Page Two THE MICHIGAN DAILY Thursday, May 19, 1,977 Israeli Labor Party loses TEL AVIV, Israel (AP) -- Menahem Begin's victorious right-wing Likud bloc extended a peace offering to the defeat- ed Labor party yesterday in an effort to present a unified na- tion to the Arab world. There was no immediate word on whether Labor would accept the offer to form a coalition government, which came as Arabs angrily denounced the Likud election victory Tuesday as a threat to Middle East peace. ARAB state-controlled radios branded Begin a "notorious ter- rorist" with whom negotiations would be impossible. They said the election would spell disaster for President Carter's peace ef- forts in the Middle East. Palestinian guerrillas threat- ened to "escalate violence" in Israel, the Israeli-occupied Gaza Strip and the West Bank, over which the Likud wants to re- tain Israeli sovereignty. Sources in Syria said Presi- dent Hafez Assad would use the Likud victory to persuade Saudi officials to finance ad- ditional Arab armament pro- grams. THE CONSERVATIVE victory also left deep political divisions in Israel. Yosef Sarid, a top Labor official, said he doubted there could be any coalition with the Likud. "Such a wagon would quickly sink in the mud, with so many people polling at the reins," he said. But other Laborites, in- cluding party chief Shimon Pe- res, were noncommital on Be- gin's invitation, which carried a quote from Abraham Lincoln about "binding up the nation's wounds." Election projections showed the Likud party with 41 seats in the 12-seat parliament com- pared with 33 for Labor. It was the first defeat for Labor, which has ruled since Israel became a nation 29 years ago. OFFICIAL election results, hand counted and laboriously rechecked, are not expected for two weeks. But experts said the projections, based on results from 1,900 of 3,879 polling plac- es, were not expected to vary from the final totals by more than one seat. If Labor decides not to join a coalition, Likud could join with the National Religious par- ty, which was fourth with 12 seats, and other rightist and religious splinters to forge a razor-thin majority. The key group in the coal- ition-building process appeared to be Prof. Yigael Yadin's Dem- ocratic Movement for 'Change, which won at least 14 seats, an impressive score for a party founded just six months ago. YADIN, whose group could provide badly needed coalition backbone for Likud, said he would join any party espousing his faction's principles. But one of the principals is opposition to any move to annex the West Bank. In his victory speech, the 63- year-old Begin, who suffered a heart attack one month ago but says he has recovered, said he intended to invite Egyptian President Anwar Sadat, King Hussein of Jordan and Assad to meet him either in their cap- itals or on neutral ground for negotiations "to sign peace treaties." In Geneva, U.S. Secretary of State Cyrus Vance said he was adopting a wait-and-see attitude toward the Likud victory. VANCE, WHO was in Geneva for arms limitation talks with the Soviet Union, said peace prospects would depend on "what kind of a coalition is put together." In Moscow, the Soviet press LEARN NOW ABOUT THE NEXT CPA EXAM IEW DETROIT 313-542-1666 GRAND RAPIDS 616-454-09v9 expressed concern at Likud's right-wing reputation, but stop- ped short of predicting an im- mediate worsening of the Mid- dle East situation. Some Likud officials said the West Bank platform was not as tough as it seemed. Likud offic- ial Zalman Shoval said his party would agree to a referendum on whether the West Bank should remain under Israeli occupation if withdrawal became a real- istic prospect. BUT IF LIKUD follows through on its election platform, it could mean increased Jewish settle- ment in the West Bank, in de- fiance of U.S. objections, and refusal to discuss withdrawal - on the other fronts for less than a full peace treaty. In the West Bank, Arabs re- ceived the news of Begin's tri- umph glumly. "Begin is a man of war, not of peace," said Kerim Khalaf, mayor of the West Bank town of Ramallah. KHALAF, an outspoken Pales- tinian nationalist, urged the United States "to pressure Be- gin to evacuate the occupied territories and give the Pales- tinian people their rights." The diplomatic community here reacted with amazement at Begin's victory. "We are as surprised as any- one," said a U.S. diplomat. But he added that he felt no mood of crisis. "OBVIOUSLY Begin has dif- ferent views, but there is a feeling that no one wants the situation in the Middle East to deteriorate," the diplomat said. Under Israeli law, President Ephraim Katzir must, within 20 days, receive delegates of all parties for consultations on what coalition is to be formed. He must then appoint one of the parties to form a coalition. The premier-designate then has a maximum of 42 days to forge a ruling alliance. 2 men finally admit toBiksrobbery NEW YORK FILMMAKER STORM. DE HIRSCH will speak and show her films this evening THURSDAY, MAY 19, 1977 8:00 P.M.-ARCHITECTURE AUD. -Old A & D building Storm De Hirsch, poet as well as independent filmmaker has been creating lyrical films since the 1960's. BOSTON (AP) - Twenty-sev- en years after it happened, two white-haired crooks returned to the scene of the crime yester- day and admitted their role in the $2.7 million Brink's robbery. This time, like before, they did it for the money. Through their trials and years in prison, Francis "San- dy" Richardson and Vincent Costa kept their mouths shut, never admitting they'd pulled off the job. But finally they stood in a circle of flashing photographers, scribbling re- porters and smiling public re- lations men to say they had done it. Warstellini 44 mlleon m me ifth Unil States 116lw to escape. Their public confession was a publicity stunt for a book and movie about their crime - the first million-dollar cash robbery in American history. These two and three other participants get a percentage of the book's prof- its. Richardson, 70, and Costa, 62, were among 11 men who robbed the vault at Brink's headquar- ters in Boston's North End of $2.7 million. Of that, $1.2 mil- lion was cash. It took the FBI six years to solve the case, and eventually nine men went to prison. But only $57,000 was ever recov- ered. THE MICHIGAN DAILY Volume LXXXVII, No. 12-5 Thursday, May 19, 1977 is edited and managed by students at the University of Michigan. News phone 764-0562. Second class postage paid at Ann ArbarM lehigan 48109 Published daily Tuesday through Sunday morning during the Univer- sity year at 420 Maynard Street, Ann Arbor. Michigan 48109. Subscription rates: $12 Sept. thru April (2 semes- ters); $13 by mail outside Ann Arbor. Summer session published Tues- day through Saturday morning= Subscription rates: $6.50 in Ann Arbor; $7.50b y mail outside Ann Arbor. Mixed Bowling Leagues Sign Up Now UNION LANES REDUCED RATES-50c PER GAME Also M-PIN BOWLING-Win a free game! Open I11 a.m. Mon.-Sat., 1 p.m. Sun. f s S. amin+g "T iRussian Rye ALL YOU CAN EAT! Sun., Mon., Tues., Wed., & Thurs. Served at your table in our finest tradition . 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