Subscribe to the Daily- Call 764-0558 FREE ISSUE 4.,itjc tj9 tiFREE ISSUE Ninety Years of Editorial Freedom Vol. XC, No. 82 Ann Arbor, Michigan-Friday January 11, 1980 Free Issue TwelveIa a , s *Meany, past AFL-CIO president, dead at 85 WASHINGTON (AP) - George Meany, the gruff-talking one-time plumber who rose to become the single most powerful force in the American labor movement, died yesterday. He weas 85. Meany stepped down in November af- ter 25 years as the only president the AFL-CIO had ever known. Meany, who had been confined to a wheelchair since last May, was read- mitted to George Washington Hospital on Sunday for treatment of a painful buildup of fluid in his legs. AFL-CIO spokesman Albert Zack said Meany's cdndition had worsened yesterday afternoon and he was tran- sferred to the hospital's intensive care unit. He died late last night, Zack said. Meany's health had deteriorated rapidly in 1979, perhaps hastened by his wife's death in March. Friends said the loss of the woman to whom he had been married for 59 years dampened his spirit and his determination to recover. Shortly after her death, he suffered a knee injury that prompted a flairup of his arthritic hip. He was left gaunt, pale and confined to a wheel ch ir. It was from that wheel chair that Meany made a tearful farewell tok the 14 million-member labor federation in November at the AFL-CIO's annual convention. Meany was "Mr. Labor," keeping an iron grip on the organization he forged by bringing together the American Federation of Labor and Congress of Industrial Organizations in 1955. Under Democratic and Republican presidents alike, he became as much a political powe+ broker as a labor leader. And he could never be taken for granted. Although he led the AFL-CIO to a strong endorsement of Jimmy Carter during Carter's campaign against Gerald R. Ford in 1976, Meany soqn emerged as one of the new president's most persistent and harshest critics. Meany was succeeded as head of the AFL-CIO by Lane Kirkland, his protege and handpicked successor. Afghans cdose road linking Russia, Kabul A REFUGEE FROM Afghanistan stands in front of his tent at Pir Piayee, Pakistan. More than 411,000 Afghan crossed into Pakistan since the first pro-Soviet president, the late Nur Mohammad Taraki, was installed in some 20 months ago. STUDENTS UPGRADE PRISON REC FACILITIES Class tackles realjb KABUL, Afghanistan (AP)-Diplo- matic sources reported the Soviet Union has moved additional men and armor into Afganistan, but Moslem guerrillas were said yesterday to have x. closed a strategic highway linking Russia with the capital city. There also were reports that an Afghan army brigade fought with Soviet troops in Kandahar, in south- western Afghanistan, and both sides suffered heavy casualties. THE REPORTS could not be confir- med independently. Afghanistan's new pro-Soviet gover- AP Photo nment broadcast a letter to President have Carter accusing the United States of K5 "trying with all its force to work again- Kabul, st us." The nation's new president, Babrak Karmal, told a news conference "the small-numbered Soviet military con- tingent" will leave the country as soon as "intervention" by foreign powers supporting Moslem Afghan rebels is over, the Hungarian news agency reported. Karmal claimed the in- surgency is supported by the United questing States, China, Pakistan, Saudi Arabia g the and Egypt. Clipson THE NEWS AGENCY, MTI, quoted I began Karmal as saying Afghanistan's pcoming revolutionary council had asked the project, Soviet Union for assistance even before s to the Dec. 27, when the Soviets sent thousan- igs and ds of troops into Afghanistan and mates in helped install Karmal in place of ds. After Hafizullah Amin, who subsequently tracks, was reported executed. projects The Soviets, he said, did not consider among intervention for some time, but later returned the assistance of the "Soviet contingent structed became urgently pressing." He did not elaborate. nent of Soviet troops are believed to control ommen- most of the major cities and highways emented throughout the country. running THE OFFICAL Soviet news agency ccording Tass said in a dispatch from Kabul that il Plant an American Roman Catholic mission re funds here had been functioning as an "un- d for the derground center" for recruiting "counter-revolutionary agents" to cir- ess," he culate "subversive literature." Tass 5 claimed the mission was part of the By STEVE HOOK "When you know that your idea will not be just looked at by a professor and put on the shelf, you have a greater sen- se of purpose," said graduate architec- ture student Robert Wear. "It's not just an exercise." Last winter term, Wear and 16 other students enrolled in Prof. Colin Clip- son's Human Factors in Architectural Design class embarked on a project to research and design a wide range of recreational facilities at Jackson State Prison. THE CLASS provided recommen- dations the state Department of Correc- tions will follow when improving the facilities later this year. For the students, their experiences with the project provided a welcome and valuable diversion from training in the classroom, offering them both professional and sociological insights. For the state, the concept promises high-quality expertise which would not otherwise come so cheap. "You can't beat a real-life situation like that one," saidWear's classmate in the project, Martin McKee. "You're scared working in, that environ- ment-you play by the rules or you don't play. It grows you up real quick." McKee said the "restrictions and limitations" involved with the project, such as inhibiting the view from watch towers, and avoiding equipment "that could be used as weapons by the in- mates," were a "real challenge." THE PROJECT was inspired by a let- ter sent to the University two years ago by Jackson State inmates re assistance in upgradin recreational facilities there. heard about the plea and preparations for his up graduate students. During the students made frequent trip: prison, touring the buildin grounds, and interviewing in an attempt to clarify their neee developing plans for running weight rooms, landscaping and a new hobbycraft center other proposals, the studentsr to the drawing board and con specific designs. Since May, the Departm Corrections has had its rec dations, although it has implf just two so far, an outdoor track and weightlifting pit. A to the department's Physica Consultant, Bob Groneleer, mo have "just now" been allocate project. "It's been a very slow proc See STUDENT, Page American cultural center run by the U.S. Embassy. The 152-nation U.N. General Assem- bly, which has nopower to take punitive action, scheduled debate on the situation in Afghanistan. The Soviet' Union, which on Monday vetoed a Security Council resolution calling for withdrawal of all foreign troops, has an estimated 100,000 soldiers in this Cen- tral Asian nation. Afghan sources and Asian diplomats See SOVIETS, Page 6 Afghan refugees pour' into Pakistan, PIRhPIAYEE, Pakistan (AP)- More than 2,600 Afghans are pouring in- to 12 major refugee camps in Pakistan each day, apparently in search of the religious freedom they fear has been lost in their Soviet-dominated homeland. Once inside this Moslem land, the Afghan refugees are provided tiny food rations and tents too flimsy to withstand sub-zero temperatures many of them must endure. There are urgent shortages of medicine, baby food, mobile dispensaries and hospital facilities. AND YET THE Afghans keep coming with their cattle, camels, goats and sheep from which many derive their livelihoods and transportation. There is not enough food to feed the animals either,, but the talk here is of religious freedom not material shor- tages, though less than the equivalent of 50 cents is spent on each refugee each See AFGHANISTAN, Page 6 Golddiggers of 1980 strike it rich trading nuggets worth their weight By LISA LAVA-KELLAR Your mouth might be worth its weight in gold-or parts of it, anyway. Last week, a woman walked into the Ann Arbor Stamp and Coin shop, reached into her mouth and plunked her gold dental bridge on the counter. She left with $70. ESCALATING GOLD prices have many individuals scurrying to sell their gilded paraphernalia. As many as 150 persons buy and trade daily at Ann Ar- bor Stamp and Coin, according to Bryan Godwin, owner. "We'll buy anything gold, as long as it's marked as ten, eighteen or.twenty- four karat gold," said Godwin. Although local jewelers say they receive many phone calls from in- dividuals wishing to trade-in their *keepsakes, the eager consumer may have a harder time at a jewelry store. "I'M SNOT BUYING gold at this point," said M. H. Lewis, owner of Lewis Jewelers of Ann Arbor. "When I do buy, I must know the individual and the history of the piece." Most jewelers are wary, according to Lewis, because alloys are difficult to distinguish from the gold. See GOLDDIGGERS, Page 5 Moslem militants from U.S. Embassy consult with Khomeini TEHRAN, Iran (AP) - Moslem militants from the U.S. Embassy made a surprise pilgrimage to Qom yester- day and consulted with Ayatollah Ruhollah Khomeini, stirring speculation that some solid develop- ment may be near in the long captivity of their American hostages. But one possibility was that the militants were only trying to persuade Khomeini to order that U.S. diplomat L. Bruce Laingen, in custody at the Foreign Ministry, be handed over to them. THE GOVERNMENT radio repor- ted, meanwhile, that the leader of a shadowy assassination band called "The Koran" and 15 of his comrades had been captured after a shootout with militiamen. The band had claimed responsibility for a string of political killings, including the slaying of a Khomeini associate last month that many Iranians denounced as the work of the American CIA. Anti-Khomeini unrest continued among Iran's ethnic minorities yester- day. General strikes paralyzed two provincial capitals - Tabriz, center'of the Azerbaijani region, and Kurdish- populated Sanandaj. The purpose of the militants' journey to the holy city of Qom, 100 miles south of Tehran, was not revealed, and no details were available on the meeting with Khomeini. ONE SPOKESMAN for the student militants said 100 of the estimated 500 young people occupying the embassy had gone to see the Iranian leader, but another of the youths later denied the group was that large. The students refused to say whether the trip was concerned with their 50 or so American hostages or with Laingen, although one said of the Laingen issue, "If we had wanted to discuss that, we would have sent two people." Charge d'Affaires Laingen, the top U.S. diplomat in Iran, has been at the Foreign Ministry with two embassy colleagues ever since the militants seized the complex and hostages Nov. 4. The militants say they will not free their hostages until the deposed Shah Mohammad Reza Pahlavi is sent back to Iran. LAST WEEK, the miltants called on the ministry to hand Laingen over to them for questioning about alleged espionage operations at the embassy. Foreign Minister Sadegh Ghotbzadeh asked Khomeini to make the decision, but the ayatollah has been silent on the question. It was the first known meeting bet- ween Khomeini and the militants, who describe themselves as loyal followers of the ayatollah and have a clergyman representative of Khomeini in the em- bassy. Daily Photo by CYRENA CHA ESCALATING GOLD prices have not kept consumers from shopping for gilded paraphernalia. Many Ann Arbor jewelers said they are wary of buying gold because alloys are difficult to distinguish from the expensive gold. I - all new tenants. Artistic aphrodisiac Is there a cultural void in your life? If so, the solution is only a short drive away, at the University's Flint campus. "The Art of Playboy," the private art collection of Playboy magazine, will be exhibited at the Flint campus' University Center Gallery through Feb. 5. Arthus Paul, the magazine's art director and vice-president for corporate art and graphics director of Playboy Enterprises, Inc., was guest of honor at the Jan. 7 opening of the collection. Paul's claim to fs, -n> Un na:tnn l f n kj f ,,,A 1~ r- f - C:...4, ...._ _ -r-- CQ s J A f7 Geddes Ave. bus shelter near the C.C. Little Building. The Unversity has operated a South Commuter lot for 13 years. "Along with our expanding program of van pools, the North Commuter parking lot and the new bus line provides another step in our use of mass transportation for improved access to the Medical Center and the Central Campus," said James Brinkerhoff, University vice-president and chief financial officer. On the inside A discussion of the United Nations and international law p=pp- 1', 1 .,,. .. 4. 1 1 rI