally. He contends that other board members would be more apt to go through chan- nels rather than take care of a problem themselves. Smydra said he believes the purpose of the board is to "promote academic excellence" and that it is "appropriate for a trustee to be intimately involved with the area of education on a day to day basis." He claimed he visited the two Texas universities in order to ob- serve ways in which to improve education at MSU, in con ACCORDING TO Smydra, the majority of the board did not agree with his reasons for traveling to Galveston and Houston and that this sparked the present controversy. "If my philosophy is considered improper, then any action stemming from that philosophy is also considered improper." As to the claim that he spent over $200 in one month without authorization from the board, Smydra admitted .he did break a rule but alleges that five other trustees have also. "Two or three board membrs a month exceed the limit; spending over $200 has become a coimmon practice," he said. John Bruff, chairman of the MSU board of trustees, said that counter to Smydra's claim, the unauthorized ex- penditure of over $200 in one month has not become a common practice. He said that exceeding this limit, which was set by the board last year, "must be ap- proved under any circumstances." SMYDRA ALSO said "there is no mechanism for seeking authorization." But according to Bruff, approval may be sought through the audit committee. trove rsy "By choosing to resign I chose not to defend myself," Smydra said. "When you are accused of something like this, and then the final report comes out saying you are cleared, nobody remembers that. The allegations that are made are what stick in peoples' minds." According to Smydra, there, was "presumption of wrong-doing to being with." He said that because he planned to serve only another year of his term, he decided it was not worth spending the next 11 month fighting. 'I believed that after this, something else would happen," he said. "I figured the university wasn't being helped by this constant controversy. Something had to give and sok I resigned," he ad- ded. Bruff refused to comment on what ac- tion would have been taken against Smydra had he not resigned and claimed that all of Smydra's allegations were untrue. MIAMI, Fla. (R) } - A Black Muslim man who hijacked a jet with 65 people aboard and demanded to be taken to Iran was taken into custody yesterday in Cuba after the passengers sneaked off the plane. None of the passengers or crew was injured and they returned to the United Stales last night, federal of- ficials said. The man, who was accompanied on the flight by his wife and two daughters - seven months and two years old - surrendered nearly 14 hours after hijacking the Delta Air,. Lines. L-1011 over North Carolina, according to Federal Aviation Administration (FAA) spokesman Fred Farrar in Washington and Delta spokesman Dick Jones in Miami. ARTHUR NEHRBASS, special agent in charge of the FBI office in Miami, where the plane landed at 6:36 p.m., EjST, identified the man as Samuel Alben Ingram Jr., 29, of Atlanta. Nehrbass said Ingrain, his wife arnd th"ir children were being heh'l in Cuba and he didn't know whether Cubans would return them to the United States. "We're still putting the story together," Nehrbass said. "The crew tells us the Cuban authorities were very cooperative. Some of the passengers are exhausted, but otherwise everyone is all right." TIE PLANE'S passengers and crew were debriefed by federal authorities before going through Customs and con- tinuing on to New York, the flight's original destination. Authorities had said the man - who seized the jet at 1:51 a.m. EST - ap- parently had been armed with one or more guns. There were no reports of shooting. One of the passengers, Lynn Martin, 19, of Dallas, said in Miami: "HE °the hijacker) did not threaten the passengers. The captain told us he was armed. I Qlon't know with what." She said the hijacker was in the cock- pit while his wife and daughters were asleep in their seats while the plane was on the ground in Havana. She said that the passengers began sneaking out the back of the plane and to the ground via a truck used to raise food to the plane. "HIS WIFE and kids were in their seats asleep and he was in the cockpit and we just snuck out," she added before being hus' led off by Delta per- sonnel. 'It was nerve-wracking." Capitol Hill officials speak of war threat By JULIE SELBST The atmosphere in Washington these days is turbulent, and the spirit of war pervades, U.S. Rep. John Conyers said last week in an informal discussion in Ann Arbor. Michael Russell, spokesman for United States Senator Donald Riegle, did not agree, but did say 'there appear to be two camps, one for some sort of strong military posture, and the other along the lines of, 'we ought to get serious about thinking about a strong military posture'." "WAR FEVER, like the morning af- ter Pearl Harbor," he continued, "it hasn't reached those proportions. But SALT II, you can etch it in stone. It will not be considered in this session of Congress.'. Butdfor the moment, aside from President Carter's proposal, registration for the draft has met with little other encouragement. "He (Riegle) would not want to go ahead with it (the registration proposal) until he's had a chance to participate in the hearing on the selec- tive service system," Russell said, "At this point he would go no further than negotiation." The hearings will probably take place some time this month. ACCORDING TO Stephen Serkaian, a spokesman for U.S. Sen. Carl Levin, President Carter will have to decide whether to propose the registration of women for the draft by Feb. 9. To in- stitute a draft registration affecting both sexes would take longer than if a conventional draft were instituted, said Serkaian, because it would require new legislation. The president is required by law to respond to Congress on the study of the See SENATE, Page 2 AP Photo STANFORD UNIVERSITY students burned a mock draft card at a demonstration Thursday. About 600 students attended the noon rally at the university's Old Union Courtyard, and shouted their approval as the poster size card went up in flames. Tom Durham. "We couldn't get out there unless we had a lot of beer." Durham said the fraternity is having the beach party to kick-off the beginning of Rush Week. and to "try to get a little publicity for ourselves." Durham also said he hopes the party will help alleviate the fraternity system's generally negative image in the wake of the cat killing incident. O ie-president resigns It was announced this week that Kim Bower, the newly elected vice-president of LSA-SG, has resigned from that- unclaimed suitcase over to police in April, 1977, she didn't realize she was handing in over $185,000 in 'loot.' Actually, the woman is probably relieved she didn't keep the missing luggage. It seems the suitcase contained 18 grams of heroin with a street value of $175,00, $8,600 in cash and some' women's clothing. Since nobody claimed the suitcase, Cir- cuit Judge Hazen Armstrong ruled this week that it belongsj to Saginaw County. Sheriff James Kelley has been given custody of the suitcase and it's contents. If someone had' claimed the suitcase, however, there world have been a big Catch-22. Possession of large amounts of heroin is a felony audience at the Hollywood Pallaldium, as a "good-looking older man." But as Parks walked on stage, she remarked, "He doesn't look so old." Parks was fired last month from his job as the Miss America Pageant's emcee because Pageant officials said he was too old. fZ On the inside Coverage of the Michigan-Minnesota hockey game in Minneapolis in Sports . . . Star Trek on Arts, page 5 .. . And a criticism of the media's treatment of religion on the I C i