The Michigan Daily-Wednesday; October 4, 1978-Page 7 Fighting continues in Lebanon BEIRUT, Lebanon (AP)-Flames and black clouds billowed over Beirut yesterday as Syrians renewed their shelling of Christian sectors, ignoring pleas from Lebanese President Elias Sarkis to end the fighting that repor- tedly claimed 250 lives in six days. In New York, U.N. Secretary- General Kurt Waldheim offered his of- fice to help achieve a Lebanese cease- fire, and it was' reported the United Nations was considering the evacuation of 301 U.N. dependents from Beirut. OFFICIAL SOURCES said French Foreign Minister Louis de Guiringaud postponed a trip to Brazil to work with U.N. diplomats for a cease-fire. After a relatively calm night, Syrian wings of an Arab League peacekeeping force opened up at mid-afternoon with an intensive barrage of artillery, rocket and mortar fire into neighborhoods where right-wing Lebanese militias maintain strongholds. Many areas were reported to be without running water or electricity. An estimated 250 Lebanese have been killed and 502 wounded in heavy fighting since last Wednesday. In a television address Monday, a haggard- looking Sarkis said the fighting in east Beirut had pushed his nation "to the verge of collapse." He asked for peace and promised to establish a new gover- nment to replace the caretaker regime of Premier Salim el Hoss. TUESDAY'S SHELLING apparently hit an oil storage depot northeast of the capital, exploding it and ;sending flames and a black cloud high into the bright sky over the city. As in the past, it was impossible to prove which side started the flare-up, but the right-wing "Voice of Lebanon" radio station said the Syrians opened fire without provocation. The Syrian command did not comment. "Syrian forces suddenly opened fire on women, children and old people in east Beirut and northeastern mountain resorts," the radio said. Among the mountain towns shelled was Beqfaya, hometown of rightist Phalangist Pasrty leader Pierre Gemayel. The radio said Gemayel urged Sarkis by telephone to "fly immediately to the United Nations to explain the Lebanese situation to the international conscien- ce." The Syrian-led peacekeepers in 1976 intervened in-and ended-a bloody civil war that pitted leftist Lebanese Moslems and their Palestinian allies against the Christians. The move saved the Christians, but they now refuse to yield to Syrian control of their neigh- borhoods. French sources in Paris declined to say what action De Guiringaud would take, but they said France has con- siderable influence in Syria and Lebanon, both former protectorates. L - l i 1'i 1li "1' -'1L1 ;f __i_ DAILY EARLY BIRD MATINEES -- Adults $1.25 DISCOUNT IS FOR SHOWS STARTING BEFORE 1:30 MON. thru SAT. 10 A.M. ti l:3a P.M. SUN. & HOLS. 12 Noon til 1:30 P.M. EVENING ADMISSIONS AFTER 5:00, $3.50 ADULTS Monday-Saturday 1:30-5:00, Admission $2.50 Adult and Students Sundays and Holidays 1:30 to Close, $3.50 Adults, $2.50 Students Sunday-Thursday Evenings Student & Senior Citizen Discounts Children 12 And Under, Admissions $1.25 TICKET SALES 1. Tickets sold no sooner than 30 minutes prior to showtilne. 2. No tickets sold later than 15 minutes after showtime. Guerrillas cult heroes to Nicaraguan youth MANAGUA, Nicaragua (AP)-Gun- toting Sandinista guerrillas-not the traditional cowboy or cop-are the new heroes of Nicaraguan youths. The rebels, wearing the black and red masks of the Sandinista National Liberation Front and waging a bloody struggle to overthrow President Anastasio Somoza, have captured the imagination of many young people in this Central American nation. MANY MORE ARE caught in an emptional tug-of-war, torn by polarization between supporters of the 41-year-old Somoza family regime and its foes. On one side is the 300- to 400-strong force of the black-and-red and on the Council strengthens police in (Continued from Page 1) COUNCILMAN LOUIS Senunas, (R- Third Ward) asked, "What kind of reasonable purposes are there that people put a park to after 10 p.m.?" Councilman Ken Latta (D-First Ward) replied, "How soon they forget; I was young once." Finally, Latta made a resolution to provide "adequate police protection" from 9 p.m. through midnight for the next two weeks on an experimental basis, and after two weeks Council would receive a progress report. The resolution passed unanimously. COUNCIL ALSO passed unanimously plans for improved traffic control at the Liberty/Stadium intersection. The estimated cost of the work is $73,000. The eight-phase signal will be regulated by traffic flow and detectors under the road surface which will be installed, accordig to John Robbins, streets, traffic, and parking director. The ap- proaches to the intersection will also be repaved. The bulk of the work will be done next spring, but some preliminary work is possible this fall before the ground urns Park freezes, Robbins said. The approved city historian contract includes a $3,000 salary, which will be paid to the Historical Foundation. The historian services were designated to begin Sunday, but there is till debate as to whether Wystan Stevens, who has been a volunteer historian in the past, will be retained with a salary. STEVENS ALREADY receives free room and a parking place at Kemp House as its curator, said Gerald Bell, Mayor Pro Tem (R-Fifth Ward). "We already have a city curator, maybe that's why we don't need a historian," Bell said. Belcher said he opposed some of Stevens' demands, which include no supervision, and a $15,000 salary with $5,000 for expenses and hospitalization. He also expressed concern that Stevens wouldn't produce anything because he has never published and never met the deadlines set by the Ann .Arbor Observer and the Ann Arbor News for a historical column. other the drab olive.green colors of the 7,500-man national guard, the nation's police force and army. One pro-Somoza housewife said she was horrified to find her children playing war games. She was even more horrified when she discovered they were calling themselves "Commandte Cero" and "Comandante Dos," the code names used by Sandinista guerrilla leaders. THERE IS NO doubt the guerrillas. have cut a romantic swath in Nicaragua, where many people are poor and illerate. The Sandinista raids are daring and often successful, the street fighters wear masks and mouth a modern version of Robin Hood rhetoric. On top of that they capitalize on the name of Augusto Cesar Sandino, a Nicaraguan who fought the invasion of U.S. Marines in the 1920s and '30a and who was tricked and slain in 1934 by the government, then led by Somoza's father. During the most recent violence in Nicaragua, the majority of the fighting on both sides was done by teen- agers-both male and female. "LOS MUCHACHOS" the children manned the barricades and were the backbone of the anti-Somoza resistance in Masaya, Leon, Chinandega and Esteli. The Red Cross estimated at least 1,500 were killed. The national guard troops that Somoza sent in to retake the cities with house-to-house fighting were often no older. At one roadblock outside of Esteli some soldiers were 16 years old. One claimed he joined the guard when he was 11. The pressure to join one side or the other crokses all socio-economic lines. The majority of the Sandinista leader- ship appears to come from the middle and upper classes. Many are recruited in schools and universities. THE NATIONAL guard remains one of the few institutions which provide upwasrd social and economic mobility for the youth of the lower classes which fill its rank and file. But the Sandinistas draw support from all levels of society, and widespread opposition to Somoza gives them a broad base of popular support. Norberto, a 12-year-old from the slums of Managua, is nearing the age he will have to make a decision. AS HE SAT in the shade of a chinaberry tree, Norberto seemed on his way to a choice. "El pueblo (the public) do not want Somoza," he said. He pointed to a scar on a building facade nearby. "That Sandinista rocket missed," he said. "But sooner or later they will get him (Somoza) out of that bunker." As he spoke, Norberto held a large cutter ant between his fingers and wat- ched it passively as it pinched fiercely at his flesh. "You know," he said, "it was you Ameicans who put this man in power, why can't you remove him as you did Nison. The situation is getting very bad here. The national guard is killing too many people." It was the Deltas Fi o.Lt hw against the rules... \1Fri.o& StolaeShw the rules lost! Fo1:00ong le Following 9:0 ~NeuaI~rLAMp@@NB. A JACK ROW INS-CHARLES H. JOFFE PRODUCTION "INTERIOR" 10:40 1:00 3:30 6:30 9:00 10:30 1:15 3:45 6:45 9:15 KRISTIN GRIFFITH MARYBETH HURT RICHARD JORDAN DIANE KEATON E.G. MARSHALL GER ALDINE PAGE MAUREEN STAPLETON SAM WATERSTON Director of Photography GORDON WILLIS Executive Producer ROBERT GREENHUT Produced by CHARLES. H. JOFFE 11 WE GOT THE NEMl 04 St t ..e 'y 4" o ' ' ' te ? a 2. , TOYC$9eow a, of t ® b R6 0 Ap.a 4)ct ,wt 4.0"a q b~' 4K? p 44 g I* ' b00 i..t"' Vo 'o 0 " Ot t '' ya~c3 Q a '' e co' r4.e *se ' "° ya 0o p ° a ° e , w9 ta y~j yy e r o' ea ti, :y m el o H 4 ok o oo , " e'ea aoe ° *c° p , , , " ~ ° ar 4 G y' e QPtie e p p4.y 0 'y s ,y ° o o"' w ~ ~ ~ ~ 4 QyQ - °o ° ' e p i w Q o 4 wp y Q °a Q C ok a , ac ' er O wt @ y' y 'O pb 04 0 ~ p G $ , eJ4 t j " 'o '''9tr0" wi° p '' , y ~a Z' . ',i q, 4. i U ^° ° e 'e 1 ' "" 0 :C o°Y °° ° 40 ' p 1 Cav'S q y ar °' { 0 4 t 4 ° G ° a pfipJ o° , o ,i , o map w et pm 4 a ° o 91 e ap t ° w p° . 'S e ' G t w , a y w S R . e I vs ' Written and Directed by WOODY ALLEN I I "A WONDERFUL FILM." -Rex Reed Franco Brusati's 10:15 12:30 3:00 7:00 9:30- No matinees Sat. & Sun. z*uu A*I *' e 21/2 hours after our deadline The Daily received word over the wire that Pope John Paul I was dead. The Daily was just then returning from the printers in Northville-too late to add any new information. Dedicated Daily newstaffers contacted Editors and the Shop Superintendent to produce a Daily extra -itl! - - L - i . -- &L A - -& - , ...,........,.,, ... .... . .. L... r 11,.:I., i / I