S.African investments preview, see Page 4 Vol. LXXXVIII, No. 130 Ann Arbor, Michigan-Thursday, March 16, 1978 Ten Cents 12 Pages Begin vows troops to stay until JERUSALEM (AP) - Prime Minister Menachem Begin said Israeli forces completed their mnassive strike into Lebanon yesterday and he vowed the troops would remain until it was certain Palestinian guerrillas would not return to their bases. "The operation ... was completed today in the afternoon," Begin told a news conference in Jerusalem. He said Israel would seek agreements to guarantee that "in all those places ... from which the murderers have been ejected they should not return." HIS ANNOUNCEMENT came after witnesses in Lebanon reported that Israeli land, sea and air forces had routed Palestinians from guerrilla strongholds in the south and rocketed refugee camps as far north as Beirut, killing Palestinians and Lebanese. An Israeli military spokesman denied jets attacked civilians in refugee cam- ps. He said they hit "only military targets of the terrorists." All aircraft returned safely, he said. Civilian casualties mounted into the scores and Palestinians claimed they had killed or wounded 300 troops of the Israeli task force, which the guerrillas estimated at more than 25,000 soldiers. "WE HAVE been receiving casualties.since this morning," said the director of Rambam Hospital in Haifa, northern Israel. The military command issued no count. Palestinian guerrillas said they had unleashed a massive rocket retaliation against the northern Israeli settlement of Kiryat Shmona. Syrian peacekeeping forces reported their anti-aircraft positions in the coastal town of Damur shot back and hit one of the Israeli warplanes that at- tacked the refugee camps. There was no sign of Syrian involvement beyond anti-aircraft fire. BUT THE SPECTER loomed high of hostilities escalating into a major PLO1 Syrian-Israeli confrontation, sparking a new Middle East war. Israeli Lt. Gen. Mordechai Gur told reporters' the assault was aimed at clearing a five-mile-deep guerrilla-free zone along the 49-mile border with Lebanon. The attack followed Israeli pledges te prevent a repetition of Saturday's'Palestinian terror raid near Tel Avid, which Israel claimed was launched from Lebanon and which killed 34 Israelis. Qualified sources in Israel said that nation planned to maintain a strategic presence in southern Lebanon until the government in Beirut and the Syrian- dominated Arab peacekeeping forces agreed with Israel on curbing guerrilla goes activity. SYRIA and Lebanon requested big power intervention, as did Egypt. The Cairo government and the United States, said the attack would hurt chan- ces for Middle East peace. Reports of killed and wounded flooded into Beirut from across the small country, making a determination of total casualties difficult. The Israeli command had said its thrust was at military targets. "The Jews fell on our heads from the sky and spurted arrows of red-hot fire straight into our homes," a badly wounded 17-year-old refugee girl said in a hospital at Beirut's Sabra camp after See BEGIN, Page,6 Daily Photo by WAYNE CABLE Henry Kissinger was spotted on campus yesterday with his friend Heidi Gott- leib. Actually, the Kissinger mannequin represents just one of the many po- litical leaders depicted by cartoonist Bill Mauldin. Mauldin will lecture tonight at 8 in Rackham Auditorium. Ed. School Dean Cohen to head Plymouth probe By MICHAEL ARKUSH Outgoing Education' School dean Wilbur Cohen, chairman of the new seven member task force assigned by Governor . Milliken to investigate Plymouth Center abuses, said yester- day he will pursue the investigation without any restrictions from the governor. Cohen, appointed to head the new task force after Donald Smith (former director of the state Department of Mental Health) resigned last week, said he will recommend any changes the task force wants "regardless of the governor." "I AM NOT working for the gover- nment or under any court order. We will make any recommendations, whatever they are," Cohen said. Cohen briefed reporters before for- mally adjourning the task force's first meeting. He said he would not stop the investigation at any level until all charges are answered. He hinted he State Senate votes for lenient pot law would carry the investigation to the governor's office if necessary. Joining Cohen on the task force are representatives from the state Mental Health Department, the state Social Services Department, and the State Police. Cohen's committee will attempt to: " Find out the facts of abuse charges at Plymouth Center, " See if any cover-up existed at the center or in the department of mental health, " Help in searching additional allegations of abuse, " Coordinate their findings with a previously named state-panel on abuse, " Investigate how abuse cases are handled at all state institutions that provide live-in care and treatment programs. ALSO APPOINTED to Cohen's com- mittee were William Haber, a former University dean, Detroit City Council President Erma Henderson, and National Bank of Detroit Vice President Walter Greene. John Dempsey, representing the department of Social Services, stressed the need for coordination among the members of the task force. "When three people are in charge, no one is in charge," Dempsey said. Daily Photo by WAYNE CABLE By DENNIS SABO Michigan moved one step closer to statewide decriminalization of marijuana yesterday when the state Senate approved a measure that would end possible jail sentences for possession of less than one ounce of marijuana. - The measure passed on a 25-12 vote and it is now headed to the House, which rejected similar legislation in- troduced by Ann Arbor Rep. Perry. uillard (D), last year. Under the proposed legislation, of- fenders caught with less than one ounce of marijuana would receive a 'maximum fine up to $100. There would be no criminal record and local gover- nments would not be able to alter the state law. Currently, marijuana offenders arrested with small amounts of the widely-used drug could face up to 90 days in jail, a $100 fine, or both. The bill's sponsors, state Senators Anthony Derezinski (D-Muskegon) and Jerome Hart, (D-Bay City) both expect the legislation to receive similar favorable support in the House. If the Th ursdayv * The Regents are expeclt to make a decision today on the future of the University's in- vestments in companies with holdings in South Africa. See story, Page 3. * The Senate will vote today on bill receives House approval, it could become law later this year or possibly in early 1979. Hart, chairman of the Senate ap- propriations committee said at least $25 million in state funds could be saved annually if the money now used for marijuana law enforcement was reallocated for the prevention of more serious crimes. According to Derezinski, both marijuana users and law officers have See NEW, Page 9 Mayoral By PAULA LASHINSKY Housing, mass transit and roads were among the issues prompting a heated and biting debate yesterday between' mayoral candidates Louis Belcher and' Albert Wheeler in their first formal1 debate of the campaign season. The face-off, held in the. Anderson Room of the Michigan Union was spon- sored by SDX, a professional jour- nalism fraternity. SDX provided a panel of three Michigan Daily reporters who questioned the candidates. Even before the debate began, it was apparent the emotional fever was high. The two men were involved in the closest race in the city's history last spring, when Belcher lost to Wheeler by one vote. After 11 months of legal bat- tles, the court ordered a new election last month. Neither candidate has had much time to campaing for the April election but their spontaneity indicated they were eager to discuss the issues. "Tthere are a lot of basic differences between the two of us, differences in philosophy and priorities," said Wheeler. "We are different in our respect for fact and truth and I am anxious for these differences to become apparent." Belcher claimed to hold the same regard for fact and truth as his running mate, saying it was one of the reasons he is in favor of the debate. "I love these debates," remarked Belcher. "It's time we nailed the. S debate mayor. None of his programs relate and it's time we made this clear. What is different about this election is that it is 365 days later and nothing has changed." Housing continues to be one of the most disputed issues of the campaign. Wheeler was quick to refute Belcher's accusations that he con- tinuously vetoed all housing legislation. Wheeler also claimed student housing is primarily a University problem and there is little that he can do. "I have been to the University and told them that they must build more University, housing,"' Wheeler said. "Student housing is our primary problem. The only other thing I can do is go to HUD and try to receive funds." Belcher said he supports downtown housing development, and recommends calling in private contractors to do the job. He also stressed the importance of downtown revitalization. He added that See MAYORAL, Page 6 Students rally for Scharansky By MICHAEL ARKUSH Nearly 300 University students refused to eat dinner last night todsym- bolize the first anniversary of the arrest of Soviet dissident Anatoly Scharansky, accused by the KGB (Soviet secret police) of being a CIA spy. Staging their hunger strike at East Quad, the students sent their empty paper plates to Soviet Ambassador to the United States Anatoly Dobrynin, to protest the Soviet mistreatment of Scharansky. "I THINK IT was very important for all these people to get involved. It was just an overwhelming response," said Brian Miller, a member of AKTSIA (Action for Soviet Jewry and Human Rights), the organization which coor-; dinated the hunger strike. The Univer- sity hunger strike is only one of the many strikes occurring around. the world to protest Scharansky's arrest. AKTSIA, a studen-run organization formed to promote the struggle for human rights in the Soviet Union and Eastern Europe, sponsored a human rights symposium in early February and regularly urges students to write letters to prominent U.S. and Soviet of- ficials protesting the human rights See STUDENTS, Page 6 Tentative pact OK'd by UMW b WASHINGTON (AP) - The United Mine Workers' bargaining council ap- proved a new tentative contract last night and sent it to the coalfields for miners to ratify and end their 100-day coal strike. The vote was 22 to 17, according to a bargaining council member. A union ar ain ers The tentative contract, the third one between the union and the Bituminous Coal Operators Association in the 100- day strike, contains key industry con- cessions in the areas of health benefits and wildcat strikes. The council voted 25-13 in favor of a earlier contract proposal that later was Lf