The Michigan Daily- Saturday, September 25, 1982-Page 7 -' Israeli judge to probe massacre JERUSALEM (AP)- Prime Minister Menachem Begin's government, under intense pressure for an inquiry into the Beirut massacre, asked the Israeli Whief justice yesterday to investigate the killings. But the judge delayed accepting the job. Begin's critics dismissed the proposal because it does not provide for a fully empowered judicial commission of inquiry. OPPOSITION Labor Party leader Shimon Peres said such a commission would be the only way for "the whole truth to be revealed to the end." He said that under Begin's proposal, Kahan would not have subpoena powers and witnesses would not be liable to penalty for perjury. The plan is merely "something to ease the tension .. . but it won't help," Peres said. The chief justice, Yitzhak Kahan, cannot respond to the government request immediately because the Supreme Court is considering two private petitions on whether to set up a full judicial inquiry, Justice Ministry spokesman Yitzhak Feinberg said. Israeli newspapers, meanwhile, reported Israel's senior military command knew of the Lebanese Christian massacre of civilians at two Beirut refugee camps the day it began, not the day after, as reported by Israeli Defense Minister Ariel Sharon. IN BEIRUT, relief workers Friday reported un- covering a mass grave with 19 bodies near one of the Palestinian camps, raising the confirmed death toll in last week's slaughter to 317. Since the massacre came to light last weekend, Begin has been buffeted by a storm of troubles- protests by both Jews and Israeli Arabs, resignations by some high officials, and strife within his governing coalition. The pressure mounted after Sharon told Parliament on Wednesday that the Israelis had helped Lebanese Christian Phalangist militiamen plan an assault on the camps. He said the action was aimed at Palestinian Liberation Organization guerrillas and that Israel had not imagined a massacre would result. Israelis staged new protest demonstrations yester- day. At Tel Aviv's Dizengoff Circle, more than 1,000 rallied to hear poetry and songs from a dozen top en- tertainers. Some protesters covered themselves with red paint and lay on the ground to represent massacre victims. "We demand an investigation to the bottom of this," said movie actress Gila Almagor. Israel's state radio said several Cabinet ministers, whom it did not identify, intended to renew their demand for a full judicial inquiry when the Cabinet met again on Tuesday. Kahan .. to investigate massacre Death toll in Beirut revised: 597 victims (Contisued from Page 1) three nations were involved in a similar peacekeeping mission before the assassination of Lebanese President- elect Beshir Gemayel Sept. 14. The 800 U.S. Marines, backed by another 1,000 on ships anchored off the Lebanese coast, are expected to arrive tomorrow amid warnings by the State Department that the new mission will be more dangerous than the last. The first of the Italian troops were expected to arrive Saturday or Sunday.. Israeli troops slapped a curfew over the heart of west Beirut yesterday after a lone gunman cut down three Israeli soldiers at an outdoor cafe in a blaze of submachine gun fire. Police said a gunman approached the Israelis as they were having coffee at a restaurant on Hamra Street, the main commercial street of west Beirut, and opened up with a Kalashnikov AK-47 assault rifle. OneIsraeli officer was killed and the two other soldiers were injured, one seriously, the police said. The gunman escaped on foot up a side street. As dusk fell, state-run Beirut radio announced Israeli troops were patroling the area to enforce a strict curfew through the night. Israeli troops also fired flares over an area south of the center between the Corniche Mazraa and the Sabra and Chatila refugee camps where there was fighting Thursday night. FBI calls for slave ringT* suspects' surrender. LOS ANGELES (UPI) - More suspects indicted on charges they ran an international slave ringsthat allegedly sold Indonesian aliens as ser- vants to wealthy homeowners were or- dered to surrender to authorities yesterday. Two of the 10 defendants named in a 52-count indictment were arrested Thursday and were ordered to appear before a federal magistrate for a bond hearing. At least two more of the suspects live in Indonesia and the remaining six were expected to turn themselves in, FBI spokesman John Hoos said. All the suspects face an Oct. 4 arraignment. The indictment handed down by a federal grand jury culminated a 16- month investigation into allegations that 50 Indonesians, ranging in age from 18 to 40, were recruited in their country to work in the United States for two to three years with the promise of an initial salary of $100 a month. They allegedly were given passports, visas, round-trip airline tickets and sometimes money to show immigration officials, but upon their arrival in Los Angeles their documents were allegedly taken away to prevent their departure. Each of the defendants was charged with conspiracy. Some face additinoal counts of enticement into slavery; holding in involuntary servitude fraud and misuse of visa; and bringing, into the United States aliens not lawfully entitled to enter or reside in this country. If convicted, the defendants face a maximum of five years in prison and fines ranging from $2,00 to $10,000 on each count. The grand jury began its in- vestigation after the FBI and Im- migration and Naturalization Service raided dozens of homes and businessess in wealthy neightborhoods of Los Angeles and Beverly Hills in January. I-M Anti-Israeli protesters demonstrate in Diag rally AP Photo Peace demonstrators rally near the home of the Israeli Prime Minister Menachem Begin. The banner depicts Israeli Defense Minister Ariel Sharon. U.N. nuclear agency suspends Israel (continued from Page 1) Israel. The United States and other Western industrial nations voted again- st the motion. THE RESOLUTION to expel Esrael was defeated 43-27, four votes short of the two-thirds majority required for a suspension of membership. After the credentials vote -which was largely symbolic, since the current con- ference was ending anyway - State Department officials in Washington denounced the move as "unjustifiable and illegal.'' They said the United States would be reassessing its participation in the agency and the action "could have ramifications for the whole United Nations system." Davis, deputy secretary of the U.S. Energy Department, said "the degree to which the IAEA has now becme politicized, as evidenced by the resolution just adopted, is completely unacceptable to my government." IN WASHINGTON, the State Depar- tment issued a statement saying: "The United States government believes that great damage has been done to the in- tegrity of the IAEA and the whole United Nations system by the introduc- tion of strictly political issues into a credentials procedure." The statement did not directly men- tion the specific and long-term U.S. U.S. supprt for the IAEA's system of in- ternational safeguards intended to prevent nuclear proliferation. But it did state that "the government of the United States will now reassess its policy regarding participation in the IAEA and its activities." (Continued from Page 1) needed American support and we got it." ANOTHER marcher, Liz Maszk- zakiawicz, a recent graduate of the University's School of Public Health, said she was "outraged by the massacre. I think there are horros being committed against Jews and against Palestinians. The previous generation kept silent during the Holocaust, she said. "I won't keep quiet now." The pro-Palestinian rally was not ignored by the area's Jewish groups, Before the rally, the Union of Students for Israel passed out flyers sym- pathizing with the Palestinians and condemning the massacre but denoun- cing efforts to use the massacre as "a pretext for attacking Israel's right to exist." RABBI A. Goldstein, director of Chabad House, distributed information on Jewish activities along side the Diag protesters. "Everyone has a right to exist. No one should kill anyone," Goldstein stated, "Israel is just trying to exist, it is very unfortunate that people ahve taken one unfortunate incident and blown it out of proportion." Michael Brooks, director of Michigan's Hillel Foundation, said he was "proud of the fact that a lot of the (international) protest is coming from Israel. I don't recall similar protests in Lebanon or Syria when children were killed in Maalot or when buses full of Israeli civilians were blown up." Though no actual violence occured during the protest, tempers almost errupted when spectators yelled ob- scenities at protesters after the march. During the march, one of the protesters produced a badge and identified him- self as a representative of the Washtenaw County Sheriff's Depar- tment but, Deputy Sheriff Kirk Profit, a department spokesman, said he was acting without authority. The marchers remained on the Diag for several hours after the march, arguingsthe issue with Israeli sym- pathizers. F 3r-N MAPLE 769 1000 1.00 TUESDAYS i Koch loses in N. Y. governor primary Continued from Page 3)' the mayor's narrow margin of victory in New York City. The mayor, who was re-elected with. 75 percent of the vote in 1981; got a bare 50 percent of the vote here in the gover- nor's race. Koch, who had not lost an election since he was defeated in a state Assem- bly bid 20 years ago, was rumored to have had thoughts about a vice- presidential bid in 1984-had he made it to the governor's mansion in Albany. KOCH REFUSED to speculate about his future yesterday. "I'm the mayor for the balance of three years and that's enough," he said. He offered his support to Cuomo, whom he beat in the 1977 mayoral race, and said he would now concentrate on running the nation's largest city. "I want to make it very clear," Koch said. "I am not depressed." Cuomo took 670,804 votes, or 53 percent, to 597,751, or 47 percent, for Koch. In the Republican race, millionaire businessman Lewis Lehrman swamped former U.S. Attorney Paul Curran nearly 4-1, 451,086 votes to 109,964. IN OTHER statewide races, U.S. Sen. Daniel Patrick Moynihan easily won renomination and will be opposed by Assemblywoman Florence Sullivan, who won a three-way Republican primary. Democrats nominated West- chester County Executive Alfred DelBello for lieutenant governor, but left two men nearly tied in the race for the nomination for comptroller. Raymond Gallagher and James Tully each had 35 percent of the vote in a three-way race, but Gallagher was ahead by about 8,000 votes and Tully said he would abide by the official can- vass. City Council President Carol Bellamy, who would have become mayor if Koch became governor, also reacted calmly to her indirect loss. "I'm disappointed," she conceded. "However, I think it's time to start run- ning the city and stop crying over spilled milk. As the pun goes, it only makes it salty for the cat." Bellamy was only one of almost a dozen local politicians who had been gearing up to run for mayor in a special election next year on the assumption Koch would leave office. "There were at least 10 people I know of who were very desirous of my becoming governor so they could run for mayor," Koch said. 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