Divers explore plane wreckage in Potomac WASHINGTON (AP)-Feeling their way past jagged, debris and treacherous ice, divers pulled 30 bodies from the crumpled wreckage of an Air Florida jetliner yesterday and then turned to trying to find a way to raise the tail section that includes the flight recorders. But after one try at lifting the tail sec- tion, which also included a large portion of the fuselage, the recovery team postponed further efforts. Another at- tempt was expected-but not cer- tain-today after the arrival of a more powerful crane. Throughout the day, the diving teams focused their search on the rear section since that part of the wreckage con- tained the cockpit voice and flight data recorders critical to the investigation of Wednesday's crash that killed 78 people. THE DIVERS first emptied the rear section of bodies to bring the total num- ber of bodies recovered from the plane since the crash to 47. Then divers began to attach cables to the section, but quickly ran into trouble. When darkness and 22-mph winds made it impossible to attach the cables properly, the effort was abandoned for the night. Meanwhile, some federal safety of- ficials were concerned that salvage operations might be impossible today because of forecast temperatures in the teens. They emphasized, however, that no decision had been made on what to do today. "We're taking everything on a slow, controlled basis," Coast Guard Cmdr. Mike Taylor, who heads the diving operation, told reporters. SHUGART EARLIER suggested the salvage effort "may go as long as two to three weeks" because of visibility near zero underwater and danger to divers from sharp, moving pieces of wreckage and ice. The Boeing 737 jet, bound for Florida, hit a busy commuter bridge spanning the Potomac River after taking off from National Airport. AP Photo RECOVERY WORKERS remove another victim of Wednesday's Air Florida jet crash from the Potomac River yesterday. The crash resulted in 78 deaths. A temporary morgue has been set up on the riverbank to accom- modate recovery operations. Austin voters opposehousing bias AUSTIN, Texas (AP)-Early elec- tion returns last night showed voters overwhelmingly defeating a proposed city ordinance that could be the nation's first municipal law supporting housing discrimination against homosexuals. With 15 of 87 precincts reporting, the measure was being defeated by a 6,000 to 900 vote.' THE MEASURE, petitioned onto the ballot by a local anti-homosexual group, says it "shall not be unlawful to deny housing on the basis of sexual orientation." Austin, a fast-growing city of 346,000 people, has a reputation as the most liberal city in Texas. The Austin Citizens for Decency, which promoted the. housing discrimination ordinance, said the elec- tion was a referendum on homosexuals, on whether to give "special privileges to sodomites." "WE ORGANIZED TO protect our children," said Dr. Steven Hotze, who led the campaign for the ordinance. The. Citizens for a United Austin, working against the proposal, said the ordinance could lead to "snooping" and widespread housing discrimination. Some 50 clergymen joined the cam- :paign against the ordinance. AN ADVERTISEMENT BY the Citizens for a United Austin said, "If you try to buy a home, if your children try to rent an apartment, the landlord will have the right to pry into your per- sonal life. Do you want someone asking about your children's sexual preferen- ce? Or.yours? It would be legal. Could you support such a law?" Robb Southerland, a music store owner and leader of those opposing the ordinance, said the law could mean discrimination against everyone because "everyone has a sexual orien- tation." "It's an ordinance allowing any lan- dlord to deny anyone housing under the guise of sexual orientation," he said. "If this one isn't unconstitutional then we need to burn the Constitution." ED SHERMAN, University of Texas law teacher, agreed the ordinance would have trouble standing up in court. "Sexual orientation suffers from vagueness and overbreadth, but we all know what the ordinance was intended to mean," Sherman said. "The prob- lem is that it doesn't say homosexual! and a homeowner can refuse to rent to a heterosexual under the ordinance." Mary Summerall, media coordinator for the Citizens for a United Austin, said yesterday that there were no accurate estimates about the size of the city's homosexual community. HOTZE'S GROUP BEGAN its petition drive-and wrote the proposed ordinance-after the city's Human Relations Commission proposed an or- dinance protecting homosexuals, the elderly and other minority groups against housing discrimination. City Councilman Roger Duncan said the council was ready to approve that amendment. But Hotze was able to get enough signatures to force yesterday's vote. IN BRIEF Complied from Associated Press and United Press International reports Poland eases restrictions, but martial law to continue WARSAW, Poland- Poland's military rulers announced yesterday the resumption of university classes across the country and radio broadcasts of Roman Catholic church services, but a government spokesman warned martial law may last along time. The government also announced its was amending a plan to raise the price of food, heat and energy in an apparent effort to gain public support of the military government headed by Gen. Wojciech Jarzelski. Warsaw Radio said it would resume broadcasts of Roman Catholic church services Sunday. Such broadcasts, suspended with the martial law crack- down Dec. 13, were a key concession won by the Solidarity trade union and the church in late 1980. Meanwhile, government spokesman Jerzy Urban told the newspaper Zycie Warzawy that martial law will last until "all fatal phenomena" leading to its imposition are eradicated, and any talk of a timetable for military rule to end is false. Dozier pamphlet surfaces ROME- The Red Brigades kidnappers of U.S. Brig. Gen. James Dozier issued a pamphlet and a picture of him yesterday, and hundreds of policemen searched the canals of Venice but found no trace of the 50-year-old officer. An editor at Rome's Il Giornale D'Italia said a journalist for the newspaper found the pamphlet-the fourth since Dozier's kidnapping Dec. 17-in a waste basket after an anonymous caller told him where to look. The editor said the pamphlet set no demands and contained only ideological slogans such as "anti-imperialist civil war" was "the only possible strategy" to overthrow the state. The pamphlet included a photocopy of a photograph of Dozier, which ap- peared to be the same as the photo released by the Red Brigades Dec. 27. Copies of the leaflet also were found in Milan and northern Treviso. Unidentified warplanes open fire on Japanese tanker TOKYO- A Japanese tanker loaded with highly flammable chemicals was attacked and strafed with machine gun fire by two unidentified war- planes in international waters off the southern Philippines, Japanese of- ficials said yesterday. One crewman was injured. A spokesman for the ship's owners said the incident occurred Friday af- ternoon when two propeller-driven, single-engine planes attacked the 5,307- ton tanker Hegg "in the open seas about 21 miles east of Mindanao, in the Philippines. The ship's cook was wounded as the planes peppered the deck and hull with about 100 rounds of machinegun fire. The ship's agent said yesterday the attack may have been prompted by the tanker's khaki color, which he speculated may have caused the attacking planes to believe it was carrying contraband and trying to elude aerial patrols. Manila tourist hotel burns MANILA, Philippines- A fire gutted a fully booked tourist class hotel in Manila yesterday, forcing many guests to climb down curtains and blankets strung from upper floor windows. Firemen and hotel officials said there were no serious injuries. Hotel Otani Manager Pablo Cuna, wading up to his ankles in the hotel's flooded lobby, said shortly after the four-hour fire was under control that the majority of his 120 guests were not in the buildingat the time. The concrete and wood hotel is located less than 100 yards from the U.S. Embassy, but it was not immediately known whether any Americans were staying there. Vol. XCII, No.88 Sunday, January 17, 1982 The Michigan Daily is edited and managed by students at The Univer- sity of Michigan. Published daily Tuesday through Sunday mornings during the University year at 420 Maynard Street, Ann Arbor, Michigan, 49109. Sub- scription rates: $12 September through April (2 semesters); $13 by mail out- side Ann Arbor. Summer session published Tuesday through Saturday mor- nings. Subscription rates: $6.50 in Ann Arbor; $7 by mail outside Ann Arbor. Second class postage paid at Ann Arbor, Michigan. POSTMASTER: Send address changes to THE MICHIGAN DAILY, 420 Maynard Street, Ann Ar- bor, MI48109. The Michigan aily is a member of the Associated Press and subscribes to United Press international, Pacific News Service. Los Angeles Times Syndicate and Field Newspapers Syndicate. News room: (313) 764-0552; 76-DAILY, Sports desk, 764-0562; Circulation, 764-0558; Clossified Advertising, 764-0557; Display advertising, 764-0554; Billing, 764-0550. f I 4 Now= Redistricting group must prove plan legal FRATERN ITY OPEN RUSH JAN . 1 7-21 Sun.3-10 PM Mon.-Thurs. 7-10 PM Sponsored By Inter Fraternity Council (Continued from Page 1) with the commission," Attorney George Sallade said. "This is an expec- ted development, and is in accordance with the usual procedure in cases of this kind." Sallade said three different plans were reviewed by the commission: a 15- district plan submitted by the com- mission's only Democratic member, Walter Scheider; a five-district plan submitted by County Clerk Robert Harrison; and a nine-district plan, the one adopted by the commission and now being appealed. "We favor the 15-district plan," Sallade said. "i'm optimistic that we may win." DEMOCRATIC PARTY Chairman Scheider said the commission will be hard-pressed to defend its decision. "It was a very partisan thing," he said. "The plan is good from a Republican perspective." Scheider said the appeals court order to the commission gives it the oppor- tunity to present its side of the case. "The judge (Robert Danhof) is saying the other party has to be given the op- portunity to explain its point of view." Commission member Robert Henry, .chairman of the Washtenaw Republican Party, said he was not disappointed with the court's order. "What the court is trying to do is to speed the process (of the appeal) and to eliminate false issues. The court wants to show us what they're interested in and what's significant." Henry said he believes the nine- district plan selected by the com- mission was the best proposal submit- ted. "The 15-district plan was a mess, as far as I was concerned. In the five- district plan, there were just too few districts, too few commissioners. I think nine is a happy medium." Commission member Michael Stim- son, county treasurer, agreed that the nine-district plan was the best one. "Af- ter you take all the guidelines into con- sideration, you have to exercise com- mon sense," he said. -4 WORK WI1TH KIDS AT TA.MARACK IN 1982 Brighton & Ortonville, Michigan Camp Kennedy, Agree Outpost Teen Trips. Positions for bunk counselors, specialist counselors, supervisors, service staff and many other positions. INTERVIEWING JANUARY 20 & 29 SUMMER PLACEMENT OFFICE Call 764-7456 for appointment Working on The Daily Is a Great Experience! Editor-in-hief ............ SARA ANSPACH4 Managing Editor .. ..... JULIE ENGEBRECHT University Editor LORENZOGENET News Editor ..... DAVID MEYER, Opinion Page Editors..........CHARLES THOMSON KEVIN TOTTIS Sports Editor ........ . .MARK MIHANOVIC Associate Sports Editors .. . ..GREG DeGULIS MARK FISCHER BUDDY MOOREHOUSE DREW SHARP Chief Photographer.............PAUL ENGSTROM PHOTOGRAPHERS-Jackie Bell, Kim Hill. Deborah Lewis. Mike Lucas. Brian Mosck. ARTISTS Robert Lence Jonathan Stewart. Richard Walk, Norm Christiansen. Arts Editors....-......-....-......MICHAEL HUGET RICHARD CAMPBELL ARTS STAFF: Jane Carl, James Clinton, Mark Dighton, Adam Knee, Pam Kramer, Gail Negbour, Carol Ponemon, Ben Ticho. NEWS STAFF: John Adam, Beth Allen, Andrew Chap- man, Perry Clark, David Crawford, Lisa Crumrine, Ann Marie Fazio, Pam Fickinger, Joyce Frieden, Mark Gindin, Julie Hinds, Steve Hook, Kathlyn Hoover, Harlon Kahn, Mindy Layne, Mike McIntyre, Jennifer Miller, Nancy Newman, Dan Oberrotman, Stacy Powell, Janet Rae, Sean Ross, Susan Sharon, David Spak, Fannie Weinstein, Barry Witt. SPORTS STAFF: Barb Barker, Jesse Borkin, Tom Ben- tley, Randy Berger, Mark Borowski, Joe Chapelle, Laura Clark, Martha Crall, Jim Dwormon, Karen Flach, Larry freed, Matt Henehon, Chuck Jaffe, John Kerr, Doug Levy, Jim Lombard, Larry Mishkin, Dan Newman, Andrew Oakes~ Ron Pollock, Jeff Quicksilver, Sarah Sherber, Kenny Shore, James Thompson, Josie VonVoigtlander, Kent Walley, Karl Wheatley, Chris Wilson. Bob Wojnowski. BUSINESS STAFF Business Manager............... RANDI CIGELNIK Sales Manager ... . .ARBFORSLUND Operations manager.............. SUSANNE KELLY Display Manager. .. MARY ANN MISI:WICZ Clossifieds Manager ....... DENISE SULLIVAN Finance Manager .. MICHAEL YORICK Assistant Display Manager ... NANCY JOSLIN Nationals Manager .. SUSAN RABUSHKA Circulation Manager ...... ... KIM WOODS Sales Coordinator...........E ANDREW PETERSEN BUSINESS STAFF: Liz Altman, Hope Barron. Alan Blum, boniel Bowen. Lindsay Bray. Joseph Brodo. Glen Con- tor, Alexander DePillis. Susan Epps. Wendy Fox. Sebastian Frcka. Mark freeman. Morci Gittelmon. Pamela Gould. Kathryn Hendrick. Anthony Interrante. Indre Liutkus, Beth Kovinsky. Caryn Notiss. Felice Oper. Jodi Pollock. Ann Sachar. Michael Savitt. Michael Seltzer, Karen Silverstein. Sam Slaughter. INancy Thompson. Jeff rey Voight. S U of M Spring Break Nassau, Bahamas Feb. 21-Mar. 1 DELTA Seven Nights-Sheraton, B.C. (including airfare, trans- fers, service charges) ..................... ..... ..$499* Air only ................................$246 7 Day Caribbean Cruise $409** PUBLICATION SCHEDULE 64 1981 SEPTEMBER OCTOBER NOVEMBER DECEMBER S M T W T F S S -M T W T F S S M T W T F S S M T W T F S 1 2 3 1 3 45 6 7 1 2 3 4 5 10 11 12 4 6 7 8 9 10 8 10 1171213 14 6 8 9 10 11 12 115 156 17 18 19 11 1 1314 15 1617 15 17 18 1920021 2 3a 24 25 26 18 20 21 22 2324 22 24 25 i? - 27 2930 25 6 27 28 29 30 31 20223422 1490122 2 23456?-" JANARY_______ MRCHA982' Nn~o nr MhI Mj