D are in - Uni Tb aspi how; a c be it's coo kid A sid the is ti The Michigan Daily =Friday, August 3, 194- Page 3 Summer 'Canps for Champs'spur fiture athletes By MARLA GOLD Shawn Phelan, a 17-year-old from Milwaukee, said The camp, which is 10 years old, is almost entirely )uring the summer, when the University's students he was happy to return to see a girl he met last year. taught by University coaches. And to Triveline, this almost all gone, another group of students moves His new pals from the tennis camp heartily agreed means a lot. "Its the best (college-run summer that friends are the best thing about the camp. sports) camp. There is no question in my mind .. . - junior high and high schoolers engaging in the The camp boasts of 17 sports this year, up from 15 here we have the best faculty in the country, the best iversity's most well-known program - athletics. last year. They include football, basketball for boys coaching staff,"he said. 'he summer Camps for Champs is a program for and girls, coed tennis and soccer, wrestling, baseball, Reasons for coming to camp vary, although most iring athletes. It is sponsored jointly by the and others. campers agree that they came to the University sing department and the athletics department as The football camp, which costs $185 for five days, because of the good coaching staff. hance for junior high and high school students "to had 875 participants this year, and is "the best Shannon Reider, a 17-year-old from Farmington at the University, live in a dorm, and know what ,, s a' VdHills, said she came to "play tennis and have a good like to live like astudent," said Mike Vredenburg, behaved group here, said Vredenburg, who time." rdinator of housing at South Quad, where the 7,50 reasoned "each one of those kids has a dream in the Her friend Lara Dreznick, a 15-year-old from s eat and sleep. back of his mind of playing football for the University Southfield, is more serious about her tennis. She said added Don Triveline, coordinator of the athletic one day." she came because "I want to make varsity" at e of the program, "a lot come to show their stuff to He said their behavior may also be attributed to the Southfield-Lathrup High School this coming year. "+ - awe many of them feel Wtaving in front of Coach Bo coac es. Bput more importat thamps. he friendships kids make at the camps. ' Schembechler four times during the week. See HIGH, Page 5 A 737 jetliner lies damaged yesterday at the Tehran airport after two hijackers set off an explosion in the cockpit. Canopy to aid W. By DAVID JACOBS Some residents of West Quadrangle's Williams House may no longer have to wake up to the aroma of garbage and the noise of delivery trucks because of renovations in the dor- mitory, Building Director Alan Levy said. According to Levy, a canopy will be installed over the dorm's loading dock to "aid in sound absorption and help eliminate the smell of garbage going to the room areas of Williams House." THE NEW canopy, which will not be completed until after fall classes begin, is part of a summer renovation project in the 45-year-old residence hall. Although the initial impetus for the construction was to im- prove the building's loading dock, "a nice side benefit of the renovation is a completely renovated and improved laundry area," Levy said. Dowels for hanging clothes and a study area will be added during the construction, and the laundry area will have improved lighting and ventilation. In addition to the laundry area improvements, Levy said renovation of the loading dock area was necessary because uad residents it was too small for trucks to turn around and trash compac- tors occupied too much of the dock area. THE REBUILT dock area will provide storage space near the dock and should reduce the time employees spend finding and moving materials on the loading dock. The driveway has been repaired and an improved drainage system will be in- stalled soon, Levy said. The $99,000 improvement project is being done during the summer when the dorm has its smallest number of residents, but it means taking laundry elsewhere and putting up with the noise for the students and others living in the dorm during the summer. The project will cut the size of the dorm's mail room in half, but Levy said students will not notice the difference. The project is "a major improvement as it is," Levy said, although he would like to have been able to install additional laundry machines and study areas. The building director said students returningin the fall will have a nicer laundry room, new study areas, and a reduction in the noise and smell from the loading dock. Hijacking ends in . Iran with, none hurt From The Associated Press Three hijackers of an Air France jet surrendered yesterday at Tehran air- port after freeing 46 hostages and blowing up the cockpit of the empty Boeing 737. The 44 passengers and two crewmen were unhurt after the two-day ordeal of terror and the hijackers, as yet uniden- tified, were "taken away" according to officials at the Iranian airport who would not give their names. THE THREE gunmen comman- deered the plane Tuesday during a Frankfurt to Paris flight and stopped at Geneva, Beirut, and Cyprus before reaching Tehran, where the hijackers demanded France release five Iranian prisoners. The gunmen first said they would shoot one French hostage per hour, then threatened to blow the plane and passengers by 4:30 p.m. Tehran time if their demands were not met. At least one American was among the passengers. Iranian officials reached by telephone from Beirut said the hijackers surrendered soon after the deadline. THE IRANIAN officials were not clear on what happened in the final few moments. One spokesman for Iranian radio and television said by telephone that some shots were fired. "They (the hijackers) started to shoot out (of the plane) and keep the guards around the airplane...(away). They took all the passengers out from the airplane, the passengers and crew, and they exploded the cabin of the air- plane," he said. American businessman John Scott said later, "We ran about 500 meters across the dusty runway and then they told us to get down, so we were all scat- tered out...and they kept us lying down waiting for the aircraft to blow." Scott, formerly of Connecticut but presently based in Sharjah, Dubai, said he was "very elated-very good to be alive." British nurse Jane Wallington, freed earlier with the rest of the women and children, called the ordeal "horrifying." The Iranian news agency IRNA said the cockpit explosion took place at 5:10 p.m. PSN seeks stay in trespassing trial Washtenaw County) Circuit Court Judge Patrick Colin decided not to rule on a motion yesterday in the trespassing case of 11 members of the Progressive Student Network. Colin said he would make a ruling sometime next week. Defense attorney Donald Koster, who filed a motion for a stay of proceeding, said Conlin should approve the motion in order to allow the activists time to appeal District Court Judge S.J. Elden's ruling on a motion of discovery. The 11 PSN members were arrested last March for trespassing on University property during a protest against military research being conducted in engineering Prof. George Haddad's East Engineering laboratory. Haddad's research, which is funded by the Department of Defense, involves solid state diodes and transistors. The trial dates for the defendants are August 23 and September 6 and 13. - Andrew Eriksen