age 2- The Michigan Daily - Tuesday, September 23, 1986 Israel prepares to enter Lebanon The following story was submitted to the military censor who ordered several deletions. METULLA, Israel (AP) - Hundreds of Israeli troops massed on the ready along the northern border yesterday, and an official said they would move into south Lebanon if needed to aid an Israeli-backed militia under attack from Shiite Moslem guerrillas. Residents of this tiny border town said they had not seen such a concentration of troops at the m frontier since Israel pulled the w bulk of its forces from Lebanon in June 1985. THE OFFICIAL denied such action reflected a policy change. Takin 1a He said any operation would be aimed at "showing the Shiites on U-M alumnus Jan Longv the fringes of the security belt that graduation i May. She al it doesn't pay to give shelter and support to Hezbollah." (Telephoned reports to Beirut, the capital of Lebanon, said Israel today closed all access to its self- designated "security zone" in south Lebanon amid reports the BOSTON (AP) - Eigl Israeli army was moving that water polluted by W.I reinforcements for a crackdown six leukemia deaths ar on Shiite guerrillas. Monday, ending a suit t (The reports from the southern precedents on the liability port city of Tyre and the Bekaa "In one way I'm glad it' Valley town of Hasbaya in the they didn't get nailed to' foothills of Mount Hermon said Gamache, whose husband the area was closed to civilian during the trial. traffic and declared off-limits for ATTORNEYS for both reporters from Israel and , agreement, but a source it Lebanon alike.) television report that the million was "fairly accura ISRAEL has blamed the condition thathe not b Hezbollah, an Iranian-backed, The settlement came at Shiite extremist organization, for start of the second phase o attacks which killed give United the pollution caused the leu Nations peacekeepers and at least -- ,2 Israeli-allied Lebanese nilitiamen in the past six weeks. East-W e spokesman for U.N. peacekeepers in south Lebanon, (ContinuedfromPage1) told reporters Israel has been During the final s bringing more equipment, Monday morning, the con including artillery, into south clock remained at 10:56 p. Lebanon since Thursday. He time it was stopped last said the U.N. headquarters had Sept. 19. Friday midnight* vreceived reports of an Israeli troop original deadline fo build-up. conference. Delegates Israeli army officials, who "freeze" time because declined to be identified, said all remained unresolved. tours for journalists into south "WE HAVE take Lebanon were canceled as of important step toward re today until further notice. the risk of mi confrontation," Robert 4 Daily Photo by SCOTT LITUCHY' ve well has been working as a part-time gardener for the Michigan Union since her so works as a landscaper. C waste suit settled ht families who claimed R. Grace & Co. resulted in nnounced a settlement hat could have set legal of toxic polluters. s over with, but I'm sorry the wall," said Kathryn Roland, died of leukemia sides refused to detail the nvolved in the case said a e settlement was for $8 te." The source spoke on e identified further. what was expected to be the of the trial, to determine if ukemia deaths. Grace had been found guilty during the first phase of causing the pollution. But upon announcement of the settlement, U.S. District Judge Walter Jay Skinner disclosed that he had ruled the first phase would have to be held again, because of trial errors. That phase took four months and the second was expected to take as long. THE JUDGE said he agreed with the company's contention that the jury had confused dates of when the pollution occurred. The families had charged in their 1982 suit that trichloroethylene and tetrachlorethylene dumped by a Grace plant after Oct. 1, 1964, contributed to the contamination of two wells in suburban Woburn, and that the contamination caused the death of five children and an adult and is responsible for leukemia in two other children. IN BRIEF COMPILED FROM ASSOCIATED PRESS REPORTS Reagan condemns Soviets UNITED NATIONS - President Reagan told the United Nations yesterday that there has been movement in U.S.-Soviet negotiations to reduce nuclear-missile arsenals, but condemned Moscow's detention of an American reporter as "a particularly disturbing example of Soviet transgressions against human rights." "The world expects better," Reagan said in his fifth speech to the United Nations. "It expects contributions to the cause of peace that only the leaders of the United States and the Soviet Union can make." Reagan again demanded the release of Nicholas Daniloff, the Moscow correspondent for U.S. News & World Report, and said the Soviet Union "bears the responsibility for the consequences of its action." The president said there is no similarity in the cases against Daniloff and Gennadiy Zakharov, the Soviet physicist and U.N. employee arrested on spying charges a week before KGB agents plucked Daniloff from a Moscow street. S. African blacks protest miners' memorial service EVANDER, South Africa - About 200 black miners, shouting union slogans and tribal chants, disrupted a company-sponsored memorial service yesterday for 177 men killed in a mine fire last week. "We're not going to pray with whites today. We've never been allowed to pray with whites. We'll have our own rites," miners shouted. Holding clubs and steel rods over their heads, they ran through the outdoor service 10 times, drowning out sermons by white and black preachers. Hundreds of other workers who came for the service poured out of bleachers and chairs to join the dissidents. After the service, they continued to race around a field near the No. 2 shaft of Kinross gold mine until officials from the National Union of Mineworkers calmed them down. Girl identifies kidnappers JACKSONVILLE, Fla. - Two brothers arrested in a $1.5 million kidnapping were identified in a photo lineup by the 9-year-old victim, who spent more than a day in a cardboard box, an FBI agent testified Monday. U.S. Magistrate Harvey Schlesinger ordered Peter Farrell, 37, of Naples, and his brother Paul, 22, a second class seaman who was AWOL from the USS Saratoga near Jacksonville, held until a detention hearing Wednesday. Assistant U.S. Attorney Alan Ceballos said he would urge at that hearing that the men be held without bond. The brothers and two other men are accused of orchestrating the Sept. 16 abduction of Amanda Mueller, the great-great- granddaughter of C. Frederick Mueller, who founded the C.F. Mueller Co. pasta business in 1868. She was found Saturday. Rain threatens Saginaw More than 2 inches of rain fell yesterday on Michigan's Thumb and could cause the flood-plagued Saginaw River to overflow again and other rivers in eastern Michigan to approach flood stage, authorities said. Five members of an Oakland County family were critically injured in a natural gas explosion ignited by lightning from the thunderstorms that swept through the state early yesterday, authorities said. The storms knocked out power to about 13,600 electric customers in southeastern Michigan early yesterday, officials said, adding that no families were expected to be out of power for more than a day. Saginaw received 2.42 inches of rain during a 24-hour period ending yesterday morning, which pushed the Saginaw River toward flood stage, said Gary Charson, a hydrologist with the National Weather Service in Ann Arbor. Showers that were expected to redevelop last night threatened to push the river to a foot over flood stage, he said. Robertson leaves 700 Club to make time for campaign DETROIT - Presidential hopeful Pat Robertson yesterday stepped down as host of the evangelical television program that thrust him to national prominence and sought to broaden his message beyond the confines of religion. "I have withdrawn as host of 'The 700 Club' effective today," Robertson said at a news conference before appearing before the Economic Club of Detroit. Robertson announced he was stepping down when asked if his appearances on the program conflicted with federal regulations requiring equal time on television for political candidates. Robertson said he was turning "The 700 Club" over to co-host Ben Kinchlow because a heavy schedule of public appearances meant he could not devote as much time to the program as before. Last week, Robertson announced he would seek the Republican nomination for president if 3 million voters pledged him their support with the next year. 4 A st nations ratify agreement session ference im., the Friday, was the r - the had to issues en an educing litary Barry, chief U.S. negotiator at the talks, said in a statement. Oleg Grinevsky, Barry's Soviet counterpart, also praised the agreement, but said much work still had to be done in reducing war risks. "We have left hell behind us and are now in purgatory. But we are still far from heaven," Grinevsky said. THE MEASURES agreed upon allow NATO, the Warsaw Pact and neutral countries to closely monitor each other's troop movements, thus increasing mutual confidence and lessening suspicion between the blocs, delegates said. The agreement expanded on similar measures included at Helsinki in 1975. Secretary of Defense Caspar Wei nberger expressed reservations Monday in Washington as to whether Moscow would live up to the pact. Student spots on colie (Continued from Page 1) said. BUT Eugene Nissen, LSA assistant dean for student academic affairs, said, "I think the quicker the students can get on board, the better." "I don't think students realize how much their input is heeded at the Curriculum Committee level," he said. "The faculty members do listen to student input." Tear said spring appointments to the Academic Judiciary committee are being considered, but she did not anticipate similar changes for other appointments. THE PROBLEM of late appointments arises every year, according to members of the LSA Curriculum Committee, and it could hurt student representation on the committees. Nissen, a non-voting member of the Curriculum Committee, said that by missing the first meetings of the year, student representatives "deprive themselves of a lot of background." The Curriculum Committee is composed of nine voting faculty members and three voting student members. The majority of the faculty members have been on the committee for at least a year and most have more exposure to the issues than the students do. THE COMMITTEE meets weekly and advises the LSA Executive Committee, which ge panel makes final decisions o college matters. Although only an advisory body, off say Curriculum Comm recommendations are us accepted by the Exec Committee. The committee take: numerous issues that dii affect student academic lii its Sept. 9 meeting, the comr planned its agenda for the continued a discussion ofc left unfilled n all requirements for LSA students, it is and approved four new courses. icials The committee will review the ittee college's foreign language sually requirement at a future meeting. utive Lisa DeYoung, a junior in the Residential College and s up chairperson of the Michigan rectly Student Assembly Campus fe. In Governance Committee, handles mittee external committee appointments year, for MSA, which were made this credit week. Pollack asks for equality ~rn (Continued from Page i) Action programs are the best way to balance that disparity. By enforcing quotas on the number of women employers must hire, Pollack said, the federal government can make sure Affirmative Action is effective. POLLACK contested the argument that there may not be enough qualified women to fill the quotas. "They're there. Take another look," she said. Affirmative Action will result in reduced opportunities for white males, but in the end it would make things fairer for everyone, Pollack. 01 he Michig alt V atltl UNDERGRADUATE MEN IF YOU ARE A LEADER IF YOU ENJOY A CHALLENGE IF YOU WANT TO BE A PART OF A NEW TRADITION IF YOU WANT TO BE A FOUNDING FATHER IN THE RECOLONIZATION OF THE ALPHA KAPPA CHAPTER OF PI KAPPA PHI Come To Our OPEN RUSH STARTING MONDAY, SEPTEMBER 22nd THROUGH AIlrlAV C ICDT CAAQD A +,k AT TL.I Vol. XCVII -No. 14 The Michigan Daily (ISSN 0745-967 X) is published Monday through Friday during the fall and winter terms. Subscription rates: September through April-$18 in Ann Arbor; $35 outside the city. One term-$10 in town; $20 outside the city. The Michigan Daily is a member of The Associated Press and subscribes to Pacific News Service and the Los Angeles Times Syndicate. Editor in Chief....................ERIC MATTSON Managing Editor...........RACHEL GOTTLIEB News Editor. ..........JERRY MARKON City Editor ................CHRISTY RIEDEL Features Editor....................AMY MINDELL NEWS STAFF: Eve Becker, Melissa Birks, Laura Bischoff, Rebecca Blumenstein, Nancy Braiman, Marc Carrel, Harish Chand, Dov Cohen, Tim Daly, Rob Earle, Ellen Fiedelholtz, Martin Frank, Lisa Green, Stephen Gregory, Steve Herz, Mary Chris Jaklevic, Philip Levy, Michael Lustig, Kery Murakami, Peter Oerner, Eugene Pak, Martha Sevetson, Wendy Sharp, Susanne Skubik, Naomi Wax. 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