( ] Vol. LXXXVIII, No. 23-S imichigan D IYSxenae I.Cm chin DA LYSaturday, June 3, 1978 Ann Arbor, Michigan Ten Cents City Dems sue GOP over budget By DAN OBERDORFER governmental meetings be public. The act also THE LAWSUIT will be filed to Circuit Court by at- Three Democratic City Council members announced stipulates governmental meetings be advertised torney Jerold Lax next week after he returns from yesterday they intend to sue the seven Republican beforehand. traveling, Morris said. She added that several non- members for holding a caucus meeting in private - Morris is joined by Council members Ken Latta (D-. partisan groups and individuals may join in the suit, allegedly violating Michigan's Open Meetings Act. First Ward) and Susan Gregnberg (D-First Ward) in but declined to cite any names. The Democrats are asking that amendments to the the lawsuit against the Republicans. The only other The Open Meetings Act was interpreted May 2 by budget totaling $328,500, which were discussed by the Democrat on Council, Earle Greene (Second Ward), State Attorney General Frank Kelley to include Republicans at a closed caucus meeting May 23, -be was not included in the suit because he has voted for regulating meetings of Majority caucuses of local stricken from the record. The budget was adopted the the Republican amendments to the budget, according governments. to Morris. Republican Mayor Louis Belcher, however, said he following evening. Morris said the Democrats would ask the court is "confident" the court will allow the meeting. "I'm COUNCILWOMAN Leslie Morris (D-Second Ward) either to implement City Administrator Sylvester willing to test it all the way to the Supreme Court," Raid the meeting was a "flagrant violation" of Murray's budget plan or allow consideration of new Belcher said of the Democratic suit which he called Michigan's Open Meetings Act which mandates most amendments. The budget goes into effect July 1. See CITY, Page 5 Carter right about Cuba, AP Photo ELECTRONIC BUGGING equipment was found in the air shaft of the U.S. embassy in Moscow during a routine security check. The tunnel led to a surveil- lance room in the nearby apartment building. U.S. embassy finds Soviet bugging station leaders ByAPand UPI WASHINGTON-The entire congres- sional leadership yesterday endorsed President Carter's accusation that both Cuba and the Soviet Union supported the Katangese invasion of Zaire. Cubans trained and advised the Katangan forces "up to and through the day of the invasion," concluded House Republican Leader John Rhodes of Arizona. THE VERDICT was unanimous on the part of all four top congressional leaders, Republican and Democrat, who were briefed by Carter, CIA Director Stansfield Turner and other officials on the intelligence information supporting the president's allegations. The White House meeting came aftef President Carter's press secretary, Jody Powell, confirmed that there is a "very real possibility" that U.S. air- craft will be used to airlift an African peacekeeping force into Zaire. And White House officials who asked not to be named said orders have been prepared for the use of U.S. C-141 tran- sports to'shuttle remaining French troops from the copper mining city of Kolwezi, but the timing on the flights has not been set. THE SAME transports would be used if the administration goes ahead with tentative plans to fly the peacekeeping force into Zaire. The peacekeeping force, which has not materialized so far, is supported by the United States, France and other NATO nations, whose representatives will meet in Paris on Monday to con- sider its formation, Following yesterday's meeting with President Carter, both Republican and Democratic congressional leaders said they agreed with the president's ac- cusation against the Cubans. Carter said in a news conference last week that the Cubans shared the burden for the killing in Zaire because they had trained the invasion forces. say THE CONGRESSIONAL leaders said Carter and Turner had showed 35 pieces of intelligence information to back up their charges, but apparently kept the briefing verbal. They said they were not shown any papers, maps or pictures. The sources of the information, Rhodes said, "cannot be revealed for obvious reasons." He said Carter was not;claiming the "complete taking over by the Cubans" of the Katangese rebel invasion from See CARTER, Page 10 Carter denies freezig- arms talks By APand UPI WASHINGTON - President Carter angrily denied yesterday a published report that he had frozen U.S. talks on limiting strategic arms because of political considerations at home and abroad. Carter called the report in the Washington Post "totally inaccurate" and damaging to both the United States and his own credibility. HE SAID HIS basic policy has not changed-"that is, to proceed aggressively with the SALT discussion." Carter delivered his unusual personal criticism of the newspaper to White House correspondents summoned to the Oval Office. See CARTER, Page 7 MOSCOW (AP)-A U.S. Navy Sea- bee's sudden confrontation with a Russian manning a secret room packed with surveillance gear climaxed the latest round in the American Em- bassy'ยง long war against Soviet elec- tronic snooping, sources reported yesterday. The surprise meeting in the basement of a nearby building-prompting the startled Russian to flee in sur- prise-came after American security officers discovered an array of Soviet bugging equipment hidden in a shaft in the embassy's south wing. American investigators traced the wires from the intelligence-gathering devices down the vertical shaft to a tunnel leading into an apartment building adjacent to the embassy, the sources said. Finally, one of the Navy men assigned to the embassy to handle con- -struction in classified areas was sent into the tunnel, and had a face-to-face showdown with the Soviet eavesdrop- ping specialist monitoring operations of the bugs. Embassy personnel then bricked up the tunnel. American officials in Moscow and Washington were reported examining the sophisticated surveillance devices and trying to assess the degree to which the embassy's security had been breached. In Washington, State Department spokesman Thomas Reston 'said the United States had lodged a formal protest with the Soviet Foreign Ministry. There was no immediate comment on the incident by the Soviet government See U.S., Page 7