,N Page 2--Thursday, November 20, 1980-The Michigan Daily COALITION SURVIVES ON 57-54 VOTE Begin From AP and UPI JERUSALEM-Prime Minister Menachem Begin rallied his dwindling political forces yesterday and defeated a motion of no confidence in his gover- nment's economic policy. But former Defense Minister Ezer Weizman dealt a sharp blow to Begin by voting to bring down the government. Begin's coalition survived on a 57-54 vote with two abstentions-the slim- mest margin in a no-confidence bid sin- ce he became Israel's prime minister in 1977. The absainers were Samuel Flat- lefeats 1n to-Sharon, an independent, and Akiva Nof of the Democratic Movement For Change. BEGIN CUT SHORTa U.S. visit to cast his vote against a motion offered by the opposition Labor Party to protest an annual inflation rate of more than 130 percent and a consumer price in- crease of 11 percent in October. Government policy also was under attack from Israeli liberals over the shooting and wounding of 11 Palestinian student demonstrators Tuesday during clashes with the army in the occupied io-confidence bid r IN BRIEF Compiled from Associated Press and United Press international reports ; West Bank of the Jordan River. Arab high school students boycotted classes in the occupied West Bank and stoned cars in north Jerusalem to protest the shootings. IN WASHINGTON, the State Depar- tment warned the Israeli policy of firing live ammunition, at unarmed demonstrators could have "grave and far-reaching consequences." "We deeply regret the bloodshed that has occurred and we are also troubled by what appears to be the policy of the Israeli armed forces to fire live am- munition at the legs of the demon- strators," said department spokesman John Trattner. Three opposition members of parliament, Yossi Sarid, Chaika Grossman and Mordechai Wirshubsky, demanded an official inquiry, saying the army was too quick to open fire on the demonstrators. CHIEF OF STAFF Lt. Gen. Raphael Eytan said his men exercised maximum restraint, but "when demon- strators overstep a certain boundary they must understand that the army won't tolerate it." In a striking display of irony, Defense Minister Weizman voted for the down- fall of the government whose May 1977, election victory he masterminded. Weizman resigned as defense minister last May, complaining Begin was not moving fast enough toward Mideast peace and that economic policies were not correct. In an impassioned speech to parliament, Weizman explained his vote by saying that "in an emergency you do unusual things." _. " '} ' _ t, Spahett Specia Sundays you-can get a spe- cial spaghetti dinner in- cluding a garden salad & garlic bread for only $2.95. thkuOtp,91rf. Sipasto , Swami Chetancananda will lecture on the topic "The Flowering of Universal Consciousness" NOVEMBER 20, THURSDAY 8 P.M.--ANGELL HALL, AUD. D For further information contact the Rudrananda Ashram at 995-5483 114 SOTHUNIVERSITY 660-411 f P PRE-HOLIDAY GRAB BAG OF SAVINGS Come in and Grab Up to 50% off on any pair Of Beg. Price Shoes Find the Pair You Like and then Reach into the Grab Bag and Pull Out Your Savings It's as Easy as Saving Money Offer Good Til Nov. 29, 1980 PvNJ4hs Rui Iran-Iraq peace seeking mission scheduled for today BAGHDAD, Iraq-Iran'sPresident Abolhassan Bani-Sadr said yesterday his people were determined to achieve a "decisive victory" in the war against Iraq while Iraq vowed to "cut off the hand" that attacks Kuwait or- any other Arab country. Iran claimed to be pushing Iraqi forces back from' two Iranian cities. On the diplomatic front, former Swedish Prime Minister Olof Palme, on a peace seeking mission in Tehran for the United Nations, will meet today with Bani-Sadr and Prime Minister Mohammad Ali Rajai, a U.N. spokesperson in; New York said. The spokesperson said Palme conferred yesterday with Cuban Ambassador Alberto Valasquez, whose country is spearheading non- aligned peace efforts. Palme is to travel to Baghdad later this week. Pope ends five-day tour MUNICH, West Germany-John Paul II ended a five-day tour of West Germany yesterday, expressing hope that his visit helped heal the 450-year rift between Protestants and Catholics as well as ease the bitterness aroused by Nazi suppression of his Polish homeland in World War II. The pope-the first to visit the land of the reformation in 198 years-made his remarks in an address to his host, President Karl Carstens, before leaving Munich airport in his special plane for Rome at the close of the eighth major trip of his two-year papacy. Korean jet crash kills 13 SEOUL, Korea-Korean airline officials put the death toll at 13 in yester- day's fiery crash landing in heavy fog of a jumbo jet carrying 226 persons. They reported one American among the fatalities and 15 people injured. The Korean Air Lines 747 jumbo jet, on a flight from Los Angeles, brushed an anti-aircraft gun emplacement as it was landing and a wing hit a military - vehicle parked off the runway, according to Korean military sources. i They said the pilot, one of those killed, had reported trouble with his con- trols as the plane approached Seoul's Kimpo Airport, which halted all flight operations following the crash. "Yorkshire Ripper" kills 20-year-old student LEEDS, England-The knife-wielding "Yorkshire Ripper," Britain's most notorious modern murderer, has killed his 13th victim, a 20-year-old student and Sunday school teacher, police said yesterday. George Oldfield, assistant chief constable of West Midlands who has led the manhunt for 'the Ripper since the first killing in October 1975, warned: "No young woman is safe while he is at large. Police said the body of the latest victim, Leeds University languages student Jacqueline Hill, was found Tuesday in bushes only 100 yards from her residence hall in the northern textile city. Detectives declined to detail her injuries, as they have done with all the Ripper's victims, for fear that copycat killings would hamper their search. Catholic priest says he will adopt black child CHICAGO-Despite the disapproval of his church, a black Roman Catholic priest says he will adopt a black child to dramatize a growing need for their placement in adoptive or foster homes. The Rev. George Clements, 48, who has 4,800 parishioners in his predominantly black congregation at Holy Angels Church on the South Side, said through a spokesman that he formally will announce his plans to become an adoptive father at a public meeting in his church this evening. Until then, Clements, well-known as a' civil rights activist, was in seclusion, deep in meditation and prayer and unavailable for comment, spokesman GeorgeO'Hara said yesterday. Jury awards $4.5 million in insurance fraud suit POMONA, Calif.-Elmer Norman, a 72-year-old retired apartment manager who is blind in one eye and nearly deaf, wept when a jury awarded him $4.5 million in a landmark insurance fraud suit. But he said yesterday he'll probably never see a penny of it. "I've been waiting five to six years to get this suit heard in court," Nor- man told a news conference. "I would not be surprised if ittook another five years for the appeals. At my age, the chances are I will never see one cent." Norman's attorney, William Shernoff, alleged in the civil suit that Colonial Penn, which holds "out-of-hospital" health insurance policies on 2.5 million members of the American Association of Retired Persons, fraudulently swit- ched Norman's policy in 1974 to one that provided 40 percent less in benefits while stating in a letter that the new policy offered "substantial im- provements." -4 4 4 N I cc. I1 529 East Liberty MON.-FRI. 9:30-8:00; SAT. 9:30-6:00 665-9797 i, Q. What's Avilable, Accessable, and Almost Free? A. A Michigan Dai4 Box Number k t } I " 4 7 " ., ' ' \1' I I ~ 10 0 dml . 1t U fit. 4 4 I -~s e 3irigun Iuat Volume XCI, No. 67 Thursday, November 20, 1980 The Michigan Daily is edited and managed by students at The University of Michigan. Published daily Tuesday through Sunday mornings during the University year at 420 Maynard Street, Ann Arbor, Michigan, 48109. Subscription rates: $12 September through April (2 semesters); 13 by mail outside Ann Arbor. 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