The Michigan Daily-Saturday,_October 17, 1981-Page 5 ANNB INDIVIDUAL THEATRES New rift opensA$j50 WED. SAT. 0 ASUN. in Arab ran ks til 600PM Photo by DEBORAH LEWIS STUDENTS BEN HELMS (left) and Andy Crawford (right), and cashier Tobin Nellhaus complete a transaction it the University Cellar in the.Michigan Union. UCellr to stay in Union after heated negotiations (Continued from Page 1) said a tentative agreement had been reached in which the Cellar and the UUmon would split the costs of the first two but the Cellar would still be respon- sible for installation of the sprinkler system. 'All that is open to further clirification," Cianciola said. ,,.The issues of Cianciola's control of tlie Cellar's line of merchandise is still begin negotiated, Caballero said. "WE WANT 'TO make sure all the operations downstairs work together and compliment each other," Cianciola __said. "We are not trying to be a mini- mall. We need to maintain a proper balance" between retail operations in the the Union. The Cellar is looking at several op- tions to absorb the rent increase, in- cluding renting storage space off- campus, expanding and diversifying merchandise lines, renting a smaller space in the Union and raising prices. "The people in the store are going to have to work awful hard to try to keep costs down and get merchandise with higher margins," Caballero said. "We're optimistic and we're going to work together." During negotiations, the Cellar had been requesting a deferment of the higher rent rate until they moved into their new site; they said the higher rate on top of a renovation bill of some $250,000 would be financially devastating. "Deferment was not discussed, period," Caballero said of yesterday af- ternoon's negotiations. She said ar- chitects working on the renovation project would do what they could to keep costs within specification requirements. BEIRUT, lebanon (UPI) - A new rift opened in ASrab ranks yesterday when Syrian and radical Palestinian officials rejected a Saudi Arabian peace plan for the Middle East praised by PLO leader Yasser Arafat. In remarks published by the leftist Beirut newspaper As Safir, Syria and Palestinians groups rejected the plan as being against Arab aspirations, and an unacceptable approach to a set- tlement of the Arab-Israeli conflict. The plan, unveiled by Saudi Crown Prince Fahd in August, calls for the establishment of an independent Palestinian state, withdrawal of Israeli forces from occupied Arab territory, and the right of all states in the region to live in peace. THE LATTER point appeared to be the key to the plan. because it implied acceptance of Israel's right to exist. Just as significantly, Arafat praised the plan during a visit to Japan earlier in the week, calling the Saudi proposals a "constructive step" toward peace in the Middle East. But interviewed by As Safir, a ranking member of the Syria's ruling Baath Party said the Saudi approach was wrong and unacceptable. MOHAMMED Haidar, a former Syrian deputy Prime Minister, said the Baath' Party had discussed the Saudi plan and found it "in conflict with out strategy." He said Syria rejected the plan, because "it was a mistake from the Dayan dies after years of service to Israel (Continued from Page 1) celerated withdrawal of Israeli forces from the Sinai, seized by his soldiers, from Egypt in the 1967 war, and the peace talks surged forward. His stepdaughter, Nurit Hermon, said Dayan died at 8:30 p.m. 2:30 p.m. EDT shortly after Israelis began ob- serving the Jewish sabbath, and the streets were virtually deserted. Israel television interruped its regular program to announce the death, but there were no public displays of mour- ning because most Jews were celebrating the sabbath in temples or their homes. The television broadcast gave the time of death as 8:15 p.m. It said Dayan's condition deteriorated sharply in the afternoon when his blood pressureddropped and breathing dif- ficulties developed. THE HOSPITAL'S heart unit "im- proved his condition but it remained unstable," according to a medical bulletin read overetelevision.a"In the early hours of the evening a further deterioration occurred in his general condition. Various treatments were of no avail and Knesset Parliament mem- ber Moshe Dayan died this evening at 8:15." Proud and straight-talking, Dayan was born a native Palestinian in May 1915 - the first child at Kibbutz Degania, first of the communal farms that pioneered modern Jewish settlement in what was then part of the Ottoman Turkish Empire. DAYAN'S FIRST ministerial posts were in the former Labor Party gover- nment, but he was foreign minister in Begin's conservative Cabinet from 1977 to 1979 when he resigned and became an independent. Daily Classifieds.get Results Call 764-0557 375 N. MAPLE A 769-130 - - " " " S2 TO 6 00 PM ROBERT DE NIRO ROBERT DUVALL 1:15-3:20 5::30 t 7:40-9:50 by a murder... Fri. & Sat. One hid behind his vows. The other behind his badge. Bargain Hours-No $1 Tuesday "Two hours of non-stop thrills:' -RxReed 1:45 OtRS4:15 OTHE 7:00 LOST ARK 9:30 PARAMOUNT PICTURED beginning to present such a plan. "The timing was wrong and its unilateral presentation by Saudi Arabia was also wrong," Haidar said. THE SYRIAN official said he was specifically opposed to the section gran- ting "recognition of the right of all states in the region to live in peace." Ehile Haidar avoided naming Palestine Liberation Organization chief Arafat, at least one hardline guerrilla official was more explicit. Ahmed al Yamani, a leader of the. Marxist Popular Front for the Liberation of Palestine, said the Saudi plan "ultimately constitutes an exit for the Camp David process to get out of its deadlock. "It, is therefore an American initiative with a Saudi Arabian cover," al Yamani said. ' .. .....v. ..... . ."..+........................ r. ......-..... :..::::: ::.::v::::.-::v:::::....:"::,...:}i:_..::::::::v: ::._:..._v:::.:. ..... r........rrv ...............:.............................. ....... : :"::: ........ ..; ...,.......................... Agency calls for tougher laws on police- WASHINGTON (AP) - Asserting that citizens are inadequately protected from rising police brutality, the Civil Rights Commission called yesterday . for tougher federal penalties and said President Reagan's proposed budget cuts would hamper enforcement of existing laws against police miscon- duct. After a three-year study, the bipar tisan federal fact-finding agency also called for stronger internal in- vestigative units in local police depar- tments and proposed that they be sub- ject to some review by outsiders. THE COMMISSION said more per- sonnel are needed in the Justice Depar- tment's Civil Rights Divison, its Com- munity Relations Service and in U.S. At- torney's offices to handle the more than 10,000 police brutality complaints received each year. Reagan has proposed a 6 percent budget cut in 1982 for the Civil Rights Division and U.S. Attorneys and a 12 percent cut for the Community Relations Service. "I'm not going to tailor my recom- mendations to the climate existing at a particular time," Commission Chair- man Arthur Flemming told a news con- ference. "Even a period of economic difficulty does not constitute a reason for moving backward in civil rights." He estimated the cost of additional federal enforcement at $300 million to $500 million. Official doubts surgeon training DA(LY 1:15 3:20 5:30 7:40 9:50 WILLIAM HURT KATHLEEN TURNER BODY Midnite.ED Fri. & Sat. H FAT SAN FRANCISCO (AP) - About 2,000 U.S. surgeons, or nearly two in seven, are insufficiently trained and would not meet current competency standards, the president of the American College of Surgeons says. 'Consequently, surgery is performed in many approved hospitals by un- trained and unqualified individuals," Dr. Thomas Shires said in his address 'Ihursday to the 67th Annual Clinical Congress meeting of the Joint Com- mission on the Accreditation of Hospitals. THE INCOMING president of the 43,000 member college criticized JOAH for failing to develop a means of assessing professional standards for hospital surgery. "In the United States we have no regulatory mechanism for requiring a given degree of training for a given level of performance," Shires said. When asked to estimate how many surgeons are inadequately trained, Shires said two in seven surgeons would not meet competency standards set by American College of Surgeons and by boards that certify doctors in their specialties. "THERE ARE about 90,000 people in the United States who consider them- selves surgeons," he said. "Of that group, yu subtract the number who are in training, you come down to about 70,000. "Out of that 70,000 about 20,000 are untrained...or have had variable amounts of training. "There is no secret...that number is not declining significantly," said Shires, chief of surgery at the Cornell University Medical College in New York. There are still people entering the field and doing surgery, even in modern times in this decade, that have had little or no training. CARBON George Segal Jack Warden Susan St. James COPY (PG) DAILY 1:30-3:20-5:10 7:00-9:00 Midnite Fri. & Sat. J _ _", F- "__syjo ,MANN THEATRES "ost my jobVILLAGE 4 my house, my Rolls Royce, 375 N. MAPLE my family left me... 769-1300 what else can "HiDad!" possibly go wrong?" U - ~ I