Page 6-Saturday, April 2, 1983-The Michigan Daily Troops in Beiru BEIRUT, Lebanon (Ap)-The U.S. Marine com- mander in Lebanon, Col. James Mead, said yester- day he had ordered his men to carry loaded weapons for the first time in their duty here because of in- creased threats of violence. Mead told reporters at the J.S. command post near Beirut airport that the decision followed an attack on a patrol March 16 in which five Marines were slightly wounded, and warnings from the Lebanese army that more ambushes were likely. "THE HEAD of the Lebanese armed forces, Gen. Ibrahim Tannous, gave me through his intelligence a warning that our patrols had an increased probability of being hit," Mead said. "I have decided and we im- plemented this week a policy that magazines would be put into the weapons of all Marines on patrol." Although the magazines will be in the M-16 rifles, there will be no round in th said. Since the 1,200 Marines fir August to supervise the e Liberation Organization gui been that U.S. peacekeepers their weapons to avoid accid HOWEVER, AN officer in who asked not to be identift and British troops of the r also been carrying loaded defense since the attacks. Mead said another factori Marines was increased gu Israeli patrols on the old Sid skirts the fringes of the U.s.T Judge rules Fleming owns Groucho's gifts AP Photo Moon scraper The rising sun illuminates this moon sets behind the building. skyscraper in Cambridge, Mass. as the full Anti-nuclear activists form chain of protest SANTA MONICA (UPI) - A judge ruled yesterday that Erin Fleming can keep two homes and other gifts Groucho Marx gave her, saying she believed the former actress had been a good influence on the comedian in his last years. But Superior Court Judge Jacqueline Weiss denied a defense request to grant a mistrial in the complicated Bank of America suit and let stand a jury ver- dict that Miss Fleming pay nearly $500,000 damages to the late comedian's estate. THE JUDGE said she believed two doctors who testified during the 10- week trial that Miss Fleming, 42, had been a positive influence on the aging comedian while his companion during the six years before his death in 1977 at age 86. Under California law, the jury ver- dict was binding with respect to cash damages. Miss Fleming was alternatively described in testimony as a bully and ruthless gold digger who cheated Marx, and a caring companion, selfless in her devotion to him. DEFENSE attorney David Sabih hailed the judge's decision about the property but said will seek a new trial and appeal the jury verdict handed down Wednesday. The jury voted 9-3 that Miss Fleming exerted undue influence over Marx during his waning years to fraudulently obtain money and property from him. She was ordered to pay the Bank of America, executor of the comedian's estate, $221,843 in compensatory damages and $250,000 in punitive damages. J. Brin Schulman then asked Judge Weiss to place Miss Fleming's two $200,000 homes, a 1974 Mercedes Benz, $110,000 worth of bonds and her half ownership of Groucho Marx Produc- tions Inc. into a trust for eventual tran- sfer to the estate. The production firm owns rights to an array of Groucho Marx memborabilia. Judge Weiss ruled Miss Fleming did not obtain the houses but allowed Miss Fleming to keep the car because the jury included $22,000 in its damages for the auto and the judge said that would be "double recovery" for the bank. ALDERMASTON, England (AP) - With balloons soaring and firecrackers popping, tens of thousands of anti- nuclear campaigners joined hands yesterday in a 14-mile human chain spanning three key defense in- stallations in rural England. Before the mass protest, 200 demon- strators at one end of the chain outside the Greenham Common U.S. Air Base scrambled over a 12-foot-high barbed- wire fence into the arms of military police. THE PROTESTERS, including one -dressed as an Easter bunny, were detained inside the base. Four women who clambered over the Greenham fence at dawn were later released without charge. In West Germany, an estimated 10,000 anti-nuclear demonstrators blocked entrances to six U.S. bases and staged scatteredsprotests. Policesused tear gas and attack dogs to - rout protesters in the southern town of Neul Ulm. British protest organizers claimed as many as 80,000 people joined the human chain, although they said it was im- 'possible to tell if they were all linked at the same time. Police put the figure at 40,000. THE PROTESTERS converged on the rolling countryside by bus, car, hor- se and foot, causing traffic jams and other havoc in a wealthy commuter region in the Thames River Valley 50 miles west of London. Problems were compounded because demonstrators had no public sanitary facilities. And one local farmer com- plained to police that low-flying helicopters monitoring the protest were disturbing pregnant cows. The linkup was the main event in a four-day Easter weekend of protests aimed at halting deployment of new North Atlantic Treaty Organization missiles in Britain and forcing the government to scrap its own nuclear arsenal. WHEN THE sponsoring Campaign for Nuclear Disarmament determined the human chain was complete, cascades of multicolored balloons bob- bing at 14 checkpoints along the route were freed, floating into the gray, chilly skies. "Whoopee!" protesters screamed as some ignited firecrackers and bands broke into protest songs such as "We Won't Live With a Nuclear Sub- marine." t must load guns SOURCES SAID the attackers belonged to a pro- ie firing chamber, Mead Iranian faction held responsible by Lebanese authorities for the initial attack on the Marines Mar- rst came to Lebanon last ch 16, and similar attacks against the Italian and evacuation of Palestine 'rench peacekeepers. ierrillas, the policy has Marine patrols cover much of Beirut, including keep ammunition out of Shiite Moslem neighborhoods where pro-Italian sen- ental shootings. timent is high. The pro-Iranian guerrillas are believed to be sup- the multinational forces ported by 1,500 Iranian Revolutionary Guards ed said Italian, French, brought by Lebanon by the Syrian government to multinational force have fight the Israeli invasion last summer. They are guns to be used in self- based in the Bekaa Valley town of Baalebek, 40 miles east of Beirut. in his decision to arm the Mead said friction with Israeli units had stopped uerrilla activity against since March 15 after Israeli Defense Minister Moshe on road supply route that Arens issued orders to avoid any conflicts with Marine zone. Marines. 4 Daily Photo by TOD WOOLF .k Ap rl fool Steven Augustus works out on the Diag by juggling a few knives. He says it's good exercise, but whether it is healthful could be doubted. irna lis irresponsibe senior in the College of Sigma Alpha Mu fraternity jungle party, where three hie article and I don't think individuals painted their bodies black, was irrespon- C." sible. (J)per iatd.l"P-te ar- "They (the Daily) shouldnt accuse a whole group per,"k hen dt"ee are of people for what certain individuals do." attacs whn th Daiy is Harris, who is black, said he resents the fraternity everseetheDaiy'sex-members painting their faces black, but also saidh 'eesete al' x felt it was unfair to "slam" the whole fraternity in the 'sensationalism, said Mat- article. vice president of the Ins- The Daily's editor, however, said that many people sentiorintetyCouleg o is m lh ufaent ugepry hr he that voted this week to en- can draw different conclusions from an article. ~ "I don't think we made any generalizations. Our chigan Student Assembly, purpose isn't to sit here and write a 'happy paper,' " LISA Student Government Witt said. Center, and the Michigan "We are here to report the news whether it offends zation. people or not, as long as we are reporting the truth," s coverage of the recent he said. opsnealyon'ttikw e aont eeaiatosu computation of the unemployment rate dered whether some major change has because they've stopped looking for occurred in the "American jobs. fascination with the automobile." In fact, the civilian labor force shrank by 69,000 last month. Seasonally adjusted unemployment' Analysts in Michigan pointed to the rose from 14.8 percent in February to lingering malaise in Michigan's all- 15.7 percent in March. It was 15.5 per- important auto industry, and one won- cent in January. IC TION. ONTEST !A Committee calls (Continued from Page 1) COMMITTEE MEMBERS petitioning in dor- mitories, libraries, and in bars on campus are distributing copies of recent articles published in the newspaper, including the "Japs" story, to show students examples of the Daily's "irresponsibility." One petitioner, LSA sophomore Cathy Spencer, said the "Japs" article didn't address the issue, but instead attacked Judaism. "Phi Delts (fraternity members) stick together, but there is no need to write about it - or about a bar where Jews go to," she said. ALTHOUGH THE articles cited by the committee have raised controversial points, some students say that people have misrepresented the stories as per- sonal attacks. "I am Jewish and known by my friends to jump quickly to call something or someone anti-Semitic," Daily jOi said Michael Weston, a Engineering, "but I read ti it is in the least anti-Semiti "Everyone talks about it ticle just voiced it in the pa seeing things as personal; really exposing issues." Petition supporters, hovm posing issues as "hype" or thew Harris, administratir terfraternity Council. The one of six campus groups' dorse the petition. The others are: The Mi the Panhellenic Council, I the University ActivitiesI College Republican Organi Harris said the Daily': Michigan jobless rate dri (Continued from Page 1) Although the Bureau of Labor Statistics provides little interpretation of the monthly numbers, Norwood acknowledged that the unemployment rate might have gone up if large num- bers of the so-called "discouraged workers" had resumed the search for jobs. SINCE THE recession began in July 1981, the ranks of the "discouraged" have swelled by 700,000 to 1.8 million. Despite increasing signs of a business turnaround, there has been no rush to the job market by these discouraged workers, who are not, included in the t KC n I WRITING * Your chance to be published in Weekend * Anyone is invited to submit entries of * * * * creative writing No restriction on subject matter Not to exceed 2000 words; please use non-erasable paper One entry per person Deadline: April 4, 1983 Michlia " huhLif 0u A AWARDS!. 0