TROOPS IN LEBANON See Editorial Page C I * hP LIE Wan t1 IT'S SPRING High-44* Low-3 0 See Today for details March21 £Vol. LXXX VIII, No. 134 Ann ArborMichigan-Tuesday, 1978 Ten Cents 14 Pages Begin as figb WASHINGTON (AP) - Israeli Prime Minister Menachem Begin arrived here yesterday for talks with President Carter on Middle East peace prospects and the Israeli occupation of southern Lebanon. A Marine bandngreeted Begin as he arrived at Andrews Air Force Base from New York in advance of Carter's return from a St. Simons Island, Ga., vacation retreat. Secretary of State Cyrus Vance headed the U.S. welcoming delegation. BEGIN MADE no statement on his arrival. Meanwhile, Israel's U.N. am- bassador, Obaim Herzog, said in New York that "the first steps were taken" yesterday to implement a U.N. Security Council resolution and he indicated there was a cease-fire in the area. Begin, who arrived in New York on Sunday, was to' exchange views with Carter on the southern Lebanese issue and on the overall Middle-East situation durging meetings today and Wednesday at the White House. A WHITE HOUSE official traveling with President Carter said on St. Simons Island, Ga., that "it is the United States' desire that the talks on Lebanon not be the dominant topic." He said overall peace prospects in the Middle East also should be a focus of the talks. In another development, the State Carter talk ting goes on Arabs Department announced that the United States was responding to Lebanon's request for assistance to refugees, saying more than 150,000 had been for- ced to flee the fighting. The department said tests and blankets were being flown to Lebanon and several million dollars worth of help will be provided after additional consultation. Meanwhilei the department estimated that about 500 people have been killed inthe fighting and a larger number wounded. A broad range of U.S.-Israeli problems has been aggravated by last week's Israeli attacks across the southern Lebanese border following a Palestinian terrorist raid in Israel nine days ago. YESTERDAY, Israeli gunboats bombarded the southern reaches of the Palestinian-held port of Tyre while tanks smashed deeper into southern Lebanon, almost' closing an Israeli semicircle around the old city. Israeli soldiers at this recently cap- tured village two miles east of Tyre said they had no orders to move into the city. "Right now we're racing against the clock," said Steve Sachs, a Los Angeles-born Israeli soldier, referring to diplomatic moves in Washington and the United Nations for a cease-fire and Carter stage Diag protest By MICHAEL ARKUSH Carrying signs supporting the struggle of the Palestinian people and facing many angry Jewish students, more than 100 Palestinian sym- pathizers demonstrated yesterday on the Diag to protest what spokesman Hassan El-Ashhab described as "the atrocities of the Israeli Zionists." The demonstration, sponsored by the campus Organization of Arab Students (OAS), provoked sharp reaction from many Jewish students resenting the claims madeby the Palestinian protestors. HEATED DEBATE between the two sides occasionally erupted into violen- ce, with each side accusing the other of initiating the fighting. No one was seriously injured. The first major incident occurred when Jewish students danced in the middle of the diag, chanting repeatedly, "Am Yisrael Chai" (the nation of Israel lives). Palestinian protestors pushed the Zionist suppor- ters to the side, claiming they were illegally interrupting the demon- stration. "They initiated the struggle by inten- tionally interrupting the demon- See JEWS, Page 2 See BEGIN, Page II Begin Hospital disputes may prompt AFSCME strike By MITCH CANTOR Members of the American Federation of State, County and Municipal Employes (AFSCME) local 1583 may strike next month if Univer- sity Hospital Management does not keep several agreements made with the union involving the Hospital's Housekeeping Department, according to union officials. The strike, which would involve all of the University's AFSCME members (approximately 2,400 workers), would be specifically prompted by controver: V ' Daily Photo by BRAD BENJAMIN Jewish students dance to emphasize their support for Israel (above) and coun- ter a pro-Palestinian demonstration on the Diag. Yesterday's protest caused occasional violence (below). sy over ServiceMaster, a subcontractor which took over control of the hospital's housekeeping management last November. THE POSSIBLE strike would begin sometime between March 31 and April 18, union officials said yesterday. The union claims Hospital management has not lived up to several of its promises regarding Ser- viceMaster. Local president Dwight Newman said two such broken promises include a proposed improved supervisor training program. The Union labels the present program "shabby", and a promise of an increase in .hospital efficiency. Newman claims ServiceMaster is hindering this by con- tinuing to shift people to different posts. Another unkept agreement, said Newman, is that the hospital would make more money soon after Ser- viceMaster took over. "THEY (SERVICEMASTER) are the ones making all the money while the patients, us, and the University are suf- fering," Newman said. The union also charges that Ser- viceMaster has not eliminated the prevalent intimidation of workers by supervisors in the hospital. Newman said the union asked for the removal of four of Mott Children's Hospital's housekeeping supervisors on March 1. The four supervisors are Jim Burton, manager; Jeff Wilbur, assistant manager; Austin Cary and Al Schaheen, both first line supervisors. ACCORDING TO Newman, the University said if the supervisors did no "clean up their act" within a week, some action would be taken by the end of March. Another dispute between the union and ServiceMaster involves a new classification of worker - Unit Custodian - which the union deems un- fair. According to union Secretary Treasurer Tim Seguin, Unit Custodians do the same work as those under the Custodian II classification but receive 20 cents less per hour. He also said most Unit Custodians are women. THE UNION AND University ar- See UNION, Page 5 SHOOTINGS TO BE RE-EXAMINED: New Kent State 1 From Staff and Wire Service Reports The Supreme .Court cleared the way yesterday for a new trial in a $46 million lawsuit against Ohio officials over the deaths of four Kent State University students during a 1970 antiwar demon- stration. The justices let stand a ruling by the Sixth U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals that the civil rights damage suit must be heard again because a juror had been threatened during the 1975 trial clearing Gov. James Rhodes and others of all liability. THE CONTROVERSY now will return to a federal trial judge in Cleveland. Ohio National Guard troops killed four students and wounded nine others in a 13-second outburst of gunfire on May 4, 1970 as violent protests against the invasion of Cambodia by U.S. troops in Vietnam rocked the city of Kent and the university campus. The original suit filed by the nine wounded students and parents of the four slain students, which named Rhodes and state National Guard of- ficials as defendants, was dismissed by a federal trial court and the Sixth Cir- cuit Court. THOSE COURTS ruled that state of- ficials were immune, from such lawsuits, but the Supreme Court in 1974 reversed those rulings. It ordered that the charges be heard in court. That decision resulted in a 15-week trial, in which Rhodes and all other defendants were cleared of liability. But a three-judge Sixth Circuit panel last September struck down the jury's finding and ordered a new trial. THE MAY 4 Coalition, a group of Kent State students and professors who have had a major role in rounding up opposition to construction of a gym-. nasium on the shooting site, applauded the new trial. "It's the first time in American jurisprudence history that a chief exec- utive or governor has been dealt with in a court situation for sending in militia in a civil dispute," said Gregg Rambo, a spokesperson for the group. He added that Coalition members hope the trial trial approved will bring about more accountability in said, "I am surprised it was h national leaders. quickly this time, but I hav A public statement put out by the along that people wouldn't be a Coalition stated the trial would not have be shot down without trial." been granted if thousands of people had Rhodes maintained an ei not protested "the continuing injustice silence about the case becaus and the gym construction at Kent ding litigation. His attorney State." Goodman, said the case would andled so e felt all allowed to ght-year e of pen- y, Victor revert to THE COALITION'S statement fur- ther denounced Rhodes for ordering the National Guard to the campus and the governor's "inflammatory rhetoric the day before the shooting and two days before his U.S. Senate primary election bid did nothing but heighten the already tense and volatile situation." Arthur Krause of Pittsburgh, whose 18-year-old daughter Allison was killed, the appeals court in Cincinnati for procedural matters before it is assigned to trial in the Cleveland federal court. Nelson Karl, a Cleveland attorney representing the parents and students, said a new trial could begin as early as September. Sanford Rosen, a San Francisco lawyer also on the side of the victims, said he intends to prove that guardsmen used "excessive force." ITT pair faces perjury charge Citizens offer views WASHINGTON (AP) - Two officials of the International Telephone & Telegraph Cor. (ITT) were charged yesterday with lying to a Senate com- mittee about ITT's attempts to prevent the election of Marxist President Salvador Allende of Chile. Edward Gerrity Jr., 54, a.senior vice president of ITT, and Robert Berrellez, 58, the Southwest regional manager of the corporation and a former Latin American official of the conglomerate, each were charged with six felonies, At- torney General Griffin Bell announced at the Justice Department. Tuesday - * Spring has sprung and this GPRRITY WAS charged with three counts of perjury, one count of obstruc- ting governmental proceedings, one count of subordination of perjury and one count of making a false statement in a government matter. Berrellez, who once was a roving correspondent for the Associated Press in Latin America, was charged with one count of conspiracy, three of perjury, one of obstructing governmental proceedings and one of making a false statement in a government matter. The maximum penalties. are five See ITT, Page 11 on CDBG By KEITH RICHBURG More than a dozen people, including the mayor's wife, the city's poor, and the director of the Model Cities dental clinic showed up at a public hearing last night to air their views on how next year's Community Development Block Grant (CDBG) federal funds should be allocated. fund use dell Allen (R-First Ward) for "lies" and "misleading the people" in suggesting last week that the Model Cities project may have been mishandling funds. "Each year I come down and plead for re-funding and for a new building," said Doretta Taylor, director of the Model Cities dental clinic. "We have been turned down for various and sun- fact means happy students glad to come out of the cold winter doldrums. See story, Page 2. " Benjamin Hooks, executive director of the NAACP, spoke to a crowd at Rackham last night on "dye .awn-. g \ -