IA The Ann Arbor, Michigan Daily Vol. LXXXIX, No. 5-S Tuesday, May 8, 1979 Sixteen Pages j Michiaan Ten Cents Begin vows to continue attacks Daily Photo by LISA UDELSON SAM DAY, managing editor of The Progressive, speaks to a University audience; about the magazine's protest of a court ruling forbidding them to print a story on the hydrogen bomb. 'Progressive' editor blasts gov't restriction By JULIE ENGEBRECHT was very simplistic. "I wish I could tell you what the Sam Day, managing editor of The secret restrictive data is," Day told -| Progressive, told a University the audience of about 50 people. 2 audience yesterday that the article The editor compared the infor- his magazine was to have published mation in the hydrogen bomb ar- about the hydrogen bomb was tile-written by Howard "nowhere near as technically Morland-to telling someone how to r precise, technically interesting or build a Volkswagen. He said it con- helpful as some (articles) that have tained only basic information. appeared (elsewhere)." "YOU PUT THE motor in the: Day said he could not discuss the back of the car, not the front. The specific contents of the article, although he said the information See EDITOR, Page 2 From AP and Reuter JERUSALEM - Israel sent its warplanes against Palestinian targets in Lebanon for a second straight day yesterday and then invited the Lebanese to negotiate peace. Prime Minister Menachem Begin vowed con- tinued attacks on bases of "terrorists who spill the innocent blood of men, women and children." Lebanon firmly rejected Begin's in- vitation to peace talks and accused Israel of committing barbaric aggression against its territory. Prime Minister Selim Al-Hoss, in a lengthy statement carried by the state- run Beirut radio, said continuing Israeli attacks on Lebanon represented blackmail in its ugliest form. "BEGIN'S CALL for Lebanon to con- clude a peace treaty with Israel is amazing," Boss said. "It comes after barbaic Israeli aggression against Lebanese territory which has caused the deaths of many peaceful people as well as extensive damage. "The aim of these aggressions is blackmail in its ugliest form as a preface to this (peace) step," he said. The Israeli raid Sunday, which repor- tedly killed six and wounded 25 other persons, was aimed at a refugee camp in the northern Lebanese town of Nahr El-Bared, near Mohmara. Israeli gun- boats shelled the town last month after guerrillas landed on the northern Israeli coastinda raid on the town of Nahariya in which four Israelis were killed, including two children. Two of the four guerrillas were killed. Yesterday's air raid, in which no casualties were reported, was made on a Palestinian guerrilla-held area 11 miles inside Lebanon near the town of Reihah. ISRAELI JETS hit the area just one hour before Begin opened the summer session of the Knesset, the Israeli Parliament, with an offer to meet Lebanese President Elias Sarkis on Israeli or neutral soil to negotiate a peace treaty. See BEGIN'S, Page 2 State, 'U' set to bargain on hospital By JOHN GOYER SpecialtoThe Daily LANSING - University and state of- ficials yesterday laid ground rules for bargaining over the $254 million plans to replace University Hospital. Hermann Ziel, chief of Health Care Administration in the Michigan Depar- tment of Public Health (MDPH) told University officials that any changes in the plans would have to be hammered out in meetings at the state level. In addition to officials from the MD- PH, the meetings will include represen- tativeds from the legislature's Joint Capital Outlay Committee and the Department of Management and Budget - both of which will have in- fluence on the extent of state funding for the hospital project. See STATE, Page 2 BULLETIN WASHINGTON (AP)-The United States and the Soviet Union completed the outline of a treaty to limit strategic nuclear weapons late last night and have begun planning a summit meeting for the signing, See earlier story, Page 9. today 'Any legislator who hasn't made up his mind hasn't got his ears open.' -State Senator John Welborn CALIFORNIA STILL PLAGUED BY GAS SHORTAGES: Carter alters rationing proposals WASHINGTON (AP)-President Carter modified his will keep rising. standby gasoline rationing proposal yesterday in a move In California, odd-even gasoline sales restrictions based congressional leaders said improved chances for passage on license plate numbers will begin at 12:01 a.m. tomorrow this week. for nearly half of California's 15 million motorists, in an ef- The proposals would, in the event rationing is imposed, fort to shorten waiting lines at service stations. give relatively more gasoline to "hardship cases" and to ACCORDING TO Carter's proposals, less gasoline per drivers in states where each auto uses more gasoline than the car would go to households withfour or more automobiles national average. and to drivers in states where vehicles average less THESE INCLUDE Arkansas, Texas, Mississippi, South gasoline consumption than nationally. Carolina, and the District of Columbia, among others. These include North Dakota, Montana, Rhode Island, Meanwhile industry officials yesterday said there will be Hawaii, Pennysylvania and California. a supply squeeze in coming months, and the price of gasoline See CALIFORNIA, Page9 Abortion bill may reach Senate By BETH PERSKY Ann Arbor), requires the vote of twenty (taking the bill out of committee) - we State senators are scheduled to senators for discharge from commit- are being denied our rights to be decide today whether a controversial tee. heard," said Lorraine Beebee, former abortion bill should be taken out of Some groups favoring public funding state senator and state chair of the committee and brought to the floor of "for abortions planned to submit Michigan Abortion Rights Action the Senate for debate. The bill would 'resolutions to the senators calling for League (MARAL). "The fact that the prohibit the use of tax dollars for abor- the bill to remain in committee for fur- bill would be discharged from commit- tions of poor women except in cases ther consideration. Group spokesper- tee would eliminate public hearings," where the woman's life would be en- ' sons said they would have more input she added. dangered. into the decision-making process if the Beebe said that the bill "would deny Senate Bill 157, now in the Senate bill remained in the Health and Social the woman on welfare the means to Committee on Health and Social Ser- Service Committee longer. bring herself up to the level of the Ye hared bySenator Ed Pierce (D- "WE AE opposed to di shrge See ABORTION,-Page 12'