4 age 2--Wednesday, November 19, 1980-The Michigan Daily Israelis wound Arab protesters __IN BRIEF Compiled from Associated Press and i RAMALIAH, Occupied -West Bank (AP)-Israeli soldiers fired on bands of rock-throwing Arab youngsters yester- day, wounding 18 in melees here and in Bethlehem. The violence on the oc- ' cupied West Bank was the worst in five months and was triggered by an earlier shooting incident and the closure of an Arab university. At the Jabaliya refugee camp 50 miles away in the occupied Gaza Strip, an unidentified gunman walked into the office of acting Mayor Mohammed Hamed Abu Ouarda yesterday and shot him dead while several members of the municipal council looked on in shock, a military spokesperson said. It was the GET PU8LISIIE SUBMIT PAPERS TO Michigan Journal of Economics by Dec. 1 BOX IN LOBBY OF ECONOMICS BUILDING second assassination in less than24 hours of an Arab friendly to the Israelis. ISRAELI PRIME. Minister Menachem Begin aid in New York that he was cutting a U.S. visit short by one day and would return to Israel last night because of a challenge to his government in the Knesset, Israel's Parliament, over economic issues. There was no indication the West Bank trouble...was a.,a.,wr , 1610 a uiis Three boys and three girls were wounded here by the troops who fired to halt a stone-throwing riot in the main square of the town, which is just north of Bethlehem. While some Palestinians encouraged the demonstrations, an administrator at a girls' school said she had tried to stop the protest. "I TOLD THEM it is dangerous, and I didn't want them to get shot," she said. "At this age, they can't realize the dangers, they just want to express their feelings." The ages of the victims were not known, although one was reported to be 14-year-old Haniya Baramki, the daughter of the acting president of Bir Zeit University. The Rev. Audeh Rantissi, an Anglican clergyman who is acting mayor, said he would not try to stop the demonstrations. I trouble was a factor litis return. _t Coatl*tion: Snuff out drug use (Continued from Page 1) OTHER HEADLINES in the magazine include "U.S. blessing for cocaine group," "Marijuana is being legalized behind your back," and "How the drug banks hide $100 billion in dirty money."~ Swami Chetanananda will lecture on the topic "The Flowering of Universal ConsdoUSnfeSS" NOVEMBER 20, THURSDAY. 8 P.M.-ANGELL HALL, AUD. D For further information contact the Rudrananda Ashram at 995-5483 Powell said the Detroit and New York-New Jersey coalition headquar- ters are national centers for 29 "very active" regional offices. In their quest to keep drugs illegal, coalition members focus on state legislators and lobby against targeted bills. "We're very effective at going after congressmen," Powell said. One legislator who had first-hand ex- perience with Michigan Anti-Drug Coalition tactics was State Sen. John Hertel (D-Detroit). Hertel was considered a pivotal vote on the marijuana decriminalization bill up before the state Senate in1978. THE ANTI-DRUG Coalition was "pretty harassing" in its efforts to in- fluence the senator's vote, Hertel's ad- ministrative assistant Mark Hess said. "THey printed out-and-out lies and then passed them around," Hertel recalled. "They were real nasty." The coalition began circulating rumors that Hertel supported drug use, Hess said, "and that's justrnot true." When he accused the group of being dishonest, Hess said, one coalition member allegedly responded: "We can't let the truth stand in our way, the issue is too important." STATE REP. Perry Bullard's (D- Ann Arbor) administrative assistant, Dan Sharp, confirmed the coalition's reputation for aggressive tactics. According to Sharp, members "threatened to beat up people." "They went around Livonia, soliciting contributions, saying Perry was a member of the Mafia pushing drugs," Sharp said. THE MICHIGAN Anti-Drug Coalition is reputed to be highly anti-semitic, Sharp said. "They think the British monarchy, - Jewish bankers, and organizations like e the World Bank have banded together - to drug the world into a stupor," said lobbyist Roger Winthrop, state co- ordinator of the National Organization to Reform Marijuana Laws. - tWhen asked to comment on the repor- g ts of anti-semitism, an'Anti-Drug g Coalition members said, "it's a lie and 1e slander." As a lobbyist group, the coalition f doesn't have much impact, Winthrop r said. "I consider them more of a pest r- than anything else.'' r Electronic Designersaend Technicians A COMPLETE STOCK OF BOARDS & PRINTED CIRCUIT SUPPLIES ON HAND United Press International reports I A ~'1 Post office hits envelope- stuffing frauds WASHINGTON (AP)-Postal of- ficials have taken action against a half dozen firms charged with false representation in envelope-stuffing of fers. Envelope stuffing. is widely adver tised as an at-home money-making op portunity. Victims are told they can earn money simply by inserting materials into envelopes and mailing them, with all materials supplied by th company. However, postal officials say many c the offers fail to deliver on thei promises and end up costing the par ticipants money instead. In the six new cases, postal judicia officers have ordered that postal mone orders addressed to the firms not b honored, and refunds will be made 1 the people sending in the money orders In addition, mail will not be deliverer to the firms unless they can show that is not connected with the envelop-stui fing schemes. Mass murder suspect dead . YORK, Maine - A man, apparently under the influence of cocaine, shot and stabbed four people to death in this coastal resort town. Andrew Weiss, 23, of Wells; Maine, then drove 40 miles to a motel room in Peabody, Mass. where he killed himself with a drug overdose, authorities said yesterday. The search for Weiss began after the bodies of two men and two women were found Monday night at a home in the posh Cape Neddick section of York. Three of the victims were shot to death and one was stabbed. in- vestigators issued a murder warrant for Weiss after they found his pickup truck abandoned in the driveway of the home owned by Robert Lizotte, 31, one of the victims. The other male victim was Gregory Yorke, also 31. Iden- tities of the two female victims, believed to be in their 20s or 30s, were withheld pending completion of autopsies. Investigators said cocaine was strewn around the dwelling, and Ogunquit Police Chief William Hancock told reporters it appeared .Weiss was under the influence oftcocaine at the time of the killings. Authorities said they did not know the motive for the killings. Weiss's body was found by Massachusetts State Police after authorities received a tip from "an infor- mant" that Weiss might be hiding at the Peabody hotel room. Pope in West Germany; defends papal infallibility ALTOETTING, West Germany -Pope John Paul II yesterday defended papal infallibility -,among the doctrines questioned by Roman Catholic theologian Hans Keng, who lost his teaching credentials and job at a West German university as a result. John Paul was in the fourth day of the first papal visit to Germany in 198 years, as he spoke to a crowd of 40,000 nuns, friars, homemakers, farmers, and business executives. The visit was intended to help reconcile differences between West Germany's Roman Catholics and Protestants, who have been split since the reformation 500 years ago. Each denomination constitutes about half the country's population of 63 million. The Polish-born pope met with German Jews and made reference to the Holocaust, condemning the "perverted theories of racism" and the violation of human rights and dignity. Iran Ira claim control of Iranian border town BAGHDAD, Iraq - Iran and Iraq yesterday claimed four days of bloody fighting had given each control of the Iranian border town of Susangerd and each claimed the other suffered heavy casualties. Iran claimed 950 Iraqis were killed in three days of fighting in Susangerd, and Iraq said 609 Iranians died in the same period. Iran also reported fierce fighting at its besieged refining city, Abadan. The second big battle was reported under way.at Abadan on the disputed north-south Shatt al-Arab waterway, where oil tanks, refineries, and pipelines have been burning since the war began Sept. 22. Military observers in Baghdad believe the religious fanaticism of the Iranian Shiites, associated with the day of Ashura, the Moslem Shiite's holy feast of sacrifice, may be one of the reasons behind the exceptionally heavy fighting for Susangerd. In another development, PLO leader Yasser Arafat described attempts to mediate a cease-fire between Iran and Iraq as a "difficult mission," the Kuwaiti news agency reported. Palestinian sources in Beirut, Lebanon, said Arafat, who arrived in Kuwait Monday, was seeking postponement of the Arab summit meeting scheduledsNov. 25 in Amman, Jordan. Congress opens budget talks WASHINGTON - Congress opened the long-delayed debate over the fiscal 1981 budget.yesterday, with Republicans in the House demanding it be put off until Ronald Reagan takes office. Rep. Robert Giaimo (D-Conn.), chairman of the House Budget Committee, told his colleagues, "It's the responsibility of this Congress to do its duty." Giaimo alled on the Houseto pass his panel's $631.7 billion spending plan for the business year that started Oct. 1. But Rep. Delbert Latta (R-Ohio), ranking Republican on the budget panel, objected. "We ought to permit the new administration to have some input into these figures," he said. Meanwhile, the Senate began consideration of its budget committee's $633 billion plan. The House version shows a $25 billion deficit and leaves open the possibility of a $30 billion tax cut. The Senate bill, drafted three months earlier than the House measure which incorporates the latest economic projections, ignores the tax cut issue, and projects and $18 billion deficit. Woman awarded damages in sexual harassment suit y -m -n- ...---- - - -- - ---o WEDEMEYER ELECTRONICS PHONE (313) 665-8611 W 22n South Industrial Highway Mail in this coupon for ofree printed circuit handbook and' Ann Arbor, Michigan 48106 accessories catalog ($1.00 value) Building Room Department Name - -- - - - Ewa vi Im!r1 =reS 'o al y )e to s. it if- U .S. pilot, I i E, Get the Story New s Addict! rescuer die in North Sea SAXTHORPE, England (AP)-A U.S. Air Force pilot and a British rescue helicopter crewman drowned in the North Sea yesterday after the Briton made a valiant attempt to save the American in gale force winds following the collision of two U.S. fighter jets. A senior Royal Air Force officer denied reports that a crewman of the rescue helicopter had cut a winch line because the resuc"e attempt had fouled up. He said the heroic effort ended when the winch cable snapped under pressure as the twomen,entangled in the American's waterlogged parachute, were being hoisted toward the helicopter. "THE TRAGEDY happened because the RAF man could not free the American pilot from his parachute and in fact got tangled up among its meshes himself," said Group Capt. Terry Nash. A U.S. Air Force spokesperson said both pilots ejected safely after the collision. One aircraft crashed in flames and disintegrated near this village, scattering debris and slightly injuring one villager, police said. The second pilot, who later drowned, headed his stricken aircraft toward the coast, 12 miles away, and ejected. I i I MOUNT CLEMENS - A woman who says she was fired from her job at a Ford Motor Co. plant six years ago because she spurned her foreman's sexual advances has been awarded $140,000 in damages. Fayette Nale, 26, of Mount Clemens, testified in the three-week trial that her foreman, 39-year-old David Festion, promised her easy work at Ford's Utica trim plant in exchange for sexual favors. Festion denied the charges and said Nale was fired 39 days after starting work because "she was not doing the job expected of her." A jury of three men and three women Monday found the company and the foreman guilty of sexual harassment, but it didn't specify what portion of the $140,000 award each should pay. Nale was rehired after she filed the suit but was laid off last January. X MS MSA addresses Greensboro trial The Michigan Student Assembly last night passed a resolution which offered a sweeping denunciation of racism, University investments in South Africa, threatened cutbacks in University minority services, and the U.S. Congress' recent attack on school busing. The resolution, introduced by MSA member Tim Feeman, focused on a condemnation of the recent acquittal of six members of the Nazi Party and the Ku Klux Klan accused of murdering members of an anti-Klan rally in Greensboro, N.C. The resolution stated that "MSA is deeply disturbed" by the acquittals and that ti all-white fury's decision "can Volume XCI, No.66 Wednesday, November 19, 1980 The Michigan Daily is edited and managed by students at The University of Michigan. Published daily Tuesday through Sunday mornings during819 University year at 420 Maynard Street,, Ann Arbor, Michigan, 40 Subscription rates: $12 September through April (2 semesters); 13 by mail outside Ann Arbor. Summer session published Tuesday through Saturday mornings. Subscription rates: $6.50 in Ann Arbor; $7 by mail outside Ann Arbor. Second class postage paidtCHIGAN DAILYMichigan.P ard Street, Send address changes to THE Ann Arbor, MI 48109. 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