Page 10-Saturday, June 10, 1978-The Michigan Daily Israel FromAPandUPi reports AAQBIYE, Lebanon - Israeli commandos landing in darkness from the air and sea devastated a Palestinian seacoast base in this fishing village yesterday. Israel called it a pre- emptive attack on guerrillas planning seaborne terror raids on Israel. Abu Jihad, commander of Al Fatah guerrillas in Lebanon, said the garrison was caught off guard. He said its defen- ders killed 10 Israelis and lost five "martyrs." The military command in Tel Aviv, however, said only two Israeli lieutenants were killed and eight raiders wounded in a brief but bloody attack that destroyed what it said was a guerrilla naval base. It said the at- shells Palestinian base tackers counted eight Palestinian bodies and believed more were killed when the Israelis dynamited the base. INDEPENDENT United Nations sources said four Israelis were killed. Local hospital- officials said they saw the bodies of five Palestinians. "Of course they caught us off guard," said one of about 40 guerrillas milling around the ruined camp later in the day. "Everyone was asleep except for two guards." , "More of us would have been killed if we had been in the main house at the time," said one of the defenders, poin- ting to a bullet-scarred building in the center of the walled compound. "We were sleeping under the trees," said the guerrilla. whorefused to be identified. ISRAELI SPOKESMEN made no mention of civilian casualties, but residents near the battle site reported shellfire leveled a home near the beach and killed six people inside-a mother and her five children. An elderly Lebanese woman named Masriam, the children's grandmother, wandered aimlessly in bare feet, trailing a white scarf and beating her- self about the head with both hands in grief. When reporters tried to approach her for further details, she screamed in a hoarse voice, "Don't ask me. I've lost my mind!" JIHAD TOLD reporters 19 guerrillas manned the outpost. The Israeli military spokesman estimated the number at 30 to 40. Jihad denied it was a naval base or a staging area for attacks on the Jewish state. "This is not a major base at all. We have some'people here just as we have them scattered all around the area," said Jihad, No. 3 man in the heirarchy of Al Fatah, largest guerrilla faction in Yasser Arafat's Palestine Liberation Organization. In Tel Aviv, the Israelis said they had evidence the coastal base was being used to prepare for attacks on Israel "in the near future." The attack on Aaqbiye, 20 miles north of the Litani River, was the deepest Israeli penetration since its March 15th invasion of southern Lebanon in which it occupied 500square miles south of the Litani. The invasion, aimed at driving guerrillas, out of the area, followed a Palestinian terror raid near Tel Aviv in which 35 Israelis died. SYRIAN SOLDIERS of the Arab peackeeping force in Lebanon man a checkpoint just two miles north of AAqbiye, but stayed out of this fight, just as they did during the March in- vasion. Palestinian spokesmen said the Israelis destroyed two 16-foot motor launches-the type used to support sea- borne guerrilla actions against Israel-and three buildings at the camp, including a warehouse for food and weapons. The Israelis said they wrecked six buildings, four fiberglass speedboats and "a number" of rubber dinghies used for surreptitious beach landings. Cartwright receives suspended jail term By MICHAEL ARKUSH Former State Sen. Arthur Cartwright (D-Detroit), who confessed to altering a $4.50 restaurant bill to claim $45.80 in reimbursement from the state, was sentenced in Ingham County Circuit Court yesterday to a 90-day jail term, which was immediately suspended, and a $100 fine. Cartwright pleaded guilty on May 16 to the lesser charge of a misdemeanor after arranging a plea bargain with state Attorney General Frank Kelley. In return, Kelley agreed to drop eight counts of felonious charges against Cartwright, which could have brought the Detroit Democrata possible 14-year jail sentence. - THE 68-YEAR-OLD ex-lawmaker, who relinquished his seat last week as another condition of the plea bargain, became the second former Michigan representative to be sentenced in the last month. Just several weeks ago, former state Rep. Monte Geralds (D-Madison Heights), who had been convicted of embezzling $24,000 from a former law client, was placed on two years probation. Cartwright was unavailable for comment, but his attorney, Dennis Ar- cher, praised yesterday's court ruling. "CONSIDERING all the circumstan- ces, that the Attorney General had su( a strong case against us and that I (Cartwright) was charged with eig felonies, I am very happy because think we did the best we could. After a my client does not have to go to jail said Archer. Archer said Judge Thomas Brow told the court he suspended the sente ces because he said he felt Cartwrigl had "suffered enough.' THE DETROIT attorney denied ar possibility of a pre-arranged deal be ween Cartwright and the cour claiming the judge's ruling was "une pected." Cartwright was charged with fiv counts of the felony "uttering an publishing"-the offense of signin checks and not being able to account fc them-by Kelley after a long ii vestigation. Kelley assumed the cas after a Detroit newsman noticed discrepancy between the amountc money in Cartwright's checking a count and the value of the checks h signed. Cartwright, who became a stat senator in 1966, has not announced an decision concerning his future. He will receive a $12,072 annual pe sion as a 131/2-year veteran of the state House and Senate. ch he, ht I in n- ;ht U.S. protests Soviet espionage in embassy WASHINGTON (UPI)-The United ny States struck back at the Soviet Union A- yesterday in a war of words over A, espionage charges, accusing the x- Russians of making "a crude in- trusion" into the U.S. Moscow embassy ve by tunnel and chimney. 1d Provoked by public Soviet comments 1g on the celebrated chimney caper, the or State Department took the unpreceden- n- ted step of making public details of the se protest note it sent the Soviet gover- a nment last week. "- THE EMBASSY told the ministry e that it was instructed to protest this 1e crude instrusion into its chancery e which was called totally unacceptable and counter to efforts to improve. y relations between the two countries," department spokesman John Trattner °s told reporters. Normally, the State Department never releases the contents of such diplomatic notes and does not discuss the details of any alleged spy operation, as it did yesterday. The author of the Declaration of Independence was Thomas Jeffer- son, but few Americans knew this untilthe fact appeared in a newspa- per in 1784, according to the National Geographic Society. The flap originated May 25 when U.S. electronics experts, sweeping the Moscow embassy for "bugs," discovered electronic eavesdropping devices inside a chimney. U.S. OFFICIALS said the experts traced wires from the devices down the chimney, through a tunnel to some sort of monitoring control room in a neibh- boring apartment building. The U.S. government protested through the usual private diplomatic channels and, on Thursday, the Soviet Tass news agency replied by calling the protest an effort to divert attention from U.S. electronic spying operations based in the embassy. Tass claimed this charge had been made formally ina counter-protest note and said that, if the United States did not drop the matter, Moscow would up the ante by publishing "documentary evidence" on the U.S. spy effort. "Tass has its facts wrong," Trattner said in making the U.S. counter- counter-attack. "No such represen- tation has been received by the State Department as of now." He called Tass spy allegations "ab- surd" but said they compelled the United States to release "the substan- ce" of its original May 31 protest note. The Ann Arbor Film Cooperative presents at MLB 3 Saturday, June 10 BRING ME THE BEAD OF ALFREDO GARCIA (Sam Peckinpah, 1974) 7 only-MLB 3 Peckinpoh moved to Mexico to shoot a film with complete freedom from Hollywood restrictions and returned with this brilliant, uninhibited black comedy. Senor Garcia has a price on his head, and said hood becomes, as Bogart says in THE MALTESE FALCON. "The thing dreams ore made of." A truly underrated flm, it looks like it was shot by someeassionote cross between John Ford and Luis Bunuel. "Mognificently Gothic Western about a down and out piano player who tries to gain his fortune by becoming a bounty hunter, anddby so doing finds himself pursued into.modness by the furies of his own self-destructiveness. Som Peckinpoh a his best."-SIGHT AND SOUND. WARREN OATES, ISELA VEGA, GG YOUNG, £ KRISKRISTOFERRSON. THE BALLAD OF CABLE HOGUE (Sam Peckinpah, 1970) 9 only-MLB3 A worm lyrical film and a finely wro ght ode to dying individualism, this is Peckinpoh of his poetic best. JASON ROBARDS is in peak form os Hogue, a stubborn loner bottling for survival in the foling Old West. Peckinpoh's personal favorite; STELLA STEVENS portrayal of a whore with a hea of.gold is worth the price of admission. With DAVID WARNER. TUESDAY: Budd Bo tlcher's "ARRUZZA"-FREE : . . dFiA 3 , . . - . . . . . t l CIINEMA 114 presents k' ~REPULSION ' Director-ROMAN POLANSKI, 1965 Roman Polanski's direction at its very best in this macabre and erotic story of a -woman (CATHERINE DENEUVE) torn between her craving and loathing for men. Her psychopathic tendencies are revealed bit by bit in a suspenseful, mirror- rattling horror tale of alarming reality. Everything about this movie makes your blood chill. 7:30 t,9:30 Aid A, Angell all $1.50 Thursday-"BRIDGE OVERTHE RIVER KWAI"