The Michigan Daily Vol. XC, No. 36-S Ann Arbor, Michigan-Friday, July 11, 1980 Ten Cents Sixteen Pages Hostage to be set free }E E Khomeini orders seriously ill vice- consul released From UPI and AP Richard Queen, one of the 53 American hostages in Iran, is seriously ill in a Tehran hospital and Ayatollah Ruhollah Khomeini has ordered that he be freed and sent home to his parents, Tehran Radio announced yesterday. The radio said Queen, 28, a native of New York, was in "serious" condition in a Tehran hospital. It did not disclose the nature of his illness but said it was serious enough for Khomeini to order his release after 250 days in captivity: QUEEN IS A former Ann Arbor resident and University student. He did graduate work here several years ago and lived on North Campus while he was a student. In several broadacasts announcing Khomeini's orders, the radio carried conflicting accounts of Queen's illness and the events leading to the order for his release. One broadcast said Queen, a vice-counsul on his first foreign assignment, was rushed to the hospital yesterday. Another broadcast quoted his militant captors as saying he had been in the hospital for several days. e rANNOUNCING KHOMEINI'S decision to free him, it said Queen would be flown to a "third country" of his parents' choice. But another news bulletin implied that Queen's parents, a Cwho live in Lincolnville, Maine, would be allowed to come to Tehran to escort him home. The State Department said it was investigating the report from Tehran Radio but had no immediate independent confir- mation of plans for Queen's release. The State Department press office issued a statement saying, "We are urgently checking the report. We have no in- dependent confirmation of it. We have notified Mr. Queen's parents of the news report, and we will make every effort to -bassist them in any way that may be required." e ily Photo by JIM KRUZ IN SCARSDALE, N,Y., where they were visiting relatives, yrQueen's parents, Harold and Jeanne, said they were "tremen- o. storage barn, located near Liberty St. and dously excited but worried" about their son. lso destroyed were several antique cars stored "We're worried, the health there must be some reason," f the autos, said he would deal with the loss in Mrs. Queen said. "We ask that you all pray." get drunk tonight," he said. See AMERICAN, Pages By HOWARD WITEngineering Prof. Ralph Loomis-a member of the specialio TMeDaly humanities department administrative committee and a defendant in Marwil's suit against the Univer- DETROIT-In testimony that appeared to take sity-meant an ad hoc tenure review committee University attorneys by surprise, a witness for might not have agreed with the administrative com- Jonathan Marwil said yesterday that when he mittee's decision to drop Marwil from the faculty. questioned the 1978 refusal of the engineering MARWIL, A FORMER assistant professor in the engineering humanities department who has been off the University payroll since May 31, 1979, is suing the Regents and three members of the humanities department administrative committee, claiming his constitutional rights were violated and he was un- fairly denied a review by an ad hoc departmental A q es ion ofcommittee of his qualifications to receive tenure. He is seeking either reinstatement to the faculty pending a tenure review or damages from the three ten ure review s department members that could total $1.1 million. Marwil charges the administrative committee humanities department to form an ad hoc committee members-Chairman J.C. Mathes and Profs. Loomis hugive Marwil a tenure review, e was told by a and Dwight Stevenson-sidestepped College and to a itatrtretiswhasmttey department policies requiring a tenure review in his department administrator that such a committee sixth year of employment with the University. The "might have come upwith the wrong decision. former assistant professor maintains the defendants Engineering Humanities Prof. Richard Ross testified in federal district court here that he to remove him from the faculty in 1978 assumed the comment allegedly made by See MARWIL, Page 2 Autos destro Ann Arbor firefighters douse a Killens Concrete C Wagner Rd., which was gutted by fire yesterday. A inside the building. George Riehl, unhappy owner o an understandable manner. "I'm going to go out and! Witness: Defendant opposed ad hoc committee,