4..''; 4 .. 4 . Page 8-Tuesday, April 8, 1980-The Michigan Daily 8 DEAD, 16 INJURED IN PALESTINIAN A T TA CK Terrorists raid Israeli kibbutz KIBBUTZ MISGAV, Israel (AP) - Five Palestinian terrorists invaded a nursery full of sleeping children at a kibbutz on the Israeli-Lebanese frontier before dawn yesterday and killed one baby and two adults before troops stormed the building and killed the terrorists, the Israeli government said. The attack, just as Passover week ended, coincided with the Mideast summits President Carter has called with Egyptian PresidenteAnwar Sadat and Israeli Prime Minister'Menachem Begin to revive the stalled Palestinian autonomy talks. Sadat left for Washington yesterday and Begin follows next week for separate talks. WHEN THE siege was over, blood stained the children's dormitory, bullet hples ranged across the walls over playpens, tiny shoes and toys were scattered in disarray, and broken glass was everywhere. The kibbutz leader was dead, and so was 2 -year-old Eyal Gluska. An unidentified soldier also died. In Beirut a member-group of the Palestine Liberation Organization claimed responsibility for the attack, saying, "The raid proved the will of the Palestinians in rejecting the U.S.- sponsored peace process," in the Mid- dle East, according to a communique. no justification of any sort for such an outrage against innocent people." The five Palestinians apparently crossed the fenced frontier from Lebanon and stole up to the children's 'We are deeply shocked and saddened by this act of terrorism. There can be no justification of any sort for such an outrage against innocent people.' -State Department spokesman Hodding Carter "They started screaming at him in Arabic and Sami started to push them back and they shot him." Shani died. The babies started to cry and the terrorists took two small children up to the second story where they eventually assembled six toddlers - aged 1 to 3 years - and one adult as hostages, the witnesses said. ISRAELI TROOPS failed in their fir- st assault on the nursery about 2:30 a.m., and the terrorists began using a, bullhorn to demand freedom for 50 Palestinian prisoners and a plane to fly them to freedom. The terrorists, enraged by the attem- pt to assault thenursery, shot hostage Meir Peretz in the leg, he said. "The children started screaming hysterically and one of the terrorists shouted, "We'll kill them all," Peretz told reporters from his hospital bed. When the final assault was over - it took "three or four minutes," Weizman said - five Palestinians were dead and the six children and one adult hostage were freed. Four children, one civilian adult and 11 soldiers werewounded, ac- cording to the army spokesman. Defense Minister Ezer Weizman said the army "will weigh measures and ac- tions. I hope these things won't repeat themselves." IN WASHINGTON, State Depar- tment spokesman Hodding Carter said "We are :eeply shocked and saddened by this act of terrorism. There can be dormitory. Yehudit Guri, an Australian im- migrant in her 30s, was on night duty in the nursery. She said the attack started about 1 a.m. after 38-year-old Sami Shani, the kibbutz leader, came to repair an electrical fault in the dor- mitory. "SAMI CAME to fix the light and met two terrorists at the door to the children's house," Mrs. Guri said. AP rPoro ONE OF THE kibbutz defenders from Misgav-Aam on the Israeli-Leba- nese border stands in the bullet-pocked nursery attacked by Palestinian terrorists before dawn yesterday. Three Israelis and all five terrorists were killed after the nine-hour siege. -I HELP US- BUILD- A CITIZENS' PARTY TO: PROTECT CIVIL AND HUMAN RIGHTS HERE AND ABROAD. GUARANTEE A JOB FOR EVERYONE WHO WANTS TO WORK. REDUCE MILITARY SPENDING. HALT NUCLEAR POWER. MANAGE OUR ECONOMY DEMOCRATICALLY, SUPPORTING LOCAL NEIGHBORHOODS AND COMMUNITIES...-' COME TO A BALLOT ACCESS AND PETITIONING WORKSHOP TIME: 7:00 DATE: APRIL 8th PLACE: RMS. D & E MICH. LEAGUE WE NEED YOU For more information call Art Schwartz 665-9331 Sadat arrives in U.S. for Palestinian talks S From AP and UPI WASHINGTON-Egyptian President Anwar Sadat flew to Washington yesterday to talk with President Carter about the stalling negotiations with Israel over Palestinians in the West Bank and Gaza Strip. Sadat's arrival touches off two busy weeks in which Carter will try to accommodate Israel's security, concerns with Palestinian aspirations for a homeland. Sadat has said he is concerned about the stalemate that has developed since the Camp David peace settlement, and called on Israel and Egypt to agree on a framework for Palestinian autonomy by May 26. THE SKIES WERE gray when the Egyptian president arrived at Andrews Air Force Base in suburban Maryland, but Sadat appeared in good humor as he was greeted by Secretary of State Cyrus Vance and other U.S. officials. A 21-gun salute boomed out a welcoming tribute and an armed forces band played the Egyptian and American anthems. A few dozen Egyptians waved flags behind a wire fence and cheered Sadat in Arabic. commitment to justice and morality." As in the Camp David accords signed last year, he said, "we shall succeed in our endeavor with the support of the American people." American officials said the target date can be stretched for a short time, but they said the two nations have not reached at least five important issues: " Whether Palestinians will have legislative power over their own territory on the West Bank of the Jordan and the Gaza Strip, or whether Palestinian authorities will be allowd only to carry out laws made by an Israeli-dominated legislature. e How limited amounts of underground water will be shared between Palesinian Arabs and Israeli settlements in occupied territories. " How land occupied by some 120 Israeli settlements, and once owned by Arabs, will be distributed. * Whether Arabs living in East Jerusalem may vote along with residents of the West Bank, or whether they will be excluded from the autonomy arrangement. " Whether the Israeli armed forces will continue to supply the main security for the West Bank and Gaza. SADAT WAS TO meet with Carter twice today, attend a White House dinner tonight and have a third session with Carter on Wednesday. U.S. officials said the meetings were designed as exploratory sessions and noted the president is to meet with Israeli Prime Minister Menachem Begin on the same questions next week. Egyptian officials who preceded Sadat to Washington said the meetings were designed to settle some smaller questions and the two leaders will not even try to tackle core issues. The Egyptian sources said major issues would have to be settled at a later Camp David-style summit, perhaps in May. They said Sadat wants Carter to persuade the Israelis that giving a real semblance of authority to Palestinians probably. would attract prominent Palestinian leaders to join. the negotiations. Besides meeting with Carter, Sadat will talk with congressional leaders and Cabinet officials during his, visit and answer questions at a National Press Club lunch Thursday. Sadat paid tribute to Carter and "the American 4.r t- 4, 4, 4U-1 4>, ''. " > . 4:,,, :,w x ?" '" y ,;j ."." C " :C= .t "t :. a 4, '" J '1 -y",, 4+ ' <" li li L } ') r.: "d'pt> f .", ' x" '"-t )' -" ' n t "1_;: r~1 F% .C l~ .::;.''-"N";t""':° ", : " "!' More television ads a possibility # WASHINGTON (AP) - The federal government, in pursuit of justice for television advertisers, is raising a possibility that most viewers will find most unjust - more commercials. The Justice Department is challenging the TV industry's volun- tary guidelines that restrict commer- cial time, and doing so despite the op- position of broadcasters and another government agency, the Federal Communications Commission. SINCE 1952, the National Association of Broadcasters - the industry's largest trade grouO - has enforced a TV Code of Good Practice. CAMP NATCHEZ LEADING NEW ENGLAND CO-ED CHILDREN'S CAMP Located in the Berkshire Mountains on our own Natural Lake-Looking for Energetic, Committed Outdoor People Positions Available: WATERSKIING, TENNIS, SOCCER, CERAMICS, CRAFTS, GENERAL ATHLETICS, PHOTOGRAPHY, ECOLOGY, PIONEERING, CAMPCRAFT, SAILING, W.S.I., AND GENERAL COUNSELORS RECRUITER ON CAMPUS THURSDAY, APRIL 10 CONTACT PLACEMENT SERVICE, 764-7456 The code - which has the regulatory blessing of the FCC - restricts the amount of time for commercials that. can be squeezed into a television hour. But the Justice Department contends that NAB guidelines artificially limit access of advertisers and suppress competition that could hold down ad rates. This, the department says, amounts to an illegal "restraint of trade." "PURCHASERS OF television ad- vertising time have been deprived of the benefits of free and open comn- petition among television broad- casters," the suit declares. "The point is this: these are com- petitors who ,have gotten together -to decide exactly what their product will look like," said one Justice Department attorney who asked not to be named. "And these decisions should be made individually." The TV Code currently says that a network affiliate cannot air more than 9 minutes of commercials during any* hour of prime time. During other periods of the day, the limit is 16 minutes of any 60-minute period. IN ADDITION, the code says an af- filiate cannot interrupt a 30-minute' prime time program for commercials' more than twice. Outside prime time, a 30-minute program cannot be interrup- ted more than four times. The Justice Department filed suit in U.S. District Court last June to outlaw the commercial restrictions. The case has now reached the point where a federal judge is considering motions for a summary judgment filed by both the department and the NAB. At last count, the three major net- works and 504 of the nation's 740 com- mercial stations were subscribing to the NAB's Television Code. Should the judge reject the motions, a full trial will have to be held. a . r^ 1/ Kl-rr cl - Jam' F- y,,, 1/, ".... ""just look for the red tags on the shelves 20% off list price on all new hardcover and paperback books in our trade books department .. . . tuesday, april 8 through saturday, apri l 12 The Department of Philosophy announces The Tanner Lecture on Human Values ROBE RT COLES Professor of Psychiatry and Medical Humanities Harvard Medical School Pulitzer Prize Winner For Children of Crisis "Children as Moral Observers" / / ... featuring the New York Times bestsellers, and Medieval and Renaissance Collegium MARC Student Housing Fell and Winter 1980-81 Would you like to live inoan elegant :