Page Two
THE MICHIGAN DAILY
Friday,Jolly 29, 1977
Bomb wounds 28 in Israel
TEL AVIV, Israel (A) - The
third bombing in Israel within
24 hours wounded 28 persons
yesterday at a market in the
Negev Desert city of Beershe-
ba. Palestine guerrillas
claimed responsibility.
Beersheba was the fifth Is-
raeli city in which a bombing
has occurred since July 6. The
explosions coincided with re-
newed controversy over Israeli
settlements on the West Bank
This is the
great late game.
Open till 1 a.m.
Fri. & Sat.
Billiards
at
the UNION
of the Jordan.
IN W A S H I N G T O N,
President Carter said yester-
day that Israel's legalization of
three such settlements posed
obstacles to peace.
Palestine Liberation Organiz-
ation (PLO) headquarters in
Beirut, Lebanon, issued a state-
ment saying "secret guerrilla
cells operating inside Israel ex-
ecuted two successful opera-
tions in Jerusalem and Beer-
ba" Wednesday and yester-
day.
Two persons were reported
slightly wounded when a car
was bombed Wednesday in
Jerusalem. The PLO said Is-
raeli authorities arrested more
than 80 Arabs in connection
with the blasts in Jerusalem
and Beersheba, a city of 95,000
persons 50 miles southwest of
Jerusalem.
THE CAR bombing came
hours after an explosion neap
a coffee shop in a crowded Tel
Aviv open-air market wounded
11 bystanders. Police said a
young. Arab seen throwing a
parcel near the coffee shop was
arrested.
In Beirut, the "Supreme
Military Command" of Pales-
tinian guerrillas claimed re-
sponsibility for the Tel Aviv
bombing and said the bomb
"exploded as planned, killing
and wounding more than 10 Is-
raelis."
Israeli authorities reported no
deaths and said six persons re-
mained hospitalized yesterday
two with serious injuries.
THE BEERSHEBA b o m b
went off under a food stand.
Hospital officials said the blast
injured both Jews and Arabs,
including the owner of the stall.
One person was seriously hurt.
More than 20 Arabs were de-
tained for questioning, police
said. State radio said security
forces had defused a bomb
found three days ago at the
same market.
Including the toll from the
Wednesday a n d Thursday
blasts, one person has been
killed and 66 injured in the ex-
plosions since July 6.
ON JULY 20, bombs explod-
ed 10 minutes apart in a super-
market near the northern coast-
al town of Nahariya, wounding
five shoppers, and at Jerusa-
lem's Biblical zoo. The'zoo us-
ually is crowded with children
during the summer school vaca-
tion, but no injuries were re-
ported.
The radical guerrilla group
Popular Democratic Front for
the Liberation of Palestine
claimed responsibility for that
attack, saying the bomb was
its answer "to Begin's policy of
creating new settlements in
Palestine."
The Wednesday and yester-'
day blasts came after a com-
mittee of Prime Minister Men-
ahem Begin's cabinet on Tues-
day recognized three disputed
Jewish settlements in the oc-
cupied West Bank of the Jo-
dad' River. The West Bank is
home to 700,000 persons, most
of them PAlestinians.
S
y
s
y
A PubI* Service of this newspaper& The Adv z
WASHINGT
ecretary R
esterday the
hould be th
ouths and a
rtising Counc
rMarshall supports
wrm-minimum 'wage
rON Wl - Labor Marshall testified about the
ay Marshall said minimum wage before a Sen-
e minimum wage ate human resources subcom-
e same for both mittee as the House prepared
dults. to debate a bill that would raise
the minimum wage. A final
vote on the bill may not come
until September when Congress
returns from its August recess.
rThe bill before the House has
the support of the Carter ad-
ministration and organized la-
bor. It would raise the $2.30
hourly minimum wage to $2.65,
with increases to $2.89 an hour
in January 1979 and $3.15 an
hour in January 1980.
Future increases in the mini-
mum would be tied to an auto-
matic formula making the mini-
mum equal to .53 per cent of
the average blue collar wage.
The bill does not distinguish
between youth and adults.
Gymnastics is a course that
has been taught all freshmen at
West Point since 1946.
THE MIcHIGAN DAILY
Volume LXXXVII, No. 54-S
Friday, July 29, 1977
Is edited and managed by students
at the University of Michigan. News
phone 784-0562. Second class postage
paid at Ann Arbor, Michigan 48109.
Published daily Tuesday through
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Arbor. Michigan 48109. Subscription
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ters); $13 by mail outside Ann
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Summer session published Tues-
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Subscription rates: $8.50 in Ann
Arbor; $7.50 by mail outside Ann
Arbor.
Nair
When David had open heart surgery
not long ago, he needed six vital
units of blood, type o Neg. All of it
was obtained, processed and pro-
vided by the Red Cross blood center.
We're not the heroes of this
lifesaving story (the six wonderful
blood donors should get the med- s
als). But we (and other voluntary rj
blood centers) do need your con-
tinued support. Blood, you know, W efre.
doesn't grow on trees. It comfs from
donors. Like you. And we
need more people like O
you. Call your Red Cross
or other voluntary blood q
Center soon. Please.
tie
older generation
has a lot of stuffy
ideas...
cigarette
smoking is one!
American
Redi