Car see: pro yea A Det a d of IV cou the It rep: sine whe stil pre. T sev ter Wa: whe ma billi for t H his not H The Michigan Daily-Thursday, August 10, 1978-Page 7 Carter holds hope for cities' funds WASHINGTON (AP) - President proposal to funnel an additional $1 made substantial progress" toward a unemployment stayed over 5 percent, ter told 13 mayors yesterday that he - billion a year to cities with high unem- Senate compromise on the $1 billion either nationally or locally. National s a chance of reviving a stymied ployment and other symptoms of fiscal aid bill. unemployment is now 6.2 percent. posal to funnel another $1 billion a distress. A House subcommittee voted AN ADMINISTRATION source said r to distressed cities. 7-6 on Aug. 2 to defer the measure, "WE HAVE REASON to believe now there was still discussion of whether the fter the White House meeting, which would kill it for this Congress. we can salvage fiscal assistance," he trigger should be 5 percent of 6 percent roit Mayor Coleman Young, head of Carter said the subcommittee "did said. but that under administration projec- elegation from the U.S. Conference not give it adequate attention," but said The administration had originally tions the result of the two-tier program Mayors, said he felt the aid proposal that thanks to the mayors' lobbying, proposed a $1 billion program to would be about $1 billion in total aid, ild be salvaged despite a setback in "We still have a chance of redeeming replace one expiring Sept. 30, but though the figure could go higher. House last week. that." Young told reporters that mayors, Young also said the mayors were lob- was Carter's first meeting with PRESIDENTIAL AIDE Gene Eiden- House leaders and the administration bying for a continuation of federal resentatives of the mayors group berg said arter asked the mayors to were close to an agreement on a public service jobs through the Com- e they endorsed his urban program report personally to him about what slightly different approach with prehensive Employment and Training an it was unveiled March 27. "We they had heard in their lobbying drive. Democratic Sens. Russell Long of Act, commonly known as the CETA 1 support it,". Young told the Besides Young, those attending the Louisiana, Edmund Muskie of Maine, program. sident during the meeting. White House meeting were the mayors William Hathaway of Maine and Daniel Caliguiri said CETA was in trouble in 'HE MAYORS were here to lobby for of Pittsburgh, San Francisco, Newark, Moynihan of New York. Congress because of bad publicity eral urban spending proposals. Car- Jersey City and Trenton, N.J.; New Young said the compromise would be caused by scandals in a relatively few met them after flying back to Orleans, Birmingham, Ala.; Syracuse, added to some other bill by the Senate programs. shington from New York City, N.Y.; El Paso, Texas; Lafayette, La.; and returned to the House in a con- Young said failure to continue the are he had stayed overnight at the Waltham, Mass., and St. Paul, Minn. ference. House Speaker Thomas program would plunge Detroit and yoral mansion after signing a $1.65 Pittsburgh Mayor Richard Caliguiri O'Neill told the mayors Tuesday he other cities into deficit, and possibly on federal loan guarantee package said the session was "very productive." favored that approach. sparka nationwide recession. the city. "We certainly are behind him," Under the developing compromise, He credited Detroit's 5,000 CETA jobs e told the mayors that some parts of Caliguiri said. ' $500 million would be guaranteed to the with a large part in trimming his city's urban program "are in danger of Young said of Carter's programs, most depressed areas, then an ad- unemployment rate from 23 percent to 9 being passed by the Congress." "There's no question they're in trouble, ditional $30 million would be added for percent in three years. "CETA has e referred specifically to his but since we've been here I think we've each tenth of a percentage point that been the difference," he said. r i 1 v e r 5 5 9 s Lebanon BEIRUT, Lebanon (AP)-Lebanon is proposing to make this battered Mediterranean capital an "open city" to end hostilities between Syrian peacekeeping forces and local rightist Christian militias, informed sources said yesterday. Sources said the proposal to demilitarize the financial and commer- cial center was part of a stage-by-stage security plan to end the fighting in the capital of a country that is slightly smaller than Connecticut. In Lebanese parlance, "open city" means removal of the barriers that have hampered movement between Christian and Moslem sectors of the capital since the 1975-76 civil war. AS LEBANESE authorities for- mulated the proposal, a 36-hour lull in fighting in Christian neighborhoods was proposes Beirut as 'open city' .shattered by rockets and artillery fire at dawn. About 250 Christians have died in clashes with the Syrian peackeeping forces since fighting began July 1. The current lull in the Beirut fighting is being used to reinforce positions on both sides, witnesses said. Meanwhile, Israel denied Syrian government press reports that more than 400 Israeli military experts were helping rightists fight Syrians. In Washington, a State Department spokesman said there was no evidence that Israel had sent American-made weapons to the Christians. THE SYRIANS had joined the Christian rightists in fighting off leftist Moslems during the civil war, but fric- tions developed between the former allies after the Syrians stayed on to keep peace in rightist neighborhoods. The Syrians also have been angered by alleged Israeli aid to rightist Christians in Lebanon. Yesterday, Lebanese authorities or- dered Israeli peace crusader Abie Nathan to sail out of Lebanese territorial waters without delivering a cargo of emergency supplies to victims of the conflict. Nathan had appealed for permission Tuesday. Col. Sami Khatih, Lebanese com- mander of the Syrian-dominated peacekeeping army, left Beirut to discuss the security plan with the Syrian government of President Hafez Assad, according to sources. "THERE ARE SECURITY arrangements being taken to defuse tensions in the capital," Khatib said before his departure. "But it will not be in the nation's interests to-reveal these arrangements at the moment." Khatib spoke after a lengthy con- ference with President Elias Sarkis, Premier Salim el Hoss, and Fuad Butros, foreign and defense minister. But sources said the plan involves: -A cease fire between Syrians and rightists in the Christian sector of the capital. -A pullout of the Syrian peacekeeping forces from Christian neighborhoods, to be replaced by regrouped units of the Lebanese army and internal security forces. -Disarmament of rightist militias in the Christian sector and leftists in the Moslem sector. -Syrians taking up positions around the capital to intervene when security violations warrant. -Syrians control of Palestinian guerrillas in refugee camps and shanty towns of Beirut's southern fringes. TAs testify at hearing Daily Classifieds Get Results (Continued from Page 3) decide whether GSAs are primarily employees, as GEO contends, or students receiving their assistantships as a form of financial aid, as the University claims. THE FIRST GSA to testify yesterday was William McNown, who was first questioned by GEO counsel Mark Cousens at 10 a.m. Cousens tried to show that McNown, like other TAs, must perform well at his job in order to keep it, as do employees in almost every field. This is contrary to University claims that a GSA's academic progress is often the primary factor in determining whether his teaching assistantshipwll be renewed. McNown testified that two of his superiors in his division, (biological sciences) told him they had received many complaints from his students about his teaching. After finding that he had not been rehired for the fall, 1978 term, McNown talked with one of the supervisors, Bill Dawson. According to the testimony, Dawson told McNown that his "appointment would be continued if a professor in the division accepted me to teach for his class," McNownnsaid. MC NOWN ADDED that later 'he (Dawson) said the professor in charge of the (one) course I might be able to teach didn't want to take me as a TA." The former Ph.D. candidate insists his academic progress had nothing to do with the dismissal, since his average was "in advance of the retention requirement for staying in graduate school." The second witness, Barbara Wein- stein, told Cousens she had taken her assistantship solely for the money. When she was cross-examined in the af- ternoon by University counsel Robert Veracruysee, however, she elaborated on that, saying, "I wanted a job so that I could have some income so I could con- tinue with school." GEORGE VASCIK, who was a TA last winter term, supported the idea that GSAs are employees, sayingthe only reason he ever wanted to grade papers was because he "needed the money." Cousens' examination of Charles Franklin, a political science Ph.D can- didate, discounted the idea that assistantships are always cognate learning experiences for the recipients, which would support their classification as studenta. The hearings resume this morning at 10 a.m. ARMY SURPLUS 20 % OFF All Frame Packs 20% OFF FASHION JEANS OshKosh, Levi, D.C., etc... . 3-Man Nylon Tent Ripstop nylon Reg. 51.98 NOW $41.98 OFFER EXPIRES 8-12-78 201 E. Washington--94-3572 MONDAY-SATURDAY 9-6 - , ,