The Michigan Daily-Friday, February 11, 1983-Page 9 Local cable franchise to offer 4 new channels By JULIE WINOKUR Local cable television subscribers could be switching from Mickey Mouse to Playboy Playmates by remote con- trol this April. Ann Arbor . Cablevision announced yesterday the addition of four new channels and a remote control device to its 22-channel service. OVER THE NEXT five months, the company plans to add The Disney Channel, Cable News Network Headline News, a public affairs net= work, and a health network. The Cable Headline News and Cable Health Network will both debut March 1 on channels 5 and 3 respectively. Headline News will feature faster paced and more up-to-the minute repor- ting than the present 24-hour cable- news program, a company spokesper- son said. The health channel will provide 24-hour medical and health- related programming. The Movie Channel, which is curren- tly broadcast on channel 5 and 30, will only be broadcast on channel 30, Cablevision officials said. THE DISNEY CHANNEL will bow April 18, nationally as well as in Ann Arbor. The channel's $7.95 monthly charge will cover 16 daily hours of Disney movies, animation, documen- taries, and special programs. By July, Cable Satellite Public Af- fairs Network will debut on Channel 11. It will offer daily coverage of the House of Representatives, interviews with national leaders, and coverage of special political events. Home Box Office, which currently broadcasts on Channel 11, will broad- cast on channel 29. Subscribers will not be charged for any of the new channels besides the Disney channel. In March, Cablevision also plans to offer a remote control channel selector for $3 per month. jo& AP Photo be caused by a grenade ripped through the 3 7 EPA officials subpoenaed Only a few moments after this photo was taken an explosion believed to crowd of anti-Sharon demonstrators in Jerusalem. Israeli cabinet votes Sharon out (Continued from Page 1) intend at this stage to say anything about my next moves." TRANSPORT MINISTER Haim Cor- du said the Cabinet would decide Sun- day how to deal with the defense minister. Although it can take the defense portfolio away from him, only Begin can remove him from the Cabinet. Justice Minister Moshe Nissim said the Cabinet decision to accept the commission's recommendations in full meant Sharon had to quit. But Energy Minister Yitzhak Modai told reporters, "He said he will not resign," and Israel army radio said he argued at length against the report, claiming that it branded "a mark of Cain" on Israel by saying it was indirectly responsible for the massacre. A senior Israeli official said earlier Begin did not want to fire Sharon. This would leave Begin the options of resigning himself, possibly forming a new cabinet without Sharon or placing him in a lesser ministry, or calling new elections. OUTSIDE BEGIN'S office in a parking lot less than 100 yards away, a grenade explosion during the 5 -hour Cabinet meeting killed one of about 100 demonstrators demanding that Sharon be fired and wounded nine people, in- cluding three police. The blast went off in the midst of the anti-Sharon protestors who were carrying flaming torches and banners 60 feet from the gates of the office of Begin where the Cabinet was con- sidering the findings of the Beirut massacre commission. The Cabinet, in its third consecutive day of debate on the commission's recommendation that Sharon resign or be fired, had been meeting for four hours when the explosion occurred. "This was indescribable and in- tolerable," said Interior Minister Josef Burg, who runs the national police and whose only son, Avraham, was among the wounded, Armed Forces Radio said. SHARON, BESIEGED by suppor- ters, arrived at the Cabinet meeting 90 minutes late. Mounted police and security forces held back anti-Sharon protestors. Israel radio said he stayed away fro the first hour and a half to give the ministers a chance to discuss his fate freely. Israeli newspapers have demanded that the government adopt the panel's recommendations. The daily Haaretz editorialized against the idea of the government setting early elections to avoid implementing the report. "The resignation of the government, without the implementation of the recommen- dations of the ... commission, will be understood as mocking the law and its processes, and the crowning of political expediency as an overriding value in public life," it said. The National Religious Party, Begin's senior coalition partner, op- posed early elections. Interior Secretary Yosef Burg, leader of the party, had said he would urge Begin to resign and form a new government in 24 hours, which is constitutionally legal. WASHINGTON (AP) -Environmen- tal Protection Agency chief Anne Gor- such and 36 other EPA officials were subpoenaed yesterday in the escalating battle between Congress and the ad- ministration over handling of the "superfund" cleanup of toxic wastes. the House Energy and Commerce in- vestigations subcommittee demanded information about the agency's overall enforcement policies as well as detailed data relating to five specific waste disposal sites. Among those summoned were Gor- such; former Assistant Admnistrator Rita Lavelle, who was fired by President- Reagan this week; 35 other EPA staffers in Washington and California; and a broad range of agen- cy documents. "We intend to serve them as quickly as we can," said chairman Rep. John Dngell (D-Mich.). The EPA said it would have no com- ment. "We're still looking for the sub- poenas over here," said spokesman Rusty Brashear. Meanwhile, the White House was becoming more involved in the burgeoning dispute, which already has produced a constitutional battle over a contemp of Congress charge against Gorsuch and has spurred five separate House investigations- with a sixth probe likely in the Senate. Larry Speakes, deputy White House press secretary, said President Reagan was briefed on the development and that Counsel Fred Fielding "is looking at the situation over there at EPA." Rep. James Broyhill of North Carolina, ranking Republican on Dingell's subcommittee, met with Fielding later in the day and urged the administration to cooperate with Congress. The White House, Broyhill said, "has a duty and responsibility" to do so. The congressional inquiry into EPA's handling of the $1.6 billion "superfund" program to clean up abandoned chemical dumps have accelerated since Reagan's firing of Lavelle, the person in charge of the program. The chief lawyer for the House, General Counsel Stanley Brand, war- ned the EPA of criminal sanctions if subpoenaed documents are destroyed. He said two automated paper shred- deers had been moved into EPA headquarters, including one next to Lavelle's former office. He said Congress had information that the shredders had been used in off-hours, with no records kept on their use. Rep. James Howard, (D-N.J, Chair- man of the Pubic Works Committee, late yesterday asked Attorney General William Smith for assurances that the documents "are not being tampered with or destroyed." "It is absolutely essential to our in- vestigation that the security of the documents the committee seeks be assued," Howard said in a letter to Smith. EPA spokesman Chris Rice said the shredders were used only for legitimate purposes, but were being removed from the superfund office to avoid furthe con- troversy. "The shredders have never been used for the destruction of original sensitive documents related to congressional inquiries," he said. Subscribe to The Michigan Daily 764-0558 VALENTINE'S DAY GIFTS These fine Ann Arbor Merchants would like to help you make it a very special day for your Valentine! 1 b ti. ____ 'g O 4G?% 0,9 { f/I? A~e ' lo /1 / iQ kAIYia-Al Freee ~ POj* rAO art -, ,,- - . a t :: l1 " . C cilia' 9- PA! Wit!_.h -onen yI . LO e A