The Michigan Daily-Saturday, July 12, 1980-Page 13 Remember when? The fun of youth and a merry-go-round combine to make a swirling pattern of trees and kids at Bridwell Park in Wichita Falls, Texas. 1938 Pan Am airi er Bus strike continues By ELAINE RIDEOUT After 11 days without bus service, Ann Arbor Transportation Authority management and Transportation Em- ployees Union officials came out of a three-hour bargaining session yester- day expressing optimism that talks were finally progressing. "I'd say that we accomplished more today than during all of our previous negotiations put together," AATA director Richard Simonetta said yesterday. "FOR THE first time, AATA made encouraging movement on several non- economic issues," said TEU Vice- President Shelly Ettinger. According to Ettinger, AATA presen- ted the union with a set of informal counter proposals in response to a union offer submitted Thursday. Simonetta said the union package in- cluded a list of 35 items deemed "critical" by the union. "We responded to those terms today," he said. ACCORDING TO Simonetta, management officials have agreed to allow strikers to return to work while negotiations continue if they agree to work under only six of the conditions of the old contract. He explained that under those con- ditions, drivers would receive a base wage of $6.89 per hour, including a 35t cost of living allowance. All sick days, vacation days, overtime conditions and medical coverage would continue under the terms of the expired contract. In addition, AATA would continue to pay all incentive categories, all pension contributions, and any work shift would conform to all conditions of the old con- tract. According to Ettinger, both parties will continue to exchange informal proposals over the weekend as negotiations continue. Man knows where he's going by where he's been. LAS VEGAS, Nev. (AP) - Joe Ger- vais was trying to solve the greatest mystery in aviation history, the disap- pearance of Amelia Earhart when he stumbled across what he now believes is the answer to an equally mystifying airplane puzzle. In July 1938, Pan American World Airways' Hawaii Clipper vanished while flying from Guam to the Philip- pines. No trace was ever found of the plane or the 15 people on board. GERVAIS, WHO spent a decade trying to prove that Earhart is still alive, says that during his search for evidence more than 15 years ago he was shown aircraft wreckage on the Pacific atoll of Truk, wreckage-he now thinks could be that of the Hawaii Clipper. And, he said in an interview, infor- mation indicates the disappearance may have been the world's first hijacking. A local islander told him the 15 crew members and passengers were killed by the Japanese and buried beneath a hospital on the island. Gervais said he thought an in- vestigation by Pan Am was warranted to determine if the wreckage is in fact that of the Hawaii Clipper. "I WOULD think that to look further in this ... Pan Am would have to become interested," he said. "After all, it was a Pan Am airplane, their passengers, their responsibility. If there is evidence that those people are there on that island, I would think that Pan Am ought to make a reque~t to Trust Territory officials ... to conduct a local investigation. That is, go where the remnants of the hospital are and determine if those 15 people are there." James Arey, director of corporate public relations at Pan Am headquar- ters in New York, said the airline would "welcome the opportunity to examine the evidence that Mr. Gervais has." Gervais said he realized what he may have found only this year, after reading a new book, "China Clipper" by Ronald Jackson. The book is a history of Pan Am's flying boat service in the Pacific and discusses the disappearance of the Hawaii Clipper. GERVAIS, A retired Air Force pilot and now a Las Vegas truant officer, said he had flown to Truk - a for- midable Japanese naval base during the war - in November 1964 to in- vestigate the wreckage of a plane he thought could have been Earhart's. Gervais based his search for Earhart on the belief the famous flyer and navigator Fred Noonan were shot down and captured by the Japanese while on a spy mission in 1937. Gervais said the wreckage a Trukese native showed him was obviously not the Earhart plane. Marwi trial witness cites no bad. faith (Continued from Page 3) "You would agree that you're not Mr. Milktoast and express strong feelings about things?" Vercruysse asked Mar- wil Thursday. Marwil agreed. IN AN APRIL, 1979 re-appointment review of Marwil - requested by then- Vice President for Academic Affairs Harold Shapiro after Marwil appealed to him - Hughes was the only dissen- ting vote in the reaffirmed decision to let Marwil's contract terminate without a tenure review. The 1979 review was conducted by the administrative committee, as had been a 1978 non-reappointment review that Marwil contends was unorthodox and improper. Hughes, who had replaced Stevenson as a member of the commit- tee, opposed Mathes and Loomis in the decision. In later testimony yesterday, Engineering Prof. Arch Naylor took the stand as a witness for Marwil. Naylor is a former chairman-of the'College rules committee and current chairman of the faculty Senate Advisory Committee on University Affairs. NAYLOR SAID he "felt what hap- pened to Marwil was in conflict with customs" of the humanities depar- tmentand the College. He added he had always understood that assistant professors in their sixth year were given formal, uniform tenure reviews by their departments. Naylor said custom, in addition to written rules, was important at the University because "there are lots of practices at the University that don't get written down." Marwil is seeking from the court either reinstatement to the faculty pen- ding a tenure review or damages from the three department members that could total $1.1 million. The trial will resume July 21 after a week's recess when Vercruysse will. cross 'examine -aylor:-.'' -