The Michigan Daily-Thursday, December 4, 1980-Page 7 Jordan kills Syrian BEIRUT, Lebanon (UPI)-Jordan rejected Syria's terms for withdrawing troops from the border yesterday and reports from Damascus indicated the Syrians were still marshalling their, forces at the frontier. However, there was no indication Be an angel - . Read o 2 Ba lvi 764-0558 that the two Arab countries, their troops faced off on either side of the border were about to go to war. THE Kuwaiti News Agency quoted Jordanian Information Minister Adnan Abu Odeh as saying Amman had turned down the Syrian conditions for ending the confrontation, including a demand that Jordan cease assisting the Moslem Brotherhood Organization. Syria has accused Jordan of "ar- ming, supporting, and training" mem- bers of the banned brotherhood, which Damascus has Blamed for a number of sabotage attacks in Syrian cities. Syria also demanded Jordan make no effort to speak on behalf of the Palestine Liberation Organization. "ACCEPTING these conditions would in effect mean admitting these allegations ... being made by Syria," Abu Odeh said. In a separate interview with the Jordanian news agency, Abu O'deh denied Jordan had even received any Syrian demands. "Jordan did not receive any con- ditions and no one has conveyed to it any conditions," he said. He said Syria had used allegations over the issues of the Moslem Brotherhood and the PLO "to justify their massing of troops on the border with Jordan." HE DENIED Jordan was backing the Moslem Brotherhood and said Jordan still considered the PLO the sole representative of the Palestinian people-"a basic decision which cannot be contradicted." The rejection appeared to jeopardize peace moves led by Saudi Arabian prince Abdullah Bin Abdel Aziz, the I offer, Saudi national guarad commander who traveled to Damascus and then to Am- man in a bid to defuse the situation. Observers in Damascus said the Saudi mediation had succeeded in preventing a military incident "at least provisionally," but that attempts to ease tension and restore normal relations were "still standing at zero point." Syria had an estimated 50,000 troops, fully one-fourth of its armed forces, backed by some 1,100 Soviet-made tanks poised along the border. Despite Western news reports Tuesday that Syria had begun a partial withdrawal from the frontier, official sources in Damascus said military preparations were still under way and that any reports to the contrary were "not worth commenting on." Mao's to lea PEKING (AP) - M widow admitted in cou that she led a group i false evidence against President Liu Shao-chi the arrest of ; his glan born wife on charges American spy, the off news agency reported. Peking Radio report( Jiang Qing quibbled questions in response to she led "the nation's gr up" - the seizure of Li jail in 1969, and his Guangmei. CHINESE SOURCE Qing, leader of the G appeared self-assure Supreme People's C denied charges she ord secution of Lui and W believed to have been a widow admits ing frame-up ao Tse-tung's summer of 1967. irt yesterday Liu was exonerated posthumously n rigging up last spring; Wang works as director then Chinese of the foreign affairs department of and ordered the Chinese Academy of Social norous, U.S.- Sciences after serving 12 years in she was an jail. ficial Xinhua Foreign reporters, barred from the courtroom on grounds state ed earlier that secrets may be discussed, must rely and evaded on reports from Chinese officials a charges that and media. eatest frame- According to Peking Radio, the 67- u, who died in year-old widow made "crafty wife Wang denials" 'of responsibility for an in- vestigation group's drumming up S said Jiang charges that Liu's wife Wang was a ang of Four, secret agent. The radio said she ad- d before the mitted, however, that her writing ourt as she appeared on a 1968 letter com- lered the per- plaining that the group was ang, who are bypassing her. rrested in the Israelis raid guerrilla bases in Lebanon Reagan aides: Schweiker wanted for Cabinet post Daily Claossifieds (continued from Page 6) DAMOUR, Lebanon (AP)-Israeli commandos, backed 'by rocket-firing gunboats and helicopters that lit the way with flares, stormed ashore here yesterday in a predawn attack on Palestinian guerrilla positions. There were reports of up to 12 deaths and guerrillas said the Israelis left behind "a lot of blood," indicating casualties among the raiders. Israel's military command in Tel Aviv claimed an unspecified number of guerrillas were killed in the "com- plicated and sophisticated" nighttime attack on the Mediterranean coast 12 miles south of Beirut. But it said all Israeli troops returned safely after am- bushing two vehicles carrying Palestinians. A TAPE-RECORDING of battle broad- cast by Israeli army radio indicated the invaders also blew up a house with a neavy weapon after being fired on by guerrillas. The Palestine Liberation Organization headed by Yasser Arafat said two guerrillas were killed in two hours of battle that started about 2:30 a.m. The PLO said four Lebanese civilians died when their car was raked by gunfire. Palestinian guerrillas said the Israelis attacked along a five mile stretch of coastal highway in this banana-growing region 45 miles north. of the Israel-Lebanon border. WASHINGTON (AP) - President- elect Ronald Reagan has settled on retiring Sen. Richard Schweiker to head the Department of Health and Human Services, sources close to the Reagan transition team said last night. Schweiker (R-Pa.), who Reagan named as his vice presidential running mate shortly . before the 1976 Republican National Convention, had reportedly asked Reagan for the job during a meeting two weeks ago. SCHWEIKER, 54, refused yesterday to confirm or deny that he had been of- fered the post. "I'm not going to speculate on any Cabinet appointment," he told a repor- ter on Capitol Hill. '73 MG. Excellent condition, 994-1471. cNtc Toyota Corolla 1976 two-door sedan. Excellent con- dition. Call 761-5460, best offer. 11N1205 169 Rambler Wagon, Automatic, Little rust, Power steering. $300 or best offer. 662-0145 persistently. United: Detrit-SLan ranic U~I ( 12/ 'iii 19 a Fran &isco-Detroit (1/2) Super saver night. Jon 663-7503. 69@1209 CASH for U of M football tickets. Any Game-Any Section. 995-i80. cQtc Drop-add contested FREE to good home. Affectionate 4-month old kitten. 769-6404, 665-5854. 62T 1205 SUBL E T .FURNISHED EFFICIENCY-Available January. 235 Plus elec. NEAR CENTRAL CAMPUS, MEDICAL CENTER. CALL 994-4804. 19U1205 SUBLET Albert Terrace. Rm (shared) avail. Jan. for female, $130/mo. negotiable-need to sublet 'ASAP!_663-8269persistently! 71U1210 FEMALE SINGLE LEASE for sale in East Quad, winter term. Call.764-5612. 48U1205 Male roommate needed winter term, State Street apartment. Five minutes from diag. 995-1105.43U1212 MALE SUBLET $100/mo, Jan-Aug. 1981. Share modern one bedroom apt. with one roommate. 720 S. State across from U of M Law Court. 995-0949 or Ann 663-2562. -36U1206 (Continued from Page 1) died. It was not an appropriate action," Nissen said. "We' now have to go back to point zero." LSA Junior Chris Hodge, a student board member, was surprised to hear of-Nissen's remarks. "It'll never be a two- thirds majority," he said. "There was a distinct division between the students and the'faculty. It will always be like that." A STUDENT may presently drop a class between the four- th and ninth weeks of a semester with a counselor's approval, but a "W," signifying a withdrawal, will appear on the student's transcript. After the ninth week, a student must appear before a com- mittee of three counselors who determine whether the drop is justified.. After yesterday's vote was taken, the student members had planned to review studies from past LSA student gover- nments that concerned student opinion on drop-add deadlines. One popular alternative for the new deadline is six weeks, they said. A MOTION for a new deadline is expected to come in January when the board will discuss the matter again. Any proposal by the board that effects a change in the faculty code, such as the extension of the drop-add deadline, would have to be approved by the LSA faculty at its monthly meeting. .Administrative Board student members object to the "W" recorded on transcripts when, students drop a class in the fourth to ninth week period, and contend students are justifiably concerned with grades'. "I THINK everyone (faculty members) tends to say that grades don't matter. But if you ask the students, or if you ask me, the grades do matter," said LSA sophomore Emily Gale, a student representative on the board. But faculty members on the Board contend an extension of the so-called "free" drop-add affords students the oppor- tunity to manipulate their grade point. Board Chairman Hugh Green, a professor in the English department, was quoted in the minutes of last week's meeting as saying that extending the deadline allows "some sort of bail-out after the student has an idea of where he or she stood in the class." BIOLOGY PROF. John Allen said yesterday that students should be more concerned with what they can learn in a cour- se, than what their grade will be. Allen said students are "short-changing themselves" by being preoccupied with grades. Nissen predicted the faculty would not be inclined to make radical changes in the drop-add deadline because of budgetary considerations. He explained that a.deadline ex- tension would mean more paperwork as more students use drop-add. A later deadline would also mean empty spaces in classes, since dropping a class after six weeks would be much easier than adding a class. Helen Crafton, an LSA academic counselor and non-voting member of the Board, stressed that students sometimes need extra time to determine if they have adequate background for a course. Schweiker, who was known as a liberal Republican until accepting Reagan's unusual pre-convention offer of the vice-presidential spot, has moved sharply to the political right since 1976, establishing a strongly conservative voting record. Sources close to the transition said that while Reagan had decided on Sch- weiker for the health and human ser- vices job, it was not clear if the Pen- nsylvania Republican had accepted the post or even whether the offer had been formally made. The sources asked not to be named. Transition sources have said Reagan has also decided on Caspar Wein- berger, budget director during the Nixon administration, to be defense secretary; his personal attorney William French Smith to be attorney general; New York banker Walter Wriston to be treasury secretary; for- mer NATO commander Alexander Haig Jr. to be secretary of state; and Reagan campaign manager William Casey to head the CIA. POETRY READING With KEES SNOEK & DUDLEY RANDALL Reading from their works Thurs., Dec. 4, 7:30 PM GUILD HOUSE 802 MONROE (662-5189) Holiday Gtr-,eti f19 wome frmn!4 1lV- oc - - Gift Cciii [eatc. 16r conccr1s available Iburton lbwer, Ann A fbor 48109 Weekdays 9-4:30 :eSat. 912 663-3717 Stephen M. Millar, can you think of anything more fun than going to the State or Campus Theaters? No, you say. Good, because you've just won free tickets. They are waiting for you at the Daily. d'1204 AA-AA Auto Drive Away Cars to all points GAS Rose Bowl special BOOK NOW! 22476 Grand River Ave., 1-532-3800. 96P1212 UAC Travel offers a ski-trip package to Nubs Nob Dec. 26-29. $147 for accommodations (6 meals) and 4 days skiing. Sign up at Ticket Central by Dec. 12. 763- ,1147. -49P1212 '60s radical Dohrn surrenders (Continued from Page 1) -.I-IJL L1-72 'U.1 of-I n 'r Baby Grand Piano, Vose & Sons-refinished. Beautiful tone. Best offer over $1250. 663-4614. 47X 1209 Fender Rhodes electric stage piano. Will stock syn- thesizers if desired. $600.668-8612. 46X1204 TWO CUSTOM SPEAKER CABINETS one 15 inch speaker and 2 tweeters in each. Great for vocal or in- strumntal se. 12 negotiable. 662-7342. 40X1205 FEMALE ROOMMATE NEEDEDu TO SA . BEDROOM IN 2-BEDROOM APT. WINTER lease only. $127.50/mo. Near campus. Laundry facilities. Call 769-3076 persistently. 25Y1206 Own room in beautiful house; available end of December; furnished, parking available; great people to live with. *95-3422. dY1213 WANTED: FEMALE ROOMMATE to share bedroom in bi-level 3-bedroom apartment, dish- washer, near CCRB, nice roommates. Call persisten- tly 996-945. -37Y1205 Single furnished bedroom in house; one minute from diag; call Michele 663-2158. 95Y1206 $50 REBATE 1 or 2 females-sharm two bedroom apt. E. Hoover. Pets, smoking OK, $200/month. 996-5862. 94Y1209Q Side and is the father of her two children. NO CHARGES are pending against Ayers, 35, who is the son of former Commonwealth Edison chairman Thomas Ayers. He said both he anti Dohrn spoke to their parents Tuesday. After Dohrn was arraigned on nine charges - seven stemming from the 1969 "Days of Rage" in Chicago and two more for jumping bail - she and Ayers read brief statements to repor- ters, refusing to answer any questions about their past. "I believe in the necessity of un- derground work, so I am returning to open life with a sense of loss as well as hope. I look forward to spending time with family and friends, new and old," she said. ... GIVEN THE system which per- petuates such harsh oppression and suf- fering, rebellion is inevitable and con- tinuous," she said. ". .. I remain committed to the struggle ahead." Circuit Judge Fred Suria, who -.reduced her bail from $380,000,000 said "from past experience, I have found that the people who turn themselves in, in fact abide by the conditions of the bond." As condition of the bond, Ken- nedy was required to list for his clients a Chicago address in addition to a New York City address of 528 W. 123rd St. Dohrn faces no outstanding federal charges. However, local felony charges of aggravated battery, mob action, and, solicitation of mob action are pending, PERM SPECIAL COWAVE reg. $60; NOW $25 EASY DOES IT reg. $65; NOW $48.50 HAIRCUT reg. $25; NOW $13 SUNTAN BOOTH-20 VISITS reg. $60; NOW $25 [ofqcept fwo NAIL DESIGN " MANICURING " FACIALS Specials thru 12/16 668-6376 405 N Main Call for Appointments.668.6377 . 405 N. Main=======Maann====a=== in addition to the bail jumping charges. Othe radical figures from the anti- war movement who have surfaced recently include student leader Mark Rudd, also indicted in the "Days of Rage" protests, and Yippie leader Ab-. bie Hoffman, who had jumped bail on a drug charge. Paul S. Rubin The Daily wants you to come pick up your free tickets to the State and Campus Theaters. Congratulations to the lucky winner and have a nice day. dW1204 COLONIAL PIPELINE COMPANY ATLANTA, GEORGIA JOB OPPORTUNITIES HYDRAULICS ANALYSIS Colonial Pipeline operates the world's largest refined prod-