.d Page 2-Sunday, January 31, 1982-The Michigan Daily Haig says Mideast peace far off From AP and UPI Secretary of State Alexander Haig has returned from his latest quick trip to the Middle East with the discouraging finding that an agreement in the Palestinian autonomy talks is remote, perhaps even impossible. It was Haig's second trip to the Mideast in two weeks as the administration intensifies efforts to eliminate the roadblocks to agreement on self-rule for the 1.3 million Palestinians living in the Israeli- occupied lands. In the face of the divisions between Egypt and Israel, Haig is seeking "transitional arrangements" to protect Palestinian rights while trying to keep the peace process alive. SENIOR U.S. officials said Haig sought to quell suspicions and mute a growing war of words between the two countries and to reassert a serious U.S. in- terest in the Palestinian issue. Haig sought also to repair damage caused by un- foreseen Mideast developments-including the mur- der of Egyptian President Anwar Sadat and Israeli annexation of the Golan Heights-coupled with U.S. preoccupation with other issues such as the crack- down in Poland. The trips to Cairo and Jerusalem in three weeks have shown HIaig that problems get more complex as he gets deeper into them, that there is a growing lack of good will between Egypt and Israel, and that both Egypt and Israel are increasingly pessimistic over the chances of the talks succeeding. DURING HIS discussions with Prime Minister Menachem Begin in Jerusalem and with Mubarak in Cairo, Haig concluded that there is no realistic chan- ce of reaching an agreement on Palestinian self-rule before Israeli returns the final portion of the Sinai Desert to Egypt on April 25. And one senior U.S. official said, "I don't even think of it as a practical objective" in light of the deep Israeli-Egyptian split on the issue. As Haig's plane flew from Cairo to London it was made known he believes that the differences between the two sides are so great that he cannot predict with certainty that the autonomy question is even "solvable." "I would say it's going to be a tremendously dif- ficult task," said a senior U.S. official on the aircraft. But it was also clear that with.the expected appoin- tment of Richard Fairbanks as a full time U.S. autonomy negotiator the administration intends to quicken the pace of its efforts to find solutions. He has recommended that Richard Fairbanks, a Yale-educated lawyer now serving as an assistant secretary of state, be appointed special negotiator. Laid-off Ford workers to lose checks as benefit fund dries up F OM rom sirsITI Vrm Arand UPI DETROIT - Laid-off autoworkers with less than 10 years seniority will no longer receive checks because Ford Motor Co.says its Supplemental In- come Benefit fund has run dry. "The SUB fund will be in a no-pay situation," Ford spokesman Ed Snyder said Friday. "We cannot pay a benefit of any kind to any employee with less than 10 years seniority." MOST OF the No. 2 automaker's 5,500 hourly workers on indefinite layoff would be affected by the cutoff, Snyder said. About 23,000 of those workers are in Michigan. Another 25,325 Ford workers nation- wide will be on temporary layoff next week. Meanwhile, one auto industry analyst says the collapse of emergency con- tract talks between the United Auto Workers union and General Motors Corp. sets the stage for even more dif- ficult and volatile negotiations this summer. "I THINK the odds of a strike in Sep- tember and tough negotiations in the summer have increaged," David Healy, analyst for Drexel Burnham Lambert Inc. in New York said Friday. "I think we're in for some hardball." Bargaining between GM and the UAW began Jan. 11 at the company's request but fell apart late Thursday when negotiators failed to agree on wage-and-benefit concessions sought by the No. 1 automaker before a UAW-imposed deadline. The suspension of talks means GM and the union will not meet across the bargaining table again until July, the traditional time for opening contract talks in the auto industry. Current con- tracts expire Sept. 14. "We wanted to enter nyegotiations early because we wanted to stop the hemorrhaging of jobs," UAW President Douglas Fraser said last week. "That was our strategy. I think it was well conceived and it didn't work." IN BRIEF Compiled from Associated Press and United Press International reports Reagan proposes restrictions on habeas corpus pleas WASHINGTON- The Reagan administration will propose major new restrictions on the ability of convicts to file habeas corpus petitions asking federal courts to review their cases, Attorney General Wijliam French Smith said yesterday. Smith said the proposed restrictions, which would apply to convicts who have exhausted the normal appeals process, aredesigned to stem the "flood" of petitions that have become "a clear problem for the justice system." The proposals, outlined in a speech prepared for delivery to a conference on administration of justice in Williamsburg, Va., will be presented to Congress this week, Smith said. Under present law, a convict may appeal through the state court system and seek a review from the U.S. Supreme Court, which refuses to hear most criminal cases. When those avenues are exhausted, the convict may at any time file a petition for habeas corpus, asking a federal court to review constitutional questions arising from his trial. Siberian religious protestor ends month-long hunger strike MOSCOW- A nurse said Pentecostalist Lydia Vashchenko broke her mon- th-long hunger strike yesterday by taking broth hours after U.S. Embassy officials sent her to a Soviet hospital, ending a 43-month stay in the American compound. Vashchenko, 31, is one of seven Pentecostalists who took refuge in the U.S. Embassy 3% years ago to escape what she and her family described as religious persecution in their Siberian home of Chernogorsk. The embassy granted them humanitarian refuge and all seven had been living in one room in the embassy basement. Vashchenko and her mother, Augustina, 52, began fasting over the Christmas holidays to protest what they felt was lack of effort by the U.S. Embassy to press their case for emigration with Soviet officials. Ameri4can officials denied the claim, saying everything possible was being done. They warned the hunger strikers they would be hospitalized if it ap- peared their lives were endangered by the fast, and that there were no assurances they could return to the embassy once out of U.S. custody. Woman boxer fights to fight LANSING- A Lansing woman's bid to become Michigan's first female Golden Gloves fighter is headed for federal court with a hearing scheduled just two days before the end of the local tournament. The case, originally filed in Ingham County Circuit Court, was moved to U.S. District Court in Grand Rapids Friday at the request of the local spon- sors of the Golden Gloves tournament, because federal as well as state issues are involved. They said they are only trying to protect the woman's safety, not deny her rights. District Judge Wendell Miles has set a hearing for Feb. 8. Jill Lafler, a 19-year-old Lansing Community College student who got star- ted in boxidg as an exercise for relieving tension, says she wants to fight in the Golden Gloves tournament because there is no otherserious competition available ko her. New winter storm threatens deep freeze for Midwest Rain mixed with sleet put a coating of ice on mounds of snow in the Mid- west yesterday, making ice-skating rinks of streets and prompting floodng in Missouri. A new winter storm that dumped foot-deep snowsinthe western moun, tains pushed eastward and sub-zero temperatures threatened to put the nor- thern half of the country into a deep freeze for the fourth straight weekend. Snow fell over much.of Michigan through the.night, and a travelers ad- visory was in effect in the southern half of the state. I Fraser ... says good strategy failed First local handgun ban effective tomorrow MORTON GROVE, Ill. (AP) - This Chicago suburb will be off-limits to pistol packers tomorrow as the nation's first local ordinance banning handguns goes into effect. Authorities say they won't go looking for people with handguns. A man's home still will remain his castle and day-to-day living in the community of 26,500 will continue as always, they say. BUT THE village's attorney also doesn't expect people to turn their guns in.. The ordinance, which bans the sale of handguns within city limits and their possession by anyone other than law of- ficers and licensed collectors, has been controversial. When enacted last June, its constitutionality was quickly challenged by gun owners. The ordinance survived its first federal court test last month. And on Friday, in the first ruling by a state court, a Circuit Court judge upheld the, ban, clearing the way for it to take ef- fect tomorrow. " WHEN MONDAY comes we think it will be the biggest non-story around," Martin Ashman, village attorney and POETRY READING with Gary Llndorff and Barbara Scott Winkler Reading from their works Monday, Jan. 1-8 p.m. GUILD.HOUSE-802 Monroe ADMISSION FREE 'I don't look for people with hand guns to be trooping to the police station to turn them in. -Martin Ashman, Morton Grove attorney administrator. "Day to day life will continue the same as always, and even- tually. we believe everyone will be safer." Enforcement of the ban will come in the ordinary routine of police work, of- ficials said. "If we find a handgun in the open in the course of an investigation, like a routine traffic stop, we will take it," said Police Chief Larry Schey. "We haven't some kind of quota to fill. We won't be kicking down doors to/get han- dguns." There hasn't been a- criminal shooting in Morton Grove since 1979, of- ficials said. Burglaries pose the most serious problem. There were 189 last year in the upper-middle-class suburb. author of the ordinance, said Saturday. "Nothing is going to happen, unless someone tries to bait police into search and seizure for a test case, and I don't think they will. t . "All eventualities along these lines have been thoroughly gone over with the police department," said Ashman. "They will be wary of any traps. The media may be hoping something con- troversial may happen, but I don't think it will. I hope nothing is staged. "And I don't look for people with han- dguns to be trooping to the police station to turn them in., VIOLATORS will be fined $50 to $500 for the first offense. Penalties for sub- sequent offenses include fines of $100 to $500 and six-month jail sentences. "Handguns will be treated the same as marijuana and other contraband," said James Sloan, assistant village Jobfinders for jobless hit by budget cuts I4 WASHINGTON (UPI) - Although more Americans are unemployed than at any time since the 1930's, states are being forced to lay off more than 19,000 workers who help the jobless find work, a United Press International survey showed yesterday. More than 600 employment offices are being closed, and many jobless workers must travel to offices in other cities, the survey found. Lines at the agencies are longer. Counseling for the jobless has been sharply reduced. THE REDUCTIONS occur at a time of 8.9 percent nationwide unem- ployment and 9.5 million Americans without a job, the highest number since the late 1930s. The crunch came when Congress, engaged in a bitter budget batte with President Reagan, provided funds in December to keep the government operating while its normal ap- propriation process was stalled. The resolution, however, provided only $1.9 billion for administering of for S PLACE YOUR AD UMMER UBLET UPPLEME COST IS ONL before 5:00 pm February (Feb. 23-March 19 cost Makec te spring and/or summer? IN NT ---- - m m m m m m - m m - m I NAME _ ADDRESS PHONE 1 ' 1 ' 1 ' 1 , 1 , 1 , (ACTUAL SIZE OF AD) ' . Please print or type legibly in the space provided, as youwould like the copy to appearD tmotm-ImmHmmGmmNm - to the MICHIGAN DAILY $263.ยง million. The Labor Department earmarked nearly 80 percent of that cut for jeh-finding services. T.V. series offers work alternatives (continued from Page 1) economics have any real hope of dealing with (the problems the country faces)." The 10-week series will explore the ef- fects of the elimination of labor on topics such as the family and marriage, education, economics, politics, and social values. The videotapes were made at Santa Cruz in 1980 under a special grant from the University of California. In addition to the scheduled videotapes, Public Access, the city- supported cable company, will televise discussions from the Ann Arbor Public Library. Professor Bergmann en- couraged all viewers to participate in these stylized "town meetings" to be held every alternate Saturday at 3 p.m. beginning Feb. 13. The discussions will give the audience a rare opportunity to respond and react to television programming, he said. The Monday night premiere, entitled "A proposal," will air twice, at 3:30 and f8. Each of the 10 programs will be broadcast several times each week to reach as large an audience as possible. Local high schools also will broadcast the series. Professor Bergmann said he hopes to film a similar series for a national television company. He is also writing a related book on the future of labor in the United States. Vol. XCII, No. 100 Sunday, January 31, 1982 The Michigan Daily is edited and managed by students at The Univer- sity of Michigan. Published daily Tuesday through Sunday mornings during the University year at 420 Maynard Street, Ann Arbor, Michigan, 49109. Sub- scription rates: $12 September through April (2 semesters); $13 by mail out- side Ann Arbor Summer session published Tuesday through Saturday mor- nings. Subscription rates: $6.50 in Ann Arbor; $7 by mail outside Ann Arbor. Second class postage paid at Ann Arbor, Michigan. POSTMASTER: Send address changes to THE MICHIGAN DAILY, 420 Maynard Street, Ann Ar- bor, MI 48109. The Michigan Uoily is a member of the Associated Press and subscribes to United Press International. Pacific News Service, Los Angeles Times Syndicate and Field Newspapers Syndicate. News room: (313) 764-0552; 76-DAILY. Sports desk. 764-0562; Circulation. 764-0558: Clossified Advertising. 764-0557; Display advertising.764-05548:illing. 764-0550. Editor-in-chief....................SARA ANSPACH Managing Editor...............JULIE ENGEBRECHT University Editor ................. LORENZO BENET News Editor......................DAVID MEYER Opinion Page Editors..........CHARLES THOMSON KEVIN TOTTIS Sports Editor......,....... ....MARK MIHANOVIC Associate Sports Editors ...........GREG DeGLIS MARK FISCHER BUDDY MOOREHOUSE DREW SHARP Arts Editors..................RICHARD CAMPBELL MICHAEL HUGET Chief Photographer.,............PAUL ENGSTROM PHOTOGRAPHERS: Jackie Bell, Kim Hill, Deborah Lewis, Mike Lucas,,Brion Masck. ARTISTS: Robert Lence, Jonathan Stewart, Richard Walk, Norm Christiansen. ARTS STAFF: Jone Carl, James Clinton, Mark Dighton, Adam Knee, Gail Negbour, Carol Pnemon, Ben Ticho. NEWS STAFF: John Adam, Beth Allen, Andrew Chap- man, Perry Clark, David Crawford, Lisa Crumrine, Ann Marie Fazio, Pam Fickinger, Lou fintor, Joyce Frieden, Mark Gindin, Julie Hinds, Steve Hook, Kathlyn Hoover, Harlan Kahn, Pamela Kramer, Mindy Layne, Mike McIntyre,, Jennifer Miller, Anne Mytych, Nancy Newman, Dan Oberrotman, Stacy Powell, Janet Roe, Kent Redding, Sean Ross. 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