The Michigan Daily ... Vol. LXXXVi1, No. 62-S Ann Arbor, Michigan-Wednesday, August 10, 1977 Ten Cents Twelve Pages Israel won't accept PLO JERUSALEM (P) - Prime Minister Menahem Begin said last night the Palestine Libera- tion Organization (PLO) "nev- er will be a partner" in Middle East peace talks. Publicly declaring what they told U. S. Secretary of State Cyrus Vance privately, Israeli leaders said they would exer- cise their veto power to bar the PLO from a reconvened Geneva conference because Yasir Ara- fat's organization is dedicated to Israel's destruction. BEGIN READ aloud from the PL) charter during a dinner for Vance and said: "That or- ganization, the philosophy of which is based on an Arabic Mein Kampf, is not partner whatsoever and never will be a partner to hold any talks." In much the same terms, Foreign Minister Moshe Dayan said earlier that even if the PLO accepts U. N. Security Council Resolution 242, which recognizes Israel's right to ex- ist in secure borders, "it will not mean that we accept the PLO as a partner for negotia- tions for peace." President Carter at home and Vance and his aides on this Mideast trip have hinted broad- ly that the PLO may be ap- proaching a decision to revise its covenant, which now leaves no room for the existence of Israel as a Jewish state. CARTER TOLD reporters this week in Plains, Ga., the step would open "an avenue" to PLO participation at Geneva. At the United Nations, a PLO deputy observer, Iasan Abdel Rahman, said the organization wanted Resolution 242 changed to recognize the right of Pales- tinians to a state of their own. The chairman of the U. N. Special Committee on Palestin- ian Rights, Medoune Fall of Senegal, told the committee Carter's recent statement favor- ing a Palestinian "homeland' should make such a change possible. BEGIN, WITH oratorical flair, lectured Vance with an allegory about a country called "Hunland" and its tenets as set forth in its "Mon Kampf," the title of the hook in which Adolf Hitler recorded his beliefs. Reading from the PLIO cove- nant, Begin reminded the Sec- retary of State and the Ameri- can and Israeli audience in the parliament hall that the PLO is committeed to the dismantling of the Jewish state and ex- pulsion of all Jews who came to the country since the 1920s. "'Their aim is to destroy and annihilate our people," Ilegin said. "SOME MAY say we are sensitive about it, and we are It is logical to learn from ex- perience." Vance, in response, invited Israel to make bold moves and travel "an unfamiliar course" in the search for peace. "We will never propose to you a See ISRAEL, Page 10 Two for the road A pair of workers from Natick, Mass., enjoy an unobstructed view of the world as they catch a quick ride to work in the bucket of a bulldozer. British trooper killed in IRA ~ tZIereluet biz BELFAST, Northern Ireland (A') - The out- pises. lawed Irish Republican Army (IRA), building YESTERDAY'S VIOLENCE - in which a 16- up a promised "blitz" to greet Queen Elizabeth year-old Romnn Catholic youth also died-mark- II, shot a British trooper dead yesterday in Bel- ed the fifth dav of intensified terrorism in this fast and set off a bomb at a university the queen British province ravaged by sectarian warfare. is to visit when she arrives. More than 3' 000 Bitish troops, militia and po- Security chiefs and government leaders met lice have gathered in the province to contain the yesterday to consider whether to recommend violence and protect Queen Elizabeth as part of that the queet call off her two-day silver jubi- "Operation Monarch." She is not scheduled to' lee tour of Nwrthern Ireland, scheduled to begin go to Belfast, .a hotbed of the conflict. early today. British military headquarters said the small INFORMED SOURCES said such recommenda' bomb on the g'ounds of the New University of tion was unlikely "because that would give the Ulster at Coleraine, in the northern tip of the IRA the biggest propaganda and psychological province, caused, no casualties or damage. boost imaginable" BUT IT TRIGGERED alarm among security The IRA's radical Proyisional wing vowed to chiefs who believed the complex had been se- unleash a wave of terror if the 51-year-old mon- cured after another small bomb was found in a arth did not cancel her our, one of several building there 11 days _ ago. Army experts de- events intended the mark the 25th year of her fused that charge. The Provisianals - known as "Provos". The IRA, which wants to unite'.predominantly claimed tpey tenetrated the tight security cor-5 Protestant Nortnern Ireland with .the massively don around thte university, wh'ere the queen will (atho1 Itep6ticc' in the south see the tour as hold a recepweorand via* ayouth' festival to- a reeffirsitin; ,itheB ruitish, gle: the;JR&4Aees - .. -, B lPAge - City helps locals rehabilitate homes . By GREGG KRUPA Some of the city's ol"r homes may soon get facelifts as residents take advantage of a new federally-funded home - improvement plan. The city's Community Development Department has initiated a program aime:' at assisting low income residents of the city rehabilitate their homes. THROUGH THE Commnunity Development Housing Re- habilitation Program, low interest loans and outright grants are given to owners of one or two unit homes, who live in a designated area of the city and qualify economically for the assistance. But several problems have arisen in attempts to get the program off the ground. One is a delay in staffing the pro- gram, which Ias allowed fands for rehabilitation to lay dor- mant from 1915, when the city first began to receive Com- munity Development Block Grant (CDBG) funds until June of this year when rehabilitation work began. "When you- are institating 50 programs, it is tough to get them all off the grouId immediately," explained Barry Tillman of the Community Development staff. "We worked with some of our other priorities first, trying to get our physical and public service projects staffed." TILLMAN EMPHASIZED that funds designated for housing rehabilitation in the first and second year of the program have been kept in a bank and homeowners who have, been awarded rehabilitation assistance will indeed be fund0 of third year CDBC funds have been set aside to rehabilitate some 250 housing units. Tilliian said he has l'een keeping a -low profile on the program in ,recent months until the backlog of loan requests has be"n cleared. "$SME PEOPLE HAVE- been waiting 'for a year and a See FEDERAL,Page t