i h in I Vol. LXXXVIII, No. 22-S Cm~c ig. DA ILY ,Friday, June 2, 1978 I .5...Sixteen Pages Ann Arbor, Michigan Ten Cents plus Supplement RAPE CASE REMARK: Conn. judge ouster Rep. Paul LaRosa Gov. Ella Crasso Sy rians agreeo Lebanese patrols, BEIRUT, Lebanon (AP)-President Elias Sarkis has won Syrian consent to use regrouped Lebanese regular army units to patrol guerrilla-controlled areas in south Lebanon, official sources said yesterday. Sarkis also was given use of Syrian troops to help his army set up a buffer zone between Palestinian guerrillas and U.N. peacekeeping forces in Israeli-occupied areas of south Lebanon, said the sources, who asked not to be identified. SINCE THE 1975-76 civil war in Lebanon, a 30,000-man Arab peacekeeping for- ce, largely comprised of Syrians, has maintained control of most of the country, but not the south. Syrian President Hafez Assad, meeting with reporters after two days of talks with Sarkis in Latakia, Syria, said he agreed with Sarkis that the Lebanese army should enter the south. "This is a very important matter in order to liberate south Lebanon from A g o e s I Israeli occupation," Assad told repor- ters. "A NUMBER of measures were adopted in order to consolidate the authority of the legitimate Lebanese government throughout Lebanese territory," Assad added. Israel's invasion of 500 square miles in the south last March compressed the bulk of Yasser Arafat's Palestine Liberation Organization guerrillas f between the Litani and Zahrani rivers, 18 miles apart in south central Lebanon. Israel said it acted to sweep guerrillas off its northern flank, where they had bases for terrorist drives into Israel. The U.N. force of about 4,000 controls 65 percent of the invaded lands south of the Litani being evacuated by Israeli forces. The Syrians control up the Zahrani. DISPATCH OF Lebanese regulars to the south has been a sensitive issue sin- ce the Israeli invasion. Guerrillas and their leftist Lebanese allies controlled south Lebanon long before the 19-month civil war broke out in 1975, pittin them against right-wing Christian forces. Lebanese leftist militia leaders com- plain they cannot. get along with regrouped units of the Lebanese army, which- disintegrated during the war, because they are predominantly rightists Tom Chiakulis leads the line in a d HARTFORD, Conn. (AP) - Gov. Ella Grasso has joined those calling for an investigation of a judge who, in dismissing a rape conspiracy charge, said: "You can't blame somebody for trying." The remark was made last month by Common Pleas Court Judge Walter Pickett, after testimony indicated the man failed ina rape attempt. YESTERDAY, the governor endor- sed State Rep. Paul LaRosa's call for a review of Pickett by the Connecticut Judicial Review Council. It is up to the council to decide whether the case is in its jurisdiction. Two groups organized to fight rape and its effects, the YWCA Assault Crisis Service and Neighborhood Women Against Rape, also joined in LaRosa's challenge to Pickett's fitness for the bench. The Pickett case concerns Raymond LaBelle, 29, who with three other Har- tford men was arrested in April after a Springfield, Mass., woman said four men offered her a ride and then beat, robbed and raped her. THE OTHER three were charged with first-degree sexual assault and bound over to Superior Court for trial. Testimony indicated that LaBelle, charged with conspiracy to commit fir- st-degree sexual assault, was unable to commit the rape. Pickett ruled May 17 there was not enough of a case to Greek for sought warrant binding LaBelle over for trial. It is the latest in a series of con- troversies in which judges have been accused of insensitivity to the seriousness of sexual assault on women. In Madison, Wis., Lane County Judge Archie Simonson lost a recall election in 1977 after he said from the bench that Madison's allegedly permissive climate and women's revealing clothing could be reasons for the arousal of a youth accused of sexual assault. AND LAST month, the Colorado Supreme Court criticized District Court Judge Dean Mabry of Trinidad for throwing out a sexual assault case before it got to a jury. He had discoun- ted a woman's claim to have been sexually assaulted, likened her story to an account of an attempted seduction, and said that although this attempt was "a little bit rough .., that's the way things are sometimes," Pickett, asked in a telephone inter- view if he thought his own comment was appropriate, replied: "In the con- text it was made it certainly was. In the matter before me, there was an attem- pt. There was no action. And there was no reason to bind him over to Superior Court." But Gov. Grasso said, "I endorse en- ding it to judicial review . .. I have a number of personal views that I cannot See JUDGE, Page5 the gala By.ELIZABETH SLOWIK You don't have to be Greek to enjoy the Greek Festival at St. Nicholas Greek Orthodox church this weekend. St. Nicholas is again this year spon- soring the Greek Festival, which began yesterday and will run through Satur- day night. Greek dancing, music, food, and drink flowed freely last night under the green, yellow and red canopy at 414 N. Main Street. LAST NIGHT'S rain, say some ob- servers, may have kept a few people away. "Come Friday night you can't even stand here," countered Jacob Bahbah, supervisor of one of the booths. His gesture indicated a large expanse in front of the stage. Japanese, blacks, and Irish are only a few of the ethnic groups sampling the Hellenic tradition. The name of the festival is "Ya'ssoo," which means "Hello." Youthful dancers in red, white, and blue costumes clicked their heels to traditional Greek music. The six girls and two men perform nightly during the three-day event. "EVERYONE IS so happy and pleasant," claimed Jean Furkioti, an Ann Arbor high school student. And in- Daily Photo by JOHN KNOX ance at the Ya'ssoo Greek festival which began yesterday at 414 N. Main. See SYRIANS, Page 1 1 See YA'SSOO, Page 7